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Technology is a dangerous thing in the hands of an idiot! I am that idiot.
what exactly do you consider good battery life then. My aspire one got 6 hours and an extended battery was available that was rated for 10 hours.
The simple fact is that the only way to have great battery life AND performance is to have a gigantic battery. This is why the ipad3 weighs more than the 2 does.
And the problem is that the big batteries just don't last. I bought a battery for my dell laptop and it lasted about 3 months before it was as bad as the old one, and my HP business class tablet/netbook (core2 with a pen-input swivel screen) will no longer charge the battery since i let it go completely dead. Who's bright idea was it to but a battery level circuit in the battery that runs off battery voltage?
that's what poo does
My idea for the next big breakthrough in tech is a combination of all the above. It's an idea i designed myself. Why have a vent in the bathroom ceiling? It's inefficient. The toilet of the future will have a slight negative air pressure that sucks the stink directly out of the commode before it wafts into the room.
John Lord, Evansville Indiana
OMG 3 pages and yall still talkin bout toilets lol
Treeview with NodeAdded/NodesRemoved events | BlinkLabel control | Calculate Permutations | Object Enums | ComboBox with centered items | Create Sortable BindingList(not mine) | .Net Internals article(not mine) | Wizard Control | Understanding Multi-Threading
C++ programmers will dismiss you as a cretinous simpleton for your inability to keep track of pointers chained 6 levels deep and Java programmers will pillory you for buying into the evils of Microsoft. Meanwhile C# programmers will get paid just a little bit more than you for writing exactly the same code and VB6 programmers will continue to whitter on about "footprints". - FunkyDexter
There's just no reason to use garbage like InputBox. -jmcilhinney
What specs though? Netbooks run less powerful hardware. I'd say 6 hours is good battery life, but with a netbook you don't get the performance to go along with it.
But what if you get sucked down too? lol...that's what poo does
My idea for the next big breakthrough in tech is a combination of all the above. It's an idea i designed myself. Why have a vent in the bathroom ceiling? It's inefficient. The toilet of the future will have a slight negative air pressure that sucks the stink directly out of the commode before it wafts into the room.
If this thread is finished with please mark it "Resolved" by selecting "Mark thread resolved" from the "Thread tools" drop-down menu.
Please consider giving me some rep points if I help you a lot.
DON'T BUMP YOUR POSTS!!! Links to my code examples can now be found on my website: My websites
Please rate my post if you find it helpful!
Technology is a dangerous thing in the hands of an idiot! I am that idiot.
with the advent of wifi, some of the posters probably posted their ideas FROM the toilet. Speaking of which...
www.google.com/tisp
John Lord, Evansville Indiana
Treeview with NodeAdded/NodesRemoved events | BlinkLabel control | Calculate Permutations | Object Enums | ComboBox with centered items | Create Sortable BindingList(not mine) | .Net Internals article(not mine) | Wizard Control | Understanding Multi-Threading
C++ programmers will dismiss you as a cretinous simpleton for your inability to keep track of pointers chained 6 levels deep and Java programmers will pillory you for buying into the evils of Microsoft. Meanwhile C# programmers will get paid just a little bit more than you for writing exactly the same code and VB6 programmers will continue to whitter on about "footprints". - FunkyDexter
There's just no reason to use garbage like InputBox. -jmcilhinney
Treeview with NodeAdded/NodesRemoved events | BlinkLabel control | Calculate Permutations | Object Enums | ComboBox with centered items | Create Sortable BindingList(not mine) | .Net Internals article(not mine) | Wizard Control | Understanding Multi-Threading
C++ programmers will dismiss you as a cretinous simpleton for your inability to keep track of pointers chained 6 levels deep and Java programmers will pillory you for buying into the evils of Microsoft. Meanwhile C# programmers will get paid just a little bit more than you for writing exactly the same code and VB6 programmers will continue to whitter on about "footprints". - FunkyDexter
There's just no reason to use garbage like InputBox. -jmcilhinney
Back to the serious side of this thread... IPv? Address', what is next? I've been hearing a lot lately that there will be a new type of IP Address, anybody have info on this? I feel like this is a big technological advancement and is going to lead to a lot of good but probably more bad things. I can't find anything on google, except for my local news story. Is this just going to be a global IPv6 switch?
http://baynews9.com/content/news/bay...not_quite.html
Last edited by thebuffalo; Jun 6th, 2012 at 10:16 AM.
