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tonikoro wrote:Don't you mean 2.7 dual G5? -
As currently there is no 2.7 G4 in the apple line up in desktops nor PBooks?
-One, where does this leave classic support (even though there is only one app I use in classic, it's still vital as fuck to me)?
Where is the 64bit support going to be in an Intel based Mac, as we have yet to really see a 64Bit Pentium where AMD already had them beat?
I'm going to run with the horses and see how this pentium/OSX thing plays out, but I'm gonna sit tight on my G5 and G4-17" for the next 3 years not giving a shit.
FG Lurker wrote:I bought the Athlon 64 3500+. I can upgrade the AMD system with a BIOS flash and a quick (<20minute) CPU swap.
emperor wrote:FG Lurker wrote:I bought the Athlon 64 3500+. I can upgrade the AMD system with a BIOS flash and a quick (<20minute) CPU swap.
Im running on that same chip at the moment - will you sell off your used cpu 2nd hand once you remove it?
emperor wrote:Ive got 1GB of ram running - and i find its more then enough - using 2 and 4 gbs of ram seems overkill dont you think?
cstaylor wrote:My Dual 2Ghz G5 arrived today. Very nice... next step is adding another SATA drive so I can RAID them for faster performance.
cstaylor wrote:FCP 4.0, plus RAID-0 is faster for booting.
And 2 10,000RPM WD Raptor drives in RAID-0 config will be event faster.FG Lurker wrote:cstaylor wrote:FCP 4.0, plus RAID-0 is faster for booting.
A single 10,000rpm WD Raptor SATA drive will be faster than RAID0 for boot. Also a *lot* more reliable as it is a single server-class drive vs two desktop class ones.
Apple negotiate for a new processor chip. Being Apple, they want "most favored customer" treatment, with fab-fill margins for the vendor. What's more, they want this for what amounts to a custom processor chip, so any oversupply will just sit on the shelf until Apple decides they want them, and sometimes Apple will let them sit a while to see if they can get a price break -- it always pays to remind the world that one is, after all, the Steve Jobs.
With terms like that, custom chip vendors only start as many lots as the customer contracts to accept right off the line. Apple, not exactly rolling in cash, isn't going to highball that estimate. In fact, they play it conservative and only order a small startup batch. The rest follows, of course: the product sells, Apple orders more to cover the demand, and IBM tells them that processors have a 6-month lead time.
Apple complains publicly about IBM (does this sound like anyone we know?) IBM, being grown-ups, doesn't say anything that might be perceived as negative about a customer.
Lather, rinse, repeat.
Well, time goes by and IBM has other customers who actually pay up front for custom designs and who don't insist on having IBM tailor their product roadmap around a few million units a year. Apple again demands that IBM dedicate their CPU design teams to making an Apple special that will never generate much revenue. If IBM won't play, Apple will go to Intel.
IBM does a Rhett Butler, and the rest is history. Note that you aren't hearing one way or the other f rom IBM on this story.
Class bunch, IBM.
First I want to tell you that my powerbooks are brand new, unopened box all listed accessories included and also an 3 years apple care warranty. The invoice will come at the same time with the package.
My buy it now price is the best you could get, including the shipping and insurance taxes. We will pay them because the package will be delivered from Europe. As delivery service we use UPS2daysair service (with insurance and 15 days return policy), because it's the faster. And if you will have a quick payment, we must also have a quick delivery. So that's why we use as a payment method Western Union money transfer, the fastest and also very secure way of sending money. So, if you agree with my terms I'm sure that we can close the deal as soon as possible.
Waiting your quick answer right now
emperor wrote:FG Lurker wrote:Sounds like a hacked account to me...
does that happen often?
FG Lurker wrote:emperor wrote:FG Lurker wrote:Sounds like a hacked account to me...
does that happen often?
It's not rare.
You have to watch carefully and compare what is being sold with what the guy usually sells.
Also prices that are too good to be true are a big warning, as are email addresses displayed in the auction to encourage direct contact instead of via eBay's email system. Insistence on prepayment via Western Union or Bank Transfer are other big ripoff signs, especially if the seller's other auctions list PayPal.
In particular if you see two or more "oddities" then you should report the auction to eBay and stay away. In this case I would say 100% for sure the auction is a scam.
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