Yes, they do. I used to have Verizon 3G phone and it had public IPv4 address. At the same time later Verizon phones (LTE) would only have IPv6 (maybe also NAT-ted IPv4 , I am not sure).
I am now on AT&T and my LTE phone only has NAT-ed IPv4 address.
On both of these carriers you can have static IPv4 IP for one-time fee of about $500 if I remember correctly.
Members of Amazon Prime can request one free month of Prime membership for each late package. I received 2 so far - just contact Customer Service via website.
As was mentioned above, digital signature key used to sing Windows executable are not released. Therefore, it will never be possible to get a binary result identical to what is published on TryueCrypt website.
I think one should consider that there are 3 distinctive source of help/information serving somewhat different but overlapping goals:
1) Comprehensive books on the subject - especially useful when learning new technology from scratch to get a general overview of the whole environment/functionality/language/tools and how all pieces work together to create real life application. They often contain fairly comprehensive API description overlapping with:
2) Official online documentation (MSDN and alike) - complete API/technology reference with some of how-tos
3) Crowd sources - MSDN forum, Stack Overflow and other forums. Mostly geared towards giving answers to specific real-world question that cannot be answered by 1) and 2). Extremely useful because nobody can predict all possible real life scenarios and this is where the strength of the crowd knowledge really shines through because more often then not - whatever you problem is there is a good chance someone already experienced it and possibly found solution.
Well you may have some kind of issue with Atlassian but AFAIK they don't make any tools for System Administration. Unless you count JIRA and/or Confluence as such, which they aren't.
If you are concerned about performance and expect constant email stream you should host mail, database and web-servers on separate computers. There is a reason any reputable host does it this way. Plus increased load on one component doesn't affect others.
I think file picking system should be the least of your worries.
If storage media is used for backups - try restoring them. If files that are stored there are not changed - you can also save MD5 (or some other hash) in separate file and re-calculate/re-check it periodically.
Someone else already mentioned 3G Android phone. I recommend http://www.pagepluscellular.com/ (prepaid Verizon reseller). They have monthly plans and pay-as-you go plans. I use $80 card that gives you 2000 minutes and lasts a year. Data on this plan is $1/MB but it is still viable if you use rarely and limit background data usage with Droidwall app (your phone needs to be rooted)
How is it different from having your own dedicate server in someone's datacenter? It seems that OP assumes that cloud is somehow less secure than other alternatives. I just don't see a difference.
To clarify: I am only talking about storing encrypted data on the cloud. If you need to run an application on the cloud that needs data decrypted none of what I said applies.
Am I missing something here? If you encrypt your data yourself before sending it to the cloud storage and use more than one provider - what seems to be a problem?
Another important point not mentioned by the author of the article is that gadgets and being "permanently connected" cause dimished attention span. IMO it gets to the point when individuals are unable to concentrate and get anything done because there is always something "important" that requires their attention RIGHT NOW, like Facebook notification, text message on the phone, Twitter updates, etc. And if there are no distractions people subconsciously start seeking for them.
Take a look at http://www.pagepluscellular.com/ - they are prepaid Verizon reseller that I've been using for years. They allow BYOD; you can use most of the Verizon phones (except BB, IPhone and Verizon prepaid phones) - I use Droid Incredible. I am on their "Pay-Per-Minute" plans because it fits me the best - my usage is quite small. There is a forum about PagePlus here: http://www.howardforums.com/forumdisplay.php/364-Page-Plus-Cellular
Can someone seriously explain in a simple terms what this means if it is true? From what I understand - cheap(er) energy/electricity? Just how much cheaper that what is available now?
Windows and web client are available. Can be hosted completely within your environment. Free trial and free permanent license for 1 user (Express version). Much more details and how-to videos on their website
Well I posted and then possibly partially answered my own question: probably because Russia doesn't have money and China does? On the other hand wouldn't expertise be just as important or even more important?
Yes, they do. I used to have Verizon 3G phone and it had public IPv4 address. At the same time later Verizon phones (LTE) would only have IPv6 (maybe also NAT-ted IPv4 , I am not sure).
I am now on AT&T and my LTE phone only has NAT-ed IPv4 address.
On both of these carriers you can have static IPv4 IP for one-time fee of about $500 if I remember correctly.
