Trending December 2023 # Quotes Of Note From 2008 # Suggested January 2024 # Top 16 Popular

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So much for holiday spirit Lights! Cameras! Action!

Who cares?

“Let a marketing person loose for 10 minutes and they’ll come up with a category. You can say UMPC or MID, what the hell’s the difference?” — Phil McKinney, then-CTO at Hewlett-Packard, expressing exasperation at the Consumer Electronics Show regarding various terminology used to describe ultramobile PCs.

Feeling Blu

“As you can probably guess, all of us at Sony are feeling blue today. But that’s a good feeling.” — Sony CEO Howard Stringer speaking at CES two days after Warner Bros. announced plans to back Blu-ray Disc.

But there’s another view of Blu-ray

“You know, Blu-ray is a bag of hurt. I don’t mean from a consumer point of view — it’s great to watch movies — but the licensing is so complex. We’re waiting until things settle down and Blu-ray takes off in the marketplace before we burden our customers with the cost of the licensing and the cost of the drives.” — Apple CEO Steve Jobs.

Do no evil Labels

“All these labels — ‘geek’ and ‘nerd’ and ‘mild Asperger’s — are all getting at the same thing. … The Asperger’s brain is interested in things rather than people, and people who are interested in things have given us the computer you’re working on right now.” — Temple Grandin, an associate professor at Colorado State University, on the connection between people with a form of autism called Asperger’s Syndrome and IT professionals.

Shortage? What shortage? A bunch of what?!

“I think the OpenBSD crowd is a bunch of masturbating monkeys, in that they make such a big deal about concentrating on security to the point where they pretty much admit that nothing else matters to them” — Linus Torvalds, with characteristic color explaining why he’s fed up with security companies hyping software vulnerabilities.

Hamilton, Madison, Jay turn in their graves Ouch! That will leave a mark

“When you have an object that extends from the surface of Earth to geosynchronous altitude, every satellite currently in orbit, every piece of debris and every satellite in the future will crash into the elevator. Every one, with no exception.” — Ivan Bekey, a former NASA scientist currently with Bekey Designs, speaking at a “space elevator” conference.

Burp

“It’s not good to have lots of undigested products in your range. Symantec and McAfee both have indigestion.” — Websense CEO Gene Hodges on his company’s plans to eschew the acquisition fervor that hit the enterprise security software market. As for whether Websense would be acquired, Hodges said that’s “in the hands of the gods.”

Application squirts

“All you do is squirt applications to the cloud.” — Richard Payling, Capgemini vice president of global outsourcing regarding a partnership under which is company and chúng tôi will offer application development and hosting services using Amazon’s infrastructure.

Woe unto the engineers From the Yahoo-Microsoft saga

“Until now I naively believed that self-destructive doomsday machines were fictional devices found only in James Bond movies. I never believed that anyone would actually create and activate one in real life. I guess I never knew about [Jerry] Yang and the Yahoo Board,” billionaire investor Carl Icahn, in a June 4 letter to Yahoo Board Chairman Roy Bostock, referring to a severance plan Yahoo adopted shortly after Microsoft made its acquisition bid, and which Icahn termed a poison pill measure to scare Microsoft away.

“To this day I would say that the best thing for Microsoft to do is to buy Yahoo.” — Jerry Yang on Nov. 5, during a keynote appearance at the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco, shortly after the Google search ad deal collapsed and days before announcing he would step down as CEO as soon as a replacement is found.

Tell it, Larry!

“The interesting thing about cloud computing is that we’ve redefined cloud computing to include everything that we already do. I can’t think of anything that isn’t cloud computing with all of these announcements. The computer industry is the only industry that is more fashion-driven than women’s fashion. Maybe I’m an idiot, but I have no idea what anyone is talking about. What is it? It’s complete gibberish. It’s insane. When is this idiocy going to stop?

(Stephen Lawson, James Niccolai and Agam Shah in San Francisco; Fred O’Connor and Elizabeth Heichler in Boston; Juan Carlos Perez in Miami; Sumner Lemon in Singapore; and Jason Snell of Macworld contributed to this round up of 2008 quotes.)

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Samsung Galaxy Note 20: Features We Want From Samsung’S Next Flagship

Want the latest on Note 20 specs, expected price, release date, and more?

