I'm an Sprint customer and I love my 2yr Contract,
500Mins, Unlimited Txting, Unlimited Power Vision, 2 Solid a900's + 6700, which is soon getting an upgrade to a 6800 :D. And guess the price, under 70$/month ;)
And the 2yr contract on my end just forces Sprint to keep the current pricing. Plus w/ Roaming.. I voice as well as Data roam on Verizon's and Alltel's network so it feels like paying one company and getting access to all 3 ;)
As for this, this would be a interesting experience w/ Sprint as for the past...forever they always subsidized their devices, being a CDMA network it's not as simple as a sim card (though there are exceptions). It would suck tho to pay the highend of the hardware and not get some good service on the device... :\ (the minunium bandwidth guarantee)
I'm sorry..are you an idiot? If this technology was around in 1999, please show me links, sources...oh wait, you can't. Because it wasn't.
Let me give you a run down, flash memory..was..at best 32/64 and 128mb was it's highpoint. Ram for computers was 128/256. Windows XP wasn't around, and wouldn't be until 3 years later (2002). Theres alot more I can go upon the CPU and Chipset specs, but Obviously if you made a jest comment about being in 1999, you wouldn't understand those.
And as for that, I got my T40 for 200$, 1.5 Ghz P-m, 2 (one new)Extended Batteries, Intel 2200BG (Centrino), and a Warranty which has yet to expired ;)
So, you paid 70$ for a subclass 300mhz laptop w/ prolly a bad battery, which is currently going on ebay for 20$?.
If you waited till decemberish when this should be released, you could've gotten a much better deal, you just paid around 1/4th the price for a machine that's a POS. Hope you won't be using that to view youtube, or anything advanced...since it won't work.
Have fun w/ your 1997'ish laptop, I'll be Sporting an Asus EEE which can do twirls around yours :).
"I'm looking for a solid state drive, around 32 to 64GB, for use in my web server. The drive will contain my web sites and the operating system, either Windows Server 2008 R2 or Ubuntu. Large storage is handled by a separate RAID array, so capacity is not an issue. Rather, I am looking for the fastest, longest-lasting, and most reliable drive under $150 that is suitable to my application. Any thoughts? Thanks!"
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