3D Graphics Price-Performance Shootout
Grok Headline matches for 3D Graphics Price-Performance Shootout
VIA K8T800 Performance Motherboard
Shootout - Gigabyte, MSI and ABIT
VIA K8T800 Performance Motherboard
Shootout - Gigabyte, MSI and ABIT
12/29/2003 08:31 AMIntel says performance at any price is
history.
Intel says performance at any price is
history.
02/16/2004 11:58 PMThe Inquirer:
Intel says
performance at any price is history. Catching up with Centaur?
TV goes wireless, but there's a price -
in performance, cost
TV goes wireless, but there's a price -
in performance, cost
04/10/2004 05:47 PMLos Angeles Times Apr 10 2004 8:49PM GMT
Price vs. Performance: Olevia's
Inexpensive 50" HDTV
Price vs. Performance: Olevia's
Inexpensive 50" HDTV
12/28/2004 05:19 AMReview: Olevia ships a 50-inch, LCoS high-definition television for a
shade over $2,000. Can a small, aggressive manufacturer sell a TV
based on a technology that Intel couldn't handle? Can HDTV perfection
be found without breaking the bank
Apple's New iBook Is A Perfect
Combination Of Price, Performance, And
Design
Apple's New iBook Is A Perfect
Combination Of Price, Performance, And
Design
12/04/2003 07:10 PMIf you've ever wanted a laptop, or even a second laptop to keep with
you wherever you go, this is it. By John Manzione (MacNETv2 via
MyAppleMenu)
Matrox Graphics to Reveal New Graphics
Cards
Matrox Graphics to Reveal New Graphics
Cards
04/19/2004 08:22 AMBitboys Introduces New Graphics
Processorsfor Wireless Devices - Small,
Smart and Efficient Processor Cores
Bring Advanced Graphics Capabilities to
Handheld Products
Bitboys Introduces New Graphics
Processorsfor Wireless Devices - Small,
Smart and Efficient Processor Cores
Bring Advanced Graphics Capabilities to
Handheld Products
08/10/2004 03:08 AM(Los Angeles, California and Espoo, Finland – August 10th, 2004) --
Bitboys, a provider of graphics hardware solutions, today announced
and demonstrated the company’s new graphics processor product line for
wireless and embedded devices at SIGGRAPH 2004 in Los Angeles. [PRWEB
Aug 10, 2004]
Signametrics’ World’s – First 7-1/2
Digit, Digital Multimeter for PCI
Platform, in Production Now. - Fastest,
Most Accurate PCI, plug-in, 7-1/2
Digit, Digital Multimeters, SM2064/
SM2060, Offer Advanced Features, Bring
New Price Performance to Instrumentation
and Test Systems Integrators and Users.
Signametrics’ World’s – First 7-1/2
Digit, Digital Multimeter for PCI
Platform, in Production Now. - Fastest,
Most Accurate PCI, plug-in, 7-1/2
Digit, Digital Multimeters, SM2064/
SM2060, Offer Advanced Features, Bring
New Price Performance to Instrumentation
and Test Systems Integrators and Users.
12/24/2004 12:52 PMSignametrics started production of the fastest, most- accurate 7 ½
digit Digital Multimeters for PCI plug-in applications. Newly
available technologies allowed Signametrics engineers to develop and
implement new advanced features and superior speed and accuracy,
surpassing any existing products in this class. [PRWEB Dec 22, 2004]
Low End GFX Shootout
Low End GFX Shootout
07/06/2004 06:43 PMShootout at the So-So Corral
Shootout at the So-So Corral
05/24/2004 04:50 AMGamers with a hankerin' for a western-themed shooter get their wish in
Red Dead Revolver, but everyone else may want to mosey on by. By Lore
Sjöberg.
