Showing posts with label speed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label speed. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Comment on When It Comes to Broadband, Does Speed Matter? by Anonymous

Good news: this website (======= http://www.okeynice.com=======). we has been updated and add products and many things they abandoned. their increases are welcome to visit our website. Accept cash or. credit card payments, free transport. You can try oh, will make you. satisfied. ( http://www.okeynice.com ).

Comment on When It Comes to Broadband, Does Speed Matter? by Anonymous


Backlink: http://gigaom.com/broadband/when-it-comes-to-broadband-does-speed-matter/#comment-619743

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

How To Speed Up Your MacBook Air

steve jobs macbook air apple AP

The MacBook Air is incredibly speedy thanks to its solid state drive.

Without the moving parts of a traditional hard drive, the Air boots up, shuts down, and launches apps noticeably faster. (Same goes with other MacBooks with optional solid state drives).

But if that's not fast enough, there is a way to tweak your solid state drive to run even faster. A simple app called TRIM Enabler from Groths.org will do the trick, but you must be running the latest version of Snow Leopard, 10.6.7.

You also have to check if your drive is compatible with TRIM. To do this, you'll need to look up your drive's model: From the Finder go to Applications, Utilities, and open System Profiler. You'll find the name and model of your solid state drive there.

Then just Google: "drive name + TRIM" and you should be able to find out whether or not it's compatible.

After that, download the app from here and launch it. First hit the Backup button, then click Patch.

Warning: Since your making modifications to your drive, make sure you backup your data before using TRIM Enabler. You can always restore your system if something goes wrong.

[Via Lifehacker and Rafeed Chaudhury]

Also See: 10 Easy Ways To Speed Up Your Computer

Join the conversation about this story »

See Also:






How To Speed Up Your MacBook Air


Backlink: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/typepad/alleyinsider/silicon_alley_insider/~3/pbI7K_aBsTs/how-to-speed-up-your-macbook-air-2011-3

Saturday, November 13, 2010

AT&T; to Samsung Focus Customers “Don’t Buy microSD Cards”, Wait for “Certified” Due to Random Access Speed

A Samsung Focus document revealed that a microSD card when inserted into Windows Phone 7 is considered a ''permanent modification'' resulting in irreversible changes to card. A Focus FAQ page, states that once a card is added, ''it'll no longer be readable, writable, or even formattable on any other devices such as computers, cameras, printers, and so on''.

Friday, November 12, 2010

Comment on Comcast to Install Speed Bumps for Bandwidth Hogs by Charter Follows Comcast With Broadband Usage Caps: Tech News «

[...] Charter will also introduce a congestion management policy with a protocol-agnostic approach that’s applied only during periods of congestion (Charter notes that congestion is rare on its network). The policy will affect only the heaviest users (less than 1 percent) in small time increments. Those affected will have their bandwidth limited, but no Internet activities will be blocked. For Comcast’s similar policy see our coverage here. [...]

Post originale: http://gigaom.com/2008/09/19/comcast-installs-speed-bumps-for-bandwidth-hogs/#comment-509500

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Nathaniel Powell wrote a new blog post: The Controversy Behind The Determination Of This Speed Camera Location

Nathaniel Powell wrote a new blog post: The Controversy Behind The Determination Of This Speed Camera Location Within the last several years, many cities have noticed a number of changes on the roads. Speed camera location are already strategically p

Post originale: http://www.blogcatalog.com/search/frame?term=location&id;=ee495d65e361263ee9ac10d7ddf158cd

Nathaniel Powell wrote a new blog post: The Controversy Behind The Resolution of The Actual Speed Camera Location

Nathaniel Powell wrote a new blog post: The Controversy Behind The Resolution of The Actual Speed Camera Location In the last few years, many cities have witnessed a variety of changes while driving. Speed camera location were strategically placed to

Post originale: http://www.blogcatalog.com/search/frame?term=location&id;=109d9cd3b26e55189da5986f428c24da

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Comment on Broadband Speed Is the Tail Wagging the Policy Dog by Eddie

Craig Settles, its time to start using your grey matter in that noggin of yours. Not *once* in your post here today did you use the word "upload". Clearly you are looking at this and the FCC is too from that of "download" (consumption), i.e.: > 10-year goal of 4 Mbps download speed How amazingly boring. Have you ever thought about upload bandwidth? Craig Settles oh guru that you are, have you been reading GigaOm about cloud computing? Have you ever thought of how great it would be if we could UPLOAD, say, virtual machines (on the order of several gigabytes) that we produce on our ever powerful laptops and desktops into, say, Amazon EC2 (machine images)? VMware images? Imagine how much more experimentation could take place by people working in their local offices and using super computing multi-core machines like a Mac Pro desktop tower and then to be able to take a VMWare virtual machine image and shove it up into the cloud and run it on a cloud-based production system? How could you not have thought about this? How could you not have mentioned the substantial asymmetry we have today in broadband (up/down bandwidth). I don't get it, are you not paying attention to your fellow GigaOm authors and the things they write about?

Post originale: http://gigaom.com/2010/10/16/broadband-speed-is-the-tail-wagging-the-policy-dog/#comment-299576

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Comment on Broadband Speed Is the Tail Wagging the Policy Dog by tom

i always have mixed feelings about this. as much as i like really fast internet I also believe internet connection are more expensive than they should be. more investment in infrastructure also often means higher prices. so i want see the internet get a bit faster but also a lot cheaper. i would certainly be willing to sacrifice some speed for lower cost.

Post originale: http://gigaom.com/2010/10/16/broadband-speed-is-the-tail-wagging-the-policy-dog/#comment-299376

Broadband Speed Is the Tail Wagging the Policy Dog

As the FCC promotes the National Broadband Plan, it appears it’s convinced making 100 Mbps Internet access speed available to 100 million households within 10 years will bring transformative change to the U.S. One of the expected outcomes is a positive impact on economic development. But will it? More importantly, is there too much emphasis on the ability of speed to drive economic success?

Comment on What You Need To Know About the National Broadband Plan by Broadband Speed Is the Tail Wagging the Policy Dog: Tech News «

[...] the FCC promotes the National Broadband Plan, it appears it’s convinced making 100 Mbps Internet access speed available to 100 million [...]

Post originale: http://gigaom.com/2010/03/07/national-broadband-plan-will-be-a-day-early-but-fall-short/#comment-299209