Set of standards for physically connecting and transferring data between computers and peripheral devices
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E ae!Welcome to Deep Space Podcast - 15 years! Many thanks for listening. Finally, the next episode will be the very awaited number 500! I hope you guys enjoy it, I'm preparing a very spatial one! A big shout to the old listeners and new friends Eduardo Di Natale and Oscar!And big luv to the Spatial Listener of the week MAURY PAYAN! Please support the Deep Space Podcast, you can receive many perks with subscriptions from 1 dollar:https://deepspacepodcast.com/subscribe Enjoy the week499! Playlist:Artist – Track Name – [Label] 1) Marek Bartůněk - Shadows In The Flow - [Madah Sounds]2) Oldschool_Dubtechno .Producer - Star Temple - [Piranha Siberia Dub]3) Caleb Macken - Sufferation - [Mines Clarence]4) Steve O'Sullivan - No Aura - [Phonogramme]5) Shebuzz, Heavenchord & Encrypted Music Source - Time Is Running Out - [Madah Sounds]6) SCSI-9 - 303 Views - [Apparel Music]7) Charles.A.D - Generation Of Bubbles8) Canavezzi - Tips - [Conceptual]9) Udumusic - Mutations - [DeepWit]10) Abacus - Ancient Technology - [Phonogramme]11) Mike Nasty - Fingers Underground (Dub Mix) - [Nasty Tracks]12) Thabang Baloyi - November 06 - [Just Move]
E ae!Welcome to Deep Space Podcast - 15 years! Many thanks for listening. Please support the Deep Space Podcast, you can receive many perks with subscriptions:https://deepspacepodcast.com/subscribe Enjoy the week494! Playlist:Artist – Track Name – [Label] 1) Flabaire - Field Drift - [D.KO]2) SCSI-9 - Sound Gestretcht - [Fragment]3) Jovonn - Men's Club (Original Mix) - [Cha Cha Project]4) Cahl Sel - Focus - [Reflective]5) Matthias Vogt - ZIMT6) TIZIANO - New Mind7) Discuji - Paradox Garage (Hawthorne Edit) - [Better On Foot]8) NtsakoSoul - Fusion - [SculpturedMusic]9) Hélder Russo - Whipitt - [Percebes Música]10) Chris Carrier - Amorphophallus Titanum11) Blaktony - Eastern Market (shed3) - [Soiree]12) 6EQUJ5 - Untitled
Expmental Records Radio Show, your Monyhlu digital hub for underground club music. The show will air every 1st Thursday of the month at 4PM CET - 3PM UK, hosted by Data Transmission. Experience the essence of underground club music with Eddy Romero. His curated tracks shift from deep reflection to energetic dance, each offering a distinct sound journey that's both captivating and immersive. Prepare to engage with music in a whole new way. Expmental Records Radio Show, helmed by label boss Eddy Romero, promises unique sonic journeys with occasional guests from our label roster. We invite you to join us in this venture to explore the pulse and rhythm of underground club music. ⚡️Like the Show? Click the [Repost] ↻ button so more people can hear it!
Scsi-9- Stairs & Stars Pollyn- Sometimes You Just Know (Moodymann Remix) Conclave- All That I Need (Photay Remix) A Guy Called Gerald- Humanity feat. Louise Rhodes e-Plume- Fountain Trip Jinku- Barda (Feat. Samson Maiko) Scsi-9- 303 Views RVMP- Ethiopia Lawrence- Everglade Get The Blessing- Oscillation ochre Kham Meslien- A travers les orages e-Plume- Kiki's Gambert […]
2:24:59 – Frank in New Jersey, plus the Other Side. Topics include: Ingress, Pokémon GO, old beige computers, USB, SCSI chain, Pokémon TCG Pocket, Phantom of the Paradise (1974), 209 “holiday” 11/19, drought and wildfires, Planta Queen, The Roommate (with Mia Farrow and Patti Lupone), Sexy Sadie, Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson, Superlistening, community theater, commercial […]
2:24:59 – Frank in New Jersey, plus the Other Side. Topics include: Ingress, Pokémon GO, old beige computers, USB, SCSI chain, Pokémon TCG Pocket, Phantom of the Paradise (1974), 209 “holiday” 11/19, drought and wildfires, Planta Queen, The Roommate (with Mia Farrow and Patti Lupone), Sexy Sadie, Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson, Superlistening, community theater, commercial […]
SCSI-9 - Spring Will Tell (Saktu Remix) (feat. Julie Amadeo) Space Dimension Controller - Cryfaze Subb-an feat. The Million Plan - Vapour Trails (feat. The Million Plan) Masaya CH - Gabriel dOP, Saktu - Regarde le dessin (Saktu Remix) Qess - It's Always Been There Schatrax - The Almighty Surrender Discipline - Motion Modbit & Kinky Sound - Connect (Pavel Petrov Remix) Tiga, Hudson Mohawke, Johnny Aux feat. Channel Tres - Feel The Rush Deer Jade - Firmament CP and Co. - Hot Looking Babes ddwy - Spinning Stones
SCSI-9 - Spring Will Tell (Saktu Remix) (feat. Julie Amadeo) Space Dimension Controller - Cryfaze Subb-an feat. The Million Plan - Vapour Trails (feat. The Million Plan) Masaya CH - Gabriel dOP, Saktu - Regarde le dessin (Saktu Remix) Qess - It's Always Been There Schatrax - The Almighty Surrender Discipline - Motion Modbit & Kinky Sound - Connect (Pavel Petrov Remix) Tiga, Hudson Mohawke, Johnny Aux feat. Channel Tres - Feel The Rush Deer Jade - Firmament CP and Co. - Hot Looking Babes ddwy - Spinning Stones
Crooks made millions by breaking into M365 accounts and making stock trades on info in the email accounts, Kia hackers able to geolocate your car, lock/unlock turn it off or on, Win 11 updates causing major issues with hardware, Windows 10 updates will cost you after Oct 2025, Can the Govt set-up a website quickly? My internet does not work for all my devices could be a Windows update issue? Samsung update breaking older phones, My eBay account sign in via Google but I don't have a Google account, Win 10 SCSI update causing boot issues, Need for more power for AI, Texas says build it yourself, US Military using game controllers for its weapons.
