The term "theoretical" is not just standing in for "raw" data rate. In complex data communication, it also covers whether all frequency sub-bands, spacial directions, etc. are also available.
Thanks, Stewie241, for a nice comparative analysis between laptops and OSs. I am a long time user of MacOS (X), Linux/Unix, and Windows (in that order).
I currently use OS X because of an application that is not available (nor anything similar) that is only available on OS X: OmniOutliner. I wish there was a Linux solution, and I check every few years, but there is still nothing. I even explored starting an open source development effort, but I decided that I didn't have that much in me. I do make the best of it: MacOS X is Unix. Using MacPorts, I install most any Unix application/tool that I need, so I'm really not missing out.
My comment above was mostly about the MacBook Pro hardware which I feel is very well done but premium priced. Based on that, I think that Dell's Linux laptop listed in this post is waaay overpriced.
Nearly 1600 before tax and no user upgradable components? You'd think it was a macbook
Actually 50% more than the new MacBook Pro I bought last summer. The MBP has upgradable RAM, disk (SSD or spinning), and even the ability to swap out the optical drive for a second disk. And believe me, if Apple gets one thing right, it's that "it just works."
Could the writer of posts like this NOT overload common acronyms? FAA, damn!
Re:And they said Internet killed the Radio Amateur
on
Own the Last Mile
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· Score: 1
One of Amateur Radio's major problems is that it is non-commercial. A lot of what is done and I do on the Internet would violate the FCC rules. I couldn't buy a book from Amazon or even send an email to work saying I was going to stay home sick.
The term "theoretical" is not just standing in for "raw" data rate. In complex data communication, it also covers whether all frequency sub-bands, spacial directions, etc. are also available.
Thanks, Stewie241, for a nice comparative analysis between laptops and OSs. I am a long time user of MacOS (X), Linux/Unix, and Windows (in that order). I currently use OS X because of an application that is not available (nor anything similar) that is only available on OS X: OmniOutliner. I wish there was a Linux solution, and I check every few years, but there is still nothing. I even explored starting an open source development effort, but I decided that I didn't have that much in me. I do make the best of it: MacOS X is Unix. Using MacPorts, I install most any Unix application/tool that I need, so I'm really not missing out. My comment above was mostly about the MacBook Pro hardware which I feel is very well done but premium priced. Based on that, I think that Dell's Linux laptop listed in this post is waaay overpriced.
Nearly 1600 before tax and no user upgradable components? You'd think it was a macbook
Actually 50% more than the new MacBook Pro I bought last summer. The MBP has upgradable RAM, disk (SSD or spinning), and even the ability to swap out the optical drive for a second disk. And believe me, if Apple gets one thing right, it's that "it just works."
A novel idea! Maybe the carriers could stop f**king with the OS and make it easier to upgrade?
Could the writer of posts like this NOT overload common acronyms? FAA, damn!
One of Amateur Radio's major problems is that it is non-commercial. A lot of what is done and I do on the Internet would violate the FCC rules. I couldn't buy a book from Amazon or even send an email to work saying I was going to stay home sick.