You should only be angry at yourself, as nothing was installed without
your permission. But I know it can sometimes be difficult to find all
the settings. Google Apps is a way to deploy Google services among
many employees. If you saw this installing, you made your mistake
before this point.
The article you quoted is dated March 10, 2009. Old news.
FWIW, I haven't noticed any problems with the gmail web interface. And
I have mine open in a Firefox tab all day long.
On Thu, Jul 30, 2009 at 11:45 AM, Steve Rigbyphartz...@gmail.com wrote:
Finally, a confirmation that GMail is, yet
It probably just knew you already have updater installed, so it didn't
ask you again.
I just checked my main machine, and I have several Google products
like updater, Earth, Desktop Sidebar, Picasa 3, etc. installed, but no
Google Apps. So somewhere during the process I know it must have asked
me
Yes, I trust Google to store my stuff. And Amazon. I may store other
stuff with MS when they start offering the service.
In a separate thread, please tell us about your own redundant backup
strategy and why it's better than cloud storage.
On Thu, Jul 30, 2009 at 10:06 PM,
I haven't been following this thread, but yes, if someone has actually
mentioned Nazis, let's let it die already.
On Wed, Jul 29, 2009 at 11:48 AM, Steve at Verizonstevet...@verizon.net wrote:
This non-radical right Obama disagreer agrees with you. For those of you not
aware of Godwin's Law,
If you're actually asking, and not just ranting, I'll answer.
The biggest changes are important primarily for internet users, and
have to do with security. In WinXP and before, your account has full
administrative privileges, meaning so do any attackers. This has been
corrected in Vista and Win7.
Ya really. Give it a rest until October. Then buy a new drive and
install Win7 on it.
What is the worse that can happen?
We have another tale of woe to read.
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I'm using JungleDisk too but I don't think it costs more.? Amazon only
charges us for what we actually use; rarely more than $2/month.
Now that a lot of our documents are in the cloud anyway, I'm not even
sure we need this much.
On Fri, Jul 24, 2009 at 1:24 PM, dbdb...@att.net wrote:
I guess
Is it even necessary to pick a type? When opening an existing
document, just open it, ignoring the file types entirely. The file
extension is supposed to tell the app what it is you're opening. I
dunno, as these days I either use Office or a cloud solution (Zoho,
Google Docs).
On Wed, Jul 22,
Yes, after all the recent bad news for them, they can really use this
relatively good report. Even if Jobs had nothing to do with it.
On Wed, Jul 22, 2009 at 8:21 PM, t.piwowart...@tjpa.com wrote:
Julien Blin, analyst for JBB Research, expects Apple to continue to
dominate the PC and smartphone
I'd certainly want to swap monitors before I declared that one dead. I
mean, it could also be a bad cable or video card.
On Tue, Jul 21, 2009 at 6:18 PM, One Manone911...@yahoo.com wrote:
The display on the monitor of my hp pavilion f1703 running windoze xp has
transformed its insipid blue
to adjust each color separately; people with kids
might find their colors way off).
On Tue, Jul 21, 2009 at 8:13 PM, Judy Coslerjfcos...@gmail.com wrote:
so, how does swapping monitors help if it's a bad cable or video card???
On Tue, Jul 21, 2009 at 7:30 PM, Tony B ton...@gmail.com wrote
I use (and recommend) Ghost for my own daily images. But when I need
to image other drives I often use Drive Image XML
(http://www.runtime.org/driveimage-xml.htm).
Alas, for daily backups the app MUST be able to keep x number of
images, and delete the old ones. This is very tricky for apps to do,
Yet another example of how crazy these copyright holders have become.
They really like the idea of being able to monitor all your hard
drives for 'approved' content, and would love a kill switch to delete
anything they deemed 'not approved'.
On Sat, Jul 18, 2009 at 8:18 PM, Jeff
If we're taking a head count, I got the notice too. Mine was in Spam,
but clearly marked with a Cguys tag, so it was easily spotted.
On Sat, Jul 18, 2009 at 4:12 PM, Richard P.richs...@gmail.com wrote:
b_s-wilk
to COMPUTERGUYS-L
show details 1:40 PM (1 hour ago)
Gmail sent Betty's post
I think a much better solution would be to get them their own
accounts. Writing down and sharing a password is a serious security
breach. Besides, are you really going to remember to do that every
time you change your password?
