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Post by karl on Jan 24, 2021 12:03:02 GMT
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Post by Eugene 2.0 on Jan 25, 2021 10:46:00 GMT
I like it. I have a notebook with in as cpu. (Maybe some other systems of mine are amounted with it, but I don't really remember.)
("Intel" like "Intel-ligence", and while "intel-li-GEN-ce" is about a generative aspect of the mind, "the intel" is rather the core part of it. So, I wonder how great role "GEN" plays in "intelligence"? Now I start guessing that usually we don't pay enough attention to this detail.)
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Post by karl on Jan 25, 2021 13:40:10 GMT
I like it. I have a notebook with in as cpu. (Maybe some other systems of mine are amounted with it, but I don't really remember.) ("Intel" like "Intel-ligence", and while "intel-li-GEN-ce" is about a generative aspect of the mind, "the intel" is rather the core part of it. So, I wonder how great role "GEN" plays in "intelligence"? Now I start guessing that usually we don't pay enough attention to this detail.)
It's an evolution from interlegere.
From its Latin origin, I'd say it refers to the ability to interpret reality.
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Post by Lone Wanderer on Jan 25, 2021 15:16:40 GMT
I miss Pentium Era. Me and my brothers wanted a 486 so badly. Then my father surprised us by buying a Pentium MMX 233MHz. It was our first PC.
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Post by karl on Jan 25, 2021 16:21:00 GMT
I miss Pentium Era. Me and my brothers wanted a 486 so badly. Then my father surprised us by buying a Pentium MMX 233MHz. It was our first PC.
One of my old computers is a 233MHZ MMX, 64 mb sdram, and a 2 mb Matrox Mystique. It's said to be the first processor that could finally play "Flight unlimited", a flight simulator game with realistic physics, from the mid of 1995, which no processor could play as it was meant to be played for almost another two years.
I also recall it rendered videos four times as fast as my 133 MHZ Pentium. I think one thing that boosted its speed, beyond its MMX instructions, was that it came with 32 kb of cache, twice as much as non MMX Pentiums.
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Post by Eugene 2.0 on Jan 25, 2021 17:24:35 GMT
I like it. I have a notebook with in as cpu. (Maybe some other systems of mine are amounted with it, but I don't really remember.) ("Intel" like "Intel-ligence", and while "intel-li-GEN-ce" is about a generative aspect of the mind, "the intel" is rather the core part of it. So, I wonder how great role "GEN" plays in "intelligence"? Now I start guessing that usually we don't pay enough attention to this detail.)
It's an evolution from interlegere.
From its Latin origin, I'd say it refers to the ability to interpret reality.
Yeah, I've read about it, so "inter-leg..." is etymologically closely to the original. An at the same time, "Intel" ends on "L", not "R"; Latin's term originates from the famous Greek word "Logos", and also "legein", etc – so many others meanings are tied round the "Word". I suppose that "discourse" is kinda a synonym to "intelligence". Anyway, I believe that these terms: 'being', 'logs', 'domains', 'genes', 'genesis', 'reality', 'reveal', 'relevance', 'relegate', 'religion', 'relativity' are close to each other in some ontological meaning that is about the levels its borders, and also 'dydaskos', 'dedicate', 'educate', 'education', 'measure', 'mere', 'mereology' are closed with something to be moral, and finally ontology and moral are close via some 'drawing lines', 'making borders', 'make a warning/notification', etc.
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Post by Lone Wanderer on Jan 25, 2021 17:35:47 GMT
karlYou know MMX 233 was a beast for some kids and teens like me who just dreamed having a PC for himself even a 286.
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Post by Eugene 2.0 on Jan 25, 2021 17:51:54 GMT
Oh, my... 233 was so long ago! Those times were awesome! So many ideas, so many expectations! I have a couple of dozens of game magazines of those, and believe me or not - rarely I reread 'em and almost cry.. How incredible those times were!
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