Lost - Season 5


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Rappy 156

Peewee210 83

Mathachew 50

JediXAngel 40

Hurmoth 35

Rappy... get out more. :p

To Rappy's Defense, most of the stuff he posts are Spoilers.

OXFord!

Faraday admits he is in Love with Charlotte

Edited by JediXAngel

So many answers? Maybe I wasn't paying enough attention or I'm just stupid... :p

So what was revealed in this episode?

Charles Widmore was part of this group of British soldiers.

Locke's paradox where he tells past Richard that he is the future leader and all that?

The Others may have originated from the group of British soldiers?

So the replay of 'The Lie' gave away that Ms Hawking is indeed Faraday's mom.

It gave her first name, Eloise, which was the same name as Faraday's mouse in 'The Constant'. ('Tell me you know about Eloise')

(Don't think I need to tag that, since it did air already)

Widmore being an Other was awesome, though expected.

No, the Others aren't from the British soldiers. They just have their uniforms and guns. Richard plainly stated that they killed ALL of the soldiers.

Desmond and Penny naming their son Charlie was great too.

Desmond episodes are always so awesome.

Anyone got a feeling that Bomb will actually Explode in the end of the episode? (untagged because it wasn't necessary)

Cliffhanger effect!

Oh yeah, you nailed that one. :rolleyes:

He explains why it couldn't go off pretty much right away and you still think it does?

Nah, it's a good thing to complain about imho :D

Agreed, drives me nuts too.

I like the show but the idea of a time traveling island is a bit silly. the show confuses me but I continue to watch it !

So ...

polar bears in a jungle

giant smoke monsters

crazy hatches

island you can't sail away from except on a certain bearing

guy that doesn't age

people appearing out of nowhere

and tons of other strange things happen. Those are fine. But throw in a little time travel and NOW its silly?

Time travel makes shows 1000 more awesome. When it's done right of course.

It certainly doesn't make it 'silly' after everything else we've seen.

One thing I hate, and he did it again tonight, is when Desmond calls the Swan 'The Hatch'. He didn't come in through the hatch part, so why would he call it that. The only reason the Losties called it the Hatch is because thats what they came across first. He'd call it the bunker, or station, or Swan, or whatever. Just not 'The Hatch'.

So many answers? Maybe I wasn't paying enough attention or I'm just stupid... :p

So what was revealed in this episode?

Charles Widmore was part of this group of British soldiers.

Locke's paradox where he tells past Richard that he is the future leader and all that?

Yeah, those are some direct answers, but I was including indirect answers as well.

Some things I noticed were, why Ben couldn't kill Widmore from the previous season, possibly due to changing the rules. Widmore is still somehow important to the Island to its future. We don't get a clear answer from this episode, but a sense of what to expect.

United States army has access to the Island - possibly the start of the Dharma Initiative.

The Swan station might be where the bomb is buried. Remember Sayid talking about thick concrete reinforced walls - possibly protecting the hydrogen bomb. Though a different type of explosion occurred instead of a nuclear blast when Desmond turned the key which seems confusing. But, I'm basing this on the concrete Faraday mentioned to bury the H-Bomb.

Widmore's reaction to Alpert's orders shows the start of the tension and falling out that will occur.

I'll have to watch the episode again to think of more.

Good Episode (Y)

Desmonds got a son called Charlie (aww moment right there)

We now know why Richard visit Locke because he told him to.

5.04 "Little Prince" Promo

holy crap so sawyer could of seen kate before he knew her *confused* so maybe the whispers weren't other but them amongst the bushes....this is crazy....I will calm down now but also the hatch!

Neptune, in the Via Domus video game, it reveals whats on the other side of the walls of the Swan. Its not a bomb.

Also, you are making quite an assumption that just because they got there once the army can get back.

What is the other side of the wall? I never bothered to play the game :p

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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. The processor can opportunistically increase frequency when workload demands it, balancing performance gains with power and thermal constraints as managed by the system. Aggressive: Aggressive mode favors performance more heavily, allowing the CPU to enter higher boost states more readily and sustain them longer. This should in theory improve responsiveness under bursty or heavy workloads but increases power draw and thermal output compared to the default enabled behavior. Efficient Enabled: This mode still allows boosting, but with a stronger bias toward energy efficiency. The system attempts to use boost more selectively, avoiding unnecessary frequency spikes when the performance gain is marginal. Efficient Aggressive: This is a hybrid approach where boost is still performance-responsive, but the system continuously weighs efficiency more heavily than in Aggressive mode. It aims to deliver noticeable performance improvements while reducing wasted power in less demanding scenarios. 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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