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To: Joe NYC who wrote (125382)1/18/2001 1:31:19 AM
From: maui_dude  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
RDRAM/P4 related article at
electronicnews.com

Here's the gist of it :
"At Samsung Semiconductor Inc. we find the DDR market is much less developed than the Rambus market," Hughes said. "Typically, Rambus is outselling DDR by a factor of 4 or 5 times. This factor is expected to increase as Intel P4-based systems come on-line in increasing numbers. Which we are seeing happening right now - and as the Rambus value proposition of price/performance increasingly becomes recognized."

Maui.



To: Joe NYC who wrote (125382)1/18/2001 1:46:49 AM
From: Scumbria  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Joe,

The San Andreas is one of many faults in California. At the present time, the Hayward fault is considered more of a threat to the Bay area than the San Andreas. There are dozens of other active faults all over California.

abag.ca.gov
abag.ca.gov

Almost the entire state of California is at risk.
seismo.ethz.ch

Scumbria



To: Joe NYC who wrote (125382)1/18/2001 2:31:24 AM
From: Gordon Hodgson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
If you want to build nuclear reactors, the Hanford nuclear reservation in Eastern Washington is the place to build them. It's a god forsaken desert next to the Columbia river. In my younger wild days I worked out there as a carpenter, helping construct nukes and getting dosed with radiation at some working reactors also. It's the perfect place to build them, plus the place is already crapped up with radiation leaks. We were building 3 reactors at once until the project went bust. Think they finally got one of them up and running but 2 are still sitting there incomplete. If Intel wanted they could start the project up and crank out their own power. Wouldn't that be epic.

Oh, and unlike that nuke in CA you wouldn't have to shut it down when the surfs up!!