Domain: 72.14.207.104
Stories and comments across the archive that link to 72.14.207.104.
Comments · 111
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Re:It just amazes me
Like the sibbling post mentioned, he is trolling you.
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Re:LIARS
Maybe I did, though a perplexing one. I just copied the links to LAT/WH from the page from which I copied the linked text. The WH page is deleted, but remains in the Google cache. It's a Q/A session with Rice from Genoa on the cited date, but it doesn't mention the planebomb threat or that kind of subject at all. The LAT story isn't in their own archive, and though that issue is in the Wayback Machine, I can't find it so easily.
The WH page status is especially fishy. I'm sending this message to the American Progress website to find out what's going on, before I post on this subject again. Thanks for checking this out and revealing the problem with it. -
Re:And this is NEWS?
As early as MS-DOS 6... and/or earlier?
Can Cause Corruption
Please don't make me pull out my service logs to show the number of cases where doublespace accidentally corrupted an entire C: drive... I might have to get medieval on ya...
Clean up in aisle five! -
Re:What was the scam?
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Network neutrality simplified
I wrote a quickie article in an attempt to simplify network neutrality for the lay person.
(I linked to the Google cache 'cuz my server won't take the load and Coral Cache seems to be down) -
Re:Arabs vs. Muslims
reason and logic
My friend, if it were reason and logic you posessed, you would be able to realize that it is time for the world to rid itself of the PC blinders which plague this world and its ability to fight injustice. Islamic infighting, asassinations, and war began less than 20 years after Mohammad died in 632 AD (see a Google HTML'd version of the CRS PDF Report Islam: A Primer) and continues unabated to this day. If the fact that a majority of the deaths in Iraq are now due to Sunni-Shiite infighting escape you, I cannot help you.
Perhaps availing yourself of the CRS report above, as well as plentiful information regarding current events would further your lacking education in this matter.
(Most) Muslims fight in the name of God, no matter what the true cause. I'm tired of hearing that militant Islam is the minority faction - perhaps in the US it is, but in the Middle East it is not, and it's time that you and the rest of the world realized it. If Islam wants to be seen as a religion of peace, ridding itself of militias, oppressive governments, radicals, and generic infighting that is NOT held between small groups but large, million-person populations would be a good start. Until then, I (and many) will continue to regard it as a religion of agression and murder, one without an ounce of respect for human life.
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Where are the thieves?
May be they are getting ready for another round.
Ekush -
Re:ohhh ... EULA
Castle laws never came up in your criminal law class? Here's an example. There are many more. I know Louisiana has (or at least at one point had) castle laws as well.
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Re:Good on you google!
I think your confusion is best shown with this paragraph:
I think you are confused to think I am confused.
The site's in question were pushing one pov (anything to have a dig at the muslims). None of the examples you give are close to that - SFC, WSJ, NYT all cover a spectrum of stories.
So take National Review, which pushes one POV: conservatism. Or The Nation, which pushes one POV: liberalism. Both are on Google News.
(Your SFC example was particularly ridiculous).
Not remotely.
I understand your point, but the simple matter is that google can't index & link to every crackpot group out there.
Again, you are talking about a separate issue. This is not about how to index, but who to remove from the index, and why. To remove this site, or even to not index them in the first place, because they are some small site that no one cares about is one thing. But Google did not do that. Nor did they, as you keep falsely insisting, remove them because they offer opinions, or even because they offer only one POV. Google did it explicitly because Google views what they say as "hate speech." So stop pretending this is about anything else.
I'm not sure I've actually read anything from google about this - can you link to the google statement where google says the sites were kicked for being 'hate sites'
Yes, the very first link in the article.
Now I see the source of YOUR confusion: you never actually understood what this story was about in the first place, not even reading (or not remebering) the article this whole discussion is about. (WND seems to be down right now, but the Google cache of it works.) -
Re:Oh well...SFC I've never had to use it myself but under most extreme circumstances its available should someone need it.
Exactly what software breaks the Windows kernel? Are you talking about drivers? If so then Linux damn well does have the same problem. I've had bad drivers screw it up on the order of thousands of times.
