Actually the difference inbetween NetQuake and Quakeworld performance was the addition of clientside motion prediction... it really had very little to do with TCP or UDP. Prior to that, a client had to wait ~300ms for a status update before you were allowed to move, or other players would move. With client side prediction, for a limited period of time you can keep moving in the world even after you've lagged out, and the other players will get a predicted path of movement until you come back. If you've been lagged out for too long you get the "teleportation" problem when your packets finally reach the server, because you didn't follow the client-side predicted path and the server just told the other clients you're elsewhere.
It still beats netquake.
I'm abso-fucking-lutely sure you wouldn't survive a face full of 00 buck, because your head would just go *pop*. Yes, there are people that have survived gunshots to the head from pistol caliber weapons firing FMJs, but I've yet to hear of anyone surviving a direct shotgun blast to the face with proper ammunition(birdshot is meant for little birds). And we could always make it interesting and use like a.500 nitro.
Indeed. isoHunt(and many other p2p search engines) cross reference via the infohash, and add the other trackers that it finds that infohash on to the torrent file. Redundancy is nice.
Agreed. I've griped about Ruby with hdm(you can reach him on freenode, btw), but it's not my project. It does allow rapid development of new modules though, and is simple enough that you can patch together an exploit by copy and pasting bits of code from other modules and then throwing your shellcode in. In short, Metasploit's still the best framework we've got... although nmap's scripting engine is sorta sexy too.
TrueCrypt isn't without it's bugs. Both 5.1a and 6.0a have cost me two windows installs(one Win2k3, one Win XP pro), which couldn't be recovered with the recovery disk. 6.1a won't even install on my Inspiron 9400, giving me a "memory parity error" on the initial reboot test for full drive encryption. If you want something to trust your data to, truecrypt is not that program(yet).
Nope. The standard passport (not the card type) has a foil lining in the jacket, which makes it stay open. Renderman's covered this at HOPE, Shmoocon, and Defcon. It's really bad. Look for his "How do I pwn thee, let me count the ways" talk.
But what if we don't die? What if we discover that we've been living in a black hole this whole time and the current universe's edges are simply the expanding event horizon? Living in a black hole within a black hole would be neat! I wanna press the red button:(
Monkeys and typewriters man, monkeys and typewriters.
Actually, not really. Exploits could go after the default addresses interfaces take.
So *that's* why you didn't hear the WHOOSH sound coming...
PEBKAC. Enjoy the similiar headaches of Windows land.
You use openbios? How's that working for you?
Actually the difference inbetween NetQuake and Quakeworld performance was the addition of clientside motion prediction... it really had very little to do with TCP or UDP. Prior to that, a client had to wait ~300ms for a status update before you were allowed to move, or other players would move. With client side prediction, for a limited period of time you can keep moving in the world even after you've lagged out, and the other players will get a predicted path of movement until you come back. If you've been lagged out for too long you get the "teleportation" problem when your packets finally reach the server, because you didn't follow the client-side predicted path and the server just told the other clients you're elsewhere. It still beats netquake.
What if I like dogs *and* cats... does quantum physics have something to say about that?
Maintaining access?
I'm abso-fucking-lutely sure you wouldn't survive a face full of 00 buck, because your head would just go *pop*. Yes, there are people that have survived gunshots to the head from pistol caliber weapons firing FMJs, but I've yet to hear of anyone surviving a direct shotgun blast to the face with proper ammunition(birdshot is meant for little birds). And we could always make it interesting and use like a .500 nitro.
"Who's yo daddy?" *smack smack*
Yes it can, just as easily as CID.
I just hope Sony doesn't make it...
You're thinking of a single rotating mass, such as a big hunk of metal cut into a flywheel. They're using lots of tiny, independent masses.
Force = mass * acceleration
Yo momma's so fat, even duracell doesn't wanna see her spin.
The behavior is nice IMO, but the UI change is horrible. ~341,000 people agree.
I always thought that was Benjamin Franklin.
I'd think more discoveries happen during the words "That's odd..." or "Oh shi-."
Indeed. isoHunt(and many other p2p search engines) cross reference via the infohash, and add the other trackers that it finds that infohash on to the torrent file. Redundancy is nice.
- Shadow
But it doesn't have a chipset drawing more power than the CPU, either.
Agreed. I've griped about Ruby with hdm(you can reach him on freenode, btw), but it's not my project. It does allow rapid development of new modules though, and is simple enough that you can patch together an exploit by copy and pasting bits of code from other modules and then throwing your shellcode in. In short, Metasploit's still the best framework we've got... although nmap's scripting engine is sorta sexy too.
But how much will it heat my frosty piss?
Yes, that's the first thing I did. My memory is fine, it's truecrypt.
TrueCrypt isn't without it's bugs. Both 5.1a and 6.0a have cost me two windows installs(one Win2k3, one Win XP pro), which couldn't be recovered with the recovery disk. 6.1a won't even install on my Inspiron 9400, giving me a "memory parity error" on the initial reboot test for full drive encryption. If you want something to trust your data to, truecrypt is not that program(yet).
Nope. The standard passport (not the card type) has a foil lining in the jacket, which makes it stay open. Renderman's covered this at HOPE, Shmoocon, and Defcon. It's really bad. Look for his "How do I pwn thee, let me count the ways" talk.
Actually the sleeve tends to make the passport stay partially open and act as a parabola, amplifying the signal from a distance.
But what if we don't die? What if we discover that we've been living in a black hole this whole time and the current universe's edges are simply the expanding event horizon? Living in a black hole within a black hole would be neat! I wanna press the red button :(