"There's nothing a man can't achieve with a clear goal. What are the human limits?"

I closed the book I was reading in my hand and thought for a moment. I even have a godly heart for the greatness of man that accomplishes things I could not have dared to imagine.

"Of course, you can't miss out on money and time. Nothing in the world is free."

I added a thought to my mind. I think there's nothing in America you can't do with your passion, money and time.

Nowadays, I keep my book close to my hand. I've made some money now because I thought I needed some education. I have studied well since I was a child, but I was not very passionate about reading books.

At my place, I don't work with my own hands. Wisdom and human relationships are now more important. So I'm trying to have fun reading educational books that are not fun, but there are various fields from ancient to modern history to music and art. Of course, the East and West are also comprehensive.

That doesn't mean I actually read all of these, but the book I just read is a kind of attribute mastery book, like "Cheetki," a book that organizes great people and events well, suitable for people like me who don't have time to read.

Among them, what fascinated me was the fact about the Manhattan Project. People who don't know the Manhattan Project may be mistaken for something like a Manhattan real estate development, but it's not. This is the name of the American nuclear bomb development project during World War II.

American students would have heard of it once, but I remember a vague name. Maybe when I was in a public school like that, I didn't care much about history.

I skipped something that was not directly related to my studies, first to English and then 99% to computer and money making. The university went on to have a Yahoo career anyway. Otherwise, I wouldn't have accepted Stanford's no-name Rocksville School.

Scientists who received news during World War II that the Nazis were developing an entirely new kind of bomb started their own response project in the United States.

Then, while the United States was in World War II, they launched a full-scale development called the Manhattan Project, and in just three years they made a fearsome nuclear bomb. The cost was $2 billion, and it is now $22 billion. It is a good example of what you can do with money and passion.

I cleared my mind for a moment and headed to the conference room. I'm a little excited today because the Johnstone Techno Institute has decided to bring the results. When I entered the meeting room, I saw some unknown faces, but pretending to be nervous, I think I brought a tech team to answer my questions.

"Oh, this is it?"

"Yes, it's a work done with a lot of heart and soul by the project team."

I was amazed when I found the laptop sitting in front of me. I don't know about the other, but one looks good. I think I care enough to know that I'm risking my life for design. Once I saw it, I was able to deduct the passing point.

Rubykov, the deputy director of the Institute, who is responsible for this development, seems tired, but has a lot of confidence in his eyes. But looking at my frizzy head, I was a little sorry for the little work I had done for today.

However, the laptop on the desk was thin. When I hold up my hands with anticipation, I don't feel much weight. Is it natural to be light because it's thin? I felt good because it seemed lighter than it looked.

I carefully opened the cover and pressed the start button. Slowly boot up with little or no noise.

Tick, tick, tick, tick, tick.

"Uh-huh? What the hell is going on?"

I think I'm just booting up something, but the window is floating in front of me. I was surprised and, frankly, unbelievable. My computer takes about 30 seconds.

"Haha! I knew you'd be surprised. The solid state drives (SSDs), which were developed in collaboration with the M system acquired this summer and the Bit Micro, which invested 50% of its equity, contributed greatly. And of course, we put an optimized kernel on top of it, a virtual window on top of it."

Rubykov explained that he did everything he could to reduce boot time, but that the speed of the disk on which the operating system would be placed was crucial. That's why we built SSDs for this.

The M system is based in Israel and has also produced the world's first USB flash drive, which recently suffered from increased competition.

It was finally acquired by Johnstone Consulting for the production of various flash memory and SSD drives for various servers, smart grids, networks and other equipment. Compared to the memory of Hynix in Korea, it has the right size and production facilities to customize what is needed within the group.

In addition, Bit Micro, a leading SSD qualifier, established a friendly partnership because of the need for ultra-speed, large-scale SDD development and production technology to improve the performance and stability of the Johnstone Central Processing Center.

You could, of course, take on an outside service, but collaborative research with the Johnstone Techno Centre required you to take a step forward and develop what you needed in the group.