On Thu, Jul 16, 2009 at 4:45 PM, Rich
Oh, I suppose it could be true. Just pick whichever one is newer and
install those drivers (that's how video drivers work). Chances are, if
you're having trouble sharing the printer it has nothing at all to do
with drivers anyway. Unless maybe you've got old Win9x systems in the
mix somewhere.
I'm not sure I understand. They shut down your joint account within 12
hours of *what*? Your husband's death? Or when they were notified of
his death? Or when the executor told them to?
And if this is the case, what good did it do you to have the password
to the account?
On Thu, Jul 16, 2009 at
Clearly this is something new. In the Old Days a bank would have no
idea if you dropped dead last Saturday. I doubt we can wrench the list
away from all the important things being discussed, but I'm wondering
just who keeps this database of newly departed and how does that list
get to the bank?
No they haven't. Calm down. If you feel danger in these places you're
being forced to travel to, then you should consider a new job.
On Wed, Jul 15, 2009 at 5:17 PM, b_s-wilkb1sun...@yahoo.es wrote:
People have been targeted through their RFID tagged passports in places like
Yes, but for what? I use Logmein Free to maintain some systems
remotely - to make sure they're getting backed up and updated. But if
you imagine say, playing a game via remote it probably won't work.
Lots of other things can be done better by other methods as well.
On Wed, Jul 15, 2009 at 8:56
Yes, after you confirm that each one is valid, gmail happily forges
the From: headers.
On Tue, Jul 14, 2009 at 1:16 AM, dbdb...@att.net wrote:
If you have forwarded three ATT.net mail accounts to it however, will it
also let you send from within Gmail as any of those ATT.net addresses?
Correct. Very handy for those of us with multiple businesses. This
works great for replies; the only problem occurs when I compose a new
email and forget to select the proper From addy. Then it goes out as
my default x...@gmail.com, but so far no recipient has seemed too shocked
by it.
On Tue,
Clearly you're confusing gmail's threaded view with Outlook's old
Subject view. I know superficially they may be similar, but not once
since I switched have I ever had a desire to turn off threaded view. I
have, however, seen different sorts requested of gmail from time to
time, but to read all
Not that I'm aware of. I guess you could make a sig that would do it
if you wanted it though.
On Tue, Jul 14, 2009 at 2:19 PM, dbdb...@att.net wrote:
In neither case would a on behalf of x...@gmail.com footer be desirable
(Is that a mandatory Gmail thing?).
No. Be careful, there are a lot of people throwing random crap in this
thread. Nobody's changing Subjects.
On Tue, Jul 14, 2009 at 5:16 PM, dbdb...@att.net wrote:
No I would not want it. I thought someone said it might be mandatory
with a Gmail account?
db
Tony B wrote:
Not that I'm
Anecdotal, and completely wrong. All video is digital these days, so
unless you do something wrong, you'll get out what you put in. i.e.,
The quality of the parts in the computer has absolutely nothing to do
with the quality of your finished video.
to out of a PC. One fellow, who actually
Alas, this was true in the Old Days, but as has been pointed out on
this list before, what used to be classic phone service has slowly
been changing over the years. Sometimes it's obvious when someone
installs VOIP, sometimes it's not so obvious when the phone company
just changes things behind
No, I haven't. But why are you trying to make it so complicated? The
rage these days - for very good reasons - is simply to use your
browser for email. No muss, no fuss.
On Mon, Jul 13, 2009 at 5:04 PM, dbdb...@att.net wrote:
I know that if you set up a new Google Email account with various
You may disagree, but you will still be wrong. I can test it for you
if you like, because we still have several old Pentium 4 systems, as
well as newr Core2. If you render the same settings on both machines
the output will be bit for bit identical. In fact, for years I used an
old Pentium 2 to
One of my bosses is like this. She'll get on the phone with a client
and spend an hour without thinking anything of it. e.g. When I
answered phones, I'd get their number/email and send a fax/email with
directions. She laboriously walks them through directions on the
phone, having them write it
somehow ... which goes back to at least part
of my original question...
db
Tony B wrote:
No, I haven't. But why are you trying to make it so complicated? The
rage these days - for very good reasons - is simply to use your
browser for email. No muss, no fuss.
On Mon, Jul 13, 2009 at 5:04 PM
the existing 1 GB email store from a non google computer based
email client account uploaded somehow ... which goes back to at least part
of my original question...
db
Tony B wrote:
No, I haven't. But why are you trying to make it so complicated? The
rage these days - for very good reasons
What in the world are you talking about? Everything in my Inbox is
listed by time received. But everything in my Cguys 'folder' is listed
by thread *and* time received.