Artist: Spieltape (Arhangelsk, Russia) Name: Highway Essentials #06 Genre: Deep House / Tech House Release Date: 26.09.2024 Exclusive: Deep House Moscow Серия подкастов Highway Essentials - совместный проект Highway records и Deep House Moscow, в котором ведущие артисты лэйбла представляют свои миксы из избранных треков импринта с пятнадцатилетней историей. Новый подкаст представляет бессменный a&r менеджер лэйбла - Spieltape Tracklist: 01. Freska - Masquerade (Hernan Cattaneo & Soundexile Remix) 02. Francys - Crossing The White Line (Gorge Interpretation) 03. Echonomist - Kubrick Thursdays (Thierry Tomas Remix) 04. Sergey Sanchez & Thierry Tomas - Keep U Happy (Asaga In The Box Remix) 05. Dj Skif- Follow Me (Kotelett & Zadak Remix) 06. Mike Spirit & Spieltape - To The Sea (Oliver Schories Remix) 07. Dave Pad - I Get This Feeling (Spieltape Remix) 08. Martin Landsky & SHOW-B - Bells For Life (Mario Aureo & Spieltape Remix) 09. Gorje Hewek & Izhevski - Voltiger (Adriatique Remix) 10. Alexey Union feat. Idd Aziz - Bedidza (Bu.Di Remix) 11. Max Wexem - Skazonas 12. Paysage & Dj Skif - Blessed 13. Dave Pad - Rotary Body (Dilby Remix) 14. Aldo Cadiz & Oscar Barila - Offshare (Mihai Popoviciu Remix) 15. Spieltape - Gimme Time (Hermanez Remix) 16. Neil Quigley & Tone Float feat. Cari Golden - DWTD 17. JCB - Uppsala (Lilith (NL) Remix) 18. Spieltape & Dave Pad - Space Chants 19. Datamode - Running Back (Terry Lee Brown Junior Remix) 20. Come Closer - Lost Most Ost 21. Peter Lankton & Redoblue - Mbali 22. Tom Budden - Channel 9 23. Luter & Marcello - Thongsala Vibes 24. Anturage & Montechi - Blindfold 25. Fake Mood - Insomnia (Zakir Remix) 26. Trockensaft & Friga - Guns Gungsters (Tantsui Remix) 27. Nikitin - Gorod Theme 28. Amonita - Desert 29. Spieltape - Fountainhead 30. SCSI-9 - Smooth Sunset (Sergey Sanchez & Thierry Tomas Remix) 31. Doyeq - Imagination 32. Mike Spirit - Bel Lavoro 33. Julia Govor & Rashid Ajami - A Regret 34. BarBQ - My Pink Motor Boat 35. Sergey Sanchez & Thierry Tomas - Keep U Happy (Dave Pad Remix) 36. Amonita - Mascot 37. Spieltape & Dave Pad - Space Chants (M.O.S. Remix) 38. M.O.S. - You Now (Tuba Twooz Remix) 39. Spieltape & Dave Pad - Granular 40. Spieltape - Bag Of Bones (Nikitin Remix) 41. BarBQ - Many Days (Martin Dawson Remix) 42. Spieltape - All Of You (Oliver Schories Remix) 43. Goom Gum - Spiral (Anturage 'I Love You Acid' Remix) 44. Agraba - iMerica (Asaga Remix) 45. Come Closer - Wrong World 46. Korablove - Mermaid Song (Mihai Popoviciu Remix) 47. Francys - People (Alex Niggemann Remix) 48. Mike Spirit feat. Starving Yet Full - It's Too Late To Call The Police 49. Freska - Snowshoes (Spieltape North Tale Mix) 50. Spieltape - Farewell Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/spieltape Instagram: https://instagram.com/spieltape Highway Records: www.facebook.com/highwayrecords Soundcloud: @highwayrecords Instagram: www.instagram.com/highwayrecords CONTACT (DHM): Email — deephousemoscow@hotmail.com Follow us: www.facebook.com/deephousemsk/ www.instagram.com/deephousemoscow/ vk.com/deephousemsk/
I saw a post recently about the incredible shrinking computer, where a software consultant had written down his predictions for the future. In this case, he writes about a computer shrinking smaller than today, essentially to one chip, with docking stations wherever you need them. We're already at the place where many of us have an extremely powerful computer in our pockets in the form of a mobile phone. I'm still amazed that I bought a phone recently with half a terabyte of storage. A few years ago I gave a keynote where I looked at the changes in disk storage, starting with an IBM hard drive being loaded onto a plane. The capacity was 5MB. I remember working with KB floppy disks and MB hard drives, and lots of different connection technologies: IDE, ESDI, SCSI, and more. I've seen disks shrink from a 5 1/4" form factor to mere wafers with today's NVMe drives. Read the rest of The Invisible Disk
An 80,000 euro shortfall greets most first time buyers as the affordability gap widens. That's according to a new report from the SCSI. Pat discusses the findings with Karl Deeter Director of Irish Mortgage Brokers and also Gerard O'Toole Vice-President of the SCSI & Westport based estate agent.
Lords: * Jay * Alex Topics: * Mexican food outside San Diego (Having lived in Colorado, Ohio, and now Melbourne) * Releasing my first commercial video game * The being an uncle of camping * Skyscrapers by Matt Haig * https://files.fireside.fm/file/fireside-uploads/images/3/3597ddeb-e52e-4cda-a59c-c64600489fea/QM4hPodE.jpg * Attempting to preserve 40 years' worth of data Microtopics: * A puzzle adventure game starring a ferret. * DROD-likes. * Sending an envelope full of guacamole to a food lab so they can tell you a list of ingredients. * Reaching in the window so you can finally drive a million dollar Porsche. * Letting the Ewok sit in the driver's seat but not actually letting it drive the car. * Whether Ewoks get old enough to drive. * Throw Rock. * Making a game by first making your own level editor, image editor, audio synthesizer and music composition tools. * Finding playtesters by letting them come to you. * An eyeball that charges a laser when you step in front of it. * Deliberately optimizing your game to take up as little disk space as possible. * A project that starts moving much faster when you figure out what kind of project it should be. * Writing a 3D modeler so that you can get your 2D game on Steam. * Working with a professional artist. * Rendering fur. * Games with turns that represent less than a second of in-game time. * The mind-feel of a turn length. * A game that was so good that the developers went back decades later to make it playable. * The Mud and the Slime. * How to play DROD without any roach timers. * Which DROD is the best one to start with. * Sokoban with swordplay. * The level in King Dugan's Dungeon that's nothing but roach queens. * Optimizing your sword movements well enough that you can move forward while fighting. * Puzzles that are just hard enough to engage your mind while you do something else. * Visiting someone who is camping and then going home to sleep in your own bed. * Building a fire and making s'mores in the bathroom. * Camping expenses. * Giving gifts to adults who can already buy whatever they want. * Deliberately choosing a vacation that is especially exhausting. * Spending two days each visiting seven different family friends. * Your grandparents taking you camping and they sleep in the RV while you have to sleep in the tent. * Buying an onion bloomer for $600 and insisting that your family eat a blooming onion every night to justify the purchase. * Skyscrapers made out of words * Training yourself to visualize words in the wrong orientation. * Puzzling out what the title of the poem would've been if the typesetter hadn't messed it up * Cross-sectional art. * Poems that are intended to be viewed rather than read aloud. * Anti-poem poems. * Every project you've ever worked on (on a computer) * Good usable archives. * The unique digital footprint of your life. * Getting the bits from a SCSI hard drive in an old Mac that doesn't boot up. * Apple Desktop Bus Connection. * The miraculous ubiquity and longevity of USB-A. * Figuring out how to hook up a digital video player that requires a Firewire connection. * The MacOS resource fork. * What the .sit and .hqx extensions meant. * Gamma Zee. * Using social media to actually do things.
