Posted on 12/19/2016 1:24:15 PM PST by TigerClaws
Tweeted by Wikileaks.
WikiLeaks @wikileaks 6m6 minutes ago
INSURANCE 2016-12 torrent https://file.wikileaks.org/torrent/2016-12-09_WL-Insurance.aes256.torrent (83GiB) SHA256:637f6996be1ea0155099df79baf7b7e7be14d17965026f619acf139f9fd55382
https://twitter.com/wikileaks/status/810813937566543872
This video also appeared today:
I Was a Sex Slave to Europe's Elite at Age 6
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQFOrwyFopA
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Healthcare.gov?
83 gigs? I’m gonna need a bigger hard drive
I remember when a 5 meg hd was a thing to have.
No kidding. That’s huge. If they are all emails, what is that? Like 100 million of them? There MUST be a bunch of pics and video files in there somewhere. Somebody really just kissed the donkey.
Wasn’t this the file of Huma named “Insurance” which likely contains “Blackmail Material?”
mark
It may turn out that the WORST emails are still coming.
A friend and I bought 10 gig hard drives together -- the first ones we each had ever owned. He asked me: "How are we ever going to fill these up?"
think Drop Box or One drive
Head-——>pike. Preferably Hillary’s, but any high ranking Democrat would do.
A 5 MB hard disk drive from Apple cost $3,500 in 1981. I think it had gone down to $2000 by 1986.
I bought my first computer used, it had a 300MB external HD.
It went out just as I finished a project that I contracted for $600.
The replacement drive was 600 MB and cost $600.
I still have that Mac.
My current computer has 2.25 TB of onboard storage and it’s 85% full.
Wild times...
In 1973 I went on a field trip from business college class to the IBM plant in Morgan Hill CA to see the Winchester HardDrive. My memory is that it was 20 mb. Wiki said it was planned for two 30 mb spindles thus the name Winchester. And eventually produced as either 35 or 70 mb.
They were as big as a wash machine, and I still hold we were told 20 mb.
My first was an IBM PC clone. With 40 K of hard ram. 2 - 5 1/4 inch external floppy disk drives - one for the operating system, the other for programs and data. The first time sharing mainframe I worked on was a GE 400 with 28 K core, half of which was reserved for the operating system, the remainder for any programs and swapping data in and out.we transmitted data via punched tape.
Bump for later review.
BMK
I created and headed up a new corporate graphics department in 1992, and everybody in IT was all atwitter about the gigabyte hard drives on the Mac Quadra 900’s, saying it was a waste of money, they’d never be filled up. The IT guys hated the Macs, actually sabotaged getting them connected to the corporate network. Had to bring in outside techs to get it done.
That's where they keep our Social Security records safe.
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