Move your money to a community bank or credit union. Not only will you get better service, but you'll be letting these large banks (many of which the US tax payers recently bailed out) know that their lack of customer service and other abusive practices wont be tolerated.
I could see this being useful as some sort of "private" cloud during off hours (i.e. selling time to banks for batch and accrual operations...etc), but allowing the unwashed masses access to the underlying infrastructure of something as important as financial trading just seems like a recipe for a security disaster.
I've been doing this for about a year, and it's working pretty well for my needs:
I setup my parents windows PC with an OpenVPN connection to my house and an FTP server (only listening on the TAP interface). I use Duplicity to do an GPG encrypted incremental backup to the FTP server over the VPN.
Duplicity uses encrypted TAR files for the backup, so your internal filenames...etc are never visible, which is an added benefit if you wanted to do this to a hosting provider..etc. Depending on the amount/size of your files, the first backup can be large. To get around that, I made the first backup to an external hard drive, and brought it with me on a visit (rinse and repeat a couple of times a year for good measure).
I haven't tried to restore a single file over the network, but have tested a full restore (copying the files back to an external). That being the case, I'm not sure I'd recommend this solution for an quasi on-line backup system. However, it does work quite well for just getting your data off-site (securely and incrementally), and since my parents live about 60 miles away, I'm getting a bit of geographical diversity as well.
Well put, sir.
Warp 4.0 was released in September of 1996, a full year after the Windows 95 launch (August 1995).
Move your money to a community bank or credit union. Not only will you get better service, but you'll be letting these large banks (many of which the US tax payers recently bailed out) know that their lack of customer service and other abusive practices wont be tolerated.
I could see this being useful as some sort of "private" cloud during off hours (i.e. selling time to banks for batch and accrual operations...etc), but allowing the unwashed masses access to the underlying infrastructure of something as important as financial trading just seems like a recipe for a security disaster.
Link(s) to corroborate?
I wouldn't care. That napkin dispenser is a whore anyway!
Bad choice of business for your analogy. Somehow, a car dealer being on the right side of moral discussion just seems......well, wrong.
Not sure Tivo was on the list of DVRs you tried, but the remote/receiver on all of my Tivos have been amazing.
VCenter is NOT the management client. However, I do believe VMWare is developing a cross platform VI Client.
Citrix?
The guys that sell proprietary, incompatible, inferior OpenVPN replacement and proprietary, incompatible, inferior VNC replacement?
I wish I had mod points today, because the people that modded this steamy tird of a post insightful have no clue what their talking about.
That sure sounds like a boring ass poker game to me.
It's Yankee to you! Damn Johnny Rebs.
I believe most of his campaigns have been financed with his own money.
To further your point, I believe 3i is only "officially" certified to run on a Dell PE2950.
I stand corrected: http://www.rainiersolutions.com/RainierLibrary/iSCSI%20SAN%20Performance.pdf
I've never heard of anyone getting 960Mb/s with iSCSI out of a single gig ethernet link.
Can you substantiate the ASA statement? Links..etc would be useful.
I setup my parents windows PC with an OpenVPN connection to my house and an FTP server (only listening on the TAP interface). I use Duplicity to do an GPG encrypted incremental backup to the FTP server over the VPN.
Duplicity uses encrypted TAR files for the backup, so your internal filenames...etc are never visible, which is an added benefit if you wanted to do this to a hosting provider..etc. Depending on the amount/size of your files, the first backup can be large. To get around that, I made the first backup to an external hard drive, and brought it with me on a visit (rinse and repeat a couple of times a year for good measure).
I haven't tried to restore a single file over the network, but have tested a full restore (copying the files back to an external). That being the case, I'm not sure I'd recommend this solution for an quasi on-line backup system. However, it does work quite well for just getting your data off-site (securely and incrementally), and since my parents live about 60 miles away, I'm getting a bit of geographical diversity as well.
There are no technical solutions for stupidity and/or lack of common sense.
I don't know, Safari seems pretty darn clean to me. And long before IE7 for that matter.
To which nice features would you be referring?
Power.
Follow your own link a bit further:/ lx__servers/index.htm
http://www.unisys.com/products/clearpath__servers
Everytime I've seen a clearpath, it's been running as a VM inside of Windows 2000 on rebranded Dell x86 servers.
I smell the next "based on a true story" hollywood stinker. Whoopee!!