Comment Re:Internet Explorer (Score 4, Funny) 391
Exactly. The key is actually _SETECASTRONOMY.
Exactly. The key is actually _SETECASTRONOMY.
That is awesome but MythTV isn't something I could give to my parents (or grand parents)
I swore off X10 simply because of their pop up ad assault many years ago.
This ^
Thank you sir
No but you can heat up your lap with a tablet.
*Supposedly* they don't have plans to refresh it with the Haswell this year. Hopefully Dell will get some decent feedback and update it with the Haswell, a video out for a second monitor, and whatever else the AVERAGE home user needs.
It has a touch screen with an OS designed for a touchscreen, a decent weight, decent display quality, decent performance
Please link to "similar crap" if I have missed something.
Yeah I didn't mean it was heavy. Hopefully they get touchscreen weights to very competitive levels and we'll see things like a 15" or 17" Transformer. AIOs like the XPS 18 sub 4 LB with some of the features it is currently missing (HDMI out, eSATA, etc)
I'm going to try one out. The home computer form factor is going to change. I have tried the Asus Transformer and like it. The removable keyboard works great but to be a primary home computer it needs to have a larger display and larger keyboard. I was hoping Asus they would release something in the 15-17 inch range in the Transformer series but I don't think that has happened yet. The Dell XPS18 is a bit larger than I was thinking but it is getting decent reviews so I'll give it a shot
1. Managed switches
2. VPN
3. Firewall
I would choose 2 and/or 3 tied to a request/approval process that requires authorization, justification, and duration.
PAH-LEEZE
As for any features add, changed, or modified
That's silly. If batteries become a commodity like fuel then that whole $30k mindset will be BS
" A Supercharger can charge about half the battery in 30 minutes. All Model S vehicles with the 85 kWh battery can use Superchargers as can properly equipped 60 kWh battery vehicles."
Tesla's fast charging is OK but not great. If you have to stop for more than one fast charge on a trip then people are not going to like it. Assuming equal costs to the customer: If a battery swap can happen in roughly the same amount of time as a gasoline tank refill and have 100% driving range then swapping is better than quick charging.
Free = ESXi = HyperV
Managed = not free = vSphere = Virtual Machine Manager
Microsoft's Virtual Machine Manager is not free and has other component requirements that will significantly add to your implementation costs unless you are already running Systems Center and SQL.
The last time we tried HV & VMM was Windows 2008 R2 w/ VMM 2010. MS brought in a partner to set it up as a direct comparison to our production vSphere plant. It was a joke.
I think we had to stand up 2 or 3 extra servers (VMs) to manage VMM and it's guests. Performance was horrible for no reason. VMs would forget which disk to boot from. NIC bonding was still unsupported (it is now in 2K12). Administration was unnecessarily complex. At a minimum you need to already be a MS shop that is running Windows clustering, SQL, and SCCM.... which we are.
MS says HV 2K12 is so much better. I"m sure we will take a look at it soon enough but I would be suspicious.
Fast, cheap, good: pick two.