The Wannabe Longest Thread
#81
5' 9"
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#82
Wow. Wow. That is epic. Darn you!
Quote:In Jr. High School, I would take a gummi bear, squeeze its ears into points so it looked like Yoda, and then I would say to it "Eat you, I will!". And of course then I would it eat.
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#83
Quote:Wow. Wow. That is epic. Darn you!


LOL thanks Tongue
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JoshL1 / JoshL2 / JoshL3 / JoshL4 / JoshL5 / JoshL6 / JoshL7 / WoCCLP3 / TradingPlaces / WoCC1 / JoshL8(?)
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JoshL / JCCLPRejects

Total: 1,463 (with no repeats)

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#84
So, because this is supposed to be The Longest Thread, I offer up another digression:

How about gigabytes, eh? They're really something.



[i'm not sure where, exactly, this line of discussion will go, but I'm sure someone here can think of something creative.]
Quote:In Jr. High School, I would take a gummi bear, squeeze its ears into points so it looked like Yoda, and then I would say to it "Eat you, I will!". And of course then I would it eat.
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#85
Terabytes are the new gigabytes when it comes to personal storage space. Of course, your garden variety corporation probably is up to petabytes by now. I shudder to think of what kind of storage a government agency has.
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#86
I actually originally wrote "terrabytes" (sic), but I purposely changed it to "gigabytes" because I wasn't sure about the spelling (it turned out that I had it wrong), and I was too lazy to look it up.



The storage space of a government agency isn't what should concern you; their organizational scheme is what should be cause for worry!
Quote:In Jr. High School, I would take a gummi bear, squeeze its ears into points so it looked like Yoda, and then I would say to it "Eat you, I will!". And of course then I would it eat.
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#87
MS moved people from large to gigantic pretty fast. I prefer smaller footprints. My first database program for our research nursery held information on each individual tree we had in our nursery, about 5000, covering 6 different species, and placement on a grid in just under 100 different plantations. Program and data fit on a 720Kb 5 1/4 inch floppy for distribution. Of course, that was DOS based. The windows version used more than twice the space.

ian
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#88
As much as I'm not a huge fan of these type of topics, I'll let it slide.

Anyway, is it true that USB hard drives are slower than SATA hard drives?
[Image: tsjoJuC.png]
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#89
Exabytes is where it's at. And I do where hats -- love covering up my balding scalp.

I hear USB3 is freaky fast.
"Bad news, bad news came to me where I sleep / Turn turn turn again" - Bob Dylan
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#90
USB is very slow compared to SATA. If it wasn't, we'd be using USB for hard drive interconnects, and they wouldn't have invented eSATA and Thunderbolt.
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