Fri, 21 Jun 2024 22:15:00 GMT http://relay.fm/rd/237 http://relay.fm/rd/237 Filmographies Directors 237 Merlin Mann and John Siracusa Merlin can't tell whether John is mad at him, but John claims that he's not. Merlin can't tell whether John is mad at him, but John claims that he's not. clean 4756 Subtitle: It's rotten, Mohammed.Merlin can't tell whether John is mad at him, but John claims that he's not. This episode of Reconcilable Differences is sponsored by: Squarespace: Save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain using code DIFFS. Links and Show Notes: Merlin can't tell whether John is mad at him, but John claims that he's not. In follow-up, listeners share even more upsetting information about ice machines, and John has further remarks on a podcast Merlin likes. Also, Merlin remembers to tell John about his health problems. Names and pronunciation are further explored, and John criticizes Daisy's herding skills. Then, for some reason, they talk about lunchboxes for a while. John thinks Merlin should do more due diligence on his realizations. In an unexpected burst of Macintosh nostalgia, your hosts recall weird hard drive problems and Kerry from MacWarehouse. Then, Merlin has to go home to turn off the smoke alarm. (Recorded on Tuesday, June 4, 2024) Credits Audio Editor: Jim Metzendorf Admin Assistance: Kerry Provenzano Music: Merlin Mann The Suits: Stephen Hackett, Myke Hurley Get an ad-free version of the show, plus a monthly extended episode. Big Brother and the Holding Company Imogen Poots Dale Carnegie quote about names“Remember that a person's name is to that person the sweetest and most important sound in any language.” An example name-pronouncing YouTube video using the Dale Carnegie quote A look inside a fountain drink machine Adam 12 lunchbox John's Super Hero lunchbox MacWarehouse catalog Kerry from MacWarehouse LaCie Tsunami external SCSI hard drive A larger image of the LaCie Tsunami hard drive John's Mac OS X reviews Will Ferrell (Ashley Schaeffer) - "Let The Boy Watch" - Eastb
Fri, 21 Jun 2024 22:15:00 GMT http://relay.fm/rd/237 http://relay.fm/rd/237 Merlin Mann and John Siracusa Merlin can't tell whether John is mad at him, but John claims that he's not. Merlin can't tell whether John is mad at him, but John claims that he's not. clean 4756 Subtitle: It's rotten, Mohammed.Merlin can't tell whether John is mad at him, but John claims that he's not. This episode of Reconcilable Differences is sponsored by: Squarespace: Save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain using code DIFFS. Links and Show Notes: Merlin can't tell whether John is mad at him, but John claims that he's not. In follow-up, listeners share even more upsetting information about ice machines, and John has further remarks on a podcast Merlin likes. Also, Merlin remembers to tell John about his health problems. Names and pronunciation are further explored, and John criticizes Daisy's herding skills. Then, for some reason, they talk about lunchboxes for a while. John thinks Merlin should do more due diligence on his realizations. In an unexpected burst of Macintosh nostalgia, your hosts recall weird hard drive problems and Kerry from MacWarehouse. Then, Merlin has to go home to turn off the smoke alarm. (Recorded on Tuesday, June 4, 2024) Credits Audio Editor: Jim Metzendorf Admin Assistance: Kerry Provenzano Music: Merlin Mann The Suits: Stephen Hackett, Myke Hurley Get an ad-free version of the show, plus a monthly extended episode. Big Brother and the Holding Company Imogen Poots Dale Carnegie quote about names“Remember that a person's name is to that person the sweetest and most important sound in any language.” An example name-pronouncing YouTube video using the Dale Carnegie quote A look inside a fountain drink machine Adam 12 lunchbox John's Super Hero lunchbox MacWarehouse catalog Kerry from MacWarehouse LaCie Tsunami external SCSI hard drive A larger image of the LaCie Tsunami hard drive John's Mac OS X reviews Will Ferrell (Ashley Schaeffer) - "L
In episode 197 of our SAP on Azure video podcast we talk about how to improve storage throughput. In our last episode we quickly mentioned how features and capabilities are constantly added to services in the cloud. We talked about this in the context of the Azure Monitor for SAP solutions, but obviously these enhancements and optimizations are also happening on a lower level. Especially in SAP Hana installations, I/O throughput is super critical. In the past SCSI was used to connect your disks to the VM. Now we can leverage NVMe (non-volatile memory express) using Azure Boost. To tell us more about this and actually show how to convert from SCSI to NVMe, I am glad to have Philipp Leitenbauer with us today. Find all the links mentioned here: https://www.saponazurepodcast.de/episode197 Reach out to us for any feedback / questions: * Robert Boban: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rboban/ * Goran Condric: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gorancondric/ * Holger Bruchelt: https://www.linkedin.com/in/holger-bruchelt/ #Microsoft #SAP #Azure #SAPonAzure #Infrastructure #Performance
A short story about long cables. Original text by Steve Riggins. Macworld San Francisco 1999: Steve Jobs pokes fun at legacy parallel SCSI-1 versus FireWire.
Пролетно утро низ улиците на Скопје. Јас во chill out состојба... Едвај извежбав овој понеделник и некако целиот бев спор, ама секогаш ми е ок кога имам емисија. Понеделници sux, знам, ама се трудам колку што можам да сум ок со тоа :) Блазеси им на тие што понеделниците не им се терет. Legalize 4 days weekend! Зборував колку е убава пролетта и како си пројдов, пуштајќи плочи во Саботата во Лабораториум и колку ми значат Nirvana. Затемнувањето на сонцето што имаа прилика да го доживеат оние во Америка. Ја споделив и програмата на новото издание на фестивалот Крај Варадрот Џез и дека не треба да се пропушти настапот на Поетроника (ако мене ме прашувате). Итн… Слушавме спора, нежна и одлична музика: Sonic Youth - I Love You Golden Blue. Nirvana - Come as You Are. Deafheaven - Near. a.s.o. - Love in the Darkness. SCSI-9 - The Line Of Nine. Lufthansa - Јапонија. The Libertines - Songs They Never Play on the Radio. Fadi Mohem - Endless. Tiga, Hudson Mohawke - IN ORDER 2. Mihail P - Moon Chaser. Eddie Richards - Soul Is Life. Уживајте! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/indog/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/indog/support
Episodio 252. Yo les he contado que yo pienso muchísimo cuando yo me baño y pensé que: Un hombre hecho y derecho del Midwest, con el cuerpo de John Travolta, Los dientes bastante malos y una bola adentro, no tiene lágrimas porque nada le da lástima. Vivía en SCSI porque es lento y malo programando con texto en contexto. Cada vez somos mas estúpidos, algunos porque nos ponemos viejos y otros porque nacieron así. ✅ Follow Up Fuck Apple, fuck the tech press Jaime resets its Apple Watch Jorge no va a estar la semana que viene MacBook Keyboard Litigation Settlement Update La historia de Alfredo con el preorder de los Vision Pro Pocas Apps para Vision Pro https://www.macstories.net/news/a-survey-of-popular-apps-currently-compatible-with-apple-vision-pro/ https://9to5mac.com/2024/01/22/zeiss-inserts-vision-pro-pairing/ https://9to5mac.com/2024/01/23/prescription-lens-inserts-replacement/ Jorge desiste de la idea de comprar los Vision Pro Movistar Plus, La Resistencia, VPNs, Spliiit, etc. 17.3 y stolen device protection
Ever wondered how to ace the CISSP Cyber exam's domain four? Or, perhaps, you're merely intrigued by the intricate world of Voiceover IP (VOIP)? Either way, this episode is packed with the insights you've been seeking! Join me, Sean Gerber, as we dissect the key protocols that VOIP uses for multimedia transmissions. Together, we'll unravel the complex intricacies of Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) messages and how sessions kick off in a VOIP implementation. You'll also gain an understanding of the differences between Real-Time Transport Protocol (RTP) and Real-Time Transport Control Protocol (RTCP) and how they're applied.As we journey deeper into this episode, we'll explore the fascinating world of Internet Small Computer Systems Interface (iSCSI), focusing on its functions and default ports. Fear not, the mystery of SCSI command encapsulation will no longer be a mystery to you! We'll then shift our attention to the security aspects of SIP-based VOIP traffic, scrutinizing SIP-aware firewalls and the implementation of Transport Layer Security (TLS). Finally, we'll round off our discussion by examining RTCP's role in providing quality of service feedback in a VOIP implementation and wrapping up with an understanding of block-level transport in iSCSI. Prepare to expand your cybersecurity knowledge in a way you never thought possible!Gain access to 30 FREE CISSP Exam Questions each and every month by going to FreeCISSPQuestions.com and sign-up to join the team for Free.
