Its unlikely that you'll be able to install linux on the same RAID as windows. This is because most raid cards unload alot of the work on the processor and so the raid is done in the OS not by the hardware. This means that getting two OS's to use the same raid is next to impossible. Also...
Ubuntu/Kubuntu/Xubuntu are all pretty much the same. The only differences are which GUI is enabled by default (and its trivial to install all three on the same system). Beryl is not enabled by default.
I wouldn't go that far. In all likelihood what will happen is that a GPU will get added to a CPU as another core (or maybe add GPU functions into a CPU core). But regardless we'll still have frames rendered the same way, we just won't have a separate discreet chip that does it.
I'm no sound guru but have you tried shielding the wires connecting the speaker to the comp? The only scenario I can see with a mouse causing sound in the speakers is with a wireless mouse and sensitive speakers picking up the interference...
IIRC it started with the Pentium III 1.13GHz fiasco. Then Tom was quite critical of RDRAM and the P4 since they basically ramped up clock speeds at the cost of performance... most enthusiasts would agree with these points, but Tom managed to piss off Intel PR people. Good luck running a...
Just for reference I don't have flash (64 bit) and I have 4GB of ram with 2 GB swap (well I thought I had 2 GB swap, turns out its not activated since I was fiddling around with my drives and plugged them in differently... oops :0)
I was looking for backup solutions for a similiar setup. Frankly the cheapest thing I could find was just using another hdd. Tape drives are insanely expensive, I have no clue why, should be simpler than a hdd, and for more space you just need a longer tape... frankly if I do have a multi disk...
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