ATI GFX Shootout @ Driverheaven
ATI GFX Shootout @ Driverheaven
07/01/2004 03:29 PMWebcam Shootout
Webcam Shootout
09/08/2004 08:45 AM
I don't use webcams, because I am ugly. But once upon a
time, I was a pretty princess of a man, and had a pretty good time
playing around with basic video chat and periodic Brady Bunch groups
of pictures on webpages. And while I think it's sort of the received
wisdom that all webcams suck equally, Tom's Hardware took it upon
themselves to see if that was really the case. The result? Not only
can you pay up to $200 for a simple webcam, it seems the more you pay,
the better the quality. Amazing!
Re
ad - Webcam Quality Test Shootout [TomsHardware]
5 Heatsink Shootout
5 Heatsink Shootout
12/12/2003 09:11 AMWi-Fi Shootout in the Desert
Wi-Fi Shootout in the Desert
08/03/2004 05:26 AMHackers gathering for DefCon's annual conference think they may have
broken a world record for Wi-Fi connectivity. But even if they didn't,
they had lots of fun trying. Kim Zetter reports from Las Vegas.
The great 64-bit shootout.
The great 64-bit shootout.
09/20/2004 09:22 PMInfoWorld:
The great 64-bit shootout. I don't agree that percent of peak is
a useful metric for customers, but otherwise it's a decent article.
Dot-Net vs. J2EE shootout.
Dot-Net vs. J2EE shootout.
03/12/2003 11:18 PMThe shootout was
a bit too long and a little too fluffy, but I enjoyed it. I took 20
pages of notes and I will probably write them up for you later but for
right now, I'll just give you some quotes from the J2EE team:
Mark Fleury:
The worst dog of them all is SOAP.
Sang Shin:
Security is not an industry problem, it is a Microsoft problem.
Mark Fleury:
C# to be the number one language in two years: you've got to be
kidding me.
Mark Fleury:
JBoss is a responsible, moral, and open player.
Sang Shin:
Web services is like teenage sex, everybody is talking about it but
nobody is doing it.
Sang Shin:
My grandmother called me last night to tell me that she is doing web
services.
Mark Fleury:
ADO sucks, Dot-Net caching is not there.
Greg Ackerman:
C# is great, very Java like.
Dot-Net vs. Java shootout at NCSU.
Dot-Net vs. Java shootout at NCSU.
03/11/2003 09:43 AM
In addition to offering a
week of
high-tech training for $95, TechEngage has also arranged a
Dot-Net vs. Java
shootout on Wednesday, March 12, 6:30 PM, at the N.C. State
University College of Management in Raleigh, N.C. Representatives from
Microsoft and Borland will face off against representatives from IBM,
JBoss, and Sun.
Notes from the Dot-Net vs J2EE shootout
Notes from the Dot-Net vs J2EE shootout
03/15/2003 01:29 PM
Here are my notes from the
TechEngage J2EE vs. Dot-Net
shootout. I tried to be objective while I took these notes
Wednesday and while I typed them in today. I may have made some
mistakes and I may have let some of my open-source/Java bias show
through. You be the judge and leave a comment if you see something
that does not look right.
Opening Statements
MS [Dot-Net]: Dot-Net is a vision of XML web services enabled
by the Dot-Net Framework that happens on the Windows platform. The
evolution of computing goes like this: Mainframe OLTP, Client-server
OLTP, N-Tier TP monitors (MTS 1997, first OTM), web applications
(J2EE, Cold Fusion, Windows DNA), and finally Web Services on the
Dot-Net
platform. When people learn about Dot-Net they wonder where is the app
server? The app server is the Dot-Net Framework, Windows 2003 Server
(with load balancing and clustering), plus developer tools (like
Borland Sidewinder and Together Control Center). Windows is the app
server.
Sam Shim, Sun [J2EE]: Let's talk about Microsoft's contribution
to the evolution of computing. Microsoft's contribution is Fear,
Uncertainty, and Doubt. F. U. D. FUD. Let's talk about some of the FUD
that Microsoft is spreading. FUD #1 is that J2EE is expensive. Don't
listen to them. J2EE is free. The analysts at Gartner say that the
hidden cost of Dot-Net is 40%-60% (sorry, couldn't follow this). FUD
#2 is that the Dot-Net server is a product. Dot-Net server is not a
product yet. Once it is released, how many bugs will it have? How many
security problems?
