Hot answers tagged marketing
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I have always taken that marketing slogan to be basically some extra advertising for nVidia at the beginning of games and some implied performance benefit on nVidia hardware that is difficult, if not impossible, to actually quantify or prove.
Effectively it is likely to be little more than a rubber stamp saying that someone at nVidia saw it working on one ...
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They have different instructions that get done at different times. maybe because one instruction involves more logic gates than another. Different processors may perform different types of operations faster than others. But there are benchmarks which I suppose test how the processor is at a bunch of things calculate a figure that represents how it does, a ...
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I ran into this problem a few years back as well when needing to send bulk email to my client's internal audience, for which unsubscribe was neither required nor appropriate.
Ended up with Relevant Tools - http://www.relevanttools.com - as they were willing to remove the requirement after speaking with me, and doing a check into the background of the agency ...
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Maybe the SmushBox is for you http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/smush/smart-sms-texting-for-everyone-the-smushbox. It was discussed in Security Now episode 398: http://www.grc.com/sn/sn-398.txt
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I know this thread is now dead, but I would like to add to it, as I frequently encounter the exact same problem and am presently trying to persuade my hosting service that bulk mailings coming from my web applications have no legal obligation to include an unsubscribe link. My sites register employees for company conferences and have to send out invitations ...
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It isn't for lack of trying. For many years, several of Intel's competitors unsuccessfully tried to push performance ratings over MHz. In the mid- to late-1990's, AMD's 5x86 and Cyrix's 6x86 lines used a PR- number. Cyrix's 133 MHz 6x86, for example, outperformed Intel's 133 MHz Pentium by such a large margin that Cyrix marketed it as a PR166+. Although ...
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I work at a company which offers an email marketing product, and there are a few things we do to help avoid issues.
Both Microsoft and Google provide "whitelist" services for Hotmail and Gmail (respectively). It's a bit of a pain to setup but worth the effort.
We operate mailout servers whose job is soley to send the mail itself - these machines are ...
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