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Now we're into week 29 of the "Top Question" of Super User in the Super User blog. Please post and vote for your favorite question for this week.

Please post any question that you feel is of worth and the reason why. Try not to promote your own questions or answers for publicity's sake. We are looking for questions that are of similar par to those selected in the Super User Contest. If you like a posted question then vote it up. Each week we'll to try to post about a question and its contents.

When submitting a QotW, please indicate if you would be interested in writing about it for the blog. This is a factor which we take into consideration when selecting what to blog about - we need a post we can actually say something interesting about; it shouldn't be something we've written about too much before, and it helps to have somebody interested in writing the article.

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    HA. loved the comment in my inbox ;)
    – studiohack
    Aug 16, 2011 at 19:06
  • so tempted to close as dupe ;) Aug 17, 2011 at 20:26
  • I just love the related questions section on the right
    – nhinkle
    Aug 17, 2011 at 20:31

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Why does an 8 GB and 16 GB USB drive have the same physical size but a different amount of storage?

This question has turned up some interesting stuff about how memory chips are manufactured. Might make for a good blog post.

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  • Very interesting. I would like to see something this explained in more detail. It would be super awesome to get someone to somehow have microscopic images of the actual memory chips similar to this: sciencystuff.com/?p=24 Aug 27, 2011 at 16:02
  • @KronoS haha, those are pretty awesome. But I'm not sure if we can get our hands on an electron microscope for blog posts?
    – DMA57361
    Aug 31, 2011 at 10:30
  • @DMA57361 agreed, that might be a bit out of our price range.
    – nhinkle
    Aug 31, 2011 at 17:21
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Why is my dual-core CPU recognized as a quad-core one?

Interesting discussion about how hyperthreaded CPUs are recognized as having twice as many cores as they actually do.

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How to find the process(es) which are hogging the machine

I thought it was a really cool question, and one that would be handy to know. If I were to write about it, I would be doing testing on Windows.

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  • To whoever downvoted this, please state why, if possible. Aug 29, 2011 at 23:06

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