Solving the housing crisis and achieving targets with regard to the Climate Action Plan and the National Development Plan will require a huge effort on behalf of the construction industry. But do we have sufficient numbers of qualified graduates coming into the construction & surveying professions and if not, what does the future hold as we seek to address the mistakes of the past? Joining Bobby to discuss the construction and surveying industry is: - Noel Larkin of Noel Larkin & Associates Chartered Building Surveyors - Hubert Fitzpatrick, Director General of the Construction Industry Federation - Kevin Brady, Director at APNA and Immediate Past Chair of Quantity Surveying Professional Group in the SCSI
At the first job I had as a DBA, I had to build a new server. This was in the days of SQL Server 4.2, and I was combination DBA, sysadmin, and general help desk at a small company. With a software developer consultant, we ran some tests on various machines and then ordered a collection of parts from Compaq. Back in this time, they would only customer parts of the server. We unpacked our boxes with the server, extra drive bay, various SCSI drives, and extra RAM. We assembled and tested the machine and eventually put it into production. In the years since then, I got out of the hardware business and left that to others. For awhile I worked in organizations with IT staff dedicated to building machines, but at some point we stopped doing that. The growth of VMWare and other hypervisors changed the paradigm for most organizations. For more than a decade, all the servers I've connected to are virtual machines running on hardware that my employer or a cloud provider owns and manages as a node in a cluster. Read the rest of Bare Metal
The newly appointed West Clare-based president of the Society of Chartered Surveyors Ireland claims a boost to the sector would help to make homes more sustainable. A new report by the SCSI has found that if the economy grows by 4% per annum, there will be a shortage of almost 1,000 chartered surveyors between now and 2026. Skilled workers are in high demand across the land, construction and property sectors with the SCSI claiming that over 100,000 such workers will be needed within the next decade to cater for the growing population. Enda McGuane, who's from Cooraclare, says chartered surveyors play a vital role in ensuring homes are as energy-efficient as possible.
Bluetooth The King Ragnar Lodbrok was a legendary Norse king, conquering parts of Denmark and Sweden. And if we're to believe the songs, he led some of the best raids against the Franks and the the loose patchwork of nations Charlemagne put together called the Holy Roman Empire. We use the term legendary as the stories of Ragnar were passed down orally and don't necessarily reconcile with other written events. In other words, it's likely that the man in the songs sung by the bards of old are likely in fact a composite of deeds from many a different hero of the norse. Ragnar supposedly died in a pit of snakes at the hands of the Northumbrian king and his six sons formed a Great Heathen Army to avenge their father. His sons ravaged modern England int he wake of their fathers death before becoming leaders of various lands they either inherited or conquered. One of those sons, Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye, returned home to rule his lands and had children, including Harthacnut. He in turn had a son named Gorm. Gorm the Old was a Danish king who lived to be nearly 60 in a time when life expectancy for most was about half that. Gorm raised a Jelling stone in honor of his wife Thyra. As did his son, in the honor of his wife. That stone is carved with runes that say: “King Haraldr ordered this monument made in memory of Gormr, his father, and in memory of Thyrvé, his mother; that Haraldr who won for himself all of Denmark and Norway and made the Danes Christian.” That stone was erected by a Danish king named Herald Gormsson. He converted to Christianity as part of a treaty with the Holy Roman Emperor of the day. He united the tribes of Denmark into a kingdom. One that would go on to expand the reach and reign of the line. Just as Bluetooth would unite devices. Even the logo is a combination of runes that make up his initials HB. Once united, their descendants would go on to rule Denmark, Norway, and England. For a time. Just as Bluetooth would go on to be an important wireless protocol. For a time. Personal Area Networks Many early devices shipped with infrared so people could use a mouse or keyboard. But those never seemed to work so great. And computers with a mouse and keyboard and drawing pad and camera and Zip drive and everything else meant that not only did devices have to be connected to sync but they also had to pull a lot of power and create an even bigger mess on our desks. What the world needed instead was an inexpensive chip that could communicate wirelessly and not pull a massive amount of power since some would be in constant communication. And if we needed a power cord then might as well just use USB or those RS-232 interfaces (serial ports) that were initially developed in 1960 - that were slow and cumbersome. And we could call this a Personal Area Network, or PAN. The Palm Pilot was popular, but docking and pluging in that serial port was not exactly optimal. Yet every ATX motherboard had a port or two. So a Bluetooth Special Interest Group was formed to conceive and manage the standard in 1988 and while initially had half a dozen companies now has over 30,000. The initial development started in the late 1990s with Ericcson. It would use short-range UHF radio waves in the 2.402 GHz and 2.48 GHz bands to exchange data with computers and cell phones, which were evolving into mobile devices at the time. The technology was initially showcased at COMDEX in 1999. Within a couple of years there were phones that could sync, kits for cars, headsets, and chips that could be put into devices - or cards or USB adapters, to get a device to sync 721 Kbps. We could add 2 to 8 Bluetooth secondary devices that paired to our primary. They then frequency hopped using their Bluetooth device address provided by the primary, which sends a radio signal to secondaries with a range of addresses to use. The secondaries then respond with the frequency and clock state. And unlike a lot of other wireless technologies, it just kinda' worked. And life seemed good. Bluetooth went to the IEEE, which had assigned networking the 802 standard with Ethernet being 802.3 and Wi-Fi being 802.11. So Personal Area Networks became 802.15, with Bluetooth 1.1 becoming 802.15.1. And the first phone shipped in 2001, the Sony Ericsson T39. Bluetooth 2 came in 2005 and gave us 2.1 Mbps speeds and increased the range from 10 to 30 meters. By then, over 5 million devices were shipping every week. More devices mean we have a larger attack surface space. And security researchers were certainly knocking at the door. Bluetooth 2.1 added secure simple pairing. Then Bluetooth 3 in 2009 bringing those speeds up to 24 Mbps and once connected allowing Wi-Fi to pick up connections once established. But we were trading speed for energy and this wasn't really the direction Bluetooth needed to go. Even if a billion devices had shipped by the end of 2006. Bluetooth 4 The mobility era was upon us and it was increasingly important, not just for the ARM chips, but also for the rest of the increasing number of devices, to use less power. Bluetooth 4 came along in 2010 and was slower at 1 Mbps, but used less energy. This is when the iPhone 4S line fully embraced the technology, helping make it a standard. While not directly responsible for the fitness tracker craze, it certainly paved the way for a small coin cell battery to run these types