If you can do transcribing of video on youtube/yahoo whatever you'd be able to corner the video search market in a second there is $$$$ in that market right now for someone that figures it out.
Are you stupid? Proxies and Caches must look at cache-control headers if they to follow the spec. So the webmasters have complete control of what is cached and what is not.
Network. That is the only way to get hired. I am 22 and was hired straight out of college pretty much by AOL. The only way to get your resume read is to know people. Granted I have maintained large scale production networks for 3+ years in college and had a lot of real world experience but I wouldn't have been able to show this without knowing someone. My advice is that you should have networked in college w/ people.
I am a avid xbox gamer and would consider an upgrade if I could play my old games on the xbox2. I also would have loved to see a way to transfer the saved settings from my xbox->xbox2 perhaps over the ethernet cable but I guess that will never happen either. This is a very sad article to read given how superior the xbox is to the PS2 for graphic and sound quality. The xbox was truely an inovative game console.
Use a VPN who's concentrator forces the client to send a disabled bit for all other interfaces on the box. Cisco's VPN software can do this and you can modify it so that it also sends other flags such as a version or key that the end user probably wont be able to discover in time to duplicate with other compatiable VPN software. This would prevent you from using the wireless interfaces on a box.
So there is the IP issue... but honestly this just gives people and incentive to switch to juniper. GSR's cant even touch a high end Juniper for edge routing...
Why you are running apache / any other web server on a name server is beyond me. Named servers should be running named and ssh and nothing else. Name servers are mission critical and thus should be a stable box with nothing else on them.
i dont consider php to be a "browser" development seeing as the first P stants for PRE. As for Flash, thats a plugin not part of a broswer. I'll give you CSS as a new standard for the web that a browser has to parse but it really doesnt add "functionality" to the browser. I believe the point of the article was to point out that like the car the browser hasnt changed very much in its existence. (ie a model T is built on pretty much the same fundimentals as your new porsche) The browser has not been truly improved upon with revolutionary ideas since netscape 4.5. Other then maybe popup blockers and the new ways to do bookmarks - hey i'm still looking for one that actually does its job well...
It can be a great modern myth however after you study a bit of philosophy in the area of knowledge and skeptisism, you will find that on the surface the matrix looks good but there are some very compelling arguements against it. Thus reducing the entire film to nonsense. My only wish is that The Matrix (and its sequals) will get people more interested in Philosophy - on a real level, not just the "ohhh are we really dreaming....!" level. For more look to Nozick's theory of knowledge, G.E. Moore, Contextualist theory, closure principle, and arguements for and against the closure principle.
The bodiless brain in the vat argument has been around WAY longer then The Matrix... So in that sense The Matrix is just rehashing (though you do seem to have a body in the matrix...) These are just some ramblings of CS major with a double in philosophy... So take with a grain of salt. Thanks
Testing is a vital part of programming. Tests should always be written PRIOR to the programming. This allows you to think of problems before they arise. In some sense it seems as if MS is avoiding this by having someone "come over to fix the problem within 20 minutes." HHowever, given the diverse environments there does not seem to be a direct solution for them. The EEC seems to be a huge step forward to finding where code breaks for a given customer but it doesnt solve any security holes (which should have been addressed pre-coding when you come up w/ tests for your software). As for all the joking about MS programmers in this forum so far, i find it kinda rediculous that people do that. People that laugh at the products MS produces really do have to look hard at how THEY would manage and TEST 50 MILLION lines of code. With 50 million lines of code you're looking at virtually an infinate number of tests to run, which is obviously impossible to do. Thus you either have to roll out a product that hasn't been 100% tested because of its size or keep testing and never make money. Since its all about the money you obviously roll out the product and try to patch it as fast as you can when somone does find a bug that got by Q&A and the testers. You need to find a balance between testing a product completely and releasing a product to make money. Its a fine line and MS has done a fairly good job given the size of their code base and the pressure on them from the comsumer to get new products out in a timely way.
The real beauty of this would be if he had written a "print" driver that would allow a remote PC running windows to queue up a song thus utilizing lpd to be a "music" server rather then just an mp3 player hack.
