- Jewel Match IV for iPad, iPhone, Android, Mac & PC! Voyage through a wondrous match-3 adventure as Luna, a recent graduate of the Magic University. Search Varanah for the missing wizard, Ludovic!!
- Read up on Kane Ma's biography, career, awards and more on ESPN.
- I have an older Mac and running Webroot the scan takes about 1 hour and 20 minutes. New Macs take 10 minutes to scan. May I ask if you have the Time Machine or an external back up running? Or do you have scan mounted drives checked? If so please uncheck Scan Mounted Drives.
Ok, System told me the upgrade was ready. It got to the Estimating time remaining stage. And is just sitting there. A tap on the power button starts that bit again, telling me 9 minutes remaining 25 minutes remaining Estimating time remaining. Nothing for hours now. Mac OS X client will not connect to NAS; By Luke, 22 hours ago; QNAP. 6.8k posts Issue Playback of a file stuttering with Emby on Web and FireTV (fine with iPhone.
MCR Library is Required to Run Executable Learning Machine 101 Programs
In order to run executable software provided on the Learning Machines 101 website, you must first download and install the MATLAB Compiler Runtime Library. This Library is Installed and Uninstalled using the MCR Installer. The MCR Installer is a large 300-400 megabyte file which contains a large collection of mathematical routines which need to be installed on your computer. Allow about 20 minutes to 1 hour to complete the one-time installation procedure.
MCR Library Installation Procedure
To install the MCR library, simply download the MCR Installer and then click on the file. It will unzip and then an installer will take you through the installation process. The machine learning software on this website will not work unless the MCR Library is properly installed. Also, after the MCR Installer has been installed, the first time you click on your executable code (not the MCR Installer Code but the executable software you download from this website) it may take a few minutes for your executable code to run for the first time. It will run faster when you try running it in the future.
Warning! Note that if you already have one or more multiple versions of MATLAB installed on your system, then you may have problems getting the executable to work because the operating system is confused regarding which version of MATLAB should be used. In such cases, it might be easier to simply run the MATLAB source code instead of the executable. Or, alternatively, you can install the MCR Installer on a computer which has not had previous versions of MATLAB installed.
Do not Reinstall the MCR Installer Software Each Time You Download Software
You only need to download and install the MCR Installer software once! Once the MCR Installer software is installed on your machine (it will probably take you about 20 minutes to install), then when you download executable software in the future you do not have to reinstall the MCR Library. Future executable software will download and execute on your computer within a few minutes if the MCR Installer has been previously installed.
MCR Library Uninstallation Procedure
Do not delete the installer from your computer because you will need the installer to remove the MATLAB Compiler Runtime Library from your computer. The MCR library makes many changes to your computer and to properly reverse those changes you need to use the installer to uninstall the software. To use the MCR Installer to UNINSTALL, simply click the MCR Installer as if you are installing the MCR Library. The Installer is smart enough to figure out that the MCR Library is already installed and will ask you if you want to uninstall the software. Once you have uninstalled the MCR library, then you can go ahead and delete the MCR installer if you choose to do so.
Legal Permission
My MATLAB license agreement gives you legal permission to install (for free) the MCR installer on as many computers as you like only for the purposes of running the software provided on this website. The MCR installer is the property of MATLAB (www.mathworks.com).
PC Energy Savings Guideline
UH has over 10,000 networked personal computers to support teaching, research and administration. PCs and other electronic office equipment, such as printers and scanners, collectively consume significant amounts of energy. Fortunately, there are ways that personal computers users can conserve energy and save money, without major impact to operations.
A desktop personal computer with LCD monitor uses about 1080 kWh per year if left on 24/7 and would cost UH $225* to run. (*Energy rates are expected to increase.) Turning off the computer when you leave for the day, would save about 65%. UH could save $1.57 million a year in energy costs (based on 10,000 units at $0.23 per kWh). Energy estimates depend on computer specifications, duration of use, as well as type of use.
(adapted from Saving Energy, http://michaelbluejay.com/electricity/computers.html)
More Energy | Less Energy |
Ready to be used | Sleep / Standby |
Desktop | Laptop |
CRT monitor | LCD (flat panel display) |
Faster processor | Slower processor |
Older processor (Pentium, G3/G4/G5) | Newer processor (Core Duo) |
PC | Mac |
Heavy use | Light use |
(processor-intensive task) | (e.g. email, word processing) |
On the Internet | Offline |
Modern computers are designed with energy-saving components and come with advanced power management. Power management, standard in Windows and Mac operating systems, can put inactive monitors and computer systems (CPU, hard drive, etc.) into low-power 'sleep' mode. Moving the mouse or touching the keyboard 'wakes' up the monitor and computer in seconds. Power saving settings can be adjusted to meet your needs.
