Domain: fortytwo.ch
Stories and comments across the archive that link to fortytwo.ch.
Comments · 6
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Re:Stupid Article
Or Oracle's btrfs, or... Debian's Adrian von Bidder describes the details: Filesystems in Linux. The idea that MS would Liberate NTFS is in crackpipe territory.
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Not quite...
The study found that no open source project had fewer software defects than proprietary code. In fact, the analysis demonstrated that proprietary code is, on average, more than five times less buggy. On the other hand, the open-source software was found to be of greater average overall quality.
No, *popular* open-source software is 5x as buggy as *safety-critical* closed software. The linked dissenting opinion is at least partly right; they're comparing apples to oranges.
Maybe they should try comparing open- and closed-source software that's actually trying to solve the same problem? That'd be a bit more valid of a comparison...
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Re:Splendid admins over there at pool.ntp.org
Glad to hear. This is a bit off topic, but what kind of bandwidth usage do you experience? I've been wanting to join the NTP pool for a few months now. Their web site mentions something in the range 10-20Kbit/sec, but is that sustained, like an average over a month? I'll subscribe to the mailing list to start getting a feel.
While looking at the join page, they give the apache config fragment. That's great.
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName pool.ntp.org
ServerAlias *.pool.ntp.org
Redirect permanent / http://www.pool.ntp.org/
</VirtualHost>Thanks for the feedback.
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Re:I prefer clockspeed's taiclock
OpenNTPD is EVIL. It "connects" to the NTP servers too often.
Consider using chronyd instead.
https://fortytwo.ch/mailman/pipermail/timekeepers/ 2005/000941.html
http://chrony.sunsite.dk/ -
Parent's broken; Additional info and links!
See my other post with links on how to setup TLS for your mail server, more info on building the web-of-trust, and GPG downloads for your windows friends.
http://yro.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=132181&cid =11046941
Also note that the ======== http://link ======== at the end of the parent post has been mangled by Slashdot Submissions Co. and should be fixed before forwarding it on to your friends, or posting anywhere. Broken links have never impressed anybody.
WTF - Here are some links from the link above again. Sorry about the bandwidth wastage but I think it's worth people seeing as practices contained within are sure to benefit us all (in Utopia - yay!)
[--snip-- (abridged) ]
WinPT :: Windows Privacy Tray [sf.net] is a good place to direct your friends still using windows.
I think a resource for mail administrators on how to add TLS capabilities to their SMTP handlers could be healthy for the net as well. On there would be step by steps on how to TLS-enable sendmail, postfix, qmail, proprietary-this, and proprietary-gateway-that. :: Sendmail :: Exim :: Qmail
If you're running Postfix you've got little excuse to not be running TLS.
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.encryption.gen eral/979
My SMTP traffic is opportunisticly TransportLayerSecure. Is yours?
Get a free server certificate from cacert.org If you haven't already you should add their Root Certificate to the list your browser accepts. They will also remotely sign your PGP/GPG keys and issue free S/MIME certificates as well. Very cool, totally free, and a distributed trust model rather than a top-down, it'll-cost-you-$199.00-for-an-SSL-cert model.
For more keysigning fun DO NOT MISS http://biglumber.com/! Find people nearby and extend your web-o-trust.
Host a keysigning party at] your next LUG [debian.org] meeting .
You can get a email-address-verified signature at http://www.imperialviolet.org/keyverify.html
Learn about using subkeys .
- - - - - - GPG keys -- The new web. - - - - - - -
[--snip-- (abridged) ] -
...future for PGP? YES! Here's Resources!?!?
Does anybody know of a good clearinghouse with information on plugins for a variety of mailers I could send my dad, high school friends, or grandmother to?
Anybody know of a list out there that collects information on how to secure your email, what's it's all about, and general key maintainence issues (for "the everyday net user")?
WinPT :: Windows Privacy Tray is a good place to direct your friends still using windows.
I'd like to be able to say to a friend: "Here's my key. Go to keepitprivate.com and find a plugin for the email software you use. Then next time you send me some email, just be sure to put it in an "envelope" (it just takes one extra click or can be set to happen automatically). You don't even need to lick a stamp! I value your privacy as much as I hope you value mine!"
I think a resource for mail administrators on how to add TLS capabilities to their SMTP handlers could be healthy for the net as well. On there would be step by steps on how to TLS-enable sendmail, postfix, qmail, proprietary-this, and proprietary-gateway-that. My SMTP traffic is opportunisticly TransportLayerSecure. Is yours?
Red Hat :: Sendmail
:: Exim
:: Qmail
If you're running Postfix you've got little excuse to not be running TLS.
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.encryption.gen eral/979
Get a free server certificate from cacert.org If you haven't already you should add their Root Certificate to the list your browser accepts. They will also remotely sign your PGP/GPG keys and issue free S/MIME certificates as well. Very cool, totally free, and a distributed trust model rather than a top-down, it'll-cost-you-$199.00-for-an-SSL-cert model.
For more keysigning fun DO NOT MISS http://biglumber.com/! Find people nearby and extend your web-o-trust.
Host a keysigning party at your next LUG meeting.
You can get a email-address-verified signature at http://www.imperialviolet.org/keyverify.html
Learn about using subkeys.
- - - - - - GPG keys -- The new web. - - - - - - -