Shite? Seriously? Postgres handles data more safely than MySQL. It has less risk of getting taken over by a giant like Oracle. It's fast. It's Free. Are you just trolling or what?
Well, since patent lifetimes are 20 years, that's only $5,880,000 per person assuming that they live for that long. I wonder how much it cost to develop - it seems at nearly $6 million per person they easily stand to recoup their costs and make a sick profit.
While I enjoy the magazine, it's commonly "out there". It's like the Popular Mechanics of science magazines - lots of cool stuff that probably won't ever happen/exist.
I should also mention that I use the Linkstation in a RAID-1. You might get better speeds with a RAID-0 or jbod, but then of course you don't get the data protection.
I currently own a Buffalo Linkstation NAS, it gets about 20 MB (megabytes) of traffic/sec on reads max, which isn't all that great but at least it's into GigE speeds. The web interface is decent, and since it supports samba and ftp it should work fine with OSX. I also have tried the HP Media Vault (their small linux NAS), but I found that when I put a second drive in it would over-heat and turn off. The user interface sucked too. I didn't get a chance to benchmark its speeds before I returned it.
Here's what you need, scponly. No need to recompile openssh or anything, just compile scponly, copy a few libs to your user's dir, change the user's shell to scponly and you're done. It even works with Solaris 9's version of openssh. I've used it a bit and I'm happy with it.
As to the discussion - nerds generally have low self-esteem and poor social skills. It's makes them friggin' fabulous to communicate with.:/
Good luck. I suspect you've already solved the problem above anyway.
2004 Saab 93 2.0t 5 speed manual (175hp). Depending on how I drive, I can usually get at least the sticker. For example, I recently took a short trip across the state and got about 38 mpg while driving around 55-60 mph (highway was advertised as 34). If I bring it up to 70 it usually drops to around 35-36. In town I make quite a few stops but still usually average around 24-26 (23 on the sticker).
That combined with fairly good performance (0-60 in 8 seconds) makes me think the car has a perfect balance between performance and fuel economy.
I just bought mine Tuesday night. So far I'm pretty happy with it. For those of you who don't like the keypad, it's not so bad. By the time I had punched in all of my contacts I was as used to it as my old nokia 6160. The camera is pretty cool, but so far my favorite feature is the ring tones - any midi songs you can find will work, and with bluetooth it's pretty easy to set them up (well, setting up bluetooth on your linux box is a pain). The phone is about the same size as my 6160, so that doesn't really bother me - but I could see it being an issue if you're used to something smaller. The apps it comes with are pretty lame (mostly demos), and I haven't tried downloading any. It is kind of difficult to play games on the rocker switch, but you can't expect too much from a cell phone I guess. Overall I'm pretty happy with it, and it's way cooler than my old basic phone.
Surveys like this are inherently flawed because many proxy servers send can modify the browser type sent out to the page. For example, at my company I've got squid set up to say we're all running Mozilla 0.9.4 on Linux;-).
This should only happen if you've got the "Outlook 2000 SR-1 Update: E-mail Security" patch installed or if you've installed Office 2000 SP2. Perhaps the version you installed already had one of these applied?
Can you imagine??? "Wow, there's about 50 ICBM's popping out of the US. Well, don't worry. I'm sure they're just inert warheads heading for country X".
A trackable plane would at least localize the area that could be hit, lowering the political risk a tad.
I have inside info. that Secure Computing (maker of the sidewinder firewall) is working on the same thing with 3com.
"Product details are not being provided at this time but the companies confirmed that products resulting from their cooperation would be announced in the first half of 2001. "
It's the same we that already decides who will get the tax money. I don't have a problem with this, but I'm more of a Socialist than a Libertarian. Think of it like this:
If something is proven to be harmful on a large scale, shouldn't someone do something about it?
If something is proven to be beneficial on a large scale, shouldn't someone encourage it?
How can an individual realistically influence any of the above without government?
What tools are available to the government? Would you rather have a tax or a law?
Incidently, states that have a low standard of living are generally conservative, whereas states with a high standard of living are generally liberal. Look it up if you doubt me.
Also, you should notice that he said "we don't like", not "I don't like". The context I get out of this is "we as a country", not "we as in me".
Even files with no names must have a some sort of "date stamp" or something to fix them in the "stream" I'm sure. Otherwise they'd be forgotten, which seems like a bad idea to me.
Or is this supposed to be written in a purely linear fashion? I suppose you could have nameless globs of information then. But what would be the point of keeping it in the first place? How are you going to store this physically? Is there a delete option? Would the delete option do any good? I can't think of any practical way to store information without at least having a date stamp or inode or something that would denote whether the information is useful or not. Somebody clue me in. I'm probably wasting too much time considering this anyway.
We had this pass though my work over a month ago. But don't take my word for it, go to http://vil.nai.com/villib/dispVirus.asp?virus_k=10 225 Looks like it's as old as last July.
