Paul,
<< Thanks and congratulations - you seem to be the first (maybe only) one who got this "joke". >>
Do I get anything? :-) Perhaps one of those Intel Bunny Dolls hanging around your station? :-) My Boba Fett, the Mandalore supercommando, needs someone to do battle with on my monitor.
Thanks for the opinion on LOR/Bernard. Im doing more research.
<< Please tell me what these books are - I only know of one. >>
Hmmm. I have an interesting book called Accidental Empires and it mentions a lot on Intel. I only know about two other books, I guess, that I assume are a lot more about Intel and I don't have either--Grove's book and then the one you're in (what I have read here a couple times) called Intel Inside, which my local Barnes and Noble doesn't even have. I ignorantly assumed that there were a great deal of books on mighty Intel. I assume your 'one' is Intel Inside. Is this REALLY the only book exclusively about Intel?? With Intel's obvious importance/popularity/size/influence, I would actually find that quite bizarre and amazing, if true. But, my gosh, i guess shopping for Intel books should be easier.
all imho pigboy p.s. There will be more and more talk of Fibre Channel in the year ahead. It is a very interesting technology on the OTHER side of the server. I am very excited about it. From a post in another folder, this is an interesting link to ALR (apparantly a subsidiary of Gateway).
ntbox.alr.com
"As a leader in SMP server solutions and a developer of award-winning data storage subsystems, ALR is uniquely qualified to tackle the demands of advanced, yet cost-effective, server cluster applications. With its adaptation of Fibre Channel storage technology and the ability to house up to twelve Pentium Pro processors in a single cluster solution, ALR delivers one of the most powerful and unique cluster solutions available in an industry compatible configuration." |