In addition to the storage device SSD, research has been conducted on the ‘Virtual Machine’ function of running windows into the native operating system kernel, which has incorporated a small company called 'VMware‘.

The company purchased for $400 million has a fairly skilled team that has been researching this area since '98, greatly reducing the process of placing virtual windows on self-developed kernels. Again, virtualization technology is also essential for the Johnstone Server Center, making a concrete acquisition.

"Very well done. I've had a lot of hard work. When do you think you'll be able to enter the mountain?"

I really liked the speed, weight, and design. It really exceeded my expectations, but frankly, if a laptop like this were to appear on the market, it would attract a sensational popularity. I'll sell a few million if I can't.

"Thank you, Chairman. But there's still a lot of room for improvement. We're continuing our research, so we should have some good news soon."

The more I see the laptop in front of me, the more I like it. I'm sure it's amazing, but the attitude of the research foreman has made me a little confused. I felt like I missed something.

"This is great, but is there a problem?"

I asked straight away. The deputy director gives an embarrassing look and replies shortly.

"The expense issue has not been resolved."

"Cost?"

When I brought out the money problem, that's when I remembered the things I owe.

Stability without Blue Screen!

Everyone's Lightness is Amazing!

Thickness reminiscent of magazines on the streets.

Fast boot and responsive speed and performance!

The design is something I want to buy right away!

No matter how much I think about it, I don't remember talking about economics. I probably told them to make it because they needed me at the time, but I wasn't really interested in production. I heard the report in the middle, but I didn't care about the production issue.

"If you make this right now, what is the unit price?"

I asked a simple and clear question. I can only feel it in numbers.

"... that's going to cost you $200,000."

"What?! $200,000!"

I looked at the deputy warden because it was so ridiculous. When I was so surprised, I smiled as well.

"Haha, that makes sense..."

While I was talking, I looked around, and no one was as surprised as I was. On second thought, the deputy warden did exactly as I said. It is my fault for not giving clear instructions.

There are many software experiments at our company, but there are many projects to do various hardware studies and create prototypes. These are meant to test the possibilities and accumulate technology rather than the purpose of production, as stacked research materials often help later. If you let it go, it will all be useful later.

I think the laptop I ordered was one of these 'prototypes'. It was because there was nothing to say about production.

"The components inside the laptop will work cheaply if mass-produced, but the market is not yet formed that way. Even the most expensive SSD disc, the 128 gigabytes that are now mounted is over 150,000 dollars. Alternatively, for products to be sold, only the operating system can be installed on the SSD and the rest can be used on a typical hard disk."

The 128 gigabytes of SSD drive on my laptop is over $150,000. Expensive is really expensive. Rubikov said this large dose is used only for NASA, satellites and the military, but it is also uncommon. I made a special product in one word.

"All right, so when it comes to production, let's focus on the Johnstone electrons. If it's that expensive, you don't have to mass-produce it. But first, just make five and bring them. in silver and white."

It's mass-production. It's head wrapped in Johnstone electronics. I ordered only 5 of them separately and they are for gifts. Whatever happened before and after, I felt good because I had a laptop to use.

It was delivered less than two weeks after I requested the additional laptops, three and two in silver and white respectively. I brought a white version to Jennifer.

Jennifer shudders to tell me she's pretty and shudders at me. In fact, Jennifer's has been more concerned since I ordered the Johnstone electronics, with the cover labeled 'Queen Jennifer’ and the silver trim on it to make it look very special. The title 'Queen' was won when Jennifer became Princess Chenong.

< My husband brought me a pretty gift! >

[John came home today with a gift. You ask me a lot of questions, and all of a sudden, you take out a thin envelope from your bag?

A rusty yellow envelope. I was very curious. Do you have any land documents for me? Kick-kick. I'm kidding. The thickness was like a magazine. It's a little heavier than a magazine, after all. Curiosity explosion! I took a quick peek.