of devices for long periods of time. And it allowed for connecting devices 100 meters, or well over 300 feet away. So leave the laptop in one room and those headphones should be fine in the next. And while we're at it, maybe we want those headphones to work on two different devices. This is where Multipoint comes into play. That's the feature of Bluetooth 4 that allows those devices to pass seamlessly between the phone and the laptop, maintaining a connection to each. Apple calls their implementation of this feature Handoff. Bluetooth 5 came in 2016, allowing for connections up to 240 meters, or around 800 feet. Well, according to what's between us and our devices, as with other protocols. We also got up to 2 Mbps, which dropped as we moved further away from devices. Thus we might get buffering issues or slower transfers with weaker connections. But not outright dropping the connection. Bluetooth Evolves Bluetooth was in large part developed to allow our phones to sync to our computers. Most don't do that any more. And the developers wanted to pave the way for wireless headsets. But it also allowed us to get smart scales, smart bulbs, wearables like smart watches and glasses, Bluetooth printers, webcams, keyboards, mice, GPS devices, thermostats, and even a little device that tells me when I need to water the plants. Many home automation devices, or IoT as we seem to call them these days began as Bluetooth but given that we want them to work when we take all our mostly mobile computing devices out of the home, many of those have moved over to Wi-Fi these days. Bluetooth was initially conceived as a replacement for the serial port. Higher throughput needs moved to USB and USB-C. Lower throughput has largely moved to Bluetooth, with the protocol split between Low Energy and higher bandwidth application which with high definition audio now includes headphones. Once the higher throughput needs went to parallel and SCSI but now there are so many other options. And the line is blurred between what goes where. Billions of routers and switches have been sold, billions of wireless access points. Systems on a Chip now include Wi-Fi and Bluetooth together on the same chip. The programming languages for native apps have also given us frameworks and APIs where we can establish a connection over 5G, Wi-Fi, or Bluetooth, and then hand them off where the needs diverge. Seamless to those who use our software and elegant when done right. Today over four billion bluetooth devices ship per year, growing at about 10 percent a year. The original needs that various aspects of Bluetooth was designed for have moved to other protocols and the future of the Personal Area Network may be at least in part moved to Wi-Fi or 5G. But for now it's a standard that has aged well and continues to make life easier for those who use it.
Go to http://factormeals.com/mustbedice40 and use code mustbedice40 to get 40% Go to http://babbel.com and use code MUSTBEDICE to get 6 months of Babbel for the price of 3. In which our intrepid explorers of the infinite cosmos meet an all too eager pleasure-bot, dine on expired canned goods, introduce a salamander to the ways of love, and reveal a terrifying secret! Follow us on Twitter! https://twitter.com/_JacobFullerton https://twitter.com/linzbot_ https://twitter.com/jonsmiff https://twitter.com/adambrouillard Tshirts n stuff: https://store.roosterteeth.com/collections/funhaus Welcome to Funhaus, the internet's ONLY comedy, gaming, and variety channel since 2015! About Must Be Dice: The Forgotten Planet - An all new RPG adventure from Funhaus featuring space exploration, aliens, scruffy-looking bounty hunters, scum, villainy, glowy swords, and all kinds of other totally original ideas. Join FIRST to watch episodes early: http://bit.ly/2uNNz0O Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
De réir tuarascála ón gCumann Suirbhéirí Cairte na hÉireann, an SCSI, atá foilsithe inniu, ba chóir go mbainfeadh údaráis áitiúla feidhm as ordú ceannaigh éigeantaigh níos minice agus teastaíonn méadú faoi dhó sna scéimeanna deontais ar nós Croí Cónaithe.
Apple Interactive Television Box (1994) Before Apple TV, there was "The Apple Interactive Television Box", or ITV, also internally identified as STB (set-top box). Learn more about it, and check the photos and vid of ours (we have one!) ... Wikipedia - The Apple Interactive Television Box (AITB) is a television set-top box developed by Apple Computer in partnership with a number of global telecommunications firms, including British Telecom and Belgacom. Prototypes of the unit were deployed at large test markets in parts of the United States and Europe in 1994 and 1995, but the product was canceled shortly thereafter, and was never mass-produced or marketed. The Apple Interactive Television Box is based upon the Macintosh Quadra 605 or LC 475. Because the box was never marketed, not all specifications have been stated by Apple. It supports MPEG-2 Transport containing ISO11172 (MPEG-1) bit streams, Apple Desktop Bus, RF in and out, S-Video out, RCA audiovideo out, RJ-45 connector for either E1 data stream on PAL devices or T1 data stream on NTSC devices, serial port, and HDI-30 SCSI.[2] Apple intended to offer the AITB with a matching black ADB mouse, keyboard, Apple 300e CD-ROM drive, StyleWriter printer, and one of several styles of remote controls. The hard drive contains parts of a regular North American Mac OS 7.1.1 with Finder, several sockets for network connection protocols, and customized MPEG1 decoding components for the QuickTime Player software. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple_Interactive_Television_Box https://wiki.preterhuman.net/Apple_Interactive_Television_Box https://pippin.fandom.com/wiki/Apple_Interactive_Television_Box #MARCHintosh Visit the Adafruit shop online - http://www.adafruit.com ----------------------------------------- LIVE CHAT IS HERE! http://adafru.it/discord Adafruit on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/adafruit Subscribe to Adafruit on YouTube: http://adafru.it/subscribe New tutorials on the Adafruit Learning System: http://learn.adafruit.com/ ----------------------------------------- #adafruit #apple
James and Steve (Mac84) discuss eBay finds: iMac watch, Lisa 1, and Macintosh XL Screen Kit. They talk about the Outbound Outrigger monitor with a SCSI interface, and news includes a visit by Ron (Ron's Computer Videos) to preview Marchintosh. Join our Facebook page, follow us on Twitter, watch us on YouTube, and visit us at RetroMacCast.
The Apple PowerCD (1993) From Wikipedia - "Apple PowerCD is a CD player sold by Apple Computer in 1993 and discontinued several years later. It was a re-badged Philips-designed product (Philips CDF-100) which was sold in addition to Apple's speakers and also included a remote control. The PowerCD was capable of reading Kodak photo CDs, data CDs and audio CDs. It can connect to Macintosh personal computers through SCSI and also to stereo systems and televisions." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PowerCD ... Does the Apple PowerCD (1993) work with the Apple AirPods Max (2020) headphones? Yes. Cable is needed, but works, sounds good. https://adafruit.com/marchintosh #marchintosh
Listen in this week as Reagen and Taylor preview the two most loaded non conference tournaments of the season as well as give you NAIA SBs 10 teams to Columbus
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
This week Leo Dion joins Tim to discuss his career as Server-Side Swift developer, speaker and podcaster. They discuss some computer and development history, the future of Twitter, as well as, the upcoming Reality Pro AR/VR headset rumoured to be coming from Apple. Leo makes gets an early start on the best sandwich. Special Guest: Leo Dion.
