It is discontinued for some reason. Maybe 12 sec. is insufficient for all the generators to start each time. I don't know what we have at work, but sometimes the generator turns on outside.
Around 1970 tried to connect the two channels of a Marantz power amp together to double up on the power. Of course there was only one right way to do it, and with a 50% chance you can guess what happened. :cursin:
I'd love to replace my aging little C2D notebooks, but will there be a good ULV version for 3lb. notebooks that accept a couple of regulation hard drives?
OK, you know I meant 5.8GHz. ;) According to the advertizing hype, 2.4GHz is full of interfering coms compared to 5.8. Yet my telephones use 6.0 GHz to avoid the supposed crowding with 5.8GHz devices. :erm:
I'm not willing to get into any complicated wiring or have ugly cables in a bathroom and there are no longer analog channels here.
It is a long story but one of my old TVs went cattywampus recently. I finally broke down and bought a new LCD TV (gasp) and rotated them around. Now the...
I don't need no stinkin' androids in the john with me. :eekers:
There are serveral cheapie ~10" units that might work. They would not require a VESA mount, just a small shelf.
I'm thinking about getting one of those cheap 10" portable TVs and the RF-Link to beam the signal into the bathroom. Does anyone have experience or advice on a video system in the toilet?
Maybe 72TB is enough, though I don't like having to buy 256GB drives for the higher performance. We have not heard much noise about the C300 series SSDs which is probably a good thing.
All of my desktops have USB 3.0 and eSATA, but none of my notebooks have either. USB 3.0 is just as fast as eSATA for the 2.5" drives and does not require the extra power cable. :bsmurf:
Yeah, and they won't have a good firmware for a few months after that. Anyway, I'm skeptical that it will be that much faster. I don't trust that highly compressible data claim.
It would really be nice to use two of those 128GB cards in backup mode. One could shoot all day or even a few days without changing cards or worrying about data loss.
Isn't that what a Blackberry or similar is for, to send a real e-mail? I suppose texts are easy to send on a regular phone, but what about the previous e-mails and attachments (PDF, doc, xls etc.)?
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