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As many of you know, I've been shopping for a new computer. My old one is ...well, it's never run well, and it's given me a distaste for Asus and nVidia products. Its K8U-X motherboard supposedly supports SATA, but I found that I had to have a PATA drive to hold the boot record, since the weird driver methodology wouldn't allow the SATA
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This seems like it has the advantage of slots (to the casinos, at least) of not requiring as much human tending, while still allowing those immensely popular table games. Casinos are devoting more and more of their floor space to slots, which don't require sick time, benefits, raises, aren't unionized, and work 24 hours a day uncomplainingly
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One wonders if their final Twitter post would be "Head through windshield, slowly bleeding out"?
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Realneil speaks to my condition*. Since my favorite game doesn't take advantage of an SLI or Crossfire setup, I went with a single GPU slot motherboard, and chose the Sapphire 5850; at $265 it was a good deal from Amazon, assuming it ever ships. Couple comments though: Why no 6-monitor capability? Since this is essentially two 58xx cards in one
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Gosh, I would think that with that incredible 3G coverage, they wouldn't have a problem with people terminating. {blinks innocently}
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Eh, this is no great innovation. I've had a phone that splits in two for several years now. Well, OK, it's just got a bad hinge.
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>On another note, aren't IPhones unfriendly to blind people as well? iPhones, Androids, Pres, etc. etc. Pretty much anything with a touch screen that doesn't allow guided navigation of controls. And don't think that the existence of a mechanical joypad or keypad lets you do this-- most smartphones (the ones I've reviewed, at least
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As would I, and I'm not even in the "anti-Apple" contingent. Just platform-neutral and looking for a balance of quality and value. I have had good customer service and tech support from LG, and the best CRT I ever had was one of theirs, so they've earned my trust. I'll be looking into this puppy! Hmm, wonder if it does eBooks?
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Or, the menus could be read depending on an option in the preferences. Blind people don't generally mind having someone set things like that up, as long as they can do the majority of the work themselves. They could even ship the units with the audible menu option turned on, and let people turn it off with a couple of button presses if they wanted
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This looks (from the video, at least) to be a great use of several different technologies, integrated into one unit. The voice is also way better than the Book Port, the ebook audio-reader one of my friends favors. I was at first a little disappointed with the screen size, but Intel did scalable fonts right, and it looks like it's without the artificial