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You will see a on occasion a variety of anti-apple posts on Linuxgeekoid and from their toiletseat-shaped first generation fruity-coloured absurd iBooks, to the nuisance of learning useless “Apple-only” jargon that’s only applicable to that OS and hardware (that is sheer 100% marketing play to envelop consumers toxically in the “Cult of Apple”, which, toxically is all that it is, a pathetic cult). In other words, if you only use Apple, you will be slightly askew and off from how the rest of the world does things with computers. This severely distorted how I viewed the objective (PC/windows and linux) world of computing because Apple tries to create a whole heap of its own language (intialize means to assign a starting value to a variable in programming, but that’s about it) and it locks down it’s operating system. Unfortunately, I grew up in youth using macs. It turns out this discrepancy was once again related to the clouded, obfuscated self-created jargon used by Apple computer. So this sets it straight, ,once and for all.
Define disk formatting manuals#
I have much to learn about more detailed components of the hardware, but one thing that has always perplexed me is the often misused “initialize” and “format” of a disk.Īs it turns out, even hardware manuals for computers misuse the words initialize and format. I also love learning about hard drives and the accessing of the data from various sectors, read-write and access times. I’m in the process of getting almost everything (via digital photos and finding or creating electronic versions) I own on my hard drives.