Nope. Not only does the client rely on the hostname, but by sending the traffic unencryped, anyone between you and the server can read your password. Also, anyone on your network can read it. Using a public wifi? Don't POP.
That's ok. Just get the same jury that awarded the RIAA $2 million from the woman in MN.
Next week on Slashdot: Small town bankrupted by disgruntled employee.
I work with a German-owned company that uses Norman Virus Control. From time to time it kills machines, but its biggest offense is the frequent false positives. When your antivirus deletes user32.dll on half a dozen remote machines without a remote option to restore the file, and the mothership tells you to just deal with it, you lose all good will.
Also, it's named like a bootleg ripoff of my other favorite cpu-hog and randomly pops up a splash screen over the middle third of your monitor.
Deal with voting like we do currency and it should not be a huge ordeal. Voters can handle the responsibility. That would arguably be more secure than the ballot method.
How's that? Let the Fed print as many votes as they like?
Great, I'll be telling my grandkids how much further a vote went in my day, before vote inflation.
Thank you for pointing that out. I must say, I was impressed that 0100010001010011 (652467) had all of his personal files on X.org before I realized that he meant example.com.
The company I work for is German-owned, and we get all of our IT policies handed down from there. From time to time a user's keyboard layout will switch to German for no reason and I get emails like: What is wrong with mz kezboard?
I've used SpinRite a few times on drives with unreadable data, with about a 85% success rate. I've seen SpinRite mentioned about a dozen times today, but I have to wonder how many have actually purchased it.
I swear, I'm buying a copy as soon as I'm out of debt
I know it isn't likely, but I would love to see this evolve into a situation where I could time shift my MythTV recordings with other users over BitTorrent.
I used to work for a scumbag company, and I was miserable. It took me a while to catch on that things were never going to get better. Customers were still promised "unlimited" this, and "99.99%" that.
When I used to take cc numbers over the phone, I would type them in with the spaces to make it easier to read them back for verification. I'd remove the spaces as each section was verified.
Nope. Not only does the client rely on the hostname, but by sending the traffic unencryped, anyone between you and the server can read your password. Also, anyone on your network can read it. Using a public wifi? Don't POP.
If "opt out" is cookie based, then it's useless. Can anyone confirm?
Ah, so that explains the performance.
But when she does, you'll be the proudest parent on the block.
In 5...4...3...2...
Years?
Yup. In fact, I just changed them all to password1 this morning. I may change them again in a minute.
That's ok. Just get the same jury that awarded the RIAA $2 million from the woman in MN.
Next week on Slashdot: Small town bankrupted by disgruntled employee.
My password is hunter2
You don't need 12. 1 person that cannot be swayed and 11 people that would rather go home than continue to argue.
I work with a German-owned company that uses Norman Virus Control. From time to time it kills machines, but its biggest offense is the frequent false positives. When your antivirus deletes user32.dll on half a dozen remote machines without a remote option to restore the file, and the mothership tells you to just deal with it, you lose all good will.
Also, it's named like a bootleg ripoff of my other favorite cpu-hog and randomly pops up a splash screen over the middle third of your monitor.
Please tell me that fuzzy little picture is actually a CAT5 O' Nine Tails
Am I the only one?
/me looks around, checks address bar. Yes.
Deal with voting like we do currency and it should not be a huge ordeal. Voters can handle the responsibility. That would arguably be more secure than the ballot method.
How's that? Let the Fed print as many votes as they like?
Great, I'll be telling my grandkids how much further a vote went in my day, before vote inflation.
That sounds like Verizon math, to me.
Thank you for pointing that out. I must say, I was impressed that 0100010001010011 (652467) had all of his personal files on X.org before I realized that he meant example.com.
Wiki Resume? Great idea! Then if you don't live up to any claims on there, you can blame other editors.
I'm glad I'm not the only one.
Let the squatter know that at a certain price point, it is cheaper to simply have him killed.
The company I work for is German-owned, and we get all of our IT policies handed down from there. From time to time a user's keyboard layout will switch to German for no reason and I get emails like: What is wrong with mz kezboard?
I've used SpinRite a few times on drives with unreadable data, with about a 85% success rate. I've seen SpinRite mentioned about a dozen times today, but I have to wonder how many have actually purchased it.
I swear, I'm buying a copy as soon as I'm out of debt
I know it isn't likely, but I would love to see this evolve into a situation where I could time shift my MythTV recordings with other users over BitTorrent.
Amen.
I used to work for a scumbag company, and I was miserable. It took me a while to catch on that things were never going to get better. Customers were still promised "unlimited" this, and "99.99%" that.
Today's Dilbert reminds me of ScumCo Inc: http://www.dilbert.com/fast/2009-05-29/
The wand wasn't as much a motion sensor as it was a signal to help the Eyetoy pick up your motion. The Eyetoy needed glasses.
When I used to take cc numbers over the phone, I would type them in with the spaces to make it easier to read them back for verification. I'd remove the spaces as each section was verified.
I wonder how many users called IT to report a broken # on their keyboard after failing to enter it in your SSN field.