Edward Hyde (died 1665)

Edward Hyde (baptised 1 April 1645; died 10 January 1665) briefly served as a Member of Parliament in the House of Commons of England.

Biography

Hyde was the third son of Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon. He was educated at Christ Church, Oxford and the Middle Temple. In 1664, age nineteen, he was elected to Parliament for Salisbury, on the nomination of his father, the High Steward of the city. He died the following year.[1]

gollark: Well, maybe not that slow, I don't know the exact details of OC networking, but at least would make latency a bit higher, and stress any relays you use.
gollark: 4 drives to a server would allow... 12MB? each, which is much more than you can do now, and would give each node a decent amount of computation power (especially with data cards), but splitting everything across the network would be sloooow.
gollark: You could possibly make some sort of storage clustering thing - servers can have 4 drives each, after all, and use all of them for remote-accessible storage if they network-boot with an EEPROM.
gollark: But accessed as one peripheral *from another computer*, I mean.
gollark: Except for another computer and some network cards, but latency.

References

  1. John. P. Ferris, HYDE, Hon. Edward (1645-65), of the Middle Temple, London. in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1660-1690 (1983).
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