This device has been in the works for over two years. Popular Science reported this device along time ago as a device to watch out for. And trust me i've been watching out for it. I just wonder if it would shorten the length of batteries... One of the reasons you need to use a real outlet is to push a high charge through the battery so that you get excess material from one side to the other. (I'm grossly simplifying). I doubt a high enough current could be induced through this mat to do this. Granted its probrablly ok for short term use but in the long run i would imagine that it would wear out batteries faster.
I would imagine that cisco wouldn't do much to change the actual linksys line. I doubt they would build on their router's OS since the whole idea in the consumer market is to have an easy to configure product. Cisco will probrably want to keep a sharp distinction between their consumer products with easy to configure web interfaces (ie the old linksys ones) and their mid to high end corporate products. I do not think that either the consumer needs to worry about products becoming hard to configure, nor do i think that corporate IT needs to worry about a decline in quality of the high end stuff. This merger is not meant to "improve" technology. Its simply meant for cisco to enter a new market. I seriously doubt anything will change pricewise. If it does it would probrably mean cheaper consumer products since cisco has much more in assets and could seem to be in a position to undercut netgear. Just think, now we can have microsoft vs cisco price wars for the home network... Soon we're going to be getting home routing equipment for free if it follow the netscape vs internet explorer model;)
In a recent (i believe 2 months ago) Dr. Dobbs there was an article about just this type of application. There was an article written by one of the top social enginners of applications like this. He was one of the people responsible for doing the Amazon "like this you'd like that" feature.
They may want google to buy them. However i would suspect that since the RSS format is quite easy to understand/impliment - after all its an acronym for really simple syndication - google would do this in house. I would guess that adding an XML searcher wouldnt be too diffucult to add to the generic google search engine. RSS is a great tool and more people should take advantage of it. on the flip side why do i want to search an xml file that just contains a feed of something that already exists... You're basicly searching pages that have already been indexed by the the google crawlers.
There is an interesting article in last? months Dr Dobb's about just this sort of thing. The premise of the article is that you can track groups via email, books, or just about anything that has large scale participation. This is much like how amazon's "if you like this then you would like these too." Its akin to "7 degrees of kevin bacon" but uses some more sophisticated alogirthms then just tracing a path from A -> B -> to see what people like. I hope that a feature like this would be implimented into the system. The most interesting part of the doctor dobbs article however was that in books there is almost absolutely no crossover in liberal and conservative reading, and when there is it is the same few books over and over. Just some thoughts on IMDB and an online book respository.
Make it a black and white picture for your client. You pay someone for your bandwith probrably so their bursty nature costs you money too. I know the client thinks they are the only one in the world but they arent. Make that apparent in a kind way and explain to them that bursty traffic still is billed. They are in a public area like you said and subject to a flood like that. Like you said perhaps insurence companies could start to make money on this. I see it akin to a typical flood in your house. Water doesnt typically rise to that level but when it does the insurence company pays for the damange assuming you have flood insurence. Maybe you should go into insurence as well...
Probrably because the school doesnt WANT to reach their peak bandwith. They dont just get bandwith for free... They have to pay an upstream provider just like the majority of the rest of us. There are very few of use that are fortunate to be a Tier-1 provider. You school probrably - i have no idea of what their actually agreement w/ their telcom is - is that they pay for X bandwith but a rise to X' will cost them money. They have X' prime bandwith to use however they pay for X and have to pay an additional fee when they rise to X'. For example you may have a OC3/T3 line put into your company but have it capped at 25Mb/s but if you have need to rise to 45Mb/s you can call your telcom and ask them to do this. This is perhaps the reason your friend in the NOC thought you had more bandwith then you really did. "Sure joe we have and OC3 here..." but he neglects/doesnt know that its only a partial OC3.
Why bother even thinking about this problem? It could never happen based on the grandfathers paradox. There is no logic in asking this question. lets get a question thats at least logically possible...
While postscript is powerful adobe is trying to kill it in favor of OpenType. This isnt supposed to happen "soon." but i wouldnt expect them to be pushing postscript as much as they have. And since they are one of the leaders in the typography field i would expect that other companies would follow suit and stop modifiying postscript as heavily. Just my two cents.
If you can do transcribing of video on youtube/yahoo whatever you'd be able to corner the video search market in a second there is $$$$ in that market right now for someone that figures it out.
