I can easily see a call for fast download speeds, but by setting the upload rate to 3mb, you're excluding ADSL with it's upload of 768k which is likely the only way these customers will every be covered. Not to mention that most wireless technologies would struggle to cover any significant numbers of people at 25/3 but the people we serve with wireless are ecstatic to get 6/3 and we can't get assistance to cover additional rural areas.
Pros: Simple to setup. Customizable. Free.
Cons: A bit of a learning curve getting started but the docs are good as long as you can RTFM
http://racktables.org/
Actually, current equipment is capable of delivering 150mb+ per 40MHz sector and new AC based equipment, that was just announced today, is capable of 450mb+. This has huge potential for bringing service to these underserved areas.
http://www.ubnt.com/airmax/roc...
Phones, like the Electrify, come with warranties. Companies that provide a phone for you generally like you to keep their devices under warranty.
When Google decides that market fragmentation is too great of an issue and starts making its own devices that are always upgradable to the current version upon release then Android will become a real OS. Until then, those of us that can't void our warranties are stuck with whatever support USCC decides to give us.
For employees that access everything through a web browser, email, and jabber the iPad with a keyboard dock will be the perfect client. I've been using mine for a month now and haven't found a situation where I've needed to use a desktop. The iPad also has the added functionality that if we don't give them the password to the app store, we control what they can install on it and with no flash support they won't be spending all day playing games.
You can configure a firewall rate limiting statement based on source ip address using ipfw. Then just have an applescript that toggles this than can be run as soon as you notice the computer getting slow.
It really is a shame that you have to install a driver for a non-native file system. It's like trying to use HFS+(or ext2,3 for that matter) in Windows. Apple has chosen those file systems that they feel best meshes with OS X's feature/security sets. BSD chose theirs.
The iMac presented a ready-made market of users who chose the Mac line for its graphics capability. In turn, the iMac offered a captive audience of users who would buy a USB peripheral but would not buy any other kind of peripheral. These users provided a market for USB peripherals that wasn't facing competition from other port choices. The result was a flood of USB devices in white-and-blue plastic. This was a crucial turning point that created a reason (tied to a proven system choice) to prefer USB to non-USB ports.
How did USB for input devices work out for you? If the iMac hadn't adopted usb as the primary connection for peripherals we'd still be stuck with the PC's multitude of incompatible interfaces.
And Firewire... At the time that USB 1.1 was popular, it was inadequate for doing serious data transfer. I still use my Firewire 800 connection for any data I need to have quick access to and my USB 2.0 ports for data that is archived or not speed sensitive.
Has anyone else had problems with the print spooler service quitting after this update. Almost all of our lan computer are having the printers disappear and are requiring reboots.
My Mac servers run snapshots to external drives every hour. When something goes badly, it's back up in a few minutes. Not sure why that wouldn't have been done here.
Fox News has announced that the world was a better place with far less pollution when the world was flat which resulted in the president's council on ecology recommending that we return to the flat Earth model to protect our environment.
Crest extra whitening saved my Band of Brothers DVDs from the trash heap. Coat with tooth paste, wipe outward with a soft cloth (no paper towels), rinse clean, and dry.
It was hella expensive before and a very valuable tool if you didn't want to rewrite code from c# to objective c or swift
I can easily see a call for fast download speeds, but by setting the upload rate to 3mb, you're excluding ADSL with it's upload of 768k which is likely the only way these customers will every be covered. Not to mention that most wireless technologies would struggle to cover any significant numbers of people at 25/3 but the people we serve with wireless are ecstatic to get 6/3 and we can't get assistance to cover additional rural areas.
Pros: Simple to setup. Customizable. Free. Cons: A bit of a learning curve getting started but the docs are good as long as you can RTFM http://racktables.org/
The petition from WISPA has a fairly comprehensive summary. http://apps.fcc.gov/ecfs/docum...