A desktop computer when shut down uses 3-5 watts; when it is idle, it uses an average of 89 watts. A laptop computer when shut down uses 3 watts; when it is idle, it uses 15-25 watts.* By putting your computer to sleep when it's inactive, considerable energy savings can be realized.
*from Dell on Dell: Energy Efficiency
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- Turn off computers when you are done for the day.*
*Exceptions: if software updates and backups are done after work hours, consult with your departmental IT staff. Leave your computer on if you need to access it remotely.
- Set power management options to automatically put your computer to sleep/standby mode after 15 minutes or less of inactivity.*
* If nothing else, set power management for monitors. Set hard drive power management after consulting with your departmental IT staff as applications may be affected.
Recommendations for Power Management
(adapted from MIT for use at UH, http://web.mit.edu/ist/initiatives/it-energy/guidelines.html)
Configuring Power Management for Personal Computers http://www.hawaii.edu/askus/926
WINDOWS XP (Start > Control Panel > Power Options)
Desktop Computers:
Monitor - turn off after 10 minutes of inactivity
Hard disk - turn off after 5 minutes of inactivity
System standby - after 1 hour of inactivity
System hibernation - never
Laptop Computers (plugged in):
Turn off monitor - after 10 mins
Turn off hard disks - after 20 mins
System standby - after 1 hour
System hibernates - never
Laptop Computers (on battery):
Turn off monitor - after 5 mins
Turn off hard disks - after 10 mins
System standby - after 1 hour
System hibernates - after 2 hours
WINDOWS VISTA (Start > Control Panel > System and Maintenance > Power Options)
Desktop Computers:
Monitor - turn off after 10 minutes of inactivity
Hard disk - turn off after 5 minutes of inactivity
System standby - after 1 hour of inactivity
System hibernation - never
Laptop Computers (on battery):
Display - turn off after 5 minutes of inactivity
Put computer to sleep - after 15 minutes of inactivity
Hard disk - turn off after 5 minutes of inactivity
Laptop Computers (plugged in):
Display - turn off after 10 minutes of inactivity
Put computer to sleep - after 1 hour of inactivity
Hard disk - turn off after 20 minutes of inactivity
MAC OS (System Preferences > Energy Saver)
Desktop Computers:
Put the computer to sleep when it is inactive for: 1 hour
Put the display to sleep when it is inactive for: 15 minutes
Do not check the box for 'Put the hard disk to sleep when possible'
Laptop Computers (on power adapter):
Put the computer to sleep when it is inactive for: 1 hour
Put the display to sleep when the computer is inactive for: 15 minutes
Do not check the box for 'Put the hard disk to sleep when possible'
Laptop Computers (on battery):
Put the computer to sleep when it is inactive for: 15 minutes
Put the display to sleep when the computer is inactive for: 5 minutes
Check the box for 'Put the hard disk to sleep when possible'
- Avoid using screen savers.
They waste energy and do not save the screen. A screen saver requires that the PC and monitor be at full power. Some graphics-intensive screen savers may burn twice as much energy. Screen savers may prevent the computer from entering sleep mode. You only save energy if the monitor goes dark by going to sleep. Modern CRT and LCD screens are not prone to 'burn in' from phosphor burn as older monitors.
- For desktop computers, use LCDs instead of CRT monitors.
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LCDs use less energy (30-35 watts) than CRT monitors (80 watts).
- Use a laptop computer, if possible. They are more energy-efficient than desktop computers.
A desktop computer when idle uses an average of 89 watts. A laptop when idle uses 15-25 watts. (Dell on Dell: Energy Efficiency)
Please consider your work requirements and budget when purchasing computers. Laptops cost more, have less expansion/upgrade options, and are more prone to theft/security issues than desktop computers.
- Purchase Energy Star-rated computers when possible.
Energy Star is a joint program of the US Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Energy to help us save money and protect the environment through energy efficient products and practices. From July 20, 2007, Energy Star's new specifications for computers went into effect. Only the most energy-efficient computers will qualify for the Energy Star label.
http://www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?fuseaction=find_a_product.showProductGroup&pgw_code=CO
(adapted from http://www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?c=power_mgt.pr_power_mgt_faq)
1. Why should I use power management features?
You can save up to $75 or more per computer by activating system standby or sleep mode features. You save energy, reduce carbon dioxide emissions and help prevent global warming.
2. My screen saver is activated. Do I need to activate power management features?
If you want to use your screen saver in conjunction with monitor power management, set the screen saver 'wait time' to less than the period of time after which the monitor enters sleep mode. If your screen saver appears but your monitor never enters sleep mode, your screen saver may be the culprit: try disabling it.
3. Do computers and monitors use more energy with power management features activated due to power surges when cycling on and off?
In reality, the small surge of power created when some devices are turned on is vastly smaller than the energy used by running the device when it is not needed.
