Posts Tagged ‘ports’
1986 – The first piece of the Mir Space Station is launched. With 6 docking ports and labs for research, the Space Station was expected to push us into the stars. The term “Mir” is Russian for “Peace”.
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Other Historical Events in Technology
- Compaq Presario 2100 is introduced
- Napster’s 1 billion dollar bribe to the RIAA
- Google found Atlantis?
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Computers are getting smaller. With a processor like an ATOM Z530 – that needs no fan – and an Intel US15W chipset, you can have a computer in your pocket. Add Video, keyboard and mouse, your computer is set.
Todd Cochrane finds a great box in Compulab called the FitPC2. The device runs at 1.6 GHz and can display an image up to 1920×1080. 6 USDB ports and 802.11g wireless among other cool features. Run Windows XP or Windows 7 and even Linux on this machine.
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You might remember the products. You might remember the hype. Then, you are tooling down highway 41 years later and all of a sudden you think to yourself – “Hey, whatever happened to…”
Failed ideas. Maybe it was a great idea, but wasn’t made right, or design errors brought it down. Maybe it was just a bad product. Well, let’s take a stroll down memory lane and see if we cannot repeat these errors again.
Oh yeah, why 16? Well because we could.
The Computer Watch: Whether it was the Ruputer, the MSN Direct ‘Smart’ Watches, the Timex Data Link Watch or another gadget watch – BTW – I remember having a “Transformers watch”. It was awesome!
Still, the Dick Tracey style communication watches, the “Computer on a wrist”, never really hit it off. I even remember a watch that gave you directions. You would put in the paper tape and turn a little dial to indicate where you are and where you are going.
Last week in this place. I ate a lot of Brats this last weekend. Goodbye to friend ‘Supergirl’. Show Prep on Google Docs. Still need an iPhone App developer.
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I – S.U.N. (Straight Up News)
Lenovo S12 on ION
Kumo or Bing – Microsoft in a transition
The 10 TB Disc – All your music and movies on a DVD
Win 7 Netbook Strategy Rethought
iPhone Painting on cover of New Yorker
Hulu LIVE – Dave Matthews Concert is the first
Aneesh Chopra CTO – Senate approves
Apple Accepts Eucalyptus – a win for an iPhone App
Followup on Craigslist Lawsuit
Google U Libraries
Diamond Encrusted Nokia
- Palm Pre – $549
JOTW – I don’t know what I’ve been told… Vista is the Army’s Gold….
II
Twitter TV? – TV in 140 characters or less.
The Vista Army – What are they thinking?
QOTC – Will you or do you have a Netbook?
III
Will Netbooks Fail? – Will we find a Happy Medium?
Circuit City Return Policy – Be ready to give up Junior.
Extras:
Red Bull Diet – Good for you?
The New Soundwave – Transformers USB 4 port hub
YouTubin:
Dell Mini 10v on Ubuntu, Android and XP
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I use Twitter a lot. I wanted to stay informed, especially from friends. I decided to port all direct messages to my cell phone. That way I didn’t have to install a Twitter client. At first that was great – I could respond to people I need to talk to.
That has all changed with the Twitterbot.
Now, if I “Follow” the wrong person, I get a direct message:
Thanks for following me. I hope to talk to you, but in the meantime: here is a free gift hllp://i.am.spamming/you.
I am not impressed – In fact, I am downright annoyed. You want to get unfollowed by me? Then all you have to do is send me a bot like that. I’ll unfollow you in a heartbeat.
I don’t mind @replies. But the direct replies are the ones that go to the cell phone too. I am glad someone is trying to open communication, but this is redicuous.
So what can be done to change this?
Twitter could block directly direct messages – Maybe set up a blocker to direct messages until the two have conversed or a 30 day grace period has passed. Maybe even an
“Allow this person to DM you” option. Just because I want to follow them doesn’t mean I want them to spam me.
DM Karma – If your Karma is below a certain level, you cannot DM anyone.
In the meantime, I am going to have to turn off the option to SMS me for direct messages. I guess what was a good thing last year might not be so much this.
Five years ago, I was an experienced Windows user, conversant in all flavors of Windows for home use and in Windows NT/2000/2003 networking, and pretty good with Windows domain networking.Today, I am a raving Linux fanboy, as Jeffrey can attest. What happened?
I learned about Linux.
Someone I know theorized the other day that the mere fact that Windows 7 is being talked about as the Linux killer, when, five years ago, only the geekier among us had ever heard of Linux, means that Linux Has Arrived. I don’t know if Linux Has Arrived, but I thought it would be interesting to discuss some commonly held myths about Linux and consider how much truth each one contains.