Are you stupid? Proxies and Caches must look at cache-control headers if they to follow the spec. So the webmasters have complete control of what is cached and what is not.
too bad google doesnt obey http headers when it does its caching...
Now i can cyberstalk for real!
Network. That is the only way to get hired. I am 22 and was hired straight out of college pretty much by AOL. The only way to get your resume read is to know people. Granted I have maintained large scale production networks for 3+ years in college and had a lot of real world experience but I wouldn't have been able to show this without knowing someone. My advice is that you should have networked in college w/ people.
I am a avid xbox gamer and would consider an upgrade if I could play my old games on the xbox2. I also would have loved to see a way to transfer the saved settings from my xbox->xbox2 perhaps over the ethernet cable but I guess that will never happen either. This is a very sad article to read given how superior the xbox is to the PS2 for graphic and sound quality. The xbox was truely an inovative game console.
Use a VPN who's concentrator forces the client to send a disabled bit for all other interfaces on the box. Cisco's VPN software can do this and you can modify it so that it also sends other flags such as a version or key that the end user probably wont be able to discover in time to duplicate with other compatiable VPN software. This would prevent you from using the wireless interfaces on a box.
This show on FoodTV has aired about 100x. This article is incredibly outdated compared to the first airing...
So there is the IP issue... but honestly this just gives people and incentive to switch to juniper. GSR's cant even touch a high end Juniper for edge routing...
Why you are running apache / any other web server on a name server is beyond me. Named servers should be running named and ssh and nothing else. Name servers are mission critical and thus should be a stable box with nothing else on them.
i dont consider php to be a "browser" development seeing as the first P stants for PRE. As for Flash, thats a plugin not part of a broswer. I'll give you CSS as a new standard for the web that a browser has to parse but it really doesnt add "functionality" to the browser. I believe the point of the article was to point out that like the car the browser hasnt changed very much in its existence. (ie a model T is built on pretty much the same fundimentals as your new porsche) The browser has not been truly improved upon with revolutionary ideas since netscape 4.5. Other then maybe popup blockers and the new ways to do bookmarks - hey i'm still looking for one that actually does its job well...
It can be a great modern myth however after you study a bit of philosophy in the area of knowledge and skeptisism, you will find that on the surface the matrix looks good but there are some very compelling arguements against it. Thus reducing the entire film to nonsense. My only wish is that The Matrix (and its sequals) will get people more interested in Philosophy - on a real level, not just the "ohhh are we really dreaming....!" level. For more look to Nozick's theory of knowledge, G.E. Moore, Contextualist theory, closure principle, and arguements for and against the closure principle.
The bodiless brain in the vat argument has been around WAY longer then The Matrix... So in that sense The Matrix is just rehashing (though you do seem to have a body in the matrix...) These are just some ramblings of CS major with a double in philosophy... So take with a grain of salt. Thanks
Testing is a vital part of programming. Tests should always be written PRIOR to the programming. This allows you to think of problems before they arise. In some sense it seems as if MS is avoiding this by having someone "come over to fix the problem within 20 minutes." HHowever, given the diverse environments there does not seem to be a direct solution for them. The EEC seems to be a huge step forward to finding where code breaks for a given customer but it doesnt solve any security holes (which should have been addressed pre-coding when you come up w/ tests for your software). As for all the joking about MS programmers in this forum so far, i find it kinda rediculous that people do that. People that laugh at the products MS produces really do have to look hard at how THEY would manage and TEST 50 MILLION lines of code. With 50 million lines of code you're looking at virtually an infinate number of tests to run, which is obviously impossible to do. Thus you either have to roll out a product that hasn't been 100% tested because of its size or keep testing and never make money. Since its all about the money you obviously roll out the product and try to patch it as fast as you can when somone does find a bug that got by Q&A and the testers. You need to find a balance between testing a product completely and releasing a product to make money. Its a fine line and MS has done a fairly good job given the size of their code base and the pressure on them from the comsumer to get new products out in a timely way.
I also wanted to add that remotely queuing also would upload the file to the "music" server thus storing it there for later usage.
The real beauty of this would be if he had written a "print" driver that would allow a remote PC running windows to queue up a song thus utilizing lpd to be a "music" server rather then just an mp3 player hack.
