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rgb fan

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Everything posted by rgb fan

  1. btw the pc doesn't work and I don't have another old one
  2. so. I have boxes of ddr4 but there's one that is more important because its from my old pc and I don't want to pay a lot of money for some recovery service. so what do I do?
  3. you should try connecting the phone to computer and search for a corrupted file and finding the same phone and replacing the file
  4. if your going to get it put it on a dumy computer not your main one
  5. AndroidTV ,Android Watch and Chrome OK but Youtube and Android are just your opinion and thats just the start.
  6. by most what do you mean??
  7. your profile pic is a movie soooooooo
  8. 4K to 8K: Is it Overkill and What Does it Mean to Our Industry by :digital brew Filmmakers have been capturing 4K content for a while now. But it’s taken some time for the world to get on board the 4K-volution. Just as the television and streaming industry is catching up, an 8K sensor upgrade has been released. Is it overkill? What does this mean to our industry? Will we ever catch up? Let’s start at the beginning. 4K broke the cinematography scene in 2003 with Dalsa Origin’s release of the first 4K commercial camera. Since then 4K resolution has become the standard in the film industry. So what’s the buzz all about? What’s 4K, anyways? 4K literally means 4,000, as in 4,000 pixels. 4K, also known as Ultra HD, is used when referring to content and display devices with a 4,096 x 2,160 pixel resolution. That’s a total of 8,847,360 pixels. That’s a lot more pixels – 4 times more, to be exact – in comparison to today’s most common broadcast resolution, FullHD. More pixels means better, sharper, smoother, life-like detail. As nifty as 4K sounds, it’s been a slow journey to mainstream adoption. Few of us currently own TVs or monitors with the display technology to appreciate 4K content. Also, many argue whether the human eye is able to perceive such detail. According to CBC News, in order to truly experience the 4K difference you need, at least, a 48-inch screen, and you have to get pretty cozy with it – plus, of course, you must be watching actual 4K content. So when you hear about 6K AND 8K it might seem like total overkill. But for us production snobs, it’s like music to our ears. Here at Digital Brew, we’ve filmed with the Red One, Red Epic, and Sony F55 – all 4K. The quality is truly noticeable. When compressing videos from 4K to HD streamable video the images are definitely clearer and cleaner. Shooting at such a high resolution gives editors and VFX engineers an opportunity to zoom into images very far and reframe without losing information. If you’re shooting in 8K, you could literally zoom in twice as much, and you’d still have a 4K image, and even further, HD. Not bad. How can you watch 4K? The 4K-volution has just started gaining momentum in the television and entertainment industry. Even though commercial 4K TVs started coming out in 2013, they just recently started going mainstream thanks to the recent drop in prices. Sony, Samsung, LG and VIZIO are among some of the brands with 4K TVs already in the market. You can get your hands on one for these puppies for just under $1,000. Though, prices easily go up to $10,000. Streaming services have been ahead of the 4K game for a while now. YouTube made 4K streaming available back in 2010 and Netflix has been offering a plethora of 4K content since 2014. In fact, the paid streaming giant is now filming all of its original content in Ultra HD – season 3 of House of Cards was filmed in 6K – further solidifying its commitment to the movement. Been to the movies lately? If you happened to be at an AMC theatre, you’ve probably already watched a 4K movie. Back in 2009, AMC Entertainment agreed to install Sony 4K projection systems in cinemas across the nation. From recent blockbusters, like The Revenant and Spectre 007, to not so new ones, like 2012’s Spiderman, major film studios, like Sony, are releasing more and more 4K movies. 4K content and display technology is expected to become more available to the consumer by the end of this year. The 8K Upgrade But just as we’re beginning to catch up to 4K, RED, the top manufacturer of professional digital cinema cameras, releases an 8K sensor upgrade. The 8K sensor has a resolution of 8192 x 4320 – that’s 33 million pixels. Like the 6K WEAPON camera, the 8K version offers similar image quality, color information, dynamic range and the ability to record in RAW and ProRes formats simultaneously. What we love about RED cameras is that they don’t let their older models become obsolete. Most add-ons are universal between all bodies to upgrade without having to buy all new gear, such as upgrading sensors. Big name productions like the next Guardians of the Galaxy are already set to be filmed with the new 8K WEAPON. Filmmakers are already starting to create beautiful content with the RED’s new 8K digital camera. Filming with 8K resolution guarantees a pristine 4K image that looks incredible, like Phill Holland’s short film, FORGED. Check it out yourself. Even if you’re viewing this on an HD screen, select 4K on the bottom right gear of the YouTube player. SOURCE : https://www.digitalbrew.com/4k-8k-overkill-mean-industry/
  9. try compressed air and a dvd USB attachment
  10. i dont know the adman password i just dont remember but i know the rest before it turns of it says fetal error
  11. no it asks for 3 or 4 passwords but then it just turns off
  12. it shows a screen that says amarcan mega trends and a list of specs
  13. the hard drive has something wrong with it so it will not boot windows (7)
  14. i have a old asus ee pc it wolnt boot properly what do i do with it?
