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#31
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In article , TMack
wrote: SNIP! Yeah, it was kinda longish. Sorry. Gosh - I think we've had an intelligent debate - and reached a fair measure of agreement which is quite unusual on usenet. I hope so ... I'm not sure, though, now that you mention it, that anything the wording at http://www.usenet.org.uk/uk.comp.vendors.html says anything to exclude the OP's post ... [snip] ... the group is for discussion about named vendors or to request information about vendors, not for discussion about the general business of buying and selling. Basically, its where people go to recommend particular vendors (occasionally), criticise particular vendors (frequently!) or ask where is the best pace in the uk to buy stuff. Yes, I know what it's meant for ... my point was that the charter doesn't actually say that ("discussion of issues surrounding" covers a multitude of sins) so even consulting the charter isn't always enough to know whether a posting is on-topic for a particular group. Usenet's low signal to noise ratio is well known and unfortunate ... but some of the most interesting discussions I've followed and participated in have been off-topic. I'd hate to have the thought police spoil *all* the fun. Cheers, Daniel. |
#32
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"David Rorgh" wrote in message ... SNIP I go by what is accepted by the group members. Not one complained about the crossposts. I did! Also agroup which discusses vendors will be aware of factors which help answer my question about falling prices. Irrelevant. A group such as uk.comp.vendors will have people who are aware of many issues to do with computers - that doesn't make all computer-related discussions on-topic. Anyway, the main point that I was making was NOT about you original post being OT. It was about the fact that it was crossposted to hardware discussion groups in a way that was BOUND to result in substantial numbers of VERY OT replies appearing in uk.comp.vendors uk.comp.vendors also discusses comparative prices. Have a look through some threads there to see what I mean. No need to look at threads - look at the charter. i.e. "This newsgroup is for the disussion of issues surrounding computer hardware/software vendors in the UK." Which particular UK vendors were you discussing? You didn't even request information about any particular vendors - you simply tried to start a discussion about prices in general and the effects of SATA. Didn't it occur to you that the crosspost would result in OT material being posted to uk.comp.vendors? I suspect that it didn't because you didn't read the charter before posting. I have a feeling you almost have a need inside you to go over to uk.comp.vendors and do some netcopping. I know you would be kept busy there because there are many examples of what you are complaining about. Er...no there aren't "many examples". The vast majority of posts are on-topic and very few get crossposted to hardware discussion groups - and save the "netcopping" stuff - its the standard lame diversionary tactic used by everyone who gets called for OT posting, inappropriate crossposting etc. etc. Tony |
#33
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chrisv wrote in
10 years ago, the biggest IDE drive you could get was a 1G, and most PC's were still being sold with 540MB and smaller drives. I know this is correct, because I bought a PC (Dell P90) almost exactly 10 years ago, and 1G was definitely "the king". 8) yep ...... my IBM P-75 came with a 540 I am sure because my Mom still uses it at her beach house for email and that is worth a smile .... |
#34
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On Fri, 17 Sep 2004 11:59:04 +0100, Davis Rorgh wrote:
I know it's all "faster and cheaper" with a lot of computer equipment but it seems that HDDs have really taken a big drop. I know this is an old post but if you take a look at the past history, the price is always dropping. At times, it may be going down just a few pennies, and other time it takes a mighty big drop. I remember when an 80 MB hard drive used to sell at about $2000. Back then, most computer didn't have more than 1MB of RAM, B&W only video, and (other than big commercial uses like banks) the idea of needing more than a few MB of storeage was ludicrous. Today for the same $2000, I could probably build a RAID array with around 3 or 4TB of storeage. But today, that much space is still ludicrous. -- To reply, replace digi.mon with phreaker.net |
#35
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Impmon wrote:
On Fri, 17 Sep 2004 11:59:04 +0100, Davis Rorgh wrote: I know it's all "faster and cheaper" with a lot of computer equipment but it seems that HDDs have really taken a big drop. I know this is an old post but if you take a look at the past history, the price is always dropping. At times, it may be going down just a few pennies, and other time it takes a mighty big drop. I remember when an 80 MB hard drive used to sell at about $2000. Back then, most computer didn't have more than 1MB of RAM, B&W only video, and (other than big commercial uses like banks) the idea of needing more than a few MB of storeage was ludicrous. Today for the same $2000, I could probably build a RAID array with around 3 or 4TB of storeage. But today, that much space is still ludicrous. Actually, with the advent of HDTV it's a lot less ludicrous than it was a couple of years ago. At something like 20 gig an hour a terabyte's only 50 hours. -- --John Reply to jclarke at ae tee tee global dot net (was jclarke at eye bee em dot net) |
#36
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"Impmon" wrote I remember when an 80 MB hard drive used to sell at about $2000. Back then, most computer didn't have more than 1MB of RAM, B&W only video, and (other than big commercial uses like banks) the idea of needing more than a few MB of storeage was ludicrous. I remember when a 2.5 MB disk was 14" across and used to sell for over $5000. Now, where did I leave my teeth ? I wasn't far wrong, either - http://www.pdp8.net/rk05/rk05.shtml says $5100 |
#37
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Cornelius J Rat wrote:
"Impmon" wrote I remember when an 80 MB hard drive used to sell at about $2000. Back then, most computer didn't have more than 1MB of RAM, B&W only video, and (other than big commercial uses like banks) the idea of needing more than a few MB of storeage was ludicrous. I remember when a 2.5 MB disk was 14" across and used to sell for over $5000. Now, where did I leave my teeth ? I wasn't far wrong, either - http://www.pdp8.net/rk05/rk05.shtml says $5100 I remember something similar to that in Prestel (BT's old Teletext thingy), the guy there was boasting about it holding a million characters, as he carried it across the room I remember thinking "where's his sword?" :-) -- Pretentious? Moi? |
#38
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On Thu, 14 Oct 2004 21:23:45 +0100, "Cornelius J Rat"
wrote: I remember when a 2.5 MB disk was 14" across and used to sell for over $5000. Now, where did I leave my teeth ? I wasn't far wrong, either - http://www.pdp8.net/rk05/rk05.shtml says $5100 Remember? How about actually owning a monster? I have a 50MB hard drive that is 14" and in a metal case 2 feet high and 3 feet deep and weights probably close to 75 pounds. The disc are in a transparent cover and they make those old records look as small as a CD. -- To reply, replace digi.mon with phreaker.net |
#39
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Impmon wrote:
On Thu, 14 Oct 2004 21:23:45 +0100, "Cornelius J Rat" wrote: I remember when a 2.5 MB disk was 14" across and used to sell for over $5000. Now, where did I leave my teeth ? I wasn't far wrong, either - http://www.pdp8.net/rk05/rk05.shtml says $5100 Remember? How about actually owning a monster? I have a 50MB hard drive that is 14" and in a metal case 2 feet high and 3 feet deep and weights probably close to 75 pounds. The disc are in a transparent cover and they make those old records look as small as a CD. I've got the Data General 1.2 meg version of the RK05 he's talking about, and the Nova 2/10 minicomputer (don't seem so 'mini' now days. hehe) to go with it. As well as a PDP11. |
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