Check out our Note 20 rumor hub for the latest leaks

See also: How big is too big?

2. Cameras: Don’t over-do it (also, make sure they work)

The Samsung Galaxy S20 series, and the Ultra in particular, demonstrated how it’s easy to take things too far. Not only was the camera module of the S20 Ultra utterly massive (and gross), but the features of the camera itself were simply over the top.

The centerpiece of the S20 Ultra camera was the 100x zoom, called Space Zoom, which was accomplished thanks to a mix of optics and digital cropping of a high-pixel-count sensor. Anything beyond 10x zoom was unusable. This simply isn’t warranted or required for a modern smartphone. Sure, we want to see good 3x and 5x optical zoom, and perhaps a hybrid 10x zoom that looks good. Anything beyond this is excessive and a waste of tech — and based on the rumor mill, it seems Samsung may now feel the same. We’d rather see the best-possible set of secondary sensors (wide-angle, etc.) accompany the main shooter.

More importantly, we’d rather Samsung make sure the Galaxy Note 20 camera actually works. The S20 Ultra had major issues that have yet to be resolved.

The KISS mantra — keep it simple, stupid — is often the best approach, even when trying to sell a flagship smartphone. Stick to standard, ultra-wide, and telephoto lenses that all deliver results and people will be happy. Leave the gimmicks to the competition.

See also: Camera shootout: S20 Ultra vs Pixel 4 XL

3. Screen: A new rate

It’s time for the Note line to adopt a fast refresh rate. Samsung has long offered Quad HD+ screens on the Note series. These pixel-rich AMOLEDs are among the best available. But the competition has chosen a different spec to fret over: refresh rate. The Note 10 family has the standard refresh rate of 60Hz. This means the screen refreshes 60 times each second. Starting with gaming phones such as the ROG Phone in 2023, and later competing models from OnePlus and even Google, phone makers have jumped to 90Hz and even 120Hz panels. Samsung’s own S20 family offers 120Hz refresh rates.

Why worry about the rate? The faster rate provides a much smoother experience on the screen, particularly when it comes to motion, such as scrolling, panning, and zooming. The 120Hz screens we’ve seen this year are simply luscious. The Galaxy Note 20 needs to jump straight to 120Hz, if not 144Hz or higher. This would make the Galaxy Note 20 a monster gaming phone.

See also: Refresh rates explained

4. Cost: Earthbound pricing

Please, please, Samsung, make the Galaxy Note 20 affordable! The three S20 phones cost $999, $1,199, and $1,399, with options ranging up to $1,599. These prices are out of control, and Samsung got hammered for it.

Unfortunately, Samsung has painted itself into a bit of a corner. It’s hard to introduce a new device that has more tech than its predecessors and happens to cost less. Surely the price will be over $999, but hopefully not more than $1,399. If anything, the dismal sales of the S20 line should have opened Samsung’s eyes a bit to consumers’ dislike for phones that cost as much as — and sometimes more than — laptops.

We know, wishful thinking.

See also: Samsung S20 family better, but at what cost?

5. Unhinged: A fold in store?

The world is waiting for a sequel to last year’s Galaxy Fold, but Samsung has remained quiet about it so far. Could Samsung blend the Note and Fold lines to generate a Note that also folds?

All the rumors for both the Galaxy Note 20 and Galaxy Fold 2 point to traditional sequels that carry over the preceding form factor.

Galaxy Note 5 Vs Note 4: Details And Spec

Galaxy Note 5 vs Note 4: details and spec-war pre-release

Pitting the Galaxy Note 5 against its most recent predecessor, the Galaxy Note 4, we see a device that gets a rather interesting kick in the specs. While the device’s basic premise doesn’t change – it’s still a big phone with a Samsung-made unique stylus inside – the design gets a reboot. Taking after its closest cousin, the Galaxy S6, the detailing on this smartphone becomes refined. Glass instead of plastic, and a return of the metal rim. Now that the form is moving toward elegance rather than worker-friendly, will Note consumers stay the course?