We talk to the Chair of the Society of Chartered Surveyors Ireland's Practice and Policy John O'Sullivan about their Annual Residential Property Review & Outlook 2023.
42 per cent of houses sold in in the final three months of 2022 were due to landlords making the decision to get out of the market and cease renting their properties. Maurice Deverell, Irish Property Owners Association and John O'Sullivan, Chair of the SCSI's Practice and Policy Committee joined Anton Savage to discuss..
James and John discuss eBay finds: Macintosh IIfx black SCSI terminator, six-color Apple sign, and Motorola 68k wafers. They look back at MacAddict magazine in October 2002, and news includes NACintosh, replica Apple 1 manual, Big Mess o' Wires, and NanoRaptor creations. Join our Facebook page, follow us on Twitter, watch us on YouTube, and visit us at RetroMacCast.
00:00 SCSI-9 - Tierra del Fuego (Asaga Remix) 06:20 Miraval - Bleeding Hearts (Original Mix) 11:35 Guy Mantzur - My Wild Flower 17:06 Roman Kandel - Sombras De Invierno (Original Mix) 21:49 Mariner + Domingo - Edenwilde (Elk Mix) 27:04 Nordfold - Patterns 31:34 Mike Spirit, Spieltape - To The Sea 36:50 The Organism - Radha (Whitesquare Remix) 41:34 Mikhail Kobzar, Aleksandar Grum - Cayagana (Legit Trip Remix) 46:48 Ralf Urland - Activity (Dave Pad Remix) 51:46 Fillimonov & Mikhail Kobzar - Morning Sara 55:57 Echonomist - Kubrick Thursdays (Thierry Tomas Remix) 59:36 Gorge - Escape (Original Mix) 64:26 Fulltone - Happy Accidents (Original Mix) 69:49 Gustavo Cerati - Y Si El Humo Esta En Foco (Fede Pals Edit) 74:00 Audiojack, Jake The Rapper - Devotion 79:13 Booka Shade - Confessions (Bontan Remix) 85:15 Mr.Basic, Touch The Sound - Danke Berlin 89:59 Peredel - Another Dance 94:42 Robert Babicz - Robot Romance 98:38 Hillel Shabtai - Testimony (Midnight Visions Extended Mix) 103:52 Fillimonov - Deepsee 108:02 Tim Engelhardt - Idiosynkrasia (Andhim Remix) 112:38 [CLASSICS] Andrea Doria vs. LXR - Beauty of Silence (Inpetto Remix)
Why has Ben been lugging an old SCSI expansion card for the last 25 years?
James and John discuss eBay finds: Picasso Mac Polo Shirt, HD20 with SCSI conversion, collection of Macs and more. They look back at Macworld magazine July 1992, and news includes MacintoshPi and NanoRaptor creations. Join our Facebook page, follow us on Twitter, watch us on YouTube, and visit us at RetroMacCast.
Data storage has always been a concern for data professionals. Early on in my career, we dealt with large ESDI, IDE, and SCSI drives, all of which would fail unexpectedly in servers. Sometimes after a few years, sometimes after a few weeks. We learned to use RAID and tape backups to ensure that our data was recoverable. In many places tape was the long term storage medium used. These days, I know many people have moved to secondary disk storage of some sort, often rotating data across a few disk types that give you recovery for days, weeks, or longer. I don't know how long term storage work in Azure or AWS, but I assume some sort of combination of technologies are in use. I also know I don't trust them completely to be readily available and recoverable after a few years. Read the rest of Long Term Storage
Erik Lietz, PE from Oakridge Engineering joins the Ask Noah Show this hour to discuss running an an engineering firm on Linux! Does it work perfectly? Does Linux leave something to be desired? We dig deep and discuss the merits of running a business on Open Source! -- During The Show -- 01:45 Hard Drive Questions - Friso Ask Ubuntu (https://askubuntu.com/questions/637450/cannot-perform-smart-data-and-self-test-on-external-hard-drive/692892#692892) No one uses SCSI or IDE today Linux Kernel Blocks ATA Pass Through on USB Segate Drives Noah and Steve's external drive methods 08:30 Router Firmware Question & Responding To Other Listener - Bhikhu Try installing kio-fuse & kdenetwork-filesharing packages Performance is not the reason for open source firmware Open source firmware provides longer updates and more features 12:50 Thoughts on Bitcoin? - Cory Decentralized We agree what has value Not controlled by government Blockchain Tech 16:17 Charlie responds to user & Speeding up internet question - Charlie Open Streetmap Forum Link 1 (https://forum.openstreetmap.org/viewtopic.php?id=19465) Open Streetmap Forum Link 2 (https://forum.openstreetmap.org/viewtopic.php?pid=854178) Reddit Geocaching (https://old.reddit.com/r/geocaching/) OSMAnd OSMAnd (https://osmand.net/) OSMAnd Github (https://github.com/osmandapp/OsmAnd) OSMAnd Fdroid (https://f-droid.org/en/packages/net.osmand.plus/) Open Streetmap Wiki Android (https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Android) Open Streetmap Wiki Android App Comparison (https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Comparison_of_Android_applications) YouTube LanCache Tutorial 1 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3bfJdtA7GtA) YouTube LanCache Tutorial 2 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=427wjHRl8N4) YouTube Steam Cache Server (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=djGia0DHmis) Cache can help Upgraded Network may not 20:00 User responds about GPS - Jeremy Garmin inReach Mini (https://www.garmin.com/en-US/p/592606) Zoleo Satellite Communicator (https://www.zoleo.com/en-us/satellite-communicator/) Somwear (https://somewearlabs.com/product/outdoors-hotspot/) 21:20 User responds Nextcloud & location tracking - Aaron PhoneTrack Nextcloud (https://apps.nextcloud.com/apps/phonetrack) PhoneTrack Fdroid Package (https://f-droid.org/en/packages/net.eneiluj.nextcloud.phonetrack/) GPS Tagged Photos + Nextcloud Maps (https://github.com/nextcloud/maps) 22:50 News Wire Open Source Robotics 10th Birthday (https://spectrum.ieee.org/open-robotics) Access Denied AWS Tool (https://www.helpnetsecurity.com/2022/03/25/ermetic-access-undenied-on-aws/) MangoPi Computer-on-a-module (https://liliputing.com/2022/03/lilbits-mangopis-sd-card-sized-linux-pc-supersizing-the-iphone-13-pro-max-and-intels-most-powerful-desktop-chip.html) Parrot OS 5 Released (https://www.parrotsec.io/blog/2022-03-24-parrot-5.0-press-release/) Gnome 42 Released It's Foss (https://news.itsfoss.com/gnome-42-release/) It's Foss Clear Linux (https://news.itsfoss.com/clear-linux-gnome-42/) Feren OS 2022.03 Released (https://news.itsfoss.com/feren-os-2022-03/) Debian Bullseye 11.3 Released (https://9to5linux.com/debian-gnu-linux-11-3-bullseye-released-with-83-security-updates-and-92-bug-fixes) Continued "Protestware" Fallout Wired (https://www.wired.com/story/open-source-sabotage-protestware/) Security Boulevard (https://securityboulevard.com/2022/03/the-promise-of-open-source-code-and-the-paradox-of-protestware/) Fortune (https://fortune.com/2022/03/22/what-is-protestware-russia-ukraine-sberbank-software-open-source/) Hive Ransomeware Converted to Rust (https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/hive-ransomware-ports-its-linux-vmware-esxi-encryptor-to-rust/) FutureAI Brian Simulator II (https://jaxenter.com/ai-brain-simulator-simon-177061.html) WiSE-FT Algorithm (https://www.marktechpost.com/2022/03/25/researchers-open-source-wise-ft-algorithm-for-fine-tuning-ai-models/) BMW Group SORDI Green Car Congress (https://www.greencarcongress.com/2022/03/20220324-sordi.html) Metrologoy (https://metrology.news/bmw-publishes-largest-open-source-dataset-for-production-ai-applications/) Erik Lietz, President of Oakridge Engineering (Mondovi Wisconsin) (https://www.oakridgeeng.com) Tell me about your Engineering Work What is there to Engineer on a Farm? What technology and tools are you using? When did you get interested in open source and Linux? What made you move your entire firm to Linux? Roll Out Plan How did the Roll out go? Working through the papercuts Talk about why you wanted everything self hosted? GPU passthrough setup GPU passthrough challenges YouTube Link (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eTX10QlFJ6c) GitLab (https://gitlab.com/risingprismtv/single-gpu-passthrough/-/tree/master/) X1 Extreme Gen2 Future Plans -- The Extra Credit Section -- For links to the articles and material referenced in this week's episode check out this week's page from our podcast dashboard! This Episode's Podcast Dashboard (http://podcast.asknoahshow.com/279) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they're excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed) Special Guest: Steve Ovens.