Microsoft says that portability is not important. This is very
important. Microsoft wants to lock you in. Single vendor lock-in.
Lock-in is not a horrible problem when you are talking about
applications like office suites, but for infrastructure, single vendor
lock-in is very dangerous and expensive. Microsoft touts
interoperability, but only as a bait to draw you into single vendor
lock-in. They also say that J2EE is no good for web services:
wrong.
FUD #4 is that Dot-Net performs better. This is only true in Microsoft
funded benchmarks that are tuned in favor of Microsoft. And look at
this paper about the Dot-Net Petshop, it shows that the Petshop is
pure spaghetti code. Look at this method call from the Dot-Net Petshop
(everybody laughs), this method has 36 arguments. Spaghetti!
FUD #5 is that Microsoft believes in standards and interoperability,
but Dot-Net is not a standard. Only about 5% of Dot-Net has been
submitted as a standard. None of the important stuff you need to
develop app is standard: Winforms, ADO, etc. Even when Microsoft
supports a standard, they always add that "Microsoft extra" that
breaks compatility with other implementations of the standard. Here is
a list of examples: Kerberos, etc. etc.
Greg Ackerman, IBM [J2EE]: I like Letterman and his top ten
list so here is my top ten list for J2EE:
1. Openness, avoid single user lock-in
2. Web services, J2EE fully supports
3. Superior platform support, TCO, scalability, Linux
J2EE websphere reference customers (eBay)
4. Products designed to fit your needs
5. J2EE connects to what you already have
6. World class leading development tools
7. Best dev support programs
8. Partner support
9. IBM does not compete with ISVs
10. J2EE is a complete platform
Mark Fleury, JBoss [J2EE]: We are free and we don't suck. JBoss
supports all of the J2EE standards and helps Sun to write those
standards. JBoss has a services oriented architecture, a microkernel,
and a sophisticated net-boot capability. JBoss brings you unified
classloading, no more ClassNotFoundExceptions. If JBoss can't find
your class, then your class really can't be found.
I'm very impressed with Dot-Net. The method and class atributes
support Aspect Oriented Programming. JBoss does some of the same
things, adding capabilities to your classes by using attributes,
dynamic proxies, and interceptors. All of this stuff can work outside
of the JBoss platform too.
JBoss is the defacto standard. 150,000 downloads per month. App server
market share is 48% JBoss, 28% BEA, and then the others. JBoss offers
extreme stability. JBoss group is 30 people and growing fast. Some of
our references customers: EA Games SIMs online is all JBoss, Playboy
(I'm very proud of this), BASF, MITRE, McDonalds, etc. etc.
Richard Weeks, NetEdge [Dot-Net]: Customers use different
programming languages and Dot-Net supports 40-50 different languages.
Dot-Net is all about multi-language support. Those Java guys want you
to rewrite all of your code, don't do it. Don't rewrite your code, get
interoperability with web services. Dot-Net does not leave anything
behind, you can still use your old code.
Richard Lee, Borland [Dot-Net]: Open source is good, but
sometimes there is too much choice. Microsoft has learned from Java
and open source and has taken the best aspects of them and has built
them into Dot-Net. Borland knows how good Dot-Net is because Dot-Net
made it possible for us to build products very quickly. Our Dot-Net
products come out of our Rapid Application Development (RAD) group
because they are so rapid. Dot-Net makes things so easy, Microsoft is
not the dark side, they are our friends.
Q1: What sets your platform apart?
Sam Shim, Sun [J2EE]: Our vision has always been "the network
is the computer". We have been active in open source software with
Open Office, Netbeans, and Apache. J2ME is everywhere. Java is
everywhere from cars, computers, and phones to rings, smart cards,
etc. Java makes true end-to-end computing possible. Our innovation
continues with the N1 project which promises complete virtualization
of resources, ORION to solve maintenance and upgrade problems, and
Madhatter to bring Linux and open source to the desktop.