4. Can sleep features wear out hardware by forcing the computer to turn on and off several times a day?
Do not Reinstall the MCR Installer Software Each Time You Download Software
You only need to download and install the MCR Installer software once! Once the MCR Installer software is installed on your machine (it will probably take you about 20 minutes to install), then when you download executable software in the future you do not have to reinstall the MCR Library. Future executable software will download and execute on your computer within a few minutes if the MCR Installer has been previously installed.
MCR Library Uninstallation Procedure
Do not delete the installer from your computer because you will need the installer to remove the MATLAB Compiler Runtime Library from your computer. The MCR library makes many changes to your computer and to properly reverse those changes you need to use the installer to uninstall the software. To use the MCR Installer to UNINSTALL, simply click the MCR Installer as if you are installing the MCR Library. The Installer is smart enough to figure out that the MCR Library is already installed and will ask you if you want to uninstall the software. Once you have uninstalled the MCR library, then you can go ahead and delete the MCR installer if you choose to do so.
Legal Permission
My MATLAB license agreement gives you legal permission to install (for free) the MCR installer on as many computers as you like only for the purposes of running the software provided on this website. The MCR installer is the property of MATLAB (www.mathworks.com).
PC Energy Savings Guideline
UH has over 10,000 networked personal computers to support teaching, research and administration. PCs and other electronic office equipment, such as printers and scanners, collectively consume significant amounts of energy. Fortunately, there are ways that personal computers users can conserve energy and save money, without major impact to operations.
A desktop personal computer with LCD monitor uses about 1080 kWh per year if left on 24/7 and would cost UH $225* to run. (*Energy rates are expected to increase.) Turning off the computer when you leave for the day, would save about 65%. UH could save $1.57 million a year in energy costs (based on 10,000 units at $0.23 per kWh). Energy estimates depend on computer specifications, duration of use, as well as type of use.
(adapted from Saving Energy, http://michaelbluejay.com/electricity/computers.html)
More Energy | Less Energy |
Ready to be used | Sleep / Standby |
Desktop | Laptop |
CRT monitor | LCD (flat panel display) |
Faster processor | Slower processor |
Older processor (Pentium, G3/G4/G5) | Newer processor (Core Duo) |
PC | Mac |
Heavy use | Light use |
(processor-intensive task) | (e.g. email, word processing) |
On the Internet | Offline |
Modern computers are designed with energy-saving components and come with advanced power management. Power management, standard in Windows and Mac operating systems, can put inactive monitors and computer systems (CPU, hard drive, etc.) into low-power 'sleep' mode. Moving the mouse or touching the keyboard 'wakes' up the monitor and computer in seconds. Power saving settings can be adjusted to meet your needs.
A desktop computer when shut down uses 3-5 watts; when it is idle, it uses an average of 89 watts. A laptop computer when shut down uses 3 watts; when it is idle, it uses 15-25 watts.* By putting your computer to sleep when it's inactive, considerable energy savings can be realized.
*from Dell on Dell: Energy Efficiency
1hour And 20 Minutes Of Kane Mac Os Download
- Turn off computers when you are done for the day.*
*Exceptions: if software updates and backups are done after work hours, consult with your departmental IT staff. Leave your computer on if you need to access it remotely.
- Set power management options to automatically put your computer to sleep/standby mode after 15 minutes or less of inactivity.*
* If nothing else, set power management for monitors. Set hard drive power management after consulting with your departmental IT staff as applications may be affected.
Recommendations for Power Management
(adapted from MIT for use at UH, http://web.mit.edu/ist/initiatives/it-energy/guidelines.html)
Configuring Power Management for Personal Computers http://www.hawaii.edu/askus/926
WINDOWS XP (Start > Control Panel > Power Options)
Desktop Computers:
Monitor - turn off after 10 minutes of inactivity
Hard disk - turn off after 5 minutes of inactivity
System standby - after 1 hour of inactivity
System hibernation - never
Laptop Computers (plugged in):
Turn off monitor - after 10 mins
Turn off hard disks - after 20 mins
System standby - after 1 hour
System hibernates - never
Laptop Computers (on battery):
Turn off monitor - after 5 mins
Turn off hard disks - after 10 mins
System standby - after 1 hour
System hibernates - after 2 hours
WINDOWS VISTA (Start > Control Panel > System and Maintenance > Power Options)
Desktop Computers:
Monitor - turn off after 10 minutes of inactivity
Hard disk - turn off after 5 minutes of inactivity
System standby - after 1 hour of inactivity
System hibernation - never
Laptop Computers (on battery):
Display - turn off after 5 minutes of inactivity
Put computer to sleep - after 15 minutes of inactivity
Hard disk - turn off after 5 minutes of inactivity
Laptop Computers (plugged in):
Display - turn off after 10 minutes of inactivity
Put computer to sleep - after 1 hour of inactivity
Hard disk - turn off after 20 minutes of inactivity
MAC OS (System Preferences > Energy Saver)
Desktop Computers:
Put the computer to sleep when it is inactive for: 1 hour
Put the display to sleep when it is inactive for: 15 minutes
Do not check the box for 'Put the hard disk to sleep when possible'
Laptop Computers (on power adapter):
Put the computer to sleep when it is inactive for: 1 hour
Put the display to sleep when the computer is inactive for: 15 minutes
Do not check the box for 'Put the hard disk to sleep when possible'
Laptop Computers (on battery):
Put the computer to sleep when it is inactive for: 15 minutes
Put the display to sleep when the computer is inactive for: 5 minutes
Check the box for 'Put the hard disk to sleep when possible'
- Avoid using screen savers.