The Galaxy Note 5 has been tipped to work with a frame that’s ever-so-slightly taller than the device it’ll be revealed alongside: the Galaxy S6 Edge Plus. The Galaxy Note 5 will also appear to be slightly wider than the Edge Plus, but this will mostly be due to the “off the edge” look of the Edge device – they’ll be roughly the same amount of millimeters across.

The specifications you’re seeing here were gathered by SlashGear by a variety of inside (anonymous) sources, leaks, and rumors over the past several weeks. To the best of our (pre-official) knowledge, this is what the Galaxy Note 5 will consist of:

Galaxy Note 5• Display: 5.7-inch 1440×2560 pixel Super AMOLED• Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 810 or Samsung Exynos 7422• RAM: 3 or 4GB• Internal Storage: 32, 64, 128GB• Expandable Storage: YES – 128GB*• Battery: 3220 mAh• Front Camera: 8-megapixels, 120-degree wide-angle lens, 1080p video• Back Camera: 16-megapixels (similar/same sensor as Galaxy S6), 1080p 60fps video, 4k video• S Pen: YesGalaxy Note 4• Display: 5.7-inch 1440×2560 pixel Super AMOLED• Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 805 or Samsung Exynos 5433• RAM: 3GB• Internal Storage: 32GB• Expandable Storage: 64GB• Battery: 3220 mAh• Front Camera: 3.7-megapixels, 1080p video• Back Camera: 16-megapixels, 1080p 60fps video, 4k video• S Pen: Yes

Unfortunate for those that are super-power-users, it does not appear as though the Galaxy Note 5 will be delivered with expandable storage. Users will have to opt for the 128GB edition or work with cloud storage for massive amounts of data.*

*UPDATE: The newest leak from just this morning suggests that at least one version of the Galaxy Note 5 DOES have a microSD slot, this time able to carry up to 128GB cards!

Release of the Samsung Galaxy Note 5 is rumored to happen on either the 12th or the 13th of August, 2023. That’s just a few weeks from now. There we’ll also likely see information about the Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge Plus as well as the Samsung Gear A smartwatch.

The images you see here are a combination of photos and renderings. The photos are by SlashGear, while the renderings (of the Galaxy Note 5) are by an artist by the name of Ivo Maric. You can see more of Maric’s work via his Instagram at BeeSpline

You can see a variety of bits of additional information about the Samsung Galaxy Note 5 and its potential release in just a few weeks through the timeline you see below. This timeline consists of mainly non-official information, though Samsung’s own website bones have let loose several specs on their own just this week.

Root Galaxy Note 4 Sm

The Samsung Galaxy Note 4 SM-N910U is the Chinese variant of the device running on Samsung’s own Exynos5 chipset. The device doesn’t support LTE bands. Chainfire’s CF Auto Root works for most Samsung devices, and the Galaxy Note 4 root has also been achieved using the same root package. CF Auto Root uses Chainfire’s own SuperSU app to manage Superuser permissions for root access to apps and ADB.

Below are the rooting instructions for Galaxy Note 4 SM-N910U. Make sure you follow the instructions word-to-word for a fail-proof Galaxy Note 4 root.

Contents show

WARNING!

GUIDE: ROOT GALAXY NOTE 4 SM-N910U

STEP 0: CHECK DEVICE MODEL NO.

STEP 1: BACKUP YOUR DEVICE

STEP 2: INSTALL LATEST DRIVER

STEP 3: INSTALLATION INSTRUCTIONS

ROOT PACKAGE INFO

Name

Warranty Void Warranty.

Stability Stable Without Any Issues

Root Manager App SuperSU. It manages root permissions for apps on the device.

Credits Chainfire.

  WARNING!

Warranty may be void of your device if you follow the procedures given on this page.

You only are responsible for your device. We won’t be liable if any damage occurs to your device and/or its components.

  GUIDE: ROOT GALAXY NOTE 4 SM-N910U

Before you begin with guide instructions below, make sure your android device is adequately charged — at least 50% battery of the device.

  STEP 0: CHECK DEVICE MODEL NO.

To make sure your device is eligible with this, you must first confirm its model no. in ‘About device’ option under Settings. Another way to confirm model no. is by looking for it on the packaging box of your device. It must be SM-N910U!

This guide is specifically for the Samsung Galaxy Note 4 with model no. SM-N910U. Do not use the procedures discussed here on any other device of Samsung or any other company. You have been warned!

