Oh, come on. What's a t u between friends?
'Sleeper'
Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."
Got a question about technology? Ask it here. Discussion of hardware, software, TiVos, multi-region DVDs, Windows, Macs, LINUX, hand-helds, iPods, anything tech related. Better than any helpdesk!
From a practical perspective, if you keep your structure (HTML) and style (CSS) separate, you know which file to edit when you have to go back 6 months later and change everything from blue to red. Speaking as someone who has spent more time than she'd like to think about trying to figure out just which file she needed to fix.
Coming in late - tommyrot, if you really want to make table borders and rules disappear, you can set the color to match the background (white for my site's pages ... as I found out after a lot of aggravation).
Ok, anyone have any ideas? I have an emachine E627, and about two days ago, both of my USB ports stopped working. They appear to be working in the control panel, but if you plug anything into either one of them, nada.
Which completely sucks, since Dan's computer is not Linux based, and I can't connect my Touch or my external hard drive...where my resumes and 11 billion cover letter versions are.
Any ideas or advice? Obviously, I'm moving the external down to Dan's computer, so I can email my stuff to myself as a quickie, and I can burn a CD with all the other stuff, but I'd like to FIX it.
And we're broke.
You are using what flavor Linux?
I use windows; Dan's PC is Linux-based. And it's, um, chocolate-flavored? (I don't know.)
The first thing to do would be to try the rear USB ports and see if they work. If they do, then maybe you have a loose connection from the front ports to the motherboard. If you can't get the front ports working, then a cheap USB hub connected to a back port would take care of it.
After that, I'm sure Dan can burn a live Linux CD and boot the computer off of that. That way you can determine if the hardware has failed or if it's a software issue.
If it's a hardware failure, then the cheap solution would be a PCI card with USB ports, like this one.
It has an internal header so you can plug the front ports into the card instead of the motherboard.
If it's a software issue, then probably remove the USB drivers and install the chipset driver.
Here's what $200k speakers look like
Short answer: Pretty!
If you're in the Bill Gates tax bracket (and can avoid the proposed rescinding of the Bush tax breaks to pick up the extra dough you'll obviously need for these), act fast; there are only 100 pairs of the limited edition Muon, which KEF coyly calls "perhaps the most extraordinary audio speaker ever conceived." Perhaps? For nearly $200k, they'd better induce aural orgasms.
How do they sound? Got me. You don't actually drive a Rolls Royce Phantom in actual traffic, do you? As you can see in the picture, the Muon was actually roped off like a Michaelangelo sculpture. But there will be some folks with WAAAAAAY too much money who'll claim they can hear angels dancing on the heads of pins through them.
Here's my thing with insane audiophile speakers like that. They aren't used in the recording studios and mastering rooms that deal with the music that you are eventually buying. I've worked on systems with speakers that cost $5000-$10,000 each, and I can hear a difference there, and those professional grade speakers you will find in working recording studios. That's my benchmark. I'd love to have a set of JBL LSR series speakers for my surround system in my home or studio, but something like those things, have no appeal.
This is what I love about working for Drew - knowing what real high end audio equipment is. Not there was a lot of danger that I was about to go blow 200k on speakers and another 500k on cables and accessories. It is astonishing to me that anyone would ever even consider paying $60,000 for an audio cable (or a ceramic floor cable riser).
And, you know we all have our own aesthetic, but I think those things are hideous.