They waste energy and do not save the screen. A screen saver requires that the PC and monitor be at full power. Some graphics-intensive screen savers may burn twice as much energy. Screen savers may prevent the computer from entering sleep mode. You only save energy if the monitor goes dark by going to sleep. Modern CRT and LCD screens are not prone to 'burn in' from phosphor burn as older monitors.
- For desktop computers, use LCDs instead of CRT monitors.
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LCDs use less energy (30-35 watts) than CRT monitors (80 watts).
- Use a laptop computer, if possible. They are more energy-efficient than desktop computers.
A desktop computer when idle uses an average of 89 watts. A laptop when idle uses 15-25 watts. (Dell on Dell: Energy Efficiency)
Please consider your work requirements and budget when purchasing computers. Laptops cost more, have less expansion/upgrade options, and are more prone to theft/security issues than desktop computers.
- Purchase Energy Star-rated computers when possible.
Energy Star is a joint program of the US Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Energy to help us save money and protect the environment through energy efficient products and practices. From July 20, 2007, Energy Star's new specifications for computers went into effect. Only the most energy-efficient computers will qualify for the Energy Star label.
http://www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?fuseaction=find_a_product.showProductGroup&pgw_code=CO
(adapted from http://www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?c=power_mgt.pr_power_mgt_faq)
1. Why should I use power management features?
You can save up to $75 or more per computer by activating system standby or sleep mode features. You save energy, reduce carbon dioxide emissions and help prevent global warming.
2. My screen saver is activated. Do I need to activate power management features?
If you want to use your screen saver in conjunction with monitor power management, set the screen saver 'wait time' to less than the period of time after which the monitor enters sleep mode. If your screen saver appears but your monitor never enters sleep mode, your screen saver may be the culprit: try disabling it.
3. Do computers and monitors use more energy with power management features activated due to power surges when cycling on and off?
In reality, the small surge of power created when some devices are turned on is vastly smaller than the energy used by running the device when it is not needed.
4. Can sleep features wear out hardware by forcing the computer to turn on and off several times a day?
'Modern computers are designed to handle 40,000 on-off cycles before failure, and you're not likely to approach that number during the average computer's five- to seven-year life span. In fact, IBM and Hewlett Packard encourage their own employees to turn off idle computers, and some studies indicate it would require on-off cycling every five minutes to harm a hard drive.'
- Your computer will not go to sleep mode if programs are running in the background.
- If your computer is too old (> 5 years old), it may not have power management capabilities.
- If you run special applications which require the computer not to be in sleep mode, please do NOT turn on power management for the hard drive.
- See case studies of businesses, universities and schools that have activated system standby.
http://www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?c=power_mgt.pr_power_mgt_ss#uwi
Edison for Windows, free for individuals to manage their own PC, free from Verdiem for Windows 2000/XP/Vista/7
Edison for Windows
EZ Wizard tool for individuals to manage their own PC, free from EPA, for Windows 2000 and XP
http://www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?c=power_mgt.pr_power_mgt_ez_wiz
EZ GPO network management tool for system/network administrators to centrally manage computers, free from EPA
http://www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?c=power_mgt.pr_power_mgt_ez_gpo
Energy Star
http://www.energystar.gov/
MIT
http://web.mit.edu/ist/initiatives/it-energy/guidelines.html
Ohio State University
http://www.ohio.edu/sustainability/greenpc/
Microsoft
http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/archive/winpowmgmt.mspx
Saving Electricity
http://michaelbluejay.com/electricity/computers.html
Climate Savers
http://www.climatesaverscomputing.org/learn/energy-saver-guide/
Save and Go Green: Computer Energy Saving
http://www.paystolivegreen.com/2008/08/save-and-go-green-computer-energy-saving/
10 Computer Energy Saving Tips: Go Green
http://computers.toptenreviews.com/economy/10-computer-energy-saving-tips-go-green.htm