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That's brilliant! Are there any other Street Fighter/WWE gifs out there?

The only other ones I know of are the ones put out by Wrestling with Text (it's the video game tag, so there are a few other ones in there, but not many; there's only three pages in total).

Tonight on iPPV!

10377998_10152668872986328_1772411002436

 

Predictions...

 

Four Corner Survival Tag Match - BJ Whitmer & Adam Page vs. Josh Alexander & Ethan Gabriel Owens vs. Caprice Coleman & Watanabe vs. R.D. Evans & Moose w/ Veda Scott - #TheNewStreak shall continue! ;)
Mark Briscoe vs. Hanson
Cedric Alexander vs. "The Last Real Man" Silas Young Michael Bennett w/ Maria Kanellis - Silas Young broke his leg (although some sites are saying it's partially a work; he is injured, but not that seriously) so in comes Bennett.
Christopher Daniels & Frankie Kazarian vs. Roderick Strong & Jimmy Jacobs
"The Phenomenal" AJ Styles vs. Adam Cole
ROH World TV Title - No Time Limit - Jay Lethal © w/ Truth Martini vs. ACH - Rematch of a hell of a match on TV that ended in a time limit draw, so that and not having the 30-minute limit hypes it up well; definite match of the night contender.
ROH World Tag Team Championship - 2 Out of 3 Falls - reDRagon (Bobby Fish & Kyle O'Reilly) © vs. The Young Bucks (Nick & Matt Jackson) ...aaaand another match of the night contender right here.
ROH World Championship - "Unbreakable" Michael Elgin © vs Jay Briscoe

 

As we noted earlier today, Syfy updated its programming calendar and listed Haven for Thursday nights at 8pm EST, and Spartacus: Gods of the Arena at 9pm and 10pm EST, making it impossible for Smackdown to air from 8-10pm EST.

 
According to F4WOnline.com, WWE has confirmed that Smackdown will indeed remain in its current time slot of Friday nights at 8pm EST.

http://www.wrestlezone.com/news/508349-wwe-confirms-smackdown-on-friday-nights

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    • My father still uses a programme written in dbase3. Still manages to work with a little help from dosbox. 
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These are essentially called P-States. If you are not familiar with them, Processor Power Management is done through Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) P-states and C-states. While P-states or performance pwoer states handle CPU voltage-frequency scaling, C-states deal with CPU sleep states so that some of the CPU functions, which are not necessary at that moment, can be disabled. The P-states and C-states work together to make the processor run more efficiently. It helps the OS and apps determine which cores can be parked and which should be boosted. Of course not every user is an enthusiast or knows the technicalities and integrities of how things like overclocking or undervolting work. Thankfully for them Windows itself offers something pretty cool, though it is hidden by default on all systems. By default, Windows only has two P-States, "Minimum Processor State" and "Maximum Processor State." However, this can be changed with a Registry trick to expand the options under a secret "Processor performance boost mode" dropdown. This essentially enables the HWP or hardware P-States available on a device, and these are not controlled just by the OS itself as the underlying hardware gets involved too. In total there are five Processor Performance Boost Mode profiles that control how Windows requests and allows CPU turbo/boost behavior under the different power policies. They are: Disabled: In this mode, processor boosting is effectively turned off. The CPU will avoid entering turbo or boost frequencies and instead operate closer to its base frequency ceiling. This can significantly reduce power consumption and heat output, but at the cost of reduced burst performance and responsiveness in short workloads. Enabled: This is the standard behavior where boost functionality is allowed under normal conditions. 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Here's how to enable the Processor performance boost mode: Open Registry Editor: Press Win+R, type regedit, and click OK. Go to: HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Power\PowerSettings\54533251-82be-4824-96c1-47b60b740d00\be337238-0d82-4146-a960-4f3749d470c7 (where HKLM stands for HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE_) Modify the value of Attributes from 1 to 2 (you can find modify option by right-clicking) After that, exit Registry, you should now be able to see the new "Processor performance boost mode" dropdown menu: As you can see there are now five new P-States or CPPC states or power profile available that help define the boost mode processor setting on your PC. Wrapping it up here's a quick run-down of the settings as defined by Microsoft itself. Setting Description Disabled The corresponding P-state-based behaviour is disabled. Collaborative Processor Performance Control (CPPC) behaviour is disabled. Enabled The corresponding P-state-based behaviour is enabled. 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