Greg Ackerman, IBM [J2EE]: The things that set J2EE apart are
openness, standards, and choice. The things that set Websphere apart
are scalability/TCO, web services, comprehensiveness, dev support,
business partner support, support for open source, and most
importantly community.
Mark Fleury, JBoss [J2EE]: Everybody brags about open source.
At least Microsoft is honest about it. Microsoft does not like open
source and they say so. Sun is very hypocritical about open source.
Both Sun and Microsoft have accused JBoss of taking away the license
revenue money that drives R&D. Guilty as charged! The truth is
this: the big guys can't compete at the container level and that is
why you hear about portal this schmortal that. SOURCE CODE is what
sets us apart. The advantages of J2EE are that it is mature, free, and
ubiquitous. Dot-Net on the other hand is expensive and buggy.
Remember, JBoss wants to commoditize the app server and Microsoft
wants to commoditize the developer.
Richard Weeks, NetEdge [Dot-Net]: Dot-Net supports both managed
and unmanaged code. Dot-Net is flexible. Sometimes web service
implementations don't really follow the standard and Dot-Net helps you
to get around this by allowing you to tweak how it's implemented.
Plus, you can call COM objects. I know BEA has some Java2COM tool, but
Dot-Net's COM support is better. The SDK and the class libraries are
free and there are lots of free tools, SharpDevelop for example. You
don't need a big expensive app server because Dot-Net gives you
choices. You can use only the small parts that you need. Use your old
code, don't rewrite it.
Microsoft [Dot-Net]: Windows is the app server and Windows is
not expensive. Windows Advanced Server is only $5000. Microsoft and
IBM are driving the web services standards, not Sun. Windows is a
standards-based integration platform and platform integration gives
Dot-Net much better performance than Java. The Dot-Net developer
experience is fantastic. We've got multi-language support, the best
web application development environment ever in ASP.NET, ADO.NET, and
a strong versioning story.
REBUTTAL: Sam Shim, Sun [J2EE]: Sun was not involved in the Web
services standards because Bill Gates was playing politics. Bill made
sure that Sun did not get invited. Microsoft wants royalty based
licensing included in standards. Microsoft wants to charge for every
packet of information and monopolize the internet.
Q2: show and tell how you support web services?
Greg Ackerman, IBM [J2EE]: Websphere supports "on demand"
computing which allows you to compose your applications as reusable
services. Let's look at a demo of creating a web services using
Websphere Studio (shows an AVI animation of Websphere Studio). Let's
build a stock quote web service. You can build in Websphere Studio and
then use a Dot-Net client to access the web service.
Mark Fleury, JBoss [J2EE]: This is when I go Phbbbbtbphphppph
(makes a loud farting sound with his lips). Web services is totally
vendor driven and all hype, but JBoss supports it fully. We integrate
Axis. I don't have much else to say. Let me ask you some questions.
How many people do Java and have a Java app in production? (20 or 30
people raise their hands) How many people do Dot-Net and have a
Dot-Net app in production? (20 or 30 people raise hands) How
many people have a app that uses both Dot-Net and Java at the same
time? (nobody raises their hands) See? This
interoperability stuff is just vendor noise. You need to avoid
serialization and avoid RMI and remember SOAP is the biggest dog of
them all. B2B will not work. I worked with SAP once and found that
these guys can't even create a common object model across one company.
B2B vendors are never going to be able to create object models that
cross industries.
Richard Lee, Borland [Dot-Net]: Let's use Control Center to
create a web services. You just set the project type to C# and you are
off. You can add a class using UML notation and the code is
generated automatically. If you change the code, the diagram changes.
If you change the diagram, the code changes. You can use a wizard to
make any object into a web service.