"Ok, my response to that is pending a Google search" - Bucky Katt.
It's not about what it can "do", it's about IPv4 running out of available addresses. We are coming to a point where we have more devices than there are addresses. IPv6 was designed to address that.
We've been using IPv6 addresses for like... 8-10 years.. thats what this is showing up on my TV in the morning for? Everyone else is finally starting to use them? They are so much harder to remember
And as far as I'm sure, I don't believe that many devices currently made can handle using an IPv6 Address, phone companies 5 years ago weren't saying "hey, remember to be sure they work with IPv6!". I still use a G2, so phones that old are still in use!
Does OnStar use IP addresses for their devices? I sure would hate to buy a 2007 Escalade and not be able to setup my OnStar because GM/OnStar didnt make sure they worked with IPv6. Is 12.123.12.123 as an IPv4, doesn't it have an IPv6 value already? Kind of like abc1:23::ab1:23ab?
Last edited by thebuffalo; Jun 7th, 2012 at 10:11 AM.
You surf based on IP address? If not, why are you remembering them?
My usual boring signature: Nothing
Pen and paper? A text file? Those can help, if you actually have to type those in 10 times a day.
It's appearing on your TV because several major companies and ISPs are making a switch to IPv6. Well, not really a switch. The new system runs in parallel and since the new system is not backwards compatible, there are systems in place for establishing communication between the two. So if you're on v6, you can still access stuff on v4. The point is to make a bigger push to try and eventually phase out the v4.
Part of the reason people have to memorize these static IPs in the workplace is because networks are managed by entirely out of control box jockeys.
There is almost always WINS, in house DNS, etc. to let you get to these machines by name but to make their own lives easier these tend to be given "inventory tag" names that are considerably more clumsy to remember than an IP(v4) address!
Examples:
S123A536HH5273Z234
KK000234V61DK456
I've seen this in shop after shop. The problem is really due to the cluelessness of management, and it results in all kinds of unnecessary horrors beyond this as well.
While you want to avoid periods in host names because it interferes with DNS, you can still build DNS-like hierarchies using hyphens or even underscores when desired. One shop I know of does this, but the results can get ugly there as well:
MET1-WEBPUB-13
MET1-DMZDB-3
Those two machines are on their "metropolitan network 1" and one is a public-facing web server (#13), the other a DMZ database server (#3). An advantage is that they can rework networks quite a bit and be free to change IP addresses and network numbers.
But even this breaks down and can result in cascading software configuration maintenance if a machine must be renamed to fit radical network changes.
Part of the reason this problem even exists is that when TCP/IP was designed the world was still host based, with a small number of hosts users accessed through non-IP terminals. There were never supposed to be that many hosts to worry about, so you could give them names such as colors, names from mythology, old girlfriends, whatever.
"Ok, my response to that is pending a Google search" - Bucky Katt.
IP addresses are used by all connected devices, not just those hosting websites. In fact, a lot of different websites can and are hosted on one server, technically linking to the same IP address. The number of available IP addresses in IPv4 is running out because there are only so many combinations you can make in a 0.0.0.0 to 255.255.255.255 range. IPv6 brings LOADS more addresses.
Actually it's 2^30 since IPs that start with 10 and 192 are used for local networks. I am not sure about IPs that start with 127, or 0. Are there public IPs that start with 127 or 0?
This seems to be a list of all special-use addresses http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reserve...IPv4_addresses
So...
2^32 = 4,294,967,296 - 592,708,608 = 3,702,258,688 IPs available
I'm amazed that we made it this long.
My usual boring signature: Nothing
i am not sure about some of the numbers, but i can tell you that 0 is not used and 255 is used for broadcasting to every address in that subnet.
John Lord, Evansville Indiana
MacBook Pro with Retina display
Bring on the super high resolution displays! (I'm wanting a 27 inch 5120x2880 display btw.)
Hmm... a full speced new MBP for $3800 (plus tax), or a car? I can't decide yet![]()
Meh, I didn't really need that new heart transplant anyway.
When one of my minions says, "Hey, he's just one guy, what can he do?" I say "This"... and shoot them.
The problem with putting your lair in a volcano is keeping your robot army from melting.
I know that the human being and the fish can coexist peacefully - George Bush