  STEP 1: BACKUP YOUR DEVICE

Back up important data and stuff before you start playing around here as there are chances you might lose your apps and app-data (app settings, game progress, etc.), and in rare case, files on the internal memory, too.

For help on Backup and Restore, check out our exclusive page on that linked right below.

► ANDROID BACK UP AND RESTORE GUIDE: APPS AND TIPS

  STEP 2: INSTALL LATEST DRIVER

You must have proper and working driver installed on your windows computer to be able to successfully root your Galaxy Note 4. If you are not sure, check the link below.

► SAMSUNG GALAXY NOTE 4 DRIVERS INSTALLATION GUIDE

   STEP 3: INSTALLATION INSTRUCTIONS   DOWNLOADS

Download the CF Auto Root file given below and transfer it to a separate folder on your computer (just to keep things tidy, that is).

  CF AUTO ROOT FILE   STEP-BY-STEP GUIDE

Important Note: Backup important files stored on internal SD card of your device, so that in case a situation arises requiring you to do a factory reset after rooting, which might delete internal sd card too, your files will remain safe on PC.

Extract/Unzip the CF-Auto-Root file, CF-Auto-Root-trhplte-trhpltexx-smn910u.zip on your computer (using 7-zip free software, preferably). You’ll get the following files:

CF-Auto-Root-trhplte-trhpltexx-smn910u.tar.md5

Odin3-v3.07.exe

Odin3.ini

tmax.dll

zlib.dll

Disconnect the Galaxy Note 4 from PC if it is connected.

Boot your Galaxy Note 4 into Download Mode:

Power off your phone first and wait for 6-7 seconds after display is off.

Press and hold these 3 buttons together until you see Warning! screen: Volume Down + Power + Home.

If you don’t get the Added! message, here are some troubleshooting tips:

Make sure you have installed driver for Galaxy Note 4 as said above.

If you have already installed driver, then uninstall them and reinstall back.

Connect using a different USB port on your PC.

Try a different USB cable. The original cable that came with your phone should work best, if not, try any other cable that’s new and of good quality.

Reboot phone and PC and then try again.

Load the recovery file (extracted in Step 1) into Odin as instructed below:

Now in the Option section of Odin, make sure that Re-Partition box is unchecked. (Auto Reboot and F. Reset Time boxes remain checked, while all other boxes remain unchecked.)

Double check the above two steps.

If you see FAIL message instead of the RESET or PASS in Odin’s top left box, that’s a problem. Try this now: disconnect your Galaxy Note 4 from PC, close Odin, remove phone’s battery and put it back inside in 3-4 seconds, open Odin and then repeat from Step 3 of this guide again.

Also, If device is Stuck at setup connection or on any other process, then too, try this: disconnect your Galaxy Note 4 from PC, close Odin, remove phone’s battery and put it back inside in 3-4 seconds, open Odin and then repeat from Step 3 of this guide again.

NOTE: It may happen that your phone doesn’t automatically boot into recovery and root your phone. In that case follow the following above procedure except that in Step 7, Auto Reboot option is un-checked and then the instructions below:

Pull out the battery and re-insert it.

Boot your Galaxy Note 4 into Recovery Mode: Press and hold these 3 buttons together: Volume Up + Power + Home.

Now, this will start the rooting process and will reboot the phone automatically when the process is done.

Feedback Us!

It was easy to root Galaxy Note 4 SM-N910U using CF-Auto-Root, right? Let us know how you plan to use root privileges on your Galaxy Note 4 now.

Suggestions are most welcomed!

The Toolmonger Weekly Five: March 1, 2008

$8, chúng tôi As much as it might look like one, this isn’t a spark plug gap tool. It’s actually used to check the bevel angle of knives or tools that require sharpening. Just put the edge of a blade into the gaps and you can gauge how steep or shallow the blade’s shape is versus the angle you’re shooting for.

Measure twice, cut once. This week’s edition of Top Tools is all about the accuracy. There’s a micro-drill set for model makers; a bevel gauge to make sure you’ve got the right angle; and dowel tips that make centering a breeze.