Kenny Jones, MS [Dot-Net]: Analysts say that Microsoft has the
best support for Web services. We support web services through our
entire product line from Office, MS SQL, and MSMQ, to BizTalk, Excel,
etc. Look at you you do web services in Dot-Net Studio. You just add
an attribute to your object and it becomes a web services. Let's look
at how you use a web service in Dot-Net studio. You just add a "web
reference" and then you have a proxy object that you can use to call a
web service.
Sam Shin, Sun [J2EE]: Web services is like teenage sex:
everybody talks about it but nobody is doing it. There are three
phases of web services adoption: 1) simple (now), 2) Enterprise
Application Integration (beginning) and 3) Business web services
(2004). #3 is the most important and Sun will support it through
J2EE, UBL, ebXML, and the Liberty Alliance. It is very easy to
create web services by exposing EJBs, here is how you do it in
Netbeans (shows a wizard).
REBUTTAL: Greg Ackerman, IBM [J2EE]: the analysts are mixed on
who is the leader in web services. Some say Microsoft and some say
IBM. IBM does web services for many more customers than Microsoft
does.
REBUTTAL: Mark Fleury, JBoss [J2EE]: IBM is much better
on standards than MS.
REBUTTAL: Microsoft [Dot-Net]: J2EE support for web
services is irrelevant. App server vendors and open source software is
pushing web services much harder than Sun.
Q3: how do you support building apps for hundreds of thousands of
users?
Mark Fleury, JBoss [J2EE]: To support big applications you need
grid computing, but grids are too expansive when you must pay for
software licenses. You also need caching and JBoss has great support
for caching. Don't use serialization. Use caching. Also, you need to
integrate the stack within one virtual machine. Dow Jones uses
JBoss to support 10,000 clients.
Richard Lee, Borland [Dot-Net]: How do you build N-Tier
apps? You need to use modeling and code generation. You need to
use Model Driven Architecture (MDA). Here is a demo of MDA in Together
Control Center.
Kenny Jones, MS [Dot-Net]: We support this by the scalability
of the Windows platform with load balancing, clustering, and caching
built into ASP.Net that allows you to easily cache pages and portions
of pages. Also with distributed session state and the ADO disconnected
data set. You need technology, but you also need the knowledge and you
can get teh knowledge from the MSDN program and Microsoft Patterns and
Practices. Look at all of these customers who use Microsoft to support
giant customer bases Merril Lynch, London stock Exchange, etc.). To
summarize, the platform is scalable and the knowledge is
available.
Sam Shin, Sun [J2EE]: Java has the scalability. Sun has 64-bit
support in the Java VM. When will Microsoft have that? One VM can
scale up to 100 processors, X RAM, and X threads. Tremendous
scalability of just one Java VM. J2EE is all about scalability and
reliability. J2EE vendors compete on scalability and reliability to
benefit you. Dot-Net is constrained by Windows, Dot-Net is not
proven, Dot-Net is single-vendor lock-in. Why should you be the
Dot-Net guinea pig?
Greg Ackerman, IBM [J2EE]: IBM has a great deal of experience
in distributed computing (CORBA, Encina, etc.). J2EE is designed
for this stuff. Remember the case studies. Java and VMs
are scalable.
REBUTTAL: Microsoft [Dot-Net]: The analysts say that
portability across J2EE app servers is going to become more and more
difficult. Java app servers do contain vendor lock-in features.
Java allows you to scale to bigger more expensive hardware. With
Dot-Net you won't need to do that, you can stick with the hardware you
already have.
REBUTTAL: Mark Fleury, JBoss [J2EE]: The EJB spec does not give
you what you need to scale, you need the cache. The spec is fighting
the implementation here. J2EE is not moving fast enough. We need
Aspect Oriented Programming, from Xerox, where all good things
emanate. Dot-Net does not have what it takes here either: ADO sucks
and Dot-Net caching is not there.
Q4: explain your platform's security system?
Richard Weeks, NetEdge [Dot-Net]: Dot-Net provides code-access
security. This allows you to say where what a piece of code is allowed
to do. For example, if you have a consultant that you don't trust, you
can lock his code down so that it does not threaten you. Encryption is
built in. ASP.Net has forms based security. No more buffer
overflows because of the Dot-Net runtime. Microsoft is putting a big
emphasis on integrated securty.