The first operating systems as we might think of them today (or at least anything beyond a basic task manager) shipped in the form of Multics in 1969. Some of the people who worked on that then helped created Unix at Bell Labs in 1971. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, Unix flowed to education, research, and corporate environments through minicomputers and many in those environments thought a flavor of BSD, or Berkeley Software Distribution, might become the operating system of choice on microcomputers. But the microcomputer movement had a while other plan if only in spite of the elder minicomputers. Apple DOS was created in 1978 in a time when most companies who made computers had to mail their own DOS as well, if only so software developers could built disks capable of booting the machines. Microsoft created their Disk Operating System, or MS-DOS, in 1981. They proceeded to Windows 1 to sit on top of MS-DOS in 1985, which was built in Intel's 8086 assembler and called operating system services via interrupts. That led to poor programmers locking down points in order to access memory addresses and written assuming a single-user operating system. Then came Windows 2 in 1987, Windows 3 in 1992, and released one of the most anticipated operating systems of all time in 1995 with Windows 95. 95 turned into 98, and then Millineum in 2000. But in the meantime, Microsoft began work on another generation of operating systems based on a fusion of ideas between work they were doing with IBM, work architects had done at Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC), and rethinking all of it with modern foundations of APIs and layers of security sitting atop a kernel. Microsoft worked on OS/2 with IBM from 1985 to 1989. This was to be the IBM-blessed successor of the personal computer. But IBM was losing control of the PC market with the rise of cloned IBM architectures. IBM was also big, corporate, and the small, fledgeling Microsoft was able to move quicker. Really small companies that find success often don't mesh well with really big companies that have layers of bureaucracy. The people Microsoft originally worked with were nimble and moved quickly. The ones presiding over the massive sales and go to market efforts and the explosion in engineering team size was back to the old IBM. OS/2 had APIs for most everything the computer could do. This meant that programmers weren't just calling assembly any time they wanted and invading whatever memory addresses they wanted. They also wanted preemptive multitasking and threading. And a file system since by then computers had internal hard drives. The Microsoft and IBM relationship fell apart and Microsoft decided to go their own way. Microsoft realized that DOS was old and building on top of DOS was going to some day be a big, big problem. Windows 3 was closer, as was 95, so they continued on with that plan. But they started something similar to what we'd call a fork of OS/2 today. So Gates went out to recruit the best in the industry. He hired Dave Cutler from Digital Equipment to take on the architecture of the new operating system. Cutler had worked on the VMS operating system and helped lead efforts for next-generation operating system at DEC that they called MICA. And that moment began the march towards a new operating system called NT, which borrowed much of the best from VMS, Microsoft Windows, and OS/2 - and had little baggage. Microsoft was supposed to make version 3 of OS/2 but NT OS/2 3.0 would become just Windows NT when Microsoft stopped developing on OS/2. It took 12 years, because um, they had a loooooot of customers after the wild success of first Windows 3 and then Windows 95, but eventually Cutler and team's NT would replace all other operating systems in the family with the release of Windows 2000. Cutler wanted to escape the confines of what was by then the second largest computing company in the world. Cutler worked on VMS and RSX-12 before he got to Microsoft. There were constant turf battles and arguments about microkernels and system architecture and meetings weren't always conducive with actually shipping code. So Cutler went somewhere he could. At least, so long as they kept IBM at bay. Cutler brought some of the team from Digital with him and they got to work on that next generation of operating systems in 1988. They sat down to decide what they wanted to build, using the NS OS/2 operating system they had a starting point. Microsoft had sold Xenix and the team knew about most every operating system on the market at the time. They wanted a multi-user environment like a Unix. They wanted programming APIs, especially for networking, but different than what BSD had. In fact, many of the paths and structures of networking commands in Windows still harken back to emulating those structures. The system would be slow on the 8086 processor, but ever since the days of Xerox PARC, everyone knew Moore's Law was real and that the processors would double in speed every other year. Especially since Moore was still at Intel and could make his law remain true with the 286 and 386 chips in the pipeline. They also wanted the operating system to be portable since IBM selected the Intel CPU but there were plenty of other CPU architectures out there as well. The original name for NT was to be OS/2 3.0. But the IBM and Microsoft relationship fell apart and the two companies took their operating systems in different directions. OS/2 became went the direction of Warp and IBM never recovered. NT went in a direction where some ideas came over from Windows 95 or 3.1 but mostly the team just added layers of APIs and focused on making NT a fully 32-bit version of Windows that could that could be ported to other platforms including ARM, PowerPC, and the DEC Alpha that Cutler had exposure to from his days at Digital. The name became Windows NT and NT began with version 3, as it was in fact the third installment of OS/2. The team began with Cutler and a few others, grew to eight and by the time it finally shipped as NT 3.1 in 1993 there were a few hundred people working on the project. Where Windows 95 became the mass marketed operating system, NT took lessons learned from the Unix, IBM mainframe, and VMS worlds and packed them into an operating system that could run on a corporate desktop computer, as microcomputers were called by then. The project cost $150 million, about the same as the first iPhone. It was a rough start. But that core team and those who followed did what Apple couldn't in a time when a missing modern operating system nearly put Apple out of business. Cutler inspired, good managers drove teams forward, some bad managers left, other bad managers stayed, and in an almost agile development environment they managed to break through the conflicts and ship an operating system that didn't actually seem like it was built by a committee. Bill Gates knew the market and was patient enough to let NT 3 mature. They took the parts of OS/2 like LAN Manager. They took parts of Unix like ping. But those were at the application level. The microkernel was the most important part. And that was a small core team, like it always is. The first version they shipped to the public was Windows NT 3.1. The