The RIAA and MPAA are finding users on networks by searching for files that are shared and logging the IPs of the people allegedly sharing them.
Where Bit Torrent is concerned, each torrent is its own P2P network and with the right client, you can still access the IPs of all the clients on said torrent that are sharing the file.
So no, Bit Torrent is no greater for protecting your TCP/IP anonymity. The only recourse is non-public torrents that RIAA/MPAA couldn't see because they couldn't access.
If you're gonna let people get stuff from you, you've got to tell them where to get it from. Once the RIAA/MPAA know where to go, the fun begins.:^)
When you install the service pack, upon reboot it besically steps you through the Out of Box Experience. You can setup the firewall at that time, but if you click through like a mindless idiot, it will be on by default.
You still get to pick and choose certain settings interactively.
Pentium M is not a new technology. It's the previous core (P6) with better SIMD bolted on and ramped up clock speeds. It's drastically different from the P4 (Netburst) core but it's not new by any stretch of the imagination.
The whole Athlon/AthlonXP/Athlon64 should be self-explanatory to anyone who's willing to investigate, but most people aren't.
I thought IEEE-1394 was a transport bus developed as a standard with FireWire® being trademarked by Apple and iLink® being trademarked by Sony. All compatible, different names.
A rose by any other name would smell just as sweet, no?
Dr. Raymond Stantz: Everything was fine with our system until the power grid was shut off by dickless here. Walter Peck: They caused an explosion! Mayor: Is this true? Dr. Peter Venkman: Yes it's true. [pause] Dr. Peter Venkman: This man has no dick.
Dr. Egon Spengler: Try to imagine all life as you know it stopping instantaneously and every molecule in your body exploding at the speed of light. Dr. Raymond Stantz: Total protonic reversal. Dr. Peter Venkman: That's bad. Okay. Alright, important safety tip, thanks Egon.
Intel's desktop line runs at 800MHz FSB, yes. But the server platforms (Xeon and Xeon MP) are seriously lagging on the FSB war. The regular Xeons just made it to 533 MHz and added hyperthreading, while Xeon MP processors are stuck at 400 MHz with hyperthreading.
Not to mention the shared bus architectural design totally blows goats compared to the Opteron's concurrent bus design.
Adapter Here.
How old is Fedora Core 2 and how old is OOB Windows XP?
Windows XP was released Oct. 2001.
XP SP1 was released Sept. 2002.
Fedora Core 2 was released May 2004.
Fedora has a minimum of 1.5 years worth of security updates/patches over the XP/XP SP1 cd install.
You might as well point out that Redhat 6 and Windows 98 aren't up to snuff out of the box either.
The RIAA and MPAA are finding users on networks by searching for files that are shared and logging the IPs of the people allegedly sharing them.
:^)
Where Bit Torrent is concerned, each torrent is its own P2P network and with the right client, you can still access the IPs of all the clients on said torrent that are sharing the file.
So no, Bit Torrent is no greater for protecting your TCP/IP anonymity. The only recourse is non-public torrents that RIAA/MPAA couldn't see because they couldn't access.
If you're gonna let people get stuff from you, you've got to tell them where to get it from. Once the RIAA/MPAA know where to go, the fun begins.
What about FAT32 with VFAT for long filenames? Linux seems to handle that fine, as well as all flavors of Windows since Windows 95B.
True. Ted's a Kennedy. He's not accustomed to tragedy.
It is dark. You're likely to be overheard by a Grue.
Sure you could make the environemental control costs lower, but then Snake Plissken would have to save the President from the King of New York.
It's just not worth it.
When you install the service pack, upon reboot it besically steps you through the Out of Box Experience. You can setup the firewall at that time, but if you click through like a mindless idiot, it will be on by default.
You still get to pick and choose certain settings interactively.
Plato, is that you?
Pentium M is not a new technology. It's the previous core (P6) with better SIMD bolted on and ramped up clock speeds. It's drastically different from the P4 (Netburst) core but it's not new by any stretch of the imagination.
The whole Athlon/AthlonXP/Athlon64 should be self-explanatory to anyone who's willing to investigate, but most people aren't.
So it goes.
I thought IEEE-1394 was a transport bus developed as a standard with FireWire® being trademarked by Apple and iLink® being trademarked by Sony. All compatible, different names.
A rose by any other name would smell just as sweet, no?
Nobody's going to get a porn film confused with a Hollywood blockbuster.
:^P
I dunno. Saving Ryan's Privates was a very touching film. Especially the cemetary scene.
Maybe they should patent the mapping method and not what they find through mapping.
You're right, he should go with a BSD-style license.
Yeah, get a real job.
Where would one change this setting?
Dr. Raymond Stantz: Everything was fine with our system until the power grid was shut off by dickless here.
Walter Peck: They caused an explosion!
Mayor: Is this true?
Dr. Peter Venkman: Yes it's true.
[pause]
Dr. Peter Venkman: This man has no dick.
One would think that such an admission under oath in a civil court could easily become evidence for a future criminal trial.
If it were me, I'd plead the 5th on the basis that any possible answers could possibly incriminate me in future criminal hearings.
Is a good night's sleep worth paying the extra cash to host your domain somewhere else?
For me, it is.
Whoa whoa whoa!
That does not make sense!
Man, the worst developer job ever for me started 23 years ago and continues to this day.
All I had to start with was one cell and a uterus that wasn't even mine!
Try:
Via EPIA M board, now with floating point goodness!
Morex 2677/2699 Chassis!
Hauppauge WinPVR250/350!
Appropriate RAM and HDD space!
Pretty much an all in one solution for PVR in a nice small form factor.
Dr. Egon Spengler: Try to imagine all life as you know it stopping instantaneously and every molecule in your body exploding at the speed of light.
Dr. Raymond Stantz: Total protonic reversal.
Dr. Peter Venkman: That's bad. Okay. Alright, important safety tip, thanks Egon.
So you're the one sucker who actually paid for Windows?
Intel's desktop line runs at 800MHz FSB, yes. But the server platforms (Xeon and Xeon MP) are seriously lagging on the FSB war. The regular Xeons just made it to 533 MHz and added hyperthreading, while Xeon MP processors are stuck at 400 MHz with hyperthreading.
Not to mention the shared bus architectural design totally blows goats compared to the Opteron's concurrent bus design.