Computer Questions Not Worth Their Own Thread II

My mom bought me an external hard drive. (Don't ask, she's weird like that.) With the bathtub curve thing, it usually either fails right away or lasts a while (except for dropping it or power surges or whatever). How long is "fails right away"? I read somewhere one month, other places several months...
 
Thanks.

Question: How come a lot of computer-related companies ended up on the West Coast (esp. Silicon Valley)?
 
Thats not really true. The primary reason silicon valley, and by proxy the west coast is known to be the 'tech capital' is because of the dot-com bubble in the 90's. Silicon Valley was the center of that due to a large amount of available capital and incentives from the cities in the area for companies to have offices there.

Another reason was the availability of people with the relevant skills. You have Stanford University and UC Berkeley pretty much right next door to each other which have both had a long tradition of leading in science and technology. Immigrants from India and China (among others) also helped stimulate the boom.

Nowadays though, the main reason any company would have an office anywhere is that there are good incentives and a good availability of labor. The west coast is no longer the leader in that, its just that its the most well-known for it.
 
Interesting. I found this article which says Silicon Valley used to grow a lot of prunes.

EDIT: Just realized that prunes are dried plums. How do you make plums grow so they're dried up? :hmm:
 
Well the city I live in now used to be a bunch of orchards, and not even that long ago (1960's)
 
Interesting. I found this article which says Silicon Valley used to grow a lot of prunes.

EDIT: Just realized that prunes are dried plums. How do you make plums grow so they're dried up? :hmm:
The same way you do raisins.
Well the city I live in now used to be a bunch of orchards, and not even that long ago (1960's)
I used to live in Fremont, which is the very northern tip of SV. When I first moved there, 1976, it was pretty agricultural. Now, most of that is gone.
 
Indeed it is. Now its filled with car orchards (big automalls)
 
The same way you do raisins.

Oh, I thought it meant they were already dried up when you picked them off the trees. :blush:

My area is still pretty agricultural. For some reason, there's a lot of cows around here. My mom said when she lived out of town, sometimes cows would come on her porch. But in town, it's developing, and there's a bunch of fast-food restaurants on what used to be cornfields. My mom says they began to build them in the 1970s. (This also reminds me of the time that me and mom were filling up at one of those McDonalds which also has a gas station, and a trailer pulled up with two cattle inside. I said "Man, that's some really fresh hamburger.")

EDIT: I found this book.
In Making Silicon Valley, Christophe L▀cuyer shows that the explosive growth of the personal computer industry in Silicon Valley was the culmination of decades of growth and innovation in the San Francisco-area electronics industry. Using the tools of science and technology studies, he explores the formation of Silicon Valley as an industrial district, from its beginnings as the home of a few radio enterprises that operated in the shadow of RCA and other East Coast firms through its establishment as a center of the electronics industry and a leading producer of power grid tubes, microwave tubes, and semiconductors. He traces the emergence of the innovative practices that made this growth possible by following key groups of engineers and entrepreneurs. He examines the forces outside Silicon Valley that shaped the industry—in particular the effect of military patronage and procurement on the growth of the industry and on the development of technologies—and considers the influence of Stanford University and other local institutions of higher learning.

EDIT: Does anybody have any idea when I tried to put the accent mark on the E, it turned into a little block?
 
I installed Google Earth. Google Chrome came along with it, despite the fact that I didn't see anything about it being bundled. This makes me not so happy. Has this happened to anyone else?

EDIT: I went back to the download page and noticed that there was a checkbox. But it was ABOVE the EULA so I didn't really notice it. Sneaky, I think.
 
Darn about portable civ...

Next Question: I installed SimCity 3000 on a computer running XP SP2(?) the game runs fine however when I try to play Civ the screen goes black and the monitor shows an orange light (like when the computer is off) and the computer is running really hard, how can I fix this?
 
Try a complete uninstall, delete, and reinstall of the games that do not work. Could be a corrupted file.
 
And obviously make sure your drivers are as up-to-date as they can be.
 
My iPod Nano used to work normally, but now it refuses to sync. My computer (running Vista, if that helps) says it doesn't recognize it, but it will still charge. Any ideas?
 
Check it on another computer. That will isolate the problem to either your computer or your ipod.
 
I keep finding pornographic sites when doing google searches for non-pornographic material. What am I doing wrong?
 
Turn on safesearch.


Question:

What are my options for lightweight media players/managers? I don't want lots of features, just playlists. And I want a small footprint because RAM is precious.
 
I've been looking at building a desktop, and this is the build I've come up with.

1) Are there any glaring errors (missing components/compatibility issues)?
2) Are there any poor value/unnecessarily expensive components? I'm thinking the PSU is more beefy than I need, but the price is not bad with the mail-in rebate (though those are a pain) and I haven't found any really compelling cheaper options.
3) Are there any big upgrades for a minor price (<$20 ish) that would be worth considering?
 
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