  15. here is my oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooold blackberry curve
  16. Two of the most well-known companies in tech are Apple and Microsoft Apple is famous for virtually creating the smartphone as we know it today, and is also a leader in both tablets and computers, as well as inwearables with its highly successful Apple Watch product line. Microsoft is a software behemoth that dominates the market for PC operating systems and productivity software, and is a powerful player in the gaming and cloud computing markets. And, for good measure, Microsoft has built out a sizable consumer devices business, too, with its Surface line of computers.If you're an investor looking to add a large and powerful tech company to your portfolio and you're trying to pick between Apple and Microsoft, I'd argue that, today, Microsoft is the better bet. Here's why. Check out the latest earnings call transcripts for Apple and Microsoft. Better growth Microsoft has done an incredible job of delivering solid growth for shareholders. Last quarter, for example, the company reported year-over-year revenue growth of 12%, with operating income rising 18% during that same time frame. That growth was broad-based, too. The company's productivity and business processes segment saw sales increase 13%, its intelligent cloud segment enjoyed a 20% jump, and even its more personal computing segment -- which has heavy exposure to the relatively uninspiring PC market -- grew 7% as its search advertising, gaming, Surface, and Windows Commercial products grew enough to offset a 5% drop in Windows OEM sales. Microsoft is also calling for revenue between $29.4 billion and $30.1 billion for the quarter -- up 11% year over year at the midpoint of that range. Apple, on the other hand, isn't a growth company right now. In its most recent quarter, the company reported a 5% year-over-year decline in revenue. For the following quarter, Apple is guiding to revenue of between $55 billion and $59 billion. At the midpoint of that range, the company's sales look set to drop 6.7% from the same quarter a year ago. For the full year, analysts expect Apple's revenue to fall 3.9%, suggesting moderating declines in the second half of the company's fiscal year. In the subsequent year, analysts expect Apple to turn in revenue growth of 3.9%, but that utterly pales to the 10.4% growth that analysts forecast from Microsoft in its fiscal 2020. Microsoft seems like a better stock for growth-oriented investors than Apple. Better risk profile Microsoft's business is far more diversified than Apple's. While Microsoft has roughly even exposure across its three core reporting segments (and there's a lot of diversity within those reporting segments), Apple's business is highly dependent on a single product category: iPhone. For some perspective, nearly 63% of Apple's revenue in fiscal 2018 came from sales of the iPhone. By contrast, Microsoft's largest segment in fiscal 2018 -- more personal computing -- made up only 38.3% of the company's overall revenue. It's also worth noting that this segment consists of a broad spectrum of products. To make matters worse, Apple's iPhone business is currently tanking. Last quarter, iPhone revenue dropped 15%. Moreover, in addition to the fact that the company's outlook for the current quarter is fairly weak, there has been a flurry of negative news items regarding iPhone demand, particularly in China. Now, again, Microsoft's growth trajectory looks healthier than Apple's at the moment, so I expect that gap to narrow over the next couple of years. But, in the here and now, investors are paying significantly more for each dollar of Microsoft's operating income than they are for a dollar of Apple's at current prices. Investor takeaway Currently, Microsoft stock looks like a better bet than Apple's. Microsoft's business is more diversified and is set to grow at a significantly faster pace than Apple's is over the next couple of years. With that being said, if Apple's iPhone business gets back on a sustainable growth track -- even if that growth isn't massive -- and if the company's other segments continue to collectively grow nicely, then I'd be more than willing to re-evaluate my stance on this comparison. As my Fool.com colleague Evan Niu pointed out, analysts with Longbow Research found that iPhone search trends in China -- a potential indicator of demand -- "fell a gut-wrenching 47% in February." Longbow also cited weak Apple supplier sales results in February as another sign that iPhone demand just isn't great. So on one hand, Microsoft has a collection of businesses that, in aggregate, are delivering significant and seemingly sustainable growth. On the other, Apple's biggest business is declining and its other segments simply aren't able to completely pick up the slack. As far as risk profile goes, Microsoft seems like the safer pick. A key advantage in favor of Apple While I think Microsoft's growth prospects and overall risk profile are better, there is an area in which Apple clearly wins: sheer profitability. Although both Apple and Microsoft command roughly similar market capitalizations (Microsoft is actually a little more valuable than Apple as of this writing), Apple generated almost $68 billion in operating income over the last 12 months, dwarfing Microsoft's nearly $38.9 billion over that same period.
  17. here is a 1Gb pc2 ram card soooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo old
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