tjm
About
- Username
- tjm
- Joined
- Visits
- 0
- Last Active
- -
- Roles
- member
- Badges
- 0
- Posts
- 367
Reactions
Comments
-
It's the end of MacWorld as we know it.... ...and I feel fine! (my apologies to R.E.M.)
-
I find all this incredibly silly. Spend a few minutes looking into the political campaigns of the 19th century and how nasty they were, routinely. You were expected to say the worst things possible about your opponent. What passes for political c…
-
Quote: Originally posted by The General unjustified, well, since you dont know me, you dont know its unjustified.. all I am saying is, in this country, people are not always treated as inoccent until proven guilty.. you dont like it, then tough, …
-
Here's a handy related development: "Engineered Intelligence Corp. (EI) on Thursday announced the release of its Mac OS X-compatible version of CxC. Aimed at research labs and other markets that require high-performance computing, CxC is parallel…
-
Quote: Originally posted by Jamil What is their issue with digital medium, is it really copy protection or the fact that it can be altered easily? You can alter tapes as well, though you need more sophisticated equipment. The RIAA's position …
-
Quote: Originally posted by Nr9 even though im not an expert in this field, at least I know more than tomb. At least I don't believe the STI Cell to be something other than on-chip clustering technology. At least I dont make comments like "440 is…
-
Quote: Originally posted by LowB-ing I dont know to much about this stuff, but this thread is a great read, wheather the rumor's true or not. One thoght struck me though. The orighinal source might very well be right about the tech stuff and sim…
-
I agree with Aquafire and der Kopf. He is innocent until proven guilty. We are not the jury. We do not know any of the facts. Innocent is the only position we can take until a real jury has actually made a decision. In MJ's defense, his child…
-
Quote: Originally posted by shetline Imagine those parents who are suing a school system for (gasp!) exposing their precious little children to dangerous WiFi-otron rays, if they got wind of nuclear laptops. I'm still waiting for people to s…
-
People seem to have an irrational fear of radioactivity that goes far beyond the actual hazards involved. Holding a hot chemical battery-powered computer on your lap probably does more genetic damage than these weak beta-emitters. With proper shie…
-
Quote: Originally posted by neumac You mean something like this: Technology Research News The questions is can you fit them into laptops. Note that they get 18% efficiency with an input heat source of 200-300 °C. Processors start to f…
-
Quote: Originally posted by Powerdoc Mmh , does the man who took the picture means that Apple new product line = garbage ? No, their new product line will be $3000 home urinals, called the "G-Whiz"
-
Quote: Originally posted by blue2kdave I wonder if Moto spinning the chip division off is for some protection against an Apple suit? Is there any legal basis for the new company to be the one liable in a suit? It would bankrupt the new Moto Chi…
-
This technology has been around before. Back around '85, HD technology was stagnant and still outrageously expensive (I bought a 20 MB external drive for my Mac+ for about $500. Man alive, combined with the whole 1 MB of RAM, I was livin' large...…
-
Like Utmost, my Quicksilver G4 (even my old 7500) routinely stays on during momentary power outages. The two Windows boxes on the home network shut down instantly, but the Macs seem to hang on for a second or two. The display goes dark, but if the…
-
Personally, I have great faith in software engineers' ability to build software that maxes out the capabilities of any system available. Today's desktops run programs that were in the realm of multimillion-dollar supercomputers a decade or two ago.…
-
Look, it is possible that either BR or Barto may be right on this; the point is that we simply don't know yet. 1) It is reasonable to assume that for AMD, capturing the Airport Extreme market was a Big Deal. Apple likes having options, and ma…
-
Quote: Originally posted by Socrates Shouldn't that be pentahedron? Regular pentagons can be fitted into a regular solid shape - it takes twelve of them, so the solid is called a "dodecahedron". "Dodeca" = 12, "hedron" = faces, IIRC. The "-…
-
I agree with you 100%. It is Very Silly, indeed. The notion of a large flat-panel monitor being hung on a wall is perhaps not so silly, though. Perhaps some of the rumored wireless monitor development is oriented toward something like that. …
-
Quote: Originally posted by RBR There were some comments about 970 and 0.90 nm process. The IBM plans that have been on the web do not show any such combination. IBM plans to go to the 980 as soon as possible next year. Initially the 980 will …