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Can any1 tell me the best Graphics card in industry....what ever it costs..i dont care...?
NVIDIA GEFORCE anything with its series no.....shud be having a 256 or more video RAM so that i can play any game.....
SAJAN A PILLAI
C#.NET Programmer
TELESOFT INDIA PVT LTD...
BANGALORE
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8800 GTX ultra. Check the actual clock speeds, alot of makers will try and overclock the chips slightly for an extra performance edge.
--
You have to explain to them [VB coders] what you mean by "typed". their first response is likely to be something like, "Of course my code is typed. Do you think i magically project it onto the screen with the power of my mind?" --- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
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2 nVidia GeForce 8800 Ultra in pair using SLI.
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That's more of a religious question than anything else.
My card of choice is nVidia.
"Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997 ----- "...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001
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If you are ever planning to try out Linux, NVidia is the only viable choice. ATI cards are almost impossible for novices to install under Linux. Hell, even I cannot be bother to jump through the 10000 hoops AMD/ATI have set up for me and my X850.
Go to hell, ATI...
Cheers,
Sebastian
--
"If it was two men, the non-driver would have challenged the driver to simply crash through the gates. The macho image thing, you know." - Marc Clifton
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Sebastian Schneider wrote: Go to hell, ATI...
ATI was bought by AMD. Tell AMD to go to hell...
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I know. That's why I wrote AMD/ATI as well. My card was made before that, however, so it is not AMDs fault. It WILL be their fault, however, if they don't replace the Linux drivers soon.
Cheers,
Sebastian
--
"If it was two men, the non-driver would have challenged the driver to simply crash through the gates. The macho image thing, you know." - Marc Clifton
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The requirement is,
now we have several usb controllers, ... suppose as 4, now we want test different types of devices on them, certainly I can get the "WM_DEVICECHANGE" message or something else to handle device remove/add events, then my problem is, how to know the which usb controller and port the newly added/removed device conntected to? and another question is though I can enum all the devices via WMI, I don't konw how to get a exclusive id for each, currently I only use usb controller and general usb devices like storage and camera. can tell?
Thanks
Clark Nu
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Hi CPians,
When ever i change the sim in my nokia 6600, it almost always ask me to re-enter the time(as it has lost the previous time), is there any way/software to resolve that, so that it should not ask to re-enter the time.
-- modified at 10:15 Monday 23rd July, 2007
Best Regards,
Mushq
Mushtaque Ahmed Nizamani
Software Engineer
Ultimus Pakistan
"English is my second language, so please don't mind if i do some grammatical or spelling mistakes in my messages."
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I dont think so you are able to keep the time in mobile's memory. B'cos when we remove the battery the clock will reset. But some mobile has option to get the time from the service provider. Please check it out
Regards,
Sylvester G
If we don't succeed, we run the risk of failure
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Sylvester george wrote: I dont think so you are able to keep the time in mobile's memory.
Thanks for reply, but in some mobiles(Sony Ericsson etc) save the time and some one doesn't need to reset the time when he/she changes the sim.
Best Regards,
Mushq
Mushtaque Ahmed Nizamani
Software Engineer
Ultimus Pakistan
"English is my second language, so please don't mind if i do some grammatical or spelling mistakes in my messages."
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Maybe you should get a Sony Ericsson then.
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We do have a non volatile card based time backups. My cell Nokia 6670 has never asked if u replace the SIM/battery for some 15 mins. If you took longer than that it will ask. As well if you are replacing the memory card; even within one minute it will ask for the new time.
We ofcourse do have time updating services from the Service Provider but most of the time it lags beyond our time
There are only two kinds of people who are really fascinating-people who know absolutely everything, and people who know absolutely nothing.
Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)
Regards...
Shouvik
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Hi Mushq,
how old is your Nokia 6600 phone?
I had same the same issue on 3 nokia phones i owned.
I can remeber that at the beginning it worked fine when I changed
the sim in my phone. I had to remove the storage battery but it had still power supply
to keep the time in RAM.
But within a year it stopped working. Maybe a little internal battery or something ran out of power.
