Last Month the Japanese try to retrive this mod a little bit more. They played in the at 2pm CET. At the moment the gametracker,com Server Monitorring is off. Hope soon they turn it on. The ranking seems to work.
Registered Member #78 Joined: [ 18:27 ] [ 13 Mar 2004 ]
Why should we? It doesnt get bogged down with a bazilion registry entries leading nowhere No need for antivirus either (yet). I liked modding PC's in the past, gone all the way with watercooling, overclocking etc, but those days are over. I prefer a tidy desk without a monster taking up half the livingroom. This one will be modded a bit soon tho, I'll be throwing in a Terrabyte drive when I can afford it, and another 2 gigs of RAM. 320GBs just aint enough for all the porn I download, according to Shrooms.
Teabag, you talk about performance. You run RAID? How come I outload you on BF maps? With a single S-ATA drive? Sure Apple must have done something right when they put this together. Also how can you claim Windows is oldest? Thats way out man.
Xerox started the GUI OS trend in 1981 with its Star, Macintosh followed up in 1984 with a Graphical OS for the masses.
"When the Macintosh was introduced in 1984, it represented something altogether new to the public – an affordable Graphical User Interface (GUI) on a computer with a mouse. Suddenly, while others were typing commands like “del index.com,†Mac users were dragging and dropping the image of a file into the image of a trash can."
This is also interesting: Microsoft Windows
Windows 1.01 (1985)
Windows 3.11 (1993)
Microsoft modeled the first version of Windows, released in 1985, on the GUI of the Mac OS. Windows 1.0 was a GUI for the MS-DOS operating system that had been the OS of choice for IBM PC and compatible computers since 1981. Windows 2.0 followed, but it wasn't until the 1990 launch of Windows 3.0, based on Common User Access that its popularity truly exploded. The GUI has seen major and minor redesigns since, notably the addition of spatial file management capabilities akin to the Macintosh Finder in Windows 95, in Windows Explorer; the contentious web browser integration in Windows 98; the subsequent transition away from spatial file management more towards a single-window, task-based interface with Windows XP; and the removal of the browser integration in Windows Vista. Windows traditionally differed from other GUIs in that it encouraged using applications maximized, as evident even in this early Windows 1.01 screenshot. The users usually switch between maximized applications using Alt+Tab keyboard shortcut or by clicking on a Taskbar listing all open applications, as opposed to clicking on a partially visible window, as is more common in some other GUIs. In 1988, Apple sued Microsoft for copyright infringement of the LISA and Apple Macintosh GUI. The court case lasted 4 years before almost all of Apple's claims were denied on a contractual technicality. Subsequent appeals by Apple were also denied, and Microsoft and Apple apparently entered a final, private settlement of the matter in 1997 as a side note in a broader announcement of investment and cooperation.