Friday, May 18, 2012

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In this review, I

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{ 5 comments }

Gerry Attric February 18, 2012 at 2:30 pm

Go to the Gateway site and look for Sound Max downloads for you particular laptop.

jf February 19, 2012 at 2:46 am

That’s a strong machine. It has a 2.4ms response time (about as good as you’ll get in HDTVs) and has 240Hz refresh rate. That’s the maximum high end specs you can get in LCD to help deal with motion blur issues. The only other option is to get a computer monitor, but good luck finding one of that size.LG is a good brand name. That is clearly one of their flagship models. It has all the premium features you would need. It should do very well with games. I wouldn’t even know a better TV to recommend frankly in LCDs.The only thing that might outperform it is a Plasma. The reason is that they are near instantaneous response times (like 0.001ms). But perhaps you’ve decided Plasma isn’t something that interests you? If you haven’t thought about it, I might look into it. Grab a sweet Panasonic set to really rock out the PS3.And loads of gamers use Plasma sets. The burn-in issues of the old days is long gone. Good quality sets, don’t have that issue anymore. Just something to consider, if you already haven’t.

MR February 19, 2012 at 3:00 pm

The minute hand and hour hand start in different places, move at different speeds, and we want to know when they are separated by a particular distance.We’ll use seconds for units of time, and “minutes” for units of distance.Speed of the minute hand:(vm) = 1/60Speed of hour hand:(vh) = 5 / [(60)(60)] = 1/720Position of the minute hand with initial position at 0 (12 o’clock),(xm) = (vm)(t) + (xom)(xm) = (1/60)(t) [1]Position of hour hand with initial position at 10 “minutes” (2 o’clock):(xh) = (vh)(t) + (xoh)(xh) = (1/720)(t) + 10 [2]180 degrees apart would be 30 “minutes” apart on an analog clock.(xm) – (xh) = 30 [3]Substitute [1] and [2] into [3]:(1/60)(t) – [(1/720)(t) + 10] = 30[1/60 - 1/720](t) = 40t = 40(720) / 11 = 2618 s

Some_One February 20, 2012 at 3:03 am

I think you might

John A February 20, 2012 at 2:26 pm

I would go with the 1gb option simply due to the fact that, yes the super-clocked version will run faster, only slightly, but the 1gb of memory will be far more beneficial in the future.

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