Had this problem on my old Nokia 3330, N-Gage an now on my N70.
One hint from me.
Switching the sim within 3 seconds worked on my N-Gage, no re-enter of the time was needed.
Don't know if it still works.
regards pdluke
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pdluke wrote: how old is your Nokia 6600 phone?
It is about 1 and half year.
pdluke wrote: I can remeber that at the beginning it worked fine
For me too In begining it was working fine.
pdluke wrote: Switching the sim within 3 seconds worked on my N-Gage, no re-enter of the time was needed.
Thanks for suggestion i will try to do that.
Best Regards,
Mushq
Mushtaque Ahmed Nizamani
Software Engineer
Ultimus Pakistan
"English is my second language, so please don't mind if i do some grammatical or spelling mistakes in my messages."
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The obvious solution is to buy another phone. Just in case it wasn't immediately obvious, do NOT buy another phone just like the one you have.
This message brought to you by Obvious Technical Solutions, LLC. At OBT, we live the phrase "If it hurts when you do that, then don't do that."
"Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997 ----- "...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001
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How many times do you change the sim? jeez.
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Exactly how difficult is it to just enter in the current time and move on with your day?
BW
Quick to judge, quick to anger, slow to understand. Ignorance and prejudice and fear walk hand in hand.
-- Neil Peart
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Well,
It seems you have same problems with me. I install some application "TimeSync" that always synchronize date and time with some server in internet every time i turn on my cellphone. It cost you a penny because you must using GPRS when synchronizing.
The bad side is,TimeSync runs on Windows Mobil cellphone, but i think there's similar application that run on symbian.
"Courage choose who will follow, Fate choose who will lead" - Lord Gunner, Septerra Core
"Press any key to continue, where's the ANY key ?" - Homer Simpsons
Drinking gives me amazing powers of insight. I can solve all the worlds problems when drunk, but can never remember the solutions in the morning. - Michael P Butler to Paul Watson on 12/08/03
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This exactly depends on how they designed the hardware. In some case, the volatile information is stored in something like CMOS as in the case of PC. In other cases, the information is not considered crucial and handled over to user input, as it happens in your handset.
This all is stored in HAL (Hardware Abstraction Layer) or beyond. And you have virtually no mean to reach there, especially in case of low profile controller devices like handsets. Java and other languages stand on builtin OS. They can't reach therein.
________________________________________
To Learn is to Change
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Is all Harddisk PnpDevice?
Thank You.
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:-> It's supposed to be, (PnP means only that the hard disk driver uses the PnP driver architecture, almost every driver uses the PnP driver architecture).
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Hello -
I'm working on a program that scans files on a DVD created by our product (to calculate a CRC).
When using Windows Explorer to copy from the DVD (USB connection) to my C: drive, it takes about a minutes to copy a 1GB file.
My program, however, takes close to ten minutes to read the file (doing nothing else). The following snippet demonstrates the problem:
#define HEAP_SIZE 1000000 // 1,000,000 bytes
static BYTE g_buffer[HEAP_SIZE];
hFile = CreateFile( strThisFile, GENERIC_READ, 0, NULL, OPEN_EXISTING, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, NULL);
while ( ReadFile( hFile, g_buffer, HEAP_SIZE, &nBytesRead, NULL))
{
++nNumberOfReads;
if ( nBytesRead == 0)
{
break;
}
} Same results are observed when g_buffer is created using HeapAlloc and with varying HEAP_SIZE values.
Any hints as to why I'm seeing this are appreciated!
Thanks.
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Why do you make it hard on the system ?
- files get allocated by sectors and clusters on disk, these are all quantities that equal a power of 2. So a power of 10 for your HEAP_SIZE value is not so good.
- files get cached somehow (the file cache in RAM, and the data cache L1/L2/L3 inside or
close to the CPU chip); the hardware cache has limited size. So it probably is better to
reduce HEAP_SIZE.
I would suggest you try HEAP_SIZE values of 2^15 up to 2^18 (that's NOT C syntax !)
I expect you can get around 50 to 100 MB/s on an average system
And when organized well (two threads, ping-pong), CRC should be free.
Good luck.
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