What is it? Attach a photo. Have a nice day. Lulu? ~ ~.]

< Queen Johnstone's majesty reveals the secret! >

[I fell in love with the notebook featured on Jennifer Kim's blog, the mistress of Johnstone Group. Designed to excite the thickness of your magazine on the street with a subtle matte white finish, a subtle silver trim and a lightweight finish. My heart was pounding.

Five seconds to boot. Is that for real? It took me 30 seconds to get my super ultra laptop... and I called the Johnstone Group because I couldn't beat my curiosity. However, the only answer that comes back is that you don't know. I couldn't sleep that night.

I couldn't quench my burning thirst, so I contacted the Johnstone Group again the next day. Of course, it's not for sale on the market. With reporters in town all the time, I went to the Johnstone Techno Center with the editor's permission to see them.

Oh-oh-oh!

Know the product briefly as a guide from a techno centre staff (?), I was moved by the overwhelming emotion that I could not feel in the picture. I turned on the switch with a trembling mind and saw the seconds of my watch moving. Literally five seconds! It was real.

As expected of Johnstone Electronics, the moment I heard the price, I fell asleep! It says $200,000 a piece. Prices that can never be exceeded by salariers like journalists. At the very least, I had to be satisfied with the statement that I was going to prepare for the production plan at Johnstone Electronics. When will that be….]

You must really like the laptop I gave you. Jennifer posted a review of her notebook on her blog with a photo, along with a brief episode with me.

Of course, he used all sorts of rhetorical phrases, but there were numerous comments on Jennifer's original talents of intimate bragging. Jennifer's bragging doesn't make anyone proud, but she excels at it. But I can see it when I live on the flesh. It has a history.

Jennifer's blog is quite popular, by the way, but her personal blog is the top five. It has been a few years since the original media spotlight started, so the average daily visitor is about 500,000 people.

Americans also love Cinderella and Princess stories, so similar romantic films have been released quite a bit and are new every few years. Like romance, I don't want to have a lot of candy or candy, but I don't want to be popular.

Jennifer bought $12 million at a cheap price and then repaired the property she bought for $7 million and $3 million in New York and Ireland, including the Chateau of France, which had just turned into $50 million.

Here I've split about 300 million dollars, just in case, and according to Jens' half a billion dollars and so on, there's a little over a billion dollars worth of property.

Of course, Jennifer's story, named after American women in their 50s, inspires many women who dream of "luck rather than effort." Everyone's wondering what Jennifer's wearing, eating, and playing.

Unlike other sites, I just post my own personal articles, but I have hundreds of comments even if I just write one word about eating something simple in the evening. Of course, there are thousands of basic comments about special meals and cooking.

Sometimes, if you put on your own clothes, take a picture and send them out, the next day the clothes in the store will disappear. Then again, Jennifer doesn't have very little business. It is a pure sales strategy

500,000 daily visitors, and since I boasted about the notebook I gave them, it can't be unreasonable. It got so big that it went on a computer site, and it ended up on a television show with famous newspapers like USA Today. Not to mention what went viral on the Internet.

[Jennifer, your laptop is so pretty. And you, of course.]

$200,000... (Silence)

[My Queen Johnston is a different level. The envelope he brought home from work contained a $200,000 laptop...]

[But who knows what Miss Jennifer's fortune is?]

[Last time I saw you in the paper, you said a billion dollars.]

[Is that true? I heard there was a jet for the Queen last time.]

[It's true. I went to my blog in August 2003, and there's a picture of it.]

Initially, there were stories about laptops, which were mainly about Jennifer's property and life among men. Jennifer gets on the topic again, and the executives of Jens freak out about sending out a collection of spring clothes.

Artwork Reviews

In 2003, the SSD cost me $1,000 per GB, but the higher the capacity, the more expensive it is -- 128 GB is no big deal now.

VMware was sold to EMC in 2004 for 625 million dollars. Started in 98, it's now a company that's over $4.6 billion in annual revenue, right?