So many apps have memory leaks,
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Additionally, the forum gets a "bounty" for various offers at Amazon.com. For instance, if you sign up for a 30 day free trial of Amazon Prime, the forum will earn $3. Same if you buy a Prime membership for someone else as a gift! Trying out or purchasing an Audible membership will earn the forum a few bucks. And creating an Amazon Business account will send a $15 commission our way.
If you have an Amazon Echo, you need a free trial of Amazon Music!! We will earn $3 and it's free to you!
Your personal information is completely private, I only get a list of items that were ordered/shipped via the link, no names or locations or anything. This does not cost you anything extra and it helps offset the operating costs of this forum, which include our hosting fees and the yearly registration and licensing fees.
Stay safe and well and thank you for your participation in the Forum and for your support!! --Deborah
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OT: Technology and Geek Stuff Thread
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Originally posted by unknown lions fan View PostOnly 4GB of RAM? As cheap as RAM is, I'd always go with 8GB. If it's a high markup on a new PC, you can add it aftermarket on the cheap.
So many apps have memory leaks, especially web browsing.
That said Memory is cheap. The more the merrier. But when buying prepackaged PC's, the higher the memory, the uselessly higher the specs of everything, the higher the price. So yeah upgrading later is the smarter move and it usually ridiculously easy on most desktops and a good portion of laptop (though you go much father outside those two it gets much harder or impossible). But the major point is 4 GB is good enough for what he is looking for so he doesn't need to shoot for something that has more then that out of the box.
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Originally posted by unknown lions fan View PostOnly 4GB of RAM? As cheap as RAM is, I'd always go with 8GB. If it's a high markup on a new PC, you can add it aftermarket on the cheap.
So many apps have memory leaks, especially web browsing.Got Kneecaps?
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Life on Mars? This is pretty geeky stuff right here!
Curiosity Rover’s Secret Historic Breakthrough? Speculation Centers on Organic Molecules
Much of the internet is buzzing over upcoming “big news” from NASA’s Curiosity rover, but the space agency’s scientists are keeping quiet about the details.
The report comes by way of the rover’s principal investigator, geologist John Grotzinger of Caltech, who said that Curiosity has uncovered exciting new results from a sample of Martian soil recently scooped up and placed in the Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) instrument.
“This data is gonna be one for the history books. It’s looking really good,” Grotzinger told NPR in an segment published Nov. 20. Curiosity’s SAM instrument contains a vast array of tools that can vaporize soil and rocks to analyze them and measure the abundances of certain light elements such as carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen – chemicals typically associated with life.
The mystery will be revealed shortly, though. Grotzinger told Wired through e-mail that NASA would hold a press conference about the results during the 2012 American Geophysical Union meeting in San Francisco from Dec. 3 to 7. Because it’s so potentially earth-shaking, Grotzinger said the team remains cautious and is checking and double-checking their results. But while NASA is refusing to discuss the findings with anyone outside the team, especially reporters, other scientists are free to speculate.
“If it’s going in the history books, organic material is what I expect,” says planetary scientist Peter Smith from the University of Arizona’s Lunar and Planetary Laboratory. Smith is formerly the principal investigator on a previous Mars mission, the Phoenix lander, which touched down at the Martian North Pole in 2008. “It may be just a hint, but even a hint would be exciting.”
Smith added that he is not in contact with anyone from the Curiosity team about their results and offered his assessment as an informed outside researcher.
Organic molecules are those that contain carbon and are potential indicators of life. During its mission, Phoenix heated a sample of soil to search for organics but these efforts were stymied by the presence of perchlorates, chemical salts that sit in the Martian soil. Perchlorates react to heat and destroy any complex organic molecules, leaving only carbon dioxide, which is abundant in the Martian atmosphere.
The Viking landers, which explored opposite sides of Mars in the late 1970s, also conducted a search for organic molecules and came up empty. For decades afterward, astronomers considered Mars to be a dead planet, with conditions not very conducive to life. After the results from Phoenix, scientists realized that perchlorates were probably messing with those earlier findings as well, and could account for their negative outcome.
Curiosity’s suite of laboratory instruments are able to slowly heat a sample in a way that doesn’t trigger the perchlorates. They can also weigh any molecules present, determining how much carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen they are made from. Simple organic compounds wouldn’t be completely shocking, said Smith, since these probably come from meteorites originating in the asteroid belt and probably are around on present-day Mars. But they would indicate that the building blocks for life are present on Mars and might only need the addition of water, which Mars had in the past, in order to produce organisms.