I'm not sure what you want - a folder full of cguys postings where the
posts just flow randomly as people respond, rather than
You really are dating yourself. The modern AJAX web mail clients are
every bit as fast as a local client (since the code runs locally).
This has been true for a couple years now. And they have added
advantages e.g. Being able to access your email from multiple
computers (home work), and
People steal identities all the time. It does not require reading a
passport rfid. Nor does reading a passport rfid make it any easier.
It may be true in the future that muggers will carry rfid scanners.
They may be small enough that they could be concealed in the clothing,
and would perhaps use
The shared nature of the cell phone system makes texting much more
reliable than voice. The first thing to go down during any emergency
is cell phones. The voice part, anyway.
I use it all the time to email the wife. I don't have a cell phone
myself, but she generally doesn't have a laptop at
They already have Vegas 9 so there's no need to buy another
transcoder. Or shouldn't be.
You might try the k-lite codec pack (or similar):
http://download.cnet.com/K-Lite-Mega-Codec-Pack/3000-13632_4-10794603.html
But I have a feeling the error may not be accurate. Have you tried any
freeware
This is a great idea, and would certainly be advantageous to me, as
everyone around me is likely to be carrying more valuables than
myself. Could they tell if you had the newest gadgets with you?
On Sun, Jul 12, 2009 at 1:12 PM, t.piwowart...@tjpa.com wrote:
On Jul 12, 2009, at 11:49 AM, Art
On the Windows side I use and recommend Sony Vegas. Now at version 9:
http://www.amazon.com/s?ie=UTF8tag=mozilla-20index=blendedlink_code=qsfield-keywords=sony%20vegas
Hint: Get the Instant Vegas Movie Studio + DVD (VASST Instant)
(Instant Series) by Douglas Spotted Eagle; the $22 will have her
Ho hum. With all the _real_ stuff we have to worry about on a daily
basis, WTF should I care if some yahoo drives around and picks up my
passport RFID?
Really, on a 10-scale, with 10 being a great real-world danger such as
driving to work in traffic, and 5 being household accidents, I'd have
to
No, don't bother trying to use .mov at all on a PC. It's never worked
right for me, and will likely never work right for you. Stick with the
AVC (mp4) format.
On Sat, Jul 11, 2009 at 12:50 AM, trac...@aol.com wrote:
Just got a new camcorder. Shoots in MOV or MP4. MP4 not a problem to
deal
I got word over a year ago. But I see my page is still up. It sounds
like you just need to follow everyone else - Myspace and Facebook are
the replacements.
On Thu, Jul 9, 2009 at 7:44 AM, Mike Sloanemikeslo...@verizon.net wrote:
Although I had heard rumors for a while, I was just officially
I'm not sure the question makes any sense. If the external drives
connect via USB2, then they aren't SATA drives. The internal
configuration of the drive is irrelevant since the circuitry in the
case converts it to USB2.
On Thu, Jul 9, 2009 at 6:00 PM, rleesimonrleesi...@gmail.com wrote:
Does
Don't try to power an external drive with your laptop's power supply.
Asking for trouble. Use a power brick.
On Thu, Jul 9, 2009 at 7:12 PM, rleesimonrleesi...@gmail.com wrote:
My thinkpad x31 winxpprosp3 laptop has a 4pin firewire port .is there some
way, with an adapter, I can use it as the
...in a pinch, can the firewire provide power?
Even the mini-firewire on my machine (which I have never used ever)?
Tia!
-Original Message-
From: Tony B [mailto:ton...@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, July 09, 2009 8:29 PM
Subject: Re: firewire
Don't try to power an external drive with your
I've never particularly liked Twitter, but I never had a reason to
tell people not to use it. Until now?
Spammers Shorten Their URLs
http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/07/spammers-shorten-their-urls/?themc=th
Matt Sergeant, an anti-spam technologist at Message Labs, said the
culture of
I saw this yesterday, but it's fairly useless without a demo.