Shite? Seriously? Postgres handles data more safely than MySQL. It has less risk of getting taken over by a giant like Oracle. It's fast. It's Free. Are you just trolling or what?
I call straw man. The majority of the predictions indicate overall warming trends- not a neutral result.
The point is that one model fits the data particularly well.
Well, since patent lifetimes are 20 years, that's only $5,880,000 per person assuming that they live for that long. I wonder how much it cost to develop - it seems at nearly $6 million per person they easily stand to recoup their costs and make a sick profit.
While I enjoy the magazine, it's commonly "out there". It's like the Popular Mechanics of science magazines - lots of cool stuff that probably won't ever happen/exist.
mod up please. this should be an extreme duh for anyone concerned about this.
I should also mention that I use the Linkstation in a RAID-1. You might get better speeds with a RAID-0 or jbod, but then of course you don't get the data protection.
I currently own a Buffalo Linkstation NAS, it gets about 20 MB (megabytes) of traffic/sec on reads max, which isn't all that great but at least it's into GigE speeds. The web interface is decent, and since it supports samba and ftp it should work fine with OSX.
I also have tried the HP Media Vault (their small linux NAS), but I found that when I put a second drive in it would over-heat and turn off. The user interface sucked too. I didn't get a chance to benchmark its speeds before I returned it.
As to the discussion - nerds generally have low self-esteem and poor social skills. It's makes them friggin' fabulous to communicate with. :/
Good luck. I suspect you've already solved the problem above anyway.
That combined with fairly good performance (0-60 in 8 seconds) makes me think the car has a perfect balance between performance and fuel economy.
2004 93 SS
I just bought mine Tuesday night. So far I'm pretty happy with it. For those of you who don't like the keypad, it's not so bad. By the time I had punched in all of my contacts I was as used to it as my old nokia 6160. The camera is pretty cool, but so far my favorite feature is the ring tones - any midi songs you can find will work, and with bluetooth it's pretty easy to set them up (well, setting up bluetooth on your linux box is a pain). The phone is about the same size as my 6160, so that doesn't really bother me - but I could see it being an issue if you're used to something smaller. The apps it comes with are pretty lame (mostly demos), and I haven't tried downloading any. It is kind of difficult to play games on the rocker switch, but you can't expect too much from a cell phone I guess. Overall I'm pretty happy with it, and it's way cooler than my old basic phone.
Surveys like this are inherently flawed because many proxy servers send can modify the browser type sent out to the page. For example, at my company I've got squid set up to say we're all running Mozilla 0.9.4 on Linux ;-).
If this passes, I don't even want to be a sysadmin in the US anymore. How hard is it to become a citizen of Canada?
Why don't you go do some reading so you know what the hell you're talking about. Ack, I don't even know why I'm bothering to respond to you.
This should only happen if you've got the "Outlook 2000 SR-1 Update: E-mail Security" patch installed or if you've installed Office 2000 SP2. Perhaps the version you installed already had one of these applied?
Can you imagine??? "Wow, there's about 50 ICBM's popping out of the US. Well, don't worry. I'm sure they're just inert warheads heading for country X".
A trackable plane would at least localize the area that could be hit, lowering the political risk a tad.
"Product details are not being provided at this time but the companies confirmed that products resulting from their cooperation would be announced in the first half of 2001. "
The Press release
ah, but oh so entertaining (you posted, didn't you)
If something is proven to be harmful on a large scale, shouldn't someone do something about it?
If something is proven to be beneficial on a large scale, shouldn't someone encourage it?
How can an individual realistically influence any of the above without government?
What tools are available to the government? Would you rather have a tax or a law?
Incidently, states that have a low standard of living are generally conservative, whereas states with a high standard of living are generally liberal. Look it up if you doubt me.
Also, you should notice that he said "we don't like", not "I don't like". The context I get out of this is "we as a country", not "we as in me".
Or you would really like that IDE disk to power down for a while. (anybody know a good way to do that?)
Even files with no names must have a some sort of "date stamp" or something to fix them in the "stream" I'm sure. Otherwise they'd be forgotten, which seems like a bad idea to me.
Or is this supposed to be written in a purely linear fashion? I suppose you could have nameless globs of information then. But what would be the point of keeping it in the first place? How are you going to store this physically? Is there a delete option? Would the delete option do any good? I can't think of any practical way to store information without at least having a date stamp or inode or something that would denote whether the information is useful or not. Somebody clue me in. I'm probably wasting too much time considering this anyway.
You've got the wrong atomic symbol for Helium. Should be He, not H. H is hydrogen.
We had this pass though my work over a month ago. But don't take my word for it, go to http://vil.nai.com/villib/dispVirus.asp?virus_k=10 225 Looks like it's as old as last July.