Actually, current equipment is capable of delivering 150mb+ per 40MHz sector and new AC based equipment, that was just announced today, is capable of 450mb+. This has huge potential for bringing service to these underserved areas. http://www.ubnt.com/airmax/roc...
We've gotten 14 miles on a ptmp sector with line of sight.
Phones, like the Electrify, come with warranties. Companies that provide a phone for you generally like you to keep their devices under warranty. When Google decides that market fragmentation is too great of an issue and starts making its own devices that are always upgradable to the current version upon release then Android will become a real OS. Until then, those of us that can't void our warranties are stuck with whatever support USCC decides to give us.
6 month old phone that still hasn't gotten past 2.3. Wake me when this is news.
Once Hypercard is open source then the world will be complete.
Does your phone self destruct if you mod it? Where others don't... Droid does!
Ok. Too literal people. The admins can have a provisioning PC/Mac without the employees having a computer.
For employees that access everything through a web browser, email, and jabber the iPad with a keyboard dock will be the perfect client. I've been using mine for a month now and haven't found a situation where I've needed to use a desktop. The iPad also has the added functionality that if we don't give them the password to the app store, we control what they can install on it and with no flash support they won't be spending all day playing games.
right up until we can get iPads and then everyone gets an iPad. No more desktop computers.
I believe it is more accurate to say that they are not raising the price on everyone to keep an outdated service active for a few.
I would also have to recommend MSE. It was the only program to completely clean a co-worker's PC that was used very promiscuously.
You can configure a firewall rate limiting statement based on source ip address using ipfw. Then just have an applescript that toggles this than can be run as soon as you notice the computer getting slow.
Does the iPad support Microsoft Exchange email?
The iPhone/iPod does. Why wouldn't the iPad which runs the same OS?
Does the iPad support VPN and configuration management?
The iPhone/iPod does. Why wouldn't the iPad which runs the same OS?
Okay great but why won't my wife's macbook pro mount my ext3 backup disk? There are ext[23] drivers in netbsd and freebsd for the taking.
This should do the trick: http://code.google.com/p/macfuse/
It really is a shame that you have to install a driver for a non-native file system. It's like trying to use HFS+(or ext2,3 for that matter) in Windows. Apple has chosen those file systems that they feel best meshes with OS X's feature/security sets. BSD chose theirs.
USB adoption was slow prior to the release of the Apple iMac which spurred the growth of USB devices.
http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/power/library/pa-spec7.html
The iMac presented a ready-made market of users who chose the Mac line for its graphics capability. In turn, the iMac offered a captive audience of users who would buy a USB peripheral but would not buy any other kind of peripheral. These users provided a market for USB peripherals that wasn't facing competition from other port choices. The result was a flood of USB devices in white-and-blue plastic. This was a crucial turning point that created a reason (tied to a proven system choice) to prefer USB to non-USB ports.
How did USB for input devices work out for you? If the iMac hadn't adopted usb as the primary connection for peripherals we'd still be stuck with the PC's multitude of incompatible interfaces. And Firewire... At the time that USB 1.1 was popular, it was inadequate for doing serious data transfer. I still use my Firewire 800 connection for any data I need to have quick access to and my USB 2.0 ports for data that is archived or not speed sensitive.
Has anyone else had problems with the print spooler service quitting after this update. Almost all of our lan computer are having the printers disappear and are requiring reboots.
all other operating systems combined.
And WINE will run most of them just fine on Linux or OS X without paying the MS tax.
My Mac servers run snapshots to external drives every hour. When something goes badly, it's back up in a few minutes. Not sure why that wouldn't have been done here.
Fox News has announced that the world was a better place with far less pollution when the world was flat which resulted in the president's council on ecology recommending that we return to the flat Earth model to protect our environment.
Crest extra whitening saved my Band of Brothers DVDs from the trash heap. Coat with tooth paste, wipe outward with a soft cloth (no paper towels), rinse clean, and dry.