On Tue, Jul 7, 2009 at 9:21 AM, Jeff Wrightjswri...@gmail.com wrote:
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/07/social-insecurity-numbers-op
en-to-hacking.ars
Try this (from a quick Bing search): http://tinyurl.com/4prsmb
On Tue, Jul 7, 2009 at 9:56 AM, One Manone911...@yahoo.com wrote:
I'm running Vista
--- On Tue, 7/7/09, Jeff Wright jswri...@gmail.com wrote:
From: Jeff Wright jswri...@gmail.com
Subject: Re: [CGUYS] On-Screen Keyboard
To:
Gmail is finally out of beta! I had to reload the page, but sure
enough, it no longer says beta.
http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2009/07/google-apps-is-out-of-beta-yes-really.html
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Unlikely. I'm not sure what you mean by half moon power switch, but
the front panel switch is simply a momentary contact switch that
signals the motherboard to power up/down. It's only function either
works or doesn't - it's not like it may be losing contact during boot.
A better first wild guess
Yes, I would run a SMART check on the disk before going to that
trouble. But really, 100G is small by today's standards, so I'd
probably replace it anyway. $65 will get you 320G in a 2.5 drive
(http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16822145256).
On Wed, Jul 1, 2009 at 10:45 AM,
I'm not so sure about that. Bad memory can cause a lot of odd errors,
but rarely would it just cause apps to hang with _no_ errors. Before
you throw away that other RAM, you might want to at least test it.
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/2008.09.utilityspotlight.aspx?pr=blog
On Wed,
?
I also did not understand this:
Note that most apps in WinXP/Vista do NOT need to be re-installed to
work properly. Just copy over the old folder and make shortcuts.
I know, I am taking your time.
Thank you
Marcio
-Original Message-
From: Tony B ton...@gmail.com
Sent: Jun 29
Forget it. Get a new drive and install Win7 to it (still a free
download). If you try to migrate most of your work to a browser, then
getting up and running will be about as easy as installing the OS
itself. i.e., you won't need to install a lot of programs to get back
online. Note that Win7 will
In your case, I wouldn't. You'll just get it with new machines in due course.
Now, as to your Win98 machines - I'd upgrade those yesterday, even if
it means throwing them in the trash and buying new. By today's
standards, that was a really crappy OS. But let's not hijack this
thread with the old
I can't remember these things, but I just got one of the regular ones
yesterday. Something like The network is not working. Please contact
your network administrator. Of course, I *am* the network admin at
home, so the error isn't only useless, it's somewhat insulting.
Interesting. I think I'll get one for my own system. Instead of
arguing, I wonder if we could discuss which version I might want for
prosumer use at home?
PS This link was broken too.
On Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 6:27 PM, t.piwowart...@tjpa.com wrote:
But U.S. shoppers who pre-order between June
Of course, then the question becomes: What are the odds I would ever
need this? Or that I could replicate it with vmware or some other
method? God knows, we're starting to accumulate old WinXP licenses
here. Except I imagine several of them are only for specific machines.
I know it's supposed to
Generally, you always determine this by just running the computer for
a while. You get to know what it will do under different conditions.
You can find charts of maximum CPU temps online, but it's unlikely
you'll get anywhere near those before the thing just shuts down.
Our old Dell laptop was
The office called today and asked a technical question about one of
their video cameras. Of course, my first response was to shout at the
boss RTFM! But, she _does_ pay me for this type of thing, so I googled
the manual. I found it on Retrevo, apparently a new service. I can see
a real need for
We'll probably never know, so we can speculate all day. I tend to
imagine it was something the tech had absolutely no power over, like
he was having trouble with long distance which was from a different
company.
I do wonder what the tech could have possibly done to cause such rage.
This story may actually offer a huge clue. Or not. But I can see
myself getting pretty darned angry if this happened to me.
and she replied if I wanted to be sure to have a working phone I should
upgrade to FIOS.
something odd.
On Sat, Jun 20, 2009 at 9:51 AM, John Duncan
Yoyojohnduncany...@gmail.com wrote:
On Fri, Jun 19, 2009 at 4:25 PM, Tony B ton...@gmail.com wrote:
Is it the list or gmail? I've noticed a lot of very short links
lately. This one is de-linked right between the 7- and the down.
There's
We've discussed this before on the list. The new WinFS file system was
supposed to be implemented with Vista and would have used metadata in
files to sort them.
The old idea of a hard drive with folders within folders within
subfolders would no longer be necessary. Store all your files in root,
then, it's next to useless.
On Sat, Jun 20, 2009 at 2:45 PM, t.piwowart...@tjpa.com wrote:
On Jun 20, 2009, at 2:25 PM, Tony B wrote:
We've discussed this before on the list. The new WinFS file system was
supposed to be implemented with Vista and would have used metadata in
files to sort them
No, I don't equate killed with murder. The two terms have totally
different meanings. Tom will have to say if he meant to imply
murdered, but I really don't think he did.
