Comment Re:Sadly M$ (Score 1) 310
I've had my Nat keyboard 4000 for 4 years now, and it's been holding up quite well (nothing wrong with the padding). It's not as responsive as a buckling spring keyboard, but still isn't that bad.
I've had my Nat keyboard 4000 for 4 years now, and it's been holding up quite well (nothing wrong with the padding). It's not as responsive as a buckling spring keyboard, but still isn't that bad.
You hit the nail on the head, at least for me. I didn't read a book I actually liked until I was 12 or so, but that was far too late to get me really into books. I only read a book or two a year at my current rate.
FWIW, I've been using an Intel X-25M 160 GB SSD on my Mac Pro for over half a year, and my read/write speeds are essentially unchanged from when I got it... this is using xbench to check.
Actually the A4 does have quite a few optimizations done to it, by Intrinsity (which Apple bought); this allowed the standard Cortex core's performance to be boosted considerably. I believe Intrinsity worked with Samsung to create the processors (since Samsung actually has the fabs), and Samsung has a license to use Intrinsity's proprietary optimizations to the core. And now that Apple bought Intrinsity, they too are using the optimized version of the cortex (again, made by Samsung).
You've never heard of impressions?
Of course you enjoy it, that's why it's so damn addictive. You have to enjoy it, otherwise how is the Tobacco company going to make money off of you?
Speaking of which, Will Smith was initially asked to play Neo in the Matrix, but declined (and did Wild Wild West instead). I think the world would be a very different place if that happened...
I use gobby a lot at work for collaboratively editing latex documents with my co-authors. I particularly like that it is cross-platform, so I can be using linux and they can be using windows, no problem.
It just doesn't have an undo feature, which is frustrating! And some weird bugs occasionally.
Well to be fair, 0 F was supposed to be the freezing temperature of water when fully saturated with salt (I believe), though it turned out to be less than 0 F later. 100 F was supposed to be body temperature, which of course isn't quite right.
I like Farenheit because of the finer divisions per integer and the 0-100 intuition, but moreso because I grew up with it. Oh well.
Lets switch to metric time while we're at it, what's this 24/60 crap?
If we're talking about price, keep in mind that the cost of a 22 MP is about the same as a 12 MP sensor of the same size, given the same fabrication process. It's the area of silicon used that matters, which is why DSLRs with their larger sensors are more expensive (and of course, larger sensor = higher SNR = good). I really hope companies will start pushing point & shoots to have bigger sensors/photosites, thus starting a sensor size race, which would actually be beneficial.
"The one charm of marriage is that it makes a life of deception a neccessity." - Oscar Wilde