Now I'll add in that I live and work here in Phoenix and guess what? It is very rare that I ever come across a linux box. So by your logic just because I never see it that means the rest of the people in this country aren't using it. Here's a link 4 Years old even. Here's another its two years old.Okay, back to fudd land. Exactly what software screws up the Windows kernel these days? Or do you mean to say software that makes it difficult for the user to use his/her computer? Plenty of software out there can cause the same problem with linux. That is unless you know how to get around them, every OS gives you the tools to do it
You also seem to think I was praising Windows when I was simply defending it. I've been an admin of Novell's Netware, Microsoft's Windows, and various distros of Linux in my life and I've found problems with all of them. That is why I use Windows in some places and especially for machine and user management. Backend databases are usually Linux based with Oracle. Unfortunately I don't get to play with Netware much anymore. People were spreading misinformation about the current state of the OS and that serves no one's best interest. Convincing someone that the average user can easily switch over to linux is ludicrous at this point. This goes double if we're talking about a home user with that fancy digital camera, scanner, and/or printer. Sure most of the drivers work on any modern distro but you'll have to find them, in some cases compile them, and then configure them. This is in no way as easy as Windows. ;-)Being an OEM I can state that Microsoft does not tell OEM to put everything on a system partition. OEMs do this to save money on support later since people invariably lose their install media. They always have the option for the media and they may even charge for it but this is not the fault of Microsoft and even if they did it has nothing to do with the OS being backwards.
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Google Cache
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SF-312 Nondisclosure Agreement
Did the leaker(s) sign the same Standard Form 312 I and every other government employee with access to classified information did?
Please take note of Paragraph 3:
3. I have been advised that the unauthorized disclosure, unauthorized retention, or negligent handling of classified information by me could cause damage or irreparable injury to the United States or could be used to advantage by a foreign nation. I hereby agree that I will never divulge classified information to anyone unless: (a) I have officially verified that the recipient has been properly authorized by the United States Government to receive it; or (b) I have been given prior written notice of authorization from the United States Government Department or Agency (hereinafter Department or Agency) responsible for the classification of the information or last granting me a security clearance that such disclosure is permitted. I understand that if I am uncertain about the classification status of information, I am required to confirm from an authorized official that the information is unclassified before I may disclose it, except to a person as provided in (a) or (b), above. I further understand that I am obligated to comply with laws and regulations that prohibit the unauthorized disclosure of classified information.
Also, please note paragraph 4:
4. I have been advised that any breach of this Agreement may result in the termination of any security clearances I hold; removal from any position of special confidence and trust requiring such clearances; or the termination of my employment or other relationships with the Departments or Agencies that granted my security clearance or clearances. In addition, I have been advised that any unauthorized disclosure of classified information by me may constitute a violation, or violations, of United States criminal laws, including the provisions of Sections 641, 793, 794, 798, *952 and 1924, Title 18, United StatesCode, * the provisions of Section 783(b), Title 50, United States Code, and the provisions of the Intelligence IdentitiesProtection Act of 1982. I recognize that nothing in this Agreement constitutes a waiver by the United States of the right toprosecute me for any statutory violation.
It's high time the people who have taken it upon themselves to sabotage this administration be brought to justice.
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Re:Investment of timeYou made a comment to the Carmack story. Now the comment's dissapeared. How did you do that?
Comment was:Cache Links, Pics & Videos
(Score:2)
by eldavojohn (898314) * Foe of a Friend on Monday May 15, @10:38AM (#15334377)
(http://slashdot.org/~eldavojohn/journal/)
I kept getting a network error trying to access this site. I found a Google cache without the pictures, and page two anybody? I never got the page to load so I'm not sure how to mirror it. Gamerwithin wasn't even prepared for the pre-slashdotting! Anyone else get a mirror for this page?
If you want the screenshots, find some here at Gamespy.
If there's also more resources for it here such as trailors & videos. -
Google-cached copy of Kamp's letter to D-Link
Okay, sorry to reply to myself, but I found a cache of Poul-Henning Kamp's posting about D-Link. This was at http://72.14.207.104/search?q=cache:LAdoqMDzqM0J:n et127.com/2006/04/07/open-letter-to-d-link-about-t heir-ntp-vandalism/+%22have+been+accused+of+extort ion.+I+have+been+told+that+I%22&hl=en&gl=us&ct=cln k&cd=1
(I'm not sure of any of those gibberish-looking parameters change over time.)
I think the convention is to post Anonymously to prevent karma-whoring, but the last time I tried to post anonymously, it didn't work. It seems to work when I preview this post. Okay, here's the web page:
Poul-Henning Kamp, Slagelse, Denmark, writes:
When I contacted D-Link back in November 2005 about the way D-Link products abused my NTP-server, I expected to get in touch with somebody who understood what they were talking about, I expected them to admit that D-Link had made a bad decision and I expected that D-Link would make good on the damage they were responsible for.