Kenny Jones, MS [Dot-Net]: Windows security vulnerability is a
myth. Security is an industry wide problem, not Microsoft
problem. Windows has fewer CERT security advisories than Sun or
Redhat. Microsoft has a serious "trustworthy computing" initiative
going on. Microsoft won the Open Hack 4.0 contest. Let me
show you how code that is downloaded from the internet is treated
differently than code that lives on your hard-drive. See: this
downloaded code is not allowed to run.
Sam Shim, Sun [J2EE]: Security IS a Microsoft problem. Security
must be built-in from the beginning. You cannot just bolt it on as an
afterthought. Look at the passport fiasco. Microsoft's Passport
identity management system was centralized, single-point-of-failure,
controlled by Microsoft, and single point-of-attack. No wonder
everybody hated it and it failed. The Liberty Alliance on the
other hand is a federated system, much better. There are 52,000
viruses for Windows and the analysts say it is time to switch away
from Windows based web servers. Viruses are very expensive. The ILOVEU
virus costs us $1 billion dollars. NIMBDA costs $2.6 billion.
Recently, Microsoft's Craig Mundie said "we've been thinking about
security for almost three years now." Microsoft has been in
business for 27 years. It took them 24 years to realized that security
is important.
Greg Ackerman, IBM [J2EE]: Good for Microsoft! They finally
realize that security is important, but security needs to be built-in
from the start. Look at Dot-Net security: sandboxing,
code-access security, not exactly novel concepts. Dot-Net security is
just a copy of Java security. IBM is cooperating with Microsoft
on Web services security.
Mark Fleury, JBoss [J2EE]: UNIX has had better security than
Windows for many years. Security cannot be bolted on. Java
security is excellent. JBoss did JAAS security years ago, before all
of the other app server vendors. JBoss can also use interceptors
to add additional security.
REBUTTAL: Sam Shin, Sun [J2EE]: Microsoft FUD #9 is that
Dot-Net is secure. Dot-Net depends on COM+ which is not managed code
and is therefore unsecure. C# permits unsafe and unsecure code.
Passport has already been hacked.
Closing Statements
MS [Dot-Net]: Let's take a look at what it takes to build a
mobile web app, one with an adaptive UI that looks different depending
on which device you use to access it. Let me cut-and-paste some code
here and let's try to run it. Oh no, the Dot-Net server is not
responding (his computer appears to lock-up). Analysts say that
C# is going to be the number #1 language in two years.
Mark Fleury, JBoss [J2EE]: C# to be the #1 language in two
years? You're freaking kidding me. Dot-Net has some good features, but
multi-language support is just cute, no more. Without portability off
of the Windows platform, Dot-Net will go nowhere.
Sam Shim, Sun [J2EE]: Java is the most powerful development
technology ever. There are 3 million Java developers, 65 million
Java enabled phones, 8 million lines of Java source contributed to
open source, etc. etc. The development resources are all free: open
source software is almost all Java, tutorials, knowledge base,
community!
Greg Ackerman, IBM [J2EE]: C# is great, very Java like.
Make the rational choice (no pun intended). VB.Net has a big learning
curve, even for veteran VB programmers. C# does too, so why
don't you just go directly to Java. We will welcome you into the
community. Come on out the the Websphere Users Group and the Java
Users Group meetings in the Park.
Mark Fleury, JBoss [J2EE]: JBoss is a responsible, moral,
and open player. Let JBoss be the standard, not Dot-Net or J2EE.
Richard Weeks, NetEdge [Dot-Net]: We keep hearing about free
this and free that. Open source is not free. Support costs
money. Multi-language is not just a cute feature. Each language
has it's own unique advantages and disadvantages. C# and Java are
different. C# is better.
