The attacks were targeted against specific folks, those whose computers were targeted for being compromised. "Spear Phishing"(dang that sounds stupid) is what it resolved around, they just happened to use a few zero-exploits to carry it out.
Information *can* be worth more than an country, depending on the context and the people who know it. Google has made it easy for the common person to search and find information on any topic.
Besides, Google is just one of many large companies that have suffered from this. They just happen to be able to complain about it and reach millions in no time.
Also, I'm wondering if there is caching going on for this. If not, it could be as bad as 56KB every page without compression.
Also, I thought any container that was configured by someone with half a brain knew how to setup compression. I was one of those less-than-half-brain-folks as recently as a month ago, so it happens. I never did the initial configuration of Tomcat/Apache, just never bothered looking at how it was configured.
Compression + proper caching means your jqueryMini.js is a one-time 20KB hit.
I like to think that God was a smart enough creator and made sure there were plenty of chances for early life to get upgrades along the way. Not that God sprinkled magic viruses on chimps and viola, but rather that's how it worked out given a few hundred-million years of life.
I never quite got how folks think the earth is only 3000 years old and that Dinosaurs never really existed, etc. I'd think it'd be alot easier to explain how creation and evolution fit than deny any evidence of evolution and dinosaurs.
But, I s'pose it's all choosing which myth and facts to believe in and which to not. Plus, life is a lot more comfortable when your sure what you believe is true and everything contrary is a lie. Religion is just a nice container to organize it all with.
Shoot..off topic...
uh....What'd be even MORE interesting is to compare those divided lineages NOW and see if the viral DNA that originally existed still does in it's original form. If not, what's going to account for the changes(which is like finding a specific needle(s) in a stack of needles)?
I'd be interested in the overall answer here. I use Eclipse with a lot of additional standard addons (ECF, WTP, TPTP, etc) and would like to find something useful to use a task management that I can share with coworkers or work towards overall goals. I bet Eclipse has something for this already built in, but I'm just not using it properly.
I'm contemplating a bugzilla setup since it looks like it integrates nicely, It might be overkill though and not fit your guidelines.
Another tool I'm looking at is jazz concert that seems to include lots of tools for just what you are looking for. I haven't used it but if I get some time after the holidays, might test it out.
Ok. The news article is new, but the content is anything but.
The subpoena was withdrawn in a one sentence letter in late Feburary 2009 after the EFF sent a letter to the DOJ pointing out the problems with the subpeona.
We're only hearing about all of it now. It is troubling that the DOJ will not come out and say what the original motivation for even sending the subpoena in the first and is being mum about it all.
On top of that, the dates are all mixed up. The subpoena was sent in June 2008, according to the CBS article. However, the EFF says it wasn't received until January 30th 2009. This is important to note as Obama took office the 20th. The EFF's letter was sent Feb. 13th, with a return letter from the DOJ on the 25th.
My guess, it was probably a rookie lawyer who sent a badly worded request to SysAdmin during the confusion of a new president taking office.
I always enjoyed reading the comics as a kid. I'd have to say Calvin and Hobbes was the best. Nothing like a big cardboard box being so many different things when left to your imagination.
I needed a simple security system that would dependably make a loud noise if someone opened the door. So far, it does that as well as could be expected in an house that's being rented.
The equipment is pretty cheap, the technology is dependable enough for what you pay.
Their website, x10.com, is definitely shows a lack of taste with their ads.
Now, as the parent said, if I owned the house, I'd have gone a much more powerful route, probably involving an arduino, 1-wire devices, etc. since I could drill and run wire wherever I want.
It might take 10x the time a x10 system would, but it'd be worth it once it's finished and working.
I'd like to think I'm 80% the 10% and 20% the 90%. But that's just my self righteousness.
I agree.
They are essentially going to control the means to production. A game developer isn't going to be able to move a title UNLESS it goes thru Steam. Just like in days gone past, game retailers were the only place to get your fix. Now, however, thanks to one website, many reached, you only need one place to establish your dominance. Not a physical location in every town to duke it out with the competition.
Steam did this, and did it early enough to essentially make the competition realize they can't win....which means we(customer) lose eventually. Steam just did too good of a job with enough luck of bandwidth being widely avaliable.
The $10k fine isn't what Oracle is really being hit with. Depending on how serious the TPC is taken by customers or after MS or IBM run their market-o-tron speak on the actual news, this is an easy to use market strategy against Oracle.
A-queue-the-show....
PHB: Why should I go with IBM over other solutions like Oracle? Marketing guy: Wait, you're serious? Oracle? The company that can't even get benchmarks right, let alone compare them? PHB: What are you talking about? Marketing guy: Heh. Oracle's benchmarks are being decried by the industry*. You can't trust those snakes that pose as reputable sellers of database products. PHB: Oh teh noes! I hate snakes! Let me buy snake repellent from you now! *market-o-tron recommends not giving specifics but make broad generalizations.