For the last five months I have wasted a lot of time trying to reach some kind of agreement with the Californian lawyer which D-Link put on the case. I can't quite make up my mind if D-Link's lawyer negotiates in bad faith or is merely uninformed, I tend to suspect the latter, but either way, as of this morning I decided to cut my losses.
Since no one else at D-Link has reacted to my numerous emails, I have no other means of getting in touch with D-Link other than an open letter. I realize that it will be inconvenient and embarrasing for D-Link to have this matter exposed in public this way, but I seem to have no other choice.
I will now lay out the case below in such detail that any moderately knowledgeable person should be able to understand it, and hopefully somebody, somewhere in D-Link will contact me so we can get this matter resolved.
What is NTP?
NTP is Network Time Protocol, a protocol that allows computers to transfer timestamps across the internet so that they can set their clocks to the correct time.
A number of NTP servers on the internet are connected to radio timecode receivers, GPS receivers or in some cases directly to national time laboratories primary atomic frequency standards.
How not to implement NTP in a product
A number of D-Link products, so far I have at least identified DI-604, DI-614+, DI-624, DI-754, DI-764, DI-774, DI-784, VDI604 and VDI624, contain a list of NTP servers in their firmware and using some sort of algorithm, they pick one and send packets to it.
This is about as wrong a way to do things as one can imagine. There is no way D-Link can change the list once the product is shipped, unless D-Link can persuade the customer to upgrade the firmware.
How to implement NTP in a product
The correct way, as I have pointed out to D-Link repeatedly, is to query a D-Link controlled DNS entry like "ntp.dlink.com" and populate this DNS entry with the list of NTP servers to be queried. That would allow D-Link to add or remove servers from the list by changing the DNS server files and all deployed devices would automatically see the update next time.
If D-Link had implemented the NTP feature this way, my complaint could have been handled to my full satisfaction with an emailed apology and a few minutes of D-Link's DNS administrators time.
The problem
As you can see in the table on the right side, D-Link included the NTP server "GPS.dix.dk" in the list of NTP servers to query, and they did so without asking for permission.
I have no idea how many devices D-Link has sold, but between 75% and 90% of the packets which arrive at my server come from D-Link products via this mechanism.
Why D-Link ne -
Well, Almost....
You're right on a lot of details, but you seem to misunderstand the relationship between "Hayflick's Limit" and the longevity of a species.
Read around the higlighted area of this page:
http://72.14.207.104/search?q=cache:9GiRpofmvSgJ:w ww.senescence.info/cells.html+%22mouse+cells+divid e+roughly+15+times%22&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=1[Goo gle Cache] -
Re:Real determiners of HD format wars
Arrgghh. Links didn't show up.
Take two.
From http://www.cnn.com/2005/SHOWBIZ/books/07/14/harry. potter/index.html>here:
And Rowling, who a decade ago was an unemployed single mother writing the first Potter book in an Edinburgh café, is now believed to be the richest woman in Britain, worth an estimated $1 billion.
How wealthy is the queen? According to http://72.14.207.104/search?q=cache:hCD9IDK9MJAJ:w ww.cbc.ca/news/background/royals/queenelizabeth.ht ml+queen+elizabeth+net+worth&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&c d=1>this, Elizabeth is one of the wealthiest women in the world, with a net worth of $818 million in 2004, according to Forbes magazine.
Write a few books, hire the right agent, birth a 20th/21st century phenomenon, and be richer than the queen. -
You idiots should know. Antitroll ICBM.[list of modbombed posts]
... Troll much? And this is just the past four days. And what about this? People like you shouldn't get modded up just because they post the occasional regurgitated anti-**AA essay and troll the heck out of Slashdot the rest of the time.Only idiots who waste their lives gaming Slashdot's moderation system care about mod points. Go fuck yourself, John Marriot, aka Ackbar the bartender.
Well, well, well. It looks like you have changed your robots.txt to exclude searches from archive.org and google. That's too bad, I kind of liked looking at you exhort yourself to mod twitter down.
No big deal, any day's page shows how a pathetic and mean spirited loser spends his time. Mod up, Mod down! LOL, what a waste.
I wonder when you are going to be bright enough to change your site registration so you can tell would be employers you grew up and are ashamed of being such a complete asshole for so long. You do realize that site, which constitutes unlawful harassment, makes you the last person anyone would want to hire, don't you? Nah, you'll never get it. Go ahead and play your pathetic little games.
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It's not the same foam that they used to use.They had to change the formula in order to comply with new environmental regulations. (No CFCs.)
