On Sat, 7 Dec 2013, John R Pierce wrote:
geez, its a 10 year old pentium-4, and not even a late p4, a middle aged
32bit-only one put it out of its misery, its been living on
borrowed time for the last 5 years.
You mean since it was two?
Even when I have income,
I get annoyed about
On Sun, Dec 8, 2013 at 10:27 AM, Michael Hennebry
henne...@web.cs.ndsu.nodak.edu wrote:
Even when I have income,
I get annoyed about little mysteries that make things just not work.
I do not have any income,
so I also get annoyed at these little expenses that pop up occasionaly.
Apparently
On Sun, 8 Dec 2013, Michael Hennebry wrote:
On Sat, 7 Dec 2013, John R Pierce wrote:
geez, its a 10 year old pentium-4, and not even a late p4, a middle aged
32bit-only one put it out of its misery, its been living on
borrowed time for the last 5 years.
You mean since it was two?
On 12/8/2013 8:27 AM, Michael Hennebry wrote:
On Sat, 7 Dec 2013, John R Pierce wrote:
geez, its a 10 year old pentium-4, and not even a late p4, a middle aged
32bit-only one put it out of its misery, its been living on
borrowed time for the last 5 years.
You mean since it was two?
i
On Sun, 8 Dec 2013, John R Pierce wrote:
On 12/8/2013 8:27 AM, Michael Hennebry wrote:
On Sat, 7 Dec 2013, John R Pierce wrote:
geez, its a 10 year old pentium-4, and not even a late p4, a middle aged
32bit-only one put it out of its misery, its been living on
borrowed time for the
On 12/08/2013 03:31 PM, Michael Hennebry wrote:
You mean it was rotting just sitting on a shelf?
Perhaps surprisingly, systems of that age *can* fairly literally rot.
There were a number of Taiwanese electrolytic capacitor manufacturers
that borrowed a partial recipe from a Japanese company:
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