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Friday, 12 September 2014

How Big Should Your Page File or Swap Partition Be?

How-To Geek Newsletter
Did You Know?

Due to licensing laws and contracts, all the Kit-Kat candy bars made in the USA are produced by Hershey’s and all the Kit-Kats made in the rest of the world are produced by Nestle.

Geek Trivia

Grazing Cows Naturally Align Themselves With?
The North Star →
The Magnetic Poles →
The Sun →
The Wind →


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Today's Tech Term

Relying Party

A Relying Party is a website that operates as an identity provider and allows users to log into multiple sites with a single set of credentials. Use of a Relying Party can save other websites from the hassle and headache of developing and maintaining their own login mechanisms.

A good example of a Relying Party is OpenID.

What We're Reading from Around the Web

How Big Should Your Page File or Swap Partition Be?

According to an old rule of thumb, your page file or swap should be “double your RAM” or “1.5x your RAM.” But do you really need a 32 GB page file or swap if you have 16 GB of RAM?

Read This Article →


What ‘Concepts’ were Used Before Operating Systems?

Computers have been with us for quite some time now, but before the advent of modern operating systems, what was used to make the early computer systems work? Today’s SuperUser Q&A post takes a curious reader on a journey back in time.

Read This Article →


How to Find Free Wi-Fi Hotspots When Travelling

Free, public Wi-Fi access points are popping up in more and more places around the world. They’re extra useful when travelling, as you won’t have your home Wi-Fi network and may not want to pay for international mobile data.

Read This Article →


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