There is NO WAY I will store all of my data in the cloud. Ever.
Why not?
There is NO WAY I will store all of my data in the cloud. Ever.
There is NO WAY I will store all of my data in the cloud. Ever.
Why not?
There is NO WAY I will store all of my data in the cloud. Ever.
Why not?
Assuming your data is actually valuable, why would you trust someone else with it?
Apple does not guarantee or warrant that any Content you may store or access through the Service will not be subject to inadvertent damage, corruption or loss.
terms and conditions are essential to smart business. HD manufacturers have the same text.
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DVD's will be gone in 2 years... CD's are already obsolete...
CD's are not even a little bit obsolete. Granted the sales model is moving to digital media, but until affordable home storage (and large cap portables) and/or internet bandwidths allow lossless music, CD's will still sound better. Particularly in mid to high-end sound systems.
I for one am a collector and like owning CD's, Records and Tapes; same-same VHS, DVD's and Bluray's. I have several thousand titles, and while having all my music (and a couple of movies) with me on an iPod (iPad) is convenient for traveling, it's not how I listen (watch) at home. My lossless media requirements would be on the order of 1000 TB.
Now if I could just get an iBooks copy with every book I buy...
Why not?
An i7-3770K easily matches your Mac Pro.
Are you planning on getting rid of your toy and getting a real computer anytime soon?
The difference between a Xeon and an i7 these days is simply that the Xeon can support multiple sockets (only some models) and ECC memory.
Do you really use ECC memory or need it ? Is your Mac Pro a single socket ?
Otherwise, they are the same processor core.
from $11,499.00
I guess my toy (a 27" 2011 BTO iMac built with the following specs: 3.4GHz quad-core Core i7, 2GB AMD Radeon 6970m, and 16GB RAM) is able to run all of my apps simultaneously with no problems, batch process a few hundred photos in minutes, encode video and audio very quickly, run my RAID setup, run my digital life, be a mini-theater system, and look good on my desk just isn't cut out for professional level work. Ok.
Anybody who thinks that US manufacturing will ever get to the level of China knows very little about economics. Americans need to stick to what they do best - management. Americans have a reputation of laziness. But that's not necessarily a bad thing. It's an ideal characteristic in motivating people to find easier ways of doing almost everything. Chinese culture is one that is marked by diligence and perfectionism, which is probably better suited for manufacturing. They're also willing to work for a lot less, longer hours, and in worse conditions. Speaking in general terms of course.
Sadly, it is ethical in the terms that everyone does it.
Explain, please.