Distributed Support Services, College of Arts and Letters
Office of Information Technology
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University of Notre Dame
On Sep 10, 2009, at 5:44 PM, Al Poulin alfred.pou...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sep 10, 12:16 am, Jarett DeAngelis starkr...@gmail.com wrote:
Yeah, I'm not buyin
I dunno, man. I think there is a lot of room for innovation in the
space between this drive for cost-cutting and the re-architecture
response the industry is producing.
I also think you and I would make for a good G4 talk show :D
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Jarett T. DeAngelis, MS
Sr. IT Support Engineer
Call me crazy, but I think ARM is the future of computing. ARM is a
much more sensible ISA than x86 or even PPC, and we keep seeing more
and more powerful ARM chips come out every year. Meanwhile, everyone
is porting everything they can to it.
Picture ten years down the road: 2GHz ARM
On Sep 8, 2009, at 3:12 PM, Bruce Johnson
john...@pharmacy.arizona.edu wrote:
On Sep 8, 2009, at 11:46 AM, Jarett DeAngelis wrote:
Picture ten years down the road: 2GHz ARM chips with large amounts of
instruction-level parallelism, out-of-order execution, etc. It would
be a formidable
Protip: Apple is a hardware company. I certainly don't have any moral
qualms about using my SL disc to do a clean install on a Tiger
machine. The alternative is frankly stupid.
--
Jarett T. DeAngelis, MS
Sr. IT Support Engineer
Distributed Support Services, College of Arts and Letters
IMO the best way to do this is a clean install. It works on Tiger,
but it's not designed for it.
Back up your data, insert disc, start machine, fire up Disk Utility,
reformat, install. :)
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Jarett T. DeAngelis, MS
Sr. IT Support Engineer
Distributed Support Services, College of Arts
I've always been able to see the attraction of making very old
hardware do tricks it wasn't intended for. I'd wager half the traffic
on this list, if not more, comes from enthusiastic tinkerers who just
love their old hardware too much to give it up :)
Heck, I ran a DEC AlphaServer/266 as
Yeah, I'd be okay with the slow pace of copying and installing files
if it actually installed the bootloader correctly :)
Does anyone know of a good PPC livecd that would let one mess around
with files once they're there? I was reading something someone said
about an OpenBSD install and