Actually, you're thinking of NiCad, which does suffer from memory effect and actually has a lower ampHr/kg ratio.
NiMH have no memory effect and can now come in a low-discharge (15% a YEAR) variant. They're pretty nice actually since they are several times cheaper than the equivalent li-ion. The Li-Ion/Li-Poly's come in handy since their ampHr/kg is much higher and therefore can fit in tiny spots when scaled against the larger Ni-MH. Nasty stuff to not charge a liion though.
It was the HP TC1100. Great tablet. It had a half-size keyboard but didn't feel cramped. Sturdy construction and decent enough battery life for being used. Too bad mine got stolen. I'd say it would probably fit your needs as long as you don't require recent connections or bleeding edge performance.
It had great tracking on it and I regret not getting one earlier in my academic career.
Man...I wish I could find the burglar's who stole it.
Why bother downloading it at all when my media center can simply record it, compress it and keep track of where my watch points are?
Don't get me wrong. There are torrent trackers that do download files as new episodes appear. I just have a different approach to acquiring content when it comes to Good Eats.
Normally, I don't respond to AC. This time, you're insulting Alton Brown.
Pray tell me how one is going to learn a technique that has never been seen? Reading and pictures are all fun and good. But if you really want to learn it, you watch someone else do it then you try it.
No no...You don't know jack shit about Good Eats or the reason Alton Brown started it, do you?
I can honestly say I never really enjoyed making food until I watched Good Eats. Now, I make meals that are delicious because I learned something from watching his show.
I'd figured that pending the charlie foxtrot that'd come from turning it on they'd scrapped it for use on all signals.
I remember reading somewhere if you're using 1080i, most devices do not use HDCP to black out since there are still a ton of analog tubes with 1080i(me included).
Then again, I could be wrong since I looked into it a year ago. Also, when has an impending CF ever stopped MPAA from making everyone suffer?
Take it a bit further...give me some resources that look at Cass Sunstein in better light.
I'd turn to Google, but it seems like you've got a better knowledge of the subject than a search engine does.
Exactly.
The attacks were targeted against specific folks, those whose computers were targeted for being compromised. "Spear Phishing"(dang that sounds stupid) is what it resolved around, they just happened to use a few zero-exploits to carry it out.
I can.
Information *can* be worth more than an country, depending on the context and the people who know it. Google has made it easy for the common person to search and find information on any topic.
Besides, Google is just one of many large companies that have suffered from this. They just happen to be able to complain about it and reach millions in no time.
Also, I'm wondering if there is caching going on for this. If not, it could be as bad as 56KB every page without compression.
Also, I thought any container that was configured by someone with half a brain knew how to setup compression. I was one of those less-than-half-brain-folks as recently as a month ago, so it happens. I never did the initial configuration of Tomcat/Apache, just never bothered looking at how it was configured.
Compression + proper caching means your jqueryMini.js is a one-time 20KB hit.
I like to think that God was a smart enough creator and made sure there were plenty of chances for early life to get upgrades along the way. Not that God sprinkled magic viruses on chimps and viola, but rather that's how it worked out given a few hundred-million years of life.
I never quite got how folks think the earth is only 3000 years old and that Dinosaurs never really existed, etc. I'd think it'd be alot easier to explain how creation and evolution fit than deny any evidence of evolution and dinosaurs.
But, I s'pose it's all choosing which myth and facts to believe in and which to not. Plus, life is a lot more comfortable when your sure what you believe is true and everything contrary is a lie. Religion is just a nice container to organize it all with.
Shoot..off topic...
uh....What'd be even MORE interesting is to compare those divided lineages NOW and see if the viral DNA that originally existed still does in it's original form. If not, what's going to account for the changes(which is like finding a specific needle(s) in a stack of needles)?
Quite true.
My first "IT" job, during my Sophomore year, was a contract gig doing simple office installs across four floors.
The contract was for 4 weeks, a week each floor for both me and a fellow friend of mine.
By the end of the first week, we had completed 3 floors and that Friday, went to our supervisor to report we were way ahead of contract schedule.
His response was simple and eye opening-"Don't work yourself out of a job. It sets up a bad precedent that you might not be able to keep up with."
I'm all for working hard and good work ethic, but there isn't a point to showing yourself the door after you've nearly burned yourself out.
I'd be interested in the overall answer here. I use Eclipse with a lot of additional standard addons (ECF, WTP, TPTP, etc) and would like to find something useful to use a task management that I can share with coworkers or work towards overall goals. I bet Eclipse has something for this already built in, but I'm just not using it properly.
I'm contemplating a bugzilla setup since it looks like it integrates nicely, It might be overkill though and not fit your guidelines.
Another tool I'm looking at is jazz concert that seems to include lots of tools for just what you are looking for. I haven't used it but if I get some time after the holidays, might test it out.
Thanks!
Ok...This is not helping....what the heck do the acronyms AGW and MWP even stand for?
Sorry for appearing stupid, but everyone is using them and I have no clue what the heck they stand for.
