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Secrets Out - Its Soltek

Cool. Maybe at last we wont have to wait for the latest hardware to filter through from the USA.

Thanks for the link Bozo!
 

heh, heh. Just noticed you're from England.

I had a Soltek board for a 1GIG PIII Flip Chip, and it was lots better than the Aopen Pro266
Dirt cheap at $75 also.
 
Soltek is good and are quite popular in Europe ...

But what about Shuttle? ... They got a P4X266 board called the AV40/R

Check out the benchmarks ... Link

Also check out the website ... Link
 


<< Hey why do you guys call french fries, chips? >>

maybe they didn't wanna have anything to do with the french? I dunno... just making things up
 


<< I know were called limeys... dont remember why though...

go on tell me 🙂
>>



I think it had to do with the Brits discovering that if they ate limes while on long sea voyages, they avoided scurvy.

Scurvy is nasty stuff... vitamin C deficiancy.
 

Correct.......................


In Reply to: Re: Limey posted by Bruce Sullivan on August 24, 2000 at 22:17:30:

: : : : A PC friend wants to know if people from Britain mind being called "limeys"? Well, do you? Mr.
Hendrickson says you don't but I'm double-checking.

: : : : LIME; LIMEY - ".As far back as 1795, lime juice was issued in the British navy as an antisorbutic,
to protect against scurvy. After about 50 years, Americans and Australians began calling English ships
and sailors 'lime-juicers,' and later 'limeys.' The term 'limey' was eventually applied to all Englishmen,
and today the designation and the story behind it are widely known. Originally a contemptuous term
and an international slur, 'limey' is now considered a rather affectionate designation." "Encyclopedia of
Word and Phrase Origins" by Robert Hendrickson (Fact on File, New York, 1997)

: : : What is an antisorbutic? MS Word gave me a red line under it with no sugestions.

: : Actually, I believe the word is "antiscorbutic".

: : an-ti-scor-bu-tic
: : adj. 1. efficacious against scurvy.
: : n. 2. an antiscorbutic agent, as ascorbic acid.
: : [1715-25]
 
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