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Top Speed 112 MPH?
Floor the pedal and you're off like a shot toward the 112 mph top speed.
Google's cache of http://www.almanacnews.com/story.php?story_id=1129
http://72.14.207.104/search?q=cache:bJ8pEWoBNq4J:w ww.almanacnews.com/story.php%3Fstory_id%3D1129+X1, +Ian+Wright+%22top+speed%22&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd =1
Ferraris are a TINY BIT faster! :P -
Now attackers wil use social engineering or
privilege escalation attacks.
What's the likely outcome when $USER hits a web site that says "download this and type in your administrator password to get DANCING WEATHER REPORTS!"? -
Re:Let's be honest...
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Re:Ill fated from the begining.
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Re:Ill fated from the begining.
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Re:URL, Screenshots??
Here's the link to Cached version of ScreenShots. And, Google says, it doesn't know what this cache is. Google can police even cache, beware!!
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Full list of commands
Yes there are more commands, as you can see here in google's cache (originally from a symantec.com report that is no longer available). Scroll down to Appendix A.
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Re:Controlling information via FUD
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Why?According to this study (Google html), students who use laptops change their study habits:
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Student outcomes include:
- Laptop students spend more time engaging in collaborative work than non-laptop students
- Laptop students participate in more project-based instruction
- Laptops lead to more student writing and to writing of higher quality
- Laptops increase access to information and improve research analysis skills
- Laptop students become collaborators (interact with each other about their work)
- Laptop students direct their own learning
- Laptop students report a greater reliance on active learning strategies
- Laptop students readily engage in problem solving and critical thinking
- Laptop students consistently show deeper and more flexible uses of technology
- Laptop students spend more time doing homework on computers
Some of that is ok, and some of it I'd say is actually negative, but none of it strikes me as justification for demanding that all students have laptops. What is their real motivation for requiring laptops?
I think it's a lot of herd behavior. Everybody's going digital, so it must be good.
Or perhaps I'm a luddite and just don't know it.
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Student outcomes include:
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Re:Pay more for less control? What's wrong with DV
No, can't read your link from outside...
However, apart from one single other /. post claiming it so, I can't find a single reference to back up the assertion that the HD-DVD decryption algorithm was designed to fit in a 10,000 gate chip. Nor can I find any other reference to indicate that it's just a matter of cracking "40 key pairs" to determine the master key.
What I can find is evidence that HDCP was designed to fit inside a 10,000 gate chip, and the master key can be determined after cracking 40 key pairs. But that's HDCP - a totally different animal to the SPDC/AACS security specified for HD-DVD and Blu-Ray.
I also note that the original reference to cracking HDCP - from where the "40 key pairs" and "10,000 gates" statements come - was published in 2001. AFAIK nobody has actually cracked it yet, 4 1/2 years on... -
Re:Intel GMA950 graphics
How capable is this Intel integrated graphics? How does it compare to that in the old ($100 cheaper) PPC mini or the new Duo iMac?
Don't know, but I still remember how they used to make a big number about how the Mac Mini had a dedicated GPU, and cheap PCs didn't. Google remembers too (read the chapter “Lock the Target”).
Funny how it is no longer important at all. Even though Mac minis definitely do not have any slots for those add-on graphics cards. Welcome to the wonderful world of advertising... -
Re:Google Cache
Or, if you want it without all of the annoying highlighted words: http://72.14.207.104/search?q=cache:Sdg9JPdYswMJ:
w ww.ibm.com/developerworks/opensource/library/os-sw ingswt/+opensource+site:www.ibm.com&hl=en&gl=us&ct =clnk&cd=1&lr=lang_en -
Google Cache
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Re:crime/motive/opportunity
With this newest revelation, and the exit poll discrepancies.
I'd say we have a crime. -
Re:Caution in your Commentary
No crime?
How about this?
A sworn affidavit that there was voting fraud taking place.
Or the discepancy in exit polls.
What exactly are you looking for?
It is not our fault that the government refuses to investigate. -
Re:Slashdotted
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Re:Hang on..
...it can't be on and off at the same time!
But it can. -
Re:Obligatory RTFA.The article states that $900 is the cost to Sony. It won't cost that retail, they always take a hit.
This is a myth that has never been true. (Google cache...site seems to be down).
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Google cache
Link no longer working ("Server error"). Here's a Google cache.
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Cheaper low-tech alternative
Hand-dug wells:
1. Oxfam well building guide (up to 30m) (0.5MB pdf) (html)
2. Tearfund well building guide (up to 50m) -
ATI change their mind..
