Comment Re:Royal Airforce Museum in Hendon (Score 1) 1095
True, sorry about the missinformation. In my defense, the homepage has way better route descriptions than I could hope to provide, and I did include a link =)
True, sorry about the missinformation. In my defense, the homepage has way better route descriptions than I could hope to provide, and I did include a link =)
As many airplanes as you can shake a stick at.
It uses a bit of hightech and a special patterned paper to give a seamless experience. It's the same anoto technology as the Logitech IO, but now they let you print your own paper.
Are you quite sure about zfs working that way? When I bought my drobo a year ago it was not the case, zfs could not be expanded a disk a the time while maintaining redundancy (ie. expanding a zraid pool with a single disk). From everything I've read that feature will be added once the BPR (block pointer something) rewrite is done.
So again, have you actually done this, or have you (as I first did) concluded that it is possible from the feature list?
Why Use Virtual Memory In Modern Systems?
1. Every application on a modern system is running in its own virtual address space, and these virtual addresses are then mapped to (different) physical memory addresses. This is called "virtual memory".
You are talking about swap space, not virtual memory.
I have a system with Windows Vista Ultimate (64-bit) installed on it, and it has 4GB of RAM. However when I've been watching system performance, my system seems to divide the work between the physical RAM and the virtual memory, so I have 2GB of data in the virtual memory and another 2GB in the physical memory.
2. Just because Windows has poor memory management doesn't mean that swap space is bad in general, or is an outdated concept.
We are running AIX on a pSeries with 576 GB of main memory and lots of swap space, and it doesn't do this. It's a software problem - all you need is better memory management.
This restaurant was advertising breakfast any time. So I ordered french toast in the renaissance. - Steven Wright, comedian