sales people found it easiest to often say that NT was the business-oriented operating system. Over time, the Windows NT series was slowly enlarged to become the company's general-purpose OS product line for all PCs, and thus Microsoft abandoned the Windows 9x family, which might or might not have a lot to do with the poor reviews Millennium Edition had. Other aspects of the application layer the original team didn't do much with included the GUI, which was much more similar to Windows 3.x. But based on great APIs they were able to move faster than most, especially in that era where Unix was in weird legal territory, changing hands from Bell to Novell, and BSD was also in dubious legal territory. The Linux kernel had been written in 1991 but wasn't yet a desktop-class operating system. So the remaining choices most business considered were really Mac, which had serious operating system issues at the time and seemed to lack a vision since Steve Jobs left the company, or Windows. Windows NT 3.5 was introduced in 1994, followed by 3.51 a year later. During those releases they shored up access control lists for files, functions, and services. Services being similar in nearly every way to a process in Unix. It sported a TCP/IP network stack but also NetBIOS for locating computers to establish a share and a file sharing stack in LAN Manager based on the Server Message Block, or SMB protocol that Barry Feigenbaum wrote at IBM in 1983 to turn a DOS computer into a file server. Over the years, Microsoft and 3COM add additional functionality and Microsoft added the full Samba with LDAP out of the University of Michigan as a backend and Kerberos (out of MIT) to provide single sign-on services. 3.51 also brought a lot of user-mode components from Windows 95. That included the Windows 95 common control library, which included the rich edit control, and a number of tools for developers. NT could run DOS software, now they were getting it to run Windows 95 software without sacrificing the security of the operating system where possible. It kinda' looked like a slightly more boring version of 95. And some of the features were a little harder to use, like configuring a SCSI driver to get a tape drive to work. But they got the ability to run Office 95 and it was the last version that ran the old Program Manager graphical interface. Cutler had been joined by Moshe Dunie, who led the management side of NT 3.1, through NT 4 and became the VP of the Windows Operating System Division so also had responsibility for Windows 98 and 2000. For perspective, that operating system group grew to include 3,000 badged Microsoft employees and about half that number of contractors. Mark Luovsky and Lou Perazzoli joined from Digital. Jim Alchin came in from Banyan Vines. Windows NT 4.0 was released in 1996, with a GUI very similar to Windows 95. NT 4 became the workhorse of the field that emerged for large deployments of computers we now refer to as enterprise computing. It didn't have all the animation-type bells and whistles of 95 but did perform about as well as any operating system could. It had the NT Explorer to browse files, a Start menu, for which many of us just clicked run and types cmd. It had a Windows Desktop Update and a task scheduler. They released a number of features that would take years for other vendors to catch up with. The DCOM, or Distributed Component Object Modeling and Object Linking & Embedding (or OLE) was a core aspect any developer had to learn. The Telephony API (or TAPI) allowed access to the modem. The Microsoft Transaction Server allowed developers to build network applications on their own sockets. The Crypto API allowed developers to encrypt information in their applications. The Microsoft Message Queuing service allowed queuing data transfer between services. They also built in DirectX support and already had OpenGL support. The Task Manager in NT 4 was like an awesome graphical version of the top command on Unix. And it came with Internet Explorer 2 built in. NT 4 would be followed by a series of service packs for 4 years before the next generation of operating system was ready. That was Windows 5, or more colloquially called Windows 2000. In those years NT became known as NT Workstation, the server became known as NT Server, they built out Terminal Server Edition in collaboration with Citrix. And across 6 service packs, NT became the standard in enterprise computing. IBM released OS/2 Warp version 4.52 in 2001, but never had even a fraction of the sales Microsoft did. By contrast, NT 5.1 became Windows XP and 6 became Vista in while OS/2 was cancelled in 2005.
Todd Owens, Field Marketing Director and Nishant Lodha, Director of Product Marketing – Emerging Technologies continue discussing Fibre Channel being the gold standard protocol for connecting shared storage servers. End customers, channel partners and OEM customers are particularly focused on virtualization, security, and transitioning from SCSI to NVMe, , all while having low cost, persistent storage and low latency. Hear Todd and Nishant's perspectives and solutions from Marvell that enable customers and partners to increase storage workloads with optimized security.
Todd Owens, Field Marketing Director discusses NVMe over Fabrics with podcast host Chris Banuelos. Though NVMe is not new, moving it outside the server into storage fabric is. The efficiency and multi-thread capability of the NVMe language when compared to SCSI (small computer system interface) makes transitioning to NVMe over Fabrics a no-brainer. The complex challenge is which type of fabric approach is best. Arrays exist today that support NVMe over RoCE and FC-NVMe. However, there is much discussion around new arrays with NVMe over Fabric TCP support. Learn more about the three different approaches as well as the pros and cons. Marvell - HPE Partnership: https://www.marvell.com/hpe Marvell - Qlogic: https://www.marvell.com/qlogic
01.王威-我想要02.Dublee-Cliff03.Hot Chip-Easy To Get04.Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs-Stronger05.Homero Espinosa/Kevin Kind-Make It Better06.Fujiya & Miyagi-Uh07.Tricky-Somebody's Sins08.Ellen Allien-Ever09.Man Tear-Black Park10.Gui Boratto-Beautiful Life11.Homero Espinosa/Mark Farina-It's All Right12.SCSI-9-Tu Eres Mas13.Paradise Alley-What Road14.Emilie Nicolas-Grown Up15.The New Mastersounds-Treasure16.Digits-Sarah
01.王威-我想要02.Dublee-Cliff03.Hot Chip-Easy To Get04.Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs-Stronger05.Homero Espinosa/Kevin Kind-Make It Better06.Fujiya & Miyagi-Uh07.Tricky-Somebody's Sins08.Ellen Allien-Ever09.Man Tear-Black Park10.Gui Boratto-Beautiful Life11.Homero Espinosa/Mark Farina-It's All Right12.SCSI-9-Tu Eres Mas13.Paradise Alley-What Road14.Emilie Nicolas-Grown Up15.The New Mastersounds-Treasure16.Digits-Sarah
01.王威-我想要02.Dublee-Cliff03.Hot Chip-Easy To Get04.Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs-Stronger05.Homero Espinosa/Kevin Kind-Make It Better06.Fujiya & Miyagi-Uh07.Tricky-Somebody's Sins08.Ellen Allien-Ever09.Man Tear-Black Park10.Gui Boratto-Beautiful Life11.Homero Espinosa/Mark Farina-It's All Right12.SCSI-9-Tu Eres Mas13.Paradise Alley-What Road14.Emilie Nicolas-Grown Up15.The New Mastersounds-Treasure16.Digits-Sarah