New Universal Insulation Strippers From Knipex

Knipex’s new wire strippers are big, bad and pricey. But they’ll strip insulation from damn near anything, and they feature a four blade cutting system that’s also replaceable. This isn’t a throwaway tool. Think of it like the new generation of razors–more blades are better.

Ultracut Cordless Pipe Cutter

Ever want a bionic hand that can sever pipe? This cordless pipe cutter does just that. And uninstalling your old hand isn’t required—a plus in our book. The cutter can chew through copper tubing from ½” to ¾” in size and stuffs easily in a tool bag.

Commando Precision Drill Set

If you’re a model maker (or other tiny-task worker), you’ll appreciate this micro-drill set that stores into a pocket-sized aluminum case. Thankfully you’ll rarely need to spin them very quickly, because they’re totally finger-powered.

Bevel Gauge Ensures You’ve Got The Right Angle

As much as it might look like one, this isn’t a spark plug gap tool. It’s actually used to check the bevel angle of knives or tools that require sharpening. Just put the edge of a blade into the gaps and you can gauge how steep or shallow the blade’s shape is versus the angle you’re shooting for.

Dowel Joinery On The Cheap With Dowel Centers

These little nickel-plated inserts fit into a pre-drilled hole, making it dirt simple to mark the center on other same-sized dowels—perfect for assembly-line lathe work, like creating forty custom-turned pieces for a baby crib. They’re cheap, too, leaving you more cash for buying fine wood.

Why You Should Care About Windows Server 2008

Microsoft is releasing another operating system (OS). This time, it is focused on the backend or the servers in your datacenter. Will it be like Windows Vista and hit the market running only to flop later on? No. Not this time.

Windows Server is Microsoft’s most solid operating system and with Windows Server 2003, especially the R2 version, it became the most popular server OS in the world, with reason.

Here are three key factors you should consider in your deliberation about replacing or at least integrating WS08 with your existing Windows Server 2003 systems.

Reason #1: Integrated and ‘Free’ Virtualization

2007 was the year of virtualization with dozens of vendors coming out with products tied to the virtualization wave in the datacenter. Some will be failures and others will thrive, but one thing is sure, each and every one of them will have a tough job of trying to dethrone the current virtualization king: VMware Corporation.

One contender that will definitely make waves this year is Microsoft’s Hyper-V. Hyper-V is the product name for Microsoft’s hypervisor—the core engine that is designed to expose all server hardware to virtualized operating systems—and will be integrated directly within the operating system.

Of course, Hyper-V is not going to be released at the same time as Windows Server 2008 because the development team needs to have final OS code to finalize the build of Hyper-V itself. The release version of Hyper-V should come within six months of the official release of WS08, but a first beta is available now.

In fact, in addition to being shipped with a series of different editions as well as 32-bit and 64-bit versions, WS08 has been released in two different flavors: with or without Hyper-V.

Those who do not want to deploy release code including the Hyper-V beta code will opt for Windows Server 2008 editions without Hyper-V and those who are willing to try out the beta along with the release code, will obtain Windows Server 2008 with Hyper-V. Note that the version with Hyper-V has no mention of the hypervisor in its name.

One of the greatest features of WS08 is Server Core, or a windowless version of Windows as odd as it sounds. Why did Microsoft release such a version of its server OS?

You could believe all the hype and think it is because it is more secure, it supports key server roles or it is in competition with other, non-Windows character-based OSes, but in reality, Server Core has been designed with one primary purpose in mind. If you want to run a hypervisor, you can’t do it on a ‘bloated’ operating system that is chock full of graphics and other unnecessary code.

No, when you run a hypervisor, especially one that will compete with VMware’s ESX Server, you need to be lean and mean. Hence Server Core which is the only way you should even consider running Hyper-V.

In addition, Hyper-V, while a powerful hypervisor on its own, will not have all of the features of its competitors. You won’t be able to move a machine from one host to another while it is running. Instead, you need to pause the machine, causing service interruptions, move it and then restart it.

But will that stop Hyper-V from making the biggest virtualization bang on the market. Absolutely not! Integrating a hypervisor into Windows and basically make it ‘free’ will popularize virtualization more than ever before. This can only be good for the entire virtualization industry. After all, 90 percent of servers out there are still taking up physical space.

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