On Sat, Jun 20, 2009 at 6:57 PM, Jeff Milesjmile...@charter.net wrote:
The quote about the neighbors said losing his
We've tried it. It worked good. But then, so did Zoho, and so does
Google Docs. What actually forced us to keep using Office was envelope
printing, which I could never quite get right in OO.
I've never actually tried to put a bunch of documents online, so I
can't speak with any experience. But I
Is it the list or gmail? I've noticed a lot of very short links
lately. This one is de-linked right between the 7- and the down.
There's no space there so it makes no sense. But it breaks the link,
making it bad. Very inconvenient.
On Fri, Jun 19, 2009 at 10:57 AM, t.piwowart...@tjpa.com wrote:
Okay, so we have a whole honking *file cabinet* full of paper
documents that need to be scanned and put online. This is not going to
be an easy task.
But you're skipping all the way to almost the end of the project and
asking about databases. Long before you worry about a db you need to
figure
This seems unlikely, at least at this time. Compared to TV, the
frequencies used by the present broadcast radio stations is tiny, so
there's no great advantage to going digital.
More likely what will happen is some sort of 4G or Wimax solution. But
until cars start coming with internet-only
I can't figure out if this is interesting or not. Assuming it's not a
violation of my ISP's TOS (not at all clear), just what sort of files
am I supposed to want to share with the world? Why would I want to use
my own bandwidth to do it?
On Wed, Jun 17, 2009 at 9:42 AM, Chris
I've been evaluating one for a couple months now and have come to hate
it. But then, at $60/5 years, you have to figure you get what you pay
for. I'm ready to go back to any kind of regular VOIP at this point. I
was especially po'ed to find the usb jack on the laptop won't run it;
presumably not
fax
From thinking to doing, from sales to profits, from tax to investments- we
are YOUR adjuvancy
-Original Message-
From: Computer Guys Discussion List [mailto:computerguy...@listserv.aol.com]
On Behalf Of Tony B
Sent: 06/16/2009 2:13 PM
To: COMPUTERGUYS-L@LISTSERV.AOL.COM
This moving down to the VHF spectrum was news. The stations didn't advertise
the fact,
He must not read this list, because I posted a very thorough
explanation of this one or two years ago.
Reception problems linger after DTV transition
The FCC is currently accepting requests for TV repeater licenses, yes.
The application procedure is not easy, as the station must prove the
new repeater will only restore their old coverage area, and will not
expand it. This takes voluminous engineering reports, and would have
been very difficult
There are no citizens fighting to use white space; only other
companies. The broadcasters want adjacent frequencies kept clear to
minimize interference.
If you feel both the FCC and the NAB are out to screw you, then
there's really not much we can discuss. We'll just have to agree to
disagree.
It *was* broke, now it's fixed. For a while, anyway. You wouldn't
really consider driving a 1940 model car today, would you? Your 'fire'
analogy is a really bad one because DTV is a set of standards, not a
universal chemical process.
No question the rival format - COFDM - had it's supporters. But
Assuming this isn't a rhetorical question, I'll answer it.
The old system - designed in the 1930's, ratified in 1940, is
inefficient. It requires a whole lot of precious limited bandwidth to
broadcast a single format signal. DTV not only saves bandwidth, it can
carry many different formats. It's
Well, it's nice to know it worked, but something odd there though.
Anyway, I guess there's no more reason to worry about it.
I have no idea why they mentioned freedns which is not something *I*
recommended.
On Fri, Jun 12, 2009 at 11:18 PM, Kathy Biltonka...@fred.net wrote:
Thanks, Tony. I had
You forgot a link. But I'm not even sure what you're complaining
about. 8vsb? ATSC?
On Thu, Jun 11, 2009 at 4:05 PM, phartz...@gmail.comphartz...@gmail.com wrote:
The Washington Post today, Thursday, June 11, has a good article
about how the transition to digital television has missed
Actually, no, I didn't hear that question at all.
On Thu, Jun 11, 2009 at 9:01 PM, t.piwowart...@tjpa.com wrote:
On Jun 11, 2009, at 12:47 PM, mike wrote:
Jimmy on his late show playing natal.
And engadget says...
Also, anyone notice Fallon asking Kudo if this would ship in 2010 and Kudo
I can't get either cpuz or Everest to show mu cpu temps. What am I
doing wrong? I know I've got apps here somewhere that will do it, but
it's still early for me.
