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piaqt

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Everything posted by piaqt

  1. mine NEVER works for me. Tim can see it, though. (snarl growl spit)
  2. f***ing p***ants!:mad: :blueteam :mad: :blueteam :wail:
  3. Yes i can, but she keeps asking the SAME questions over & again, & I'm TIRED! If there were a tutorial, she could keep it on file and reference it herself (instead of calling me every 5 secs.) Your suggestions are good, and I'll probably have to write the **** thing myself. Oh, well. I'm learning how to teach, Mom's learning to use a PC, and I can probably get a meal or two out of the deal. Plus, it gives us something to talk about. (monumentally overdramatic sigh)
  4. I need a good, non-scary, non-technical overview of basic common-sense secure internet practice. This is for my mom, the PC preemie, and all-around technophobe. The only one comes to mind is Steve Gibson (grc.com) but I think that might be a little much right now.
  5. mother: Nipple Nibbler the Harpoon dog: Urine Tummy the Harpoon husband: Two In The a** the Cum Bucket 1st name: pia last: qt=Fagboy the Jizaholic nephew: Queer Johnny the a** Explorer
  6. http://www.addpro.com/ sitepro or sitepronews (.com, .org, .?)
  7. to get rid of the "add/remove" dialog for program shortcuts?
  8. Well, I haven't. Visual tip: No shortcut arrow, not a shortcut. At least that works for me. Thanks, though. I [i:2ff901ff9f]still[/i:2ff901ff9f] want that annoyance gone, yesterday.:mad:
  9. Whenever you delete a shortcut to program from the desktop, you get that lame "To remove the program, go to add/remove...." message. Anyone know how to disable it? Because "Du-uh!":WTF?:
  10. I got a new mouse (MS wheelmouse optical) with both USB & ps2 adapters. works fine. musta been the minute amount of OJ I splilled on the old one.
  11. not only out more, out to the shrink's;)
  12. Thanks, guys. tris: Will NAV scan for trojans?
  13. My mouse sometime stops responding altogether, for no apparent reason. Yes, I've cleaned it. Un- and re-plugging it in correct this, but... Then there's the opposite: Sometimes I get right-clicks that I didn't do, things opening & closing, ditto, etc. Sounds like what Chris did to his boss's laptop, but if so, I can't find the culprit. Maybe I just need a new mouse. Any ideas?
  14. from http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1103-923125.html Intel slashed the price of Pentium 4 processors for desktops and notebooks over the weekend by up to 53 percent, an annual spring ritual designed to stimulate demand for its premier PC chip. The Santa Clara, Calif.-based chipmaker cut the prices of the desktop versions of the chip by between 12 percent and 43 percent, according to a price list issued by the company. The 2.4GHz version of the chip dropped from $562 to $400, a 29 percent change, while the 2.26GHz and 2.2GHz versions of the chip fell from $423 to $241, a difference of 43 percent. Other Pentium 4s were cut by between 12 percent and 32 percent. Notebook processors dropped even more. Pentium 4 notebook chips have not sold as well as expected, according to analysts, especially in the corporate market. They're primarily used in the thicker "desktop replacement" notebooks, rather than the "thin and light" versions more popular with corporate America. Both price cuts have been expected. The 1.8GHz mobile Pentium 4 fell 48 percent, from $637 to $348, while the 1.7GHz version dropped from $508 to $241, a 53 percent decline. The 1.6GHz version was discounted 51 percent, from $401 to $198. The company also marginally cut prices on Pentium III mobile chips. The price cuts should lead to cheaper PCs. Earlier this year, some PC makers raised prices and changed configurations of some consumer models because of the rising cost of flat-panel LCD monitors and memory--but that trend has largely reversed itself. Although flat-panel monitors remain in tight supply, memory prices have been dropping. Many PC makers have also been increasing the size of their in-store rebates to encourage sales. Advanced Micro Devices, Intel's rival in processors, will likely cut prices to match Intel's cut. AMD typically announces price cuts a day or so after Intel. The Sunnyvale, Calif.-based company is also expected to soon release "Thoroughbred," a faster version of its Athlon chip, made on the 130-nanometer manufacturing process, for desktop computers. The company is currently shipping the chip to PC makers, a spokesman confirmed, and will release the chip to the public shortly. In the past, the company has introduced new chips at Computex, a large computer show in Taipei, where many contract manufacturers and motherboard makers debut new products. The show begins the first week of June. A notebook version of the chip came out in April. The massive spring price cuts for Intel and AMD are something of an annual fixture. In March 2001, Intel executives promised that the Pentium 4, then found only in high-end consumer PCs, would displace the Pentium III in desktops by the end of the year, a rapid turnover of the kind generally accomplished by price reductions. Prices were cut by up to 60 percent in April and May. By the end of 2001, the Pentium 4 had displaced the Pentium III on desktops. The price cuts also put the pinch on AMD's balance sheet. Since the first quarter of 2001, when it turned a profit and saw its market share increase from 17 percent to 21 percent, AMD has posted successive losses due to price cuts and declines in the flash memory business, while its market share has settled down to 18.2 percent. The company has managed, however, to make greater inroads into the notebook and server market.
  15. Thanks, Aaron! I love anything that subverts M$!
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