Just to add to the laptop comment the larger models from IBM (A series)and dell (inspiron 8200 and m50 and latitude c840) have two media bays in addition to holding the battery and the hard-drive, so you can get a cdrw/dvd drive and second hard-disk or second removeable media or second battery in the laptop at the same time...
currently the mobile p4 goes out to 2.2ghz athlough some vedors such as alienware have laptops based on the desktop p4 that comes at the expense of battery life and thermal management issues in abig way. Most larger laptops come wth two dimm sockets so 1GB of ram is attainable in short order.
if you need more or faster disks, using the ieee1394 port to connect a large external disk seems like a reasonable approach.
The MBONE was a tunneled infrastrucure built around a small number of layer-3 and transit exchange points such as the nasa-ames fixwest-mbone router (as10888).
Modern multicast runs natively across and between isps that support it using PIM, MSDP, and MBGP. If anything the portions of the internet wich support interdomain ulticast are far more extensive (and more importantly robust) than they were in the tunneled era...
a list of isp's the support multicast services for customers is at:
I did a similar thing with metro shelving 4 x
5 foot poles five wire shelves 14 x 36, one
of them is mounted only on the front two
poles creating a work surface, and a kvm
switch so that while there are two monitors,
there's only one keyboard and mouse. an older
picture of it is at:
http://twin.uoregon.edu/~joelja/pictures%20-%20200 1/04302001%20-%20afnog%20and%20earlier%20pictures/ p0001599.jpg
IPTV is not warez. It is distributed under cisco's revised iptv 3.0 client liscense. any customers of the UO (people who want to view the video via iptv) may download and install iptv 3.0.
please refer and questions about iptv 3.0 from the UO to multicast@lists.uoregon.edu
thanks
joel jaeggli
the most relevant prior art in this case is likely:
Theodor H. Nelson, "A File Structure for the Complex, the Changing and the indeterminate." Proceedings of the ACM National Conference, 1965.
Theodor H. Nelson, ?As We Will Think." Proceedings of Online 72 Conference, Brunel University, Uxbridge, England, 1972.
I know of a least one proposal for a hyperlinked microfilm system that dates to the early 1950's but a reference to it escapes me at the moment. While I wouldn't give ted to much credit for implementation (we're still waiting on that) but it's clearly more than a decade before BT...
an article that covers the subject of xanadu fairly well is at:
Just to add to the laptop comment the larger models from IBM (A series)and dell (inspiron 8200 and m50 and latitude c840) have two media bays in addition to holding the battery and the hard-drive, so you can get a cdrw/dvd drive and second hard-disk or second removeable media or second battery in the laptop at the same time...
currently the mobile p4 goes out to 2.2ghz athlough some vedors such as alienware have laptops based on the desktop p4 that comes at the expense of battery life and thermal management issues in abig way. Most larger laptops come wth two dimm sockets so 1GB of ram is attainable in short order.
if you need more or faster disks, using the ieee1394 port to connect a large external disk seems like a reasonable approach.
Modern multicast runs natively across and between isps that support it using PIM, MSDP, and MBGP. If anything the portions of the internet wich support interdomain ulticast are far more extensive (and more importantly robust) than they were in the tunneled era...
a list of isp's the support multicast services for customers is at:
http://www.multicast-isp-list.com/index2002.html
I did a similar thing with metro shelving 4 x0 1/04302001%20-%20afnog%20and%20earlier%20pictures/ p0001599.jpg
5 foot poles five wire shelves 14 x 36, one
of them is mounted only on the front two
poles creating a work surface, and a kvm
switch so that while there are two monitors,
there's only one keyboard and mouse. an older
picture of it is at:
http://twin.uoregon.edu/~joelja/pictures%20-%2020
IPTV is not warez. It is distributed under cisco's revised iptv 3.0 client liscense. any customers of the UO (people who want to view the video via iptv) may download and install iptv 3.0. please refer and questions about iptv 3.0 from the UO to multicast@lists.uoregon.edu thanks joel jaeggli
the article was by Vannevar Bush (first head of the NSF)
As we may think, The Atlantic Monthly, July 1945
reproduced on the web at:
http://www.isg.sfu.ca/~duchier/misc/vbush/
the most relevant prior art in this case is likely:
n .html
Theodor H. Nelson, "A File Structure for the Complex, the Changing and the indeterminate." Proceedings of the ACM National Conference, 1965.
Theodor H. Nelson, ?As We Will Think." Proceedings of Online 72 Conference, Brunel University, Uxbridge, England, 1972.
I know of a least one proposal for a hyperlinked microfilm system that dates to the early 1950's but a reference to it escapes me at the moment. While I wouldn't give ted to much credit for implementation (we're still waiting on that) but it's clearly more than a decade before BT...
an article that covers the subject of xanadu fairly well is at:
http://www.sfc.keio.ac.jp/~ted/XUsurvey/xuDatio
see especially the section titled:
PARALLEL DOCUMENTS AND TRANSPOINTING WINDOWS