Did they change their mind about changing their mind? I went to the article claiming the ati coverup, and the article had a before and after screenshot of ATI, before and after they supposedly removed the reference to "HDCP Ready". I went to the google cache, which does in fact show "HDCP Ready" in it highlighted. Then I went to the current ati page thats not supposed to have the text any more, and it's there! Did ATI put it back up after seeing people were catching them, or is this just a bunch of FUD no one has caught yet?
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Here's a link to the cached version
PCMagazine has crumpled under the load. Here's the Google cache link.
Do Google load balance individual servers? Let's see... -
Re:The benefits of education
From AB 307:
(d) On or after January 1, 2005, the Superintendent shall
ensure that each school district has access to technical assistance
and an approved online technology plan builder that the
department determines is in compliance with state and federal
requirements.
Since the *AA support this, they'll probably end up "dontating" their time to develop this so-called plan builder. Perhaps a few maverick teachers will do the right thing, but don't overestimate the amount of time that teachers have to developing new lessons just to comply with new goofy state regulations.
Bill courtesy of Google -
/.'ed
Already...
Google Cache HERE. -
Google Cache
Google Cache
Plus, I just have to copy and paste this quote for Snow Crash, I think it's hilarious because it's completely true:
"Until a man is twenty-five, he still thinks, every so often, that under the right circumstances he could be the baddest motherfucker in the world. If I moved to a martial arts monastery in China and studied real hard for ten years. If my family was wiped out by Colombian drug dealers and I swore myself to revenge. If I got a fatal disease, had one year to live,devoted it to wiping out street crime. If I just dropped out and devoted my life to being bad."
So true, so true. -
Google Cache
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Re:Total Annihilation
It was a simple reference to Intel trying to expand into the embedded market where the ARM architecture rules. (More info on ARM - wikipedia is down atm so google cache is here.
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Re:Don't worry.
Halliburton.com told me about the camps.
I was wondering too, so I Googled and got the following link:
okay. where's the link?
Halliburton - Financial News
* KBR has been awarded a contract announced by the Department of Homeland Security's United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) component. The Indefinite Delivery/Indefinite Quantity contingency contract is to support ICE facilities and has a maximum total value of $385 million over a five-year term. The contract provides for establishing temporary detention and processing capabilities in the event of an emergency influx of immigrants into the United States, or to support the rapid development of new programs. (Emphasis mine.)
From:
http://ir.halliburton.com/phoenix.zhtml?c=67605&p= irol-newsArticle&ID=809356&highlight=
Notes:
My Google query was "site:Halliburton.com contract emergency detention".
In case the Halliburton document is taken down, or if you'd like to see it with the search terms highlighted, see the page in Google's cache. -
Re:How can we take this seriously...
It apears to b a a kia. this is just one of the stories floating aorund ab out it.
I'm aware that some of the codes will reset themselves over time if the problem is corected. OTOH, while the code is present, the performance and possibly the fuel economy of the vehicle is reduced wich makes a check engine light seems worse then it is tricking mom and pop into having it looked at.
slashdot has covered some of this before. MY understanding is that some codes on the KIA (and other cars) can only be reset with the dealerships diagnostics equiptment. It is locked out to other mechanics or ordenary people. Somethign about copywrite DMCA and such. I don't no if the bill in that link eventualy passed or not. -
Re:Huh?
Google Cache makes an entire web page available from Google's servers, Google News only makes a very tiny portion of the webpage (yes, despite being news, we are still talking about web pages here) available. Explain how it is any different?
How is this http://72.14.207.104/search?q=cache:qF-NV_J-7O8J:w ww.cnn.com/rssclick/2006/US/01/09/survivor.mine/%3 Fsection%3Dcnn_topstories+site:www.cnn.com+Miner&h l=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&lr=lang_en
any better than what Google News does?
(Sorry, too lazy to make a proper link) -
Re:Story from a first-person perspective
Here's a Google cache for that slashdotted site.
Apologies; "A HREF" doesn't seem to want to work with this on slashdot.
http://72.14.207.104/search?q=cache:7K18878iJ3gJ:w ww.illmob.org/+%22William+Genovese%22&hl=en&gl=uk& ct=clnk&cd=9&client=firefox-a" -
Re:Those under 18 do not have the same rights
Then why not get rid of the drinking age laws? Parents can watch their kids to make sure they don't drink.
Great idea. Glad to see an American who isn't afraid to follow in the footsteps of most of the rest of the first world.