Some users have recently had their accounts hijacked. It seems that the now defunct EVGA forums might have compromised your password there and seems many are using the same PW here. We would suggest you UPDATE YOUR PASSWORD and TURN ON 2FA for your account here to further secure it. None of the compromised accounts had 2FA turned on.
Once you have enabled 2FA, your account will be updated soon to show a badge, letting other members know that you use 2FA to protect your account. This should be beneficial for everyone that uses FSFT.
What I do is install everything to the SSD, and then move folders like Documents, Music, etc. where there'll be a lot of of data you won't want on the SSD to the HDD (you can actually just right click -> properties on them and specify a new location). I also usually symlink my steamapps folder...
I put one of the low power ones in mine... 3450S. Saves you 12W, at least. Ultimately I was hoping to find a 3570T, but they were nowhere to be found at the time.
I believe that's what they're shooting for with Bobcat - though unlike Tegra, Bobcat will run Windows 8 instead of Windows RT, so that would put it at an advantage, in terms of software.
EDIT: Though they did just announce that they're working on some ARM CPUs, but those will be for servers.
I'm having trouble finding articles that far back... but if memory serves, I feel like at the Evergreen (Radeon HD 5000 GPUs) launch event back in 2009, when they first showed off Eyefinity, they had a demo with four GPUs powering 6 displays a piece.
But, the limit would mostly just be how many...
I've noticed this on my comp running Win8 Release Preview too, though it's cause the search indexer is constantly running... I'd just attributed it to a bug in the preview though that was just causing it to always be running.
Not only that, but with WinRT (and rumours that Apple might be looking to move OS X to ARM chips as well), as limiting as it may be now, ARM will probably become more of a competitor in coming years too. And with that would bring many more competitors than just AMD too, obviously.
And on top of that, the very vast majority of people don't have screens taller than 800px, so vertically responsive design or no, the message would still be well below the fold.
Someone's a bit touchy. I never said Apple was perfect, so don't put words in my mouth. But this is very clearly a situation where the media is making a big deal out of a non-issue, especially considering all the claims that Apple needs to apologize when that's not at all what the court...
It actually does it on any of the home pages that don't rotate between the two different ads - it used to on the Canadian and Australian pages as well, until they switched to display the the two. As someone pointed out here, the script was added leading up to the iPad Mini announcement, and was...
Why would they? That's not even what the court ruling said for them to do - the whole notion that Apple has to apologize was made up by tech sites looking to sensationalize the whole issue. The judges only asked that they put up link to a notice on their front page, which they themselves wrote.
Well, in the very least, the Canadian homepage was vertically-responsive as well, from the moment they switched over to the iPad mini ads... I remember checking out their site after the press conference the other week and noticing how good a job they did of making it responsive. It isn't now...
What's even more mind-boggling is the number of tech sites that mis-report the court-mandated statement as an apology - if you actually read the judgement, not once do the judges use the word apology. The exact text they have posted is what the courts told them to post.
Moreover, Apple's...