3 Die in Shootout Between U.N. Police in
Kosovo
3 Die in Shootout Between U.N. Police in
Kosovo
04/17/2004 06:03 PMTwo Americans working with the United Nations in Kosovo were killed
when a Jordanian officer, also working with the United Nations, opened
fire on them.
GeForce FX 5900XT Shootout
GeForce FX 5900XT Shootout
06/12/2004 05:24 PMThe Athlon 64 Motherboard Shootout
The Athlon 64 Motherboard Shootout
01/26/2004 05:23 PMDefcon Wi-Fi shootout results
Defcon Wi-Fi shootout results
08/04/2004 01:47 PM
Wireless tech guru and pal 'o' BoingBoing
Frank Keeney sends word of results
from the annual WiFi shootout (an event at
Defcon that seeks to determine just how far an 802.11 WLAN range can
extend). And here are the winners, according to event organizer Dave:
3 teenagers from Ohio used Orinoco Gold 30 milliwatt USB
adapters mounted on the feedpoints of two 10 foot dishes, and shot
55.1 miles.
Yes, that's fifty-five point one miles! This is a new world's record
for an unamplified shot! Complete details will be in a press release,
which should come out in the next few days.
Link to Wi-Fi Shootout
home page.
read the article carefully dumbass..it
mentions the price in Rs..and it says
its the STREET PRICE!!
read the article carefully dumbass..it
mentions the price in Rs..and it says
its the STREET PRICE!!
09/08/2004 01:14 AMTechTree Sep 8 2004 5:56AM GMT
In The Broadband Battle Between Speed
And Price, Customers Choose Price
In The Broadband Battle Between Speed
And Price, Customers Choose Price
12/09/2003 03:39 PMBack in October we noted that DSL and cable providers were trying to
differe
ntiate themselves from each other. The DSL providers were
focusing on being the low cost provider, while the cable guys wanted
to be the high speed providers. At the time, we pointed out that this
was likely to backfire on the cable companies. People like the speed
of broadband, but for most applications there's a "good enough" speed
- and many people want it more for the always on connection than the
speed itself. It's looking like we were right. The latest study
shows that, despite cable's commanding lead in the US,
many
more people are signing up for DSL these days because of the lower
price. It's the basic "good enough" argument. What DSL offers is
good enough for what most people want to do with their connections
now. Also, the speed difference is minimal right now. You don't get
that much faster speeds with cable, and there's not much you can
currently do with that extra bandwidth. It used to be that people
would sign up so they could download songs, but the music industry is
cracking down on that enough that it's become less of a draw for many
subscribers as well.
3 U.N. Police Die in Kosovo Jail
Shootout (AP)
3 U.N. Police Die in Kosovo Jail
Shootout (AP)
04/17/2004 08:32 PMAP - A Jordanian policeman opened fire on a group of international
U.N. police in Kosovo on Saturday, killing two Americans before he was
killed when officers returned fire. Ten American officers and an
Austrian were wounded.
External TV Tuners/PVR devices: 3-way
shootout
External TV Tuners/PVR devices: 3-way
shootout
12/24/2004 12:55 PMTV Tuners for the PC have existed for a long time but with the ever
increasing popularity of TiVo-like services and the possibility of
replicating such features on your Windows PC with little effort and a
small investment, tuners have been getting a lot of attention this
year.
TechSpot takes on three different products for this shootout, all of
them external devices which should offer extra versatility versus its
internal counterparts. The first is a unit from Transcend, which is
called the TV-Box. Next on the docket will be a unit from Digistor.
And finally, the largest of the bunch is the RTV VEG-N Video
Entertainment Generator.
These are no frills units that allow you to watch television on your
monitor, or play an Xbox game or two. How about a night at the movies,
right on your laptop? Need a place to connect your camcorder to, and
record the video? Do you like to pause and record live television? And
guess what? It’s pretty darn cheap.

