I believe it is about time that there was some sort of privacy and regulation on the web.
Richard Spanton Jr
http://www.richardspantonjr.com/community.html
I believe it is about time that there was some sort of privacy and regulation on the web.
Richard Spanton Jr
http://www.richardspantonjr.com/community.html
The other day I got into a somewhat heated discussion about why Linux is a viable alternative desktop OS. Despite my best efforts, I was unable to move the other side past the rhetoric and myths that seem to surround Linux. It is because of this discussion that I am writing this…as a way to give accurate information.
We found ten real-world examples of our favorite futuristic sci-fi gadgets.
The 174.85 beta graphics driver for both the 32 and 64bit version of Windows Vista is dated March 29 and features support for Nvidia’s latest IGPs – GeForce 8200, 8300, nForce 750a, 780a and more, plus the desktop-prone GeForce 6, 7, 8 and 9 series cards.
Microsoft’s Windows juggernaut is collapsing as it tries to support 20 years of applications and becomes more complicated by the minute. Meanwhile, Windows has outgrown hardware and customers are pondering skipping Vista to wait for Windows 7. If Windows is going to remain relevant it will need radical changes….”Windows is too monolithic.”
The Liberal Party is adamant that project data relating to the OPEL broadband network reveals the impact the Rudd Labor Government’s decision to axe it will have on under-served premises across rural, regional and remote Australia.
THE Federal Government’s much-touted $4.7 billion broadband roll-out plan has picked up speed with Broadband Minister Stephen Conroy today calling for tenders.
The federal government has moved a step closer to delivering on plans to build a national high-speed broadband network, while promising the bush will not be left out.
The competition to build the national fibre-to-the-node (FTTN) broadband network has started today, with Broadband Minister Stephen Conroy officially calling for telcos wanting to build the network to come forward.
Telstra has suggested a solution to farmers worried about what will happen now that OPEL’s planned WiMax network has been scrapped — go to Vodafone.