Exactly.
I use deltacopy on my windows boxes with a linux server.
All of the data is synced and gets transferred once a month for backup.
Whoops. The dates ARE NOT mixed up.
Figures I'd realize this after the dates.
Anywho, the original subpoena was sent on the 23rd of January, 2009.
Why the heck would anyone want traffic that old?
Ok. The news article is new, but the content is anything but.
The subpoena was withdrawn in a one sentence letter in late Feburary 2009 after the EFF sent a letter to the DOJ pointing out the problems with the subpeona.
We're only hearing about all of it now. It is troubling that the DOJ will not come out and say what the original motivation for even sending the subpoena in the first and is being mum about it all.
On top of that, the dates are all mixed up. The subpoena was sent in June 2008, according to the CBS article. However, the EFF says it wasn't received until January 30th 2009. This is important to note as Obama took office the 20th. The EFF's letter was sent Feb. 13th, with a return letter from the DOJ on the 25th.
My guess, it was probably a rookie lawyer who sent a badly worded request to SysAdmin during the confusion of a new president taking office.
I always enjoyed reading the comics as a kid. I'd have to say Calvin and Hobbes was the best. Nothing like a big cardboard box being so many different things when left to your imagination.
Same here. Installed it yesterday in fact to test out some software I'm working on.
Yes, but then what'd happen when the cat/dog/roommates see a shiny object and runs into the pots?
What if I need a constant loud pot noise? Perhaps a trap door of pots? Then again, with that many pots, I could actually detain the intruder!
I'd agree from my limited experience.
I needed a simple security system that would dependably make a loud noise if someone opened the door. So far, it does that as well as could be expected in an house that's being rented.
The equipment is pretty cheap, the technology is dependable enough for what you pay.
Their website, x10.com, is definitely shows a lack of taste with their ads.
Now, as the parent said, if I owned the house, I'd have gone a much more powerful route, probably involving an arduino, 1-wire devices, etc. since I could drill and run wire wherever I want.
It might take 10x the time a x10 system would, but it'd be worth it once it's finished and working.
How many links are going to broken after today? Then again, is there anything out there that hasn't been improved and stored away somewhere else?
I'd like to think I'm 80% the 10% and 20% the 90%. But that's just my self righteousness.
I agree.
They are essentially going to control the means to production. A game developer isn't going to be able to move a title UNLESS it goes thru Steam. Just like in days gone past, game retailers were the only place to get your fix. Now, however, thanks to one website, many reached, you only need one place to establish your dominance. Not a physical location in every town to duke it out with the competition.
Steam did this, and did it early enough to essentially make the competition realize they can't win....which means we(customer) lose eventually. Steam just did too good of a job with enough luck of bandwidth being widely avaliable.
The $10k fine isn't what Oracle is really being hit with. Depending on how serious the TPC is taken by customers or after MS or IBM run their market-o-tron speak on the actual news, this is an easy to use market strategy against Oracle.
A-queue-the-show....
Actually, you're thinking of NiCad, which does suffer from memory effect and actually has a lower ampHr/kg ratio.
NiMH have no memory effect and can now come in a low-discharge (15% a YEAR) variant. They're pretty nice actually since they are several times cheaper than the equivalent li-ion. The Li-Ion/Li-Poly's come in handy since their ampHr/kg is much higher and therefore can fit in tiny spots when scaled against the larger Ni-MH. Nasty stuff to not charge a liion though.
Recent connections? That sounds like crap.
It should say "HDMI, DVI, etc". Jeez.
It was the HP TC1100. Great tablet. It had a half-size keyboard but didn't feel cramped. Sturdy construction and decent enough battery life for being used. Too bad mine got stolen. I'd say it would probably fit your needs as long as you don't require recent connections or bleeding edge performance.
It had great tracking on it and I regret not getting one earlier in my academic career.
Man...I wish I could find the burglar's who stole it.
Why bother downloading it at all when my media center can simply record it, compress it and keep track of where my watch points are?
Don't get me wrong. There are torrent trackers that do download files as new episodes appear. I just have a different approach to acquiring content when it comes to Good Eats.
Normally, I don't respond to AC. This time, you're insulting Alton Brown.
Pray tell me how one is going to learn a technique that has never been seen? Reading and pictures are all fun and good. But if you really want to learn it, you watch someone else do it then you try it.
No no...You don't know jack shit about Good Eats or the reason Alton Brown started it, do you?
I can honestly say I never really enjoyed making food until I watched Good Eats. Now, I make meals that are delicious because I learned something from watching his show.
I'd figured that pending the charlie foxtrot that'd come from turning it on they'd scrapped it for use on all signals.
I remember reading somewhere if you're using 1080i, most devices do not use HDCP to black out since there are still a ton of analog tubes with 1080i(me included).
Then again, I could be wrong since I looked into it a year ago. Also, when has an impending CF ever stopped MPAA from making everyone suffer?