Apple’s iPhone – Battle for the Zune Microsoft Cruxer – All things in a small phone!

The Mac/tech web has been all about the iPhone over the last few days. First it was the hype and exuberance of the new device, then people started to think about the limited information Jobs presented and speculate about the reality of the iPhone — what it is, what it isn’t. For some, this resulted in a pretty dramatic reversal of their opinion on the iPhone; others simply listed some concerns about the device that really were requests for more information rather than some sort of judgment.

We won’t know until June what the iPhone really is. We might see some real-world reviews beforehand, and from there we can start getting a feel for how good (or immature) this device really is.

Phil Schiller demos the iPhone for CBS’ John Blackstone, and it is impressive, especially when you see how well Apple nailed the user interface goals. The GUI and navigation aspects are simply amazing, and the phone seems quite responsive despite all the eye-candy. There’s cross-fading, real-time zooming, and incredibly smooth scrolling. As the iPhone line matures and diversifies, Apple is going to sell millions of these things

de`RPTM Simulation – doubts

System Perfomance Monitoring – Is it possible in Linux?
Some doubts:
(1) Is it possible that we can run in graphics in Linux, as this is in TC.
(2) Which library holds the cache system variable (…like mem usage)?

Can we access variable for cache memory or current page file usage in Turbo C? In linux it seems good, by using the command ‘free’, but can we access that same as in TC, for system variable which keeps changing every sec/ms. Herein do follow the link Click Here (or) paste the following url in your browser window – http://www.shortText.com/zyldr.

This is a part of a program thought for simulating system performance monitoring, yet I can’t tell if it’s okay. But it’s only for some random values,not original one which I hope to make soon post along. Please extract or make a .c file in //tc/bin and run it,yet this is just a small version, hoping some improvements & comments along.