This device has been in the works for over two years. Popular Science reported this device along time ago as a device to watch out for. And trust me i've been watching out for it. I just wonder if it would shorten the length of batteries... One of the reasons you need to use a real outlet is to push a high charge through the battery so that you get excess material from one side to the other. (I'm grossly simplifying). I doubt a high enough current could be induced through this mat to do this. Granted its probrablly ok for short term use but in the long run i would imagine that it would wear out batteries faster.
I would imagine that cisco wouldn't do much to change the actual linksys line. I doubt they would build on their router's OS since the whole idea in the consumer market is to have an easy to configure product. Cisco will probrably want to keep a sharp distinction between their consumer products with easy to configure web interfaces (ie the old linksys ones) and their mid to high end corporate products. I do not think that either the consumer needs to worry about products becoming hard to configure, nor do i think that corporate IT needs to worry about a decline in quality of the high end stuff. This merger is not meant to "improve" technology. Its simply meant for cisco to enter a new market. I seriously doubt anything will change pricewise. If it does it would probrably mean cheaper consumer products since cisco has much more in assets and could seem to be in a position to undercut netgear. Just think, now we can have microsoft vs cisco price wars for the home network... Soon we're going to be getting home routing equipment for free if it follow the netscape vs internet explorer model ;)
In a recent (i believe 2 months ago) Dr. Dobbs there was an article about just this type of application. There was an article written by one of the top social enginners of applications like this. He was one of the people responsible for doing the Amazon "like this you'd like that" feature.
They may want google to buy them. However i would suspect that since the RSS format is quite easy to understand/impliment - after all its an acronym for really simple syndication - google would do this in house. I would guess that adding an XML searcher wouldnt be too diffucult to add to the generic google search engine. RSS is a great tool and more people should take advantage of it. on the flip side why do i want to search an xml file that just contains a feed of something that already exists... You're basicly searching pages that have already been indexed by the the google crawlers.
There is an interesting article in last? months Dr Dobb's about just this sort of thing. The premise of the article is that you can track groups via email, books, or just about anything that has large scale participation. This is much like how amazon's "if you like this then you would like these too." Its akin to "7 degrees of kevin bacon" but uses some more sophisticated alogirthms then just tracing a path from A -> B -> to see what people like. I hope that a feature like this would be implimented into the system. The most interesting part of the doctor dobbs article however was that in books there is almost absolutely no crossover in liberal and conservative reading, and when there is it is the same few books over and over.
Just some thoughts on IMDB and an online book respository.
Make it a black and white picture for your client. You pay someone for your bandwith probrably so their bursty nature costs you money too. I know the client thinks they are the only one in the world but they arent. Make that apparent in a kind way and explain to them that bursty traffic still is billed. They are in a public area like you said and subject to a flood like that. Like you said perhaps insurence companies could start to make money on this. I see it akin to a typical flood in your house. Water doesnt typically rise to that level but when it does the insurence company pays for the damange assuming you have flood insurence. Maybe you should go into insurence as well...
Probrably because the school doesnt WANT to reach their peak bandwith. They dont just get bandwith for free... They have to pay an upstream provider just like the majority of the rest of us. There are very few of use that are fortunate to be a Tier-1 provider. You school probrably - i have no idea of what their actually agreement w/ their telcom is - is that they pay for X bandwith but a rise to X' will cost them money. They have X' prime bandwith to use however they pay for X and have to pay an additional fee when they rise to X'. For example you may have a OC3/T3 line put into your company but have it capped at 25Mb/s but if you have need to rise to 45Mb/s you can call your telcom and ask them to do this. This is perhaps the reason your friend in the NOC thought you had more bandwith then you really did. "Sure joe we have and OC3 here..." but he neglects/doesnt know that its only a partial OC3.
maybe its not all the source... you know they could just release parts of it.
Why bother even thinking about this problem? It could never happen based on the grandfathers paradox. There is no logic in asking this question. lets get a question thats at least logically possible...
While postscript is powerful adobe is trying to kill it in favor of OpenType. This isnt supposed to happen "soon." but i wouldnt expect them to be pushing postscript as much as they have. And since they are one of the leaders in the typography field i would expect that other companies would follow suit and stop modifiying postscript as heavily. Just my two cents.