Members of Amazon Prime can request one free month of Prime membership for each late package. I received 2 so far - just contact Customer Service via website.
As was mentioned above, digital signature key used to sing Windows executable are not released. Therefore, it will never be possible to get a binary result identical to what is published on TryueCrypt website.
...Fingerprint changes you???
Goals mentioned above include learning, applying what you learned to real-word problems and solving issues that one comes across along the way.
I think one should consider that there are 3 distinctive source of help/information serving somewhat different but overlapping goals:
1) Comprehensive books on the subject - especially useful when learning new technology from scratch to get a general overview of the whole environment/functionality/language/tools and how all pieces work together to create real life application. They often contain fairly comprehensive API description overlapping with:
2) Official online documentation (MSDN and alike) - complete API/technology reference with some of how-tos
3) Crowd sources - MSDN forum, Stack Overflow and other forums. Mostly geared towards giving answers to specific real-world question that cannot be answered by 1) and 2). Extremely useful because nobody can predict all possible real life scenarios and this is where the strength of the crowd knowledge really shines through because more often then not - whatever you problem is there is a good chance someone already experienced it and possibly found solution.
Well you may have some kind of issue with Atlassian but AFAIK they don't make any tools for System Administration. Unless you count JIRA and/or Confluence as such, which they aren't.
* I think picking file system should be the least of your worries.
If you are concerned about performance and expect constant email stream you should host mail, database and web-servers on separate computers. There is a reason any reputable host does it this way. Plus increased load on one component doesn't affect others.
I think file picking system should be the least of your worries.
Check out Page Plus: http://www.pagepluscellular.com/
They are prepaid reseller using Verizon network. There is a forum here: http://www.howardforums.com/forumdisplay.php/364-Page-Plus-Cellular
If storage media is used for backups - try restoring them. If files that are stored there are not changed - you can also save MD5 (or some other hash) in separate file and re-calculate/re-check it periodically.
Someone else already mentioned 3G Android phone. I recommend http://www.pagepluscellular.com/ (prepaid Verizon reseller). They have monthly plans and pay-as-you go plans. I use $80 card that gives you 2000 minutes and lasts a year. Data on this plan is $1/MB but it is still viable if you use rarely and limit background data usage with Droidwall app (your phone needs to be rooted)
Can you elaborate? Chrome already supports AdBlock
How is it different from having your own dedicate server in someone's datacenter? It seems that OP assumes that cloud is somehow less secure than other alternatives. I just don't see a difference.
To clarify: I am only talking about storing encrypted data on the cloud. If you need to run an application on the cloud that needs data decrypted none of what I said applies.
Am I missing something here? If you encrypt your data yourself before sending it to the cloud storage and use more than one provider - what seems to be a problem?
Same here.
Is it:
1) NF pays content owner lump sum $X and gets right to stream content unlimited number of times within specific time period
2) NF pays content owner $Z lump sum and then $Y for every time content is streamed
3) Mix of the above?
Another important point not mentioned by the author of the article is that gadgets and being "permanently connected" cause dimished attention span. IMO it gets to the point when individuals are unable to concentrate and get anything done because there is always something "important" that requires their attention RIGHT NOW, like Facebook notification, text message on the phone, Twitter updates, etc. And if there are no distractions people subconsciously start seeking for them.
Take a look at http://www.pagepluscellular.com/ - they are prepaid Verizon reseller that I've been using for years. They allow BYOD; you can use most of the Verizon phones (except BB, IPhone and Verizon prepaid phones) - I use Droid Incredible. I am on their "Pay-Per-Minute" plans because it fits me the best - my usage is quite small. There is a forum about PagePlus here: http://www.howardforums.com/forumdisplay.php/364-Page-Plus-Cellular
Can someone seriously explain in a simple terms what this means if it is true? From what I understand - cheap(er) energy/electricity? Just how much cheaper that what is available now?
This is how I roll!
TO clarify a bit: this is more of a Wiki and bug tracking, project management features are less developed
This is what I use: http://www.axosoft.com/ontime
Windows and web client are available. Can be hosted completely within your environment. Free trial and free permanent license for 1 user (Express version). Much more details and how-to videos on their website
Well I posted and then possibly partially answered my own question: probably because Russia doesn't have money and China does? On the other hand wouldn't expertise be just as important or even more important?