“If they found signatures of a very complex organic type, that would be astounding,” said Smith, since they would likely be leftovers from complex life forms that once roamed Mars. But the odds of finding such a startling result in a sample of sand scooped from a random dune are “very, very low,” Smith said.
Smith cautioned against speculating too much, since rumors have a way of spreading rapidly when it comes to any discussion of potential life on Mars. During his tenure on the Phoenix mission, his team was evaluating the interesting perchlorate results, which they kept secret during analysis. Rumors got out and then became worse and worse when some unsubstantiated report claimed a member of his team meeting was meeting with the White House.
“When you keep things secret, people start thinking all kinds of crazy things,” he said.2015 AAL - Ezekiel "Double Digit Sacks" Ansah.
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Originally posted by CaptainBlue View PostMy smart phone upgraded to ICS Android 4.0.4 this morning. It seems to be draining my battery very quickly. Also some of my apps don't work properly. Anybody know how to fix these issues.
turn off location services, auto updates, check your brightness factor, make sure bluetooth wifi are off (at least bluetooth).
of course do a hard power down and bring it back up.
Then look at settings and battery to see what is using the battery.
Update your launcher if you have one to the latest compatible version if you haven 't already.Brand New Detroit Lions
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Originally posted by unknown lions fan View PostOnly 4GB of RAM? As cheap as RAM is, I'd always go with 8GB. If it's a high markup on a new PC, you can add it aftermarket on the cheap.
So many apps have memory leaks, especially web browsing.
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Originally posted by Fraquar View PostPeople need to use that additional memory though. Best use of it is to make a Ram drive and point your browsers cache and temp file directories there. If we are talking about someone that just wants to point and click, they are going to need a little help setting that up.
Just put a newer style SSD drive in for Windows, the swap file, applications and current application data. Leave the 500 GB - 3TB for Archive or pure storage.
I have an Ivy Bridge I5 notebook that only came with 4GB of RAM, I added the Cherryville 520 240GB and have not missed the 4GB I should have added at all. I really can't tell when I am disk thrashing, of course I am putting extra wear on the drive.
From BIOS post to GINA is 6 seconds.
My recommendation is the Intel Cherryville 520 Series, they are 6GB and the Intel toolbox is incredible. It will tune your drive so you don't wear it out (prefetch, making sure Trim is working, disabling defrag etc.
For those of you who just added a SSD drive and haven't tuned it, I know SAMSUNG and INTEL both have toolboxes to tune the drive. If your MFG doesn't have a toolbox then goolge tuning SSD drives, otherwise you are not maximizing performance and you are wearing out the drive.Brand New Detroit Lions
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Originally posted by Tony G View Postshould anything that comes with the SSD installed from the factory be setup already? I'm looking at Dell and Asus
all this means is you will wear the drive out quicker and your performance isn't at optimum.
the below is an updated article
Brand New Detroit Lions
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Reading that article, where on earth do they get the 1 minute and 45 seconds SAVED from starting a non-SSD computer info from? Misinformation of the highest order.
The only computers I've ever used that took anywhere near that long to start were at work, where they are loading the network profile, loading the shit to monitor your ass and allow access to network resources.
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This is pretty cool.
The transition to all monitors being touch monitors is continuing.
Sharp's continuing to push out new displays despite its well-documented financial troubles, and today it's got the LL-S201A model to show us. The 20-inch LED screen supports 10-point multi-touch input, and comes with a stylus which measures 2mm at the tip -- offering greater precision than finger-mimicking nibs of 6mm or more that Sharp says are normally used with capacitive panels. You can stick it on your desk in the standard monitor orientation, but design pros will want to lay it down, although they'll have to be working on a Windows machine (XP and up) as it's not compatible with Cupertino's OS. The 1,920 x 1,080 panel has a 3000:1 contrast ratio and 5ms gray-to-gray response time, and is fed from HDMI- and DisplayPort-ins -- complete with support for MHL on the former. It's due to launch in Japan on January 30th 2013 and, if it comes at a good price, could offer some strong competition to its stylus-friendly peers.Rashean Mathis: "I'm an egg guy. Last year we didn't have (the omelet station). I didn't complain, but I was dying inside."
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More options like that are probably coming. Again I'd wait just a tad longer to wait till the tech and interfaces mature and someone executes a really good one. (I know you don't want to wait for ever).Rashean Mathis: "I'm an egg guy. Last year we didn't have (the omelet station). I didn't complain, but I was dying inside."
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