View:
External TV Tuners / PVR: 3-way shootout @
TechSpotRead full story...Xbox Shootout: Doom 3 vs. Halo 2
Xbox Shootout: Doom 3 vs. Halo 2
04/09/2005 07:41 AMAbcnews.go.com - Fri Apr 8, 05:32 pm GMT
U.N. Police Wounded in Kosovo Shootout
(AP)
U.N. Police Wounded in Kosovo Shootout
(AP)
04/17/2004 11:25 AMAP - At least seven international police officers were wounded in a
shootout Saturday near a prison in northern Kosovo, a U.N. spokesman
and a Serb doctor said. An American woman was in critical condition.
Audio Codec Quality Shootout
Audio Codec Quality Shootout
04/09/2004 04:12 PMWMA, Ogg, AAC, MP3: They all have their strengths and weaknesses and
everyone has their favorite. We set out to find out which one sounds
best not by expert listeners in an artificial lab environment,
but under normal listening conditions by normal people.
Dual Channel Memory Shootout
Dual Channel Memory Shootout
07/15/2004 10:27 PM"the first Gurus v. Bloggers Design
Shootout"
"the first Gurus v. Bloggers Design
Shootout"
04/10/2004 09:49 PMDefcon Wifi Shootout Contest
Defcon Wifi Shootout Contest
06/13/2004 02:36 AMGet ready for the second annual "Defcon Wifi Shootout Contest", July
30 - August 1, 2004, at this year's Defcon in Vegas.
The goal of this year's contest is to achieve the greatest possible
connect distance between two 802.11b stations through innovative
engineering and antenna design. Wonderful prizes and fun are
available to all who participate!
Link (
via socalwug)
Armed Forces Journal Shootout Videos
Armed Forces Journal Shootout Videos
04/09/2004 03:55 PMJOEL JOHNSON -- Do you want to see a 35-second slo-mo video of a
blended metal bullet liberating a slab of roast beef of all cohesion?
Yes. Yes, you do. The Armed Forces Journal Shootout serves as a sort
of tradeshow for weapon-and-ammunition manufacturers and military
buyers. AFJ was kind...
Defcon Wi-Fi Shootout: Sniper Sights and
55 Miles
Defcon Wi-Fi Shootout: Sniper Sights and
55 Miles
08/04/2004 11:19 AMDefcon, the hacker conference in Las Vegas held each year, established
what might be a world record in Wi-Fi links: 55.1 miles: I wouldn't
want to be standing between (or near) the two points, but it's a great
achievement in the best hacker tradition. The winners of the second
annual Defcon contest were teenagers--even better! I didn't realize
the Guinness Book folks were monitoring these kinds of records; they
say the world distance record is 192 miles, but it required a Swedish
weather balloon. (Or a weather balloon in Sweden, to sound less
kinky.) Let's not forget the Snipe Yagi, a Yagi antenna mounted inside
what looks like a rifle with sniper sights....
Shootout Kills 2 Ariz. Officers, Wounds
1 (AP)
Shootout Kills 2 Ariz. Officers, Wounds
1 (AP)
08/29/2004 03:16 AMAP - Two Phoenix police officers were killed and a third wounded
Saturday night during a shootout at an apartment complex, authorities
said.
Dual CPU Shootout: Opteron versus Xeon
Dual CPU Shootout: Opteron versus Xeon
12/04/2003 10:50 AMFive Dead in Peru Police Siege Shootout
Five Dead in Peru Police Siege Shootout
01/02/2005 11:00 AMReuters via Wired News Jan 2 2005 1:42PM GMT
Spamassassin Beats CRM-114 In Anti-Spam
Shootout
Spamassassin Beats CRM-114 In Anti-Spam
Shootout
06/22/2004 11:37 PMFour Confirmed Dead in Peru Police
Shootout
Four Confirmed Dead in Peru Police
Shootout
01/02/2005 01:57 PMReuters via Wired News Jan 2 2005 2:43PM GMT
Grok Description matches for 3D Graphics Price-Performance Shootout
GrokA matches for 3D Graphics Price-Performance Shootout
3D Graphics Price-Performance Shootout