I swear I used to have something that showed cpu temp in my Google Sidebar.?
Oh, okay - Speedfan shows 51c 49c now, and says that's
I would assume Jeff already suggested all the obvious tests like does
the mouse work in safe mode? Does it work from a boot disk? And, if
not, he's had you buy a new mouse by now. Otherwise, it could simply
be corrupt mouse drivers which might be easy to reinstall.
On Sun, Jun 7, 2009 at 4:50 PM,
You of all people should know by now that when you install a new
version of Windows you should do it clean. Don't upgrade.
Besides, as I recall, you bought that (those?) machine(s) long after
Vista was out, but you stubbornly insisted on XP. We have a saying in
the US: You made your bed, now you
Actually, I do. There are no obvious defects in it as it stands. Nor
are there any defects in Vista, though driver support was woefully
slow to materialize.
And I bet the same will be true of Win7. I wonder how many engineers
at e.g. Nvidia are working on Win7 drivers right now? Probably none.
Oddly, Bing is so good I'm not sure it would even be _necessary_ to force
anyone to use it. I'm really glad to see *someone* can compete head-on with
Google.
On Sat, Jun 6, 2009 at 6:26 PM, t.piwowar t...@tjpa.com wrote:
Why am I not surprised?
http://www.pcworld.com/article/166024/
That's pretty vague. There are lots of HTML editors out there, many
freeware. But instead of learning all that you would probably be
better off just using your favorite word processor. Besides, most HTML
editors assume you have FTP access to the website, which I guess you
won't have.?
If they're
Before people keep answering this and talking about their personal
blogs, note this is a *marketing* blog. Nobody cares what you think
about blogging personally.
Yes, today all the hype says you must not only maintain a _current_
blog, but now they're starting to recommend Twitter as well.
Our
This can be difficult, depending of course on the amount of product. A
4.7g DVD can only hold some 15 minutes of HDV .m2t files. Tremendous
hassle to split those up and burn them. Of course, if both parties had
blu-ray drives the problem is solved.
A common form of distribution now for shorter
I don't recall anyone saying Wii was better than Xbox? Cheaper than
the clearly superior PS3. And most gaming is still vastly superior on
a PC than all three. But I dunno, given the internet and enough time
it's possible you found some rabid Wii fan site where they think Wii
is superior to
We use the cheap Canon HDV cameras to capture HDV footage from miniDV
tapes. About $600 I think.
On Tue, Jun 2, 2009 at 7:52 AM, David Turk dt...@indianahistory.org wrote:
We outsourced some video work, they're providing us with High-Def video on
mini-DV tapes. We have a Standard Def
We hired a local attorney to file some of the papers. Cost us $500 to
do what we could easily have done ourselves. Just go to the state
secretary's website and follow the links. They're glad to get your
money. Some states make this a lot easier than others.
But like Roy said, simply answering
Apparently you didn't read the story. Smiles and teeth in general just
makes it more difficult for automatic face recognition software to
work. Makes a lot of sense. I'm sure the apps will only get better.
However, if a smile throws the software, I can only imagine what a
beard would do. But if,
IDE==ATA==PATA - different from SATA.
But if you can hold out, USB3 should arrive by the end of the year and
will be faster than both.
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froogle.com still works.
On May 29, 2009, at 7:41 AM, Tony B wrote:
They closed Froogle ages ago. The best you can find now is the blandly
named Google Product Search.
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There's no way I would recommend getting a Mac and trying to run
Windows on it. It can be done, and many of the Mac users on this list
do it all the time, but that's not really relevant to you.
Your biggest decision will be what size screen to get. Best Buy has a
good $400+tax deal on a 15.4
What he said, but I'll also suggest that the video is probably already
available online, so all you really have to do is find it and send her
a *link* to it.
Try a google video search on the title or the filename. Shoot an email
to the contact listed on their website if you can't find it linked
at 9:38 PM, Tony B ton...@gmail.com wrote:
Still, no question reviewing sporting events would be a valid use for
special effects like forward and reverse slo-mo.
What is a valid use versus an invalid use? I will often want to
slow down the playback of a video in order to better be able to see
What isn't clear is if I need this if I have auto updates turned on?
I'll assume I already have everything in it unless specifically told
otherwise.
On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 7:39 AM, Jeff Wright jswri...@gmail.com wrote:
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/dd262148.aspx
SP1 is required.
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