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User: Zuzzy

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  1. Re:Easy to say. Not so easy to do. on Generic PCs For Corporate Use? · · Score: 1

    The advantage of a centralised VDI infrastructure is stabilisation of the desktop environment by using server grade hardware and better utilisation of resources (who ever uses that 320Gb HDD in their workstation or all their processor. However, of course, if you then roll out 100,000 desktops you save little except the Windows licenses (that you now have on the VDI platform). The main advantage is hardware reuse - you can use any old PCs and laptops with a VD I platform (or people's home computers as disater recovery, given the right VPN infrastructure) and provide the latest OS builds and software. Also, patching is easier as you d not need the desktops to come online and update, it is done centrally.

    It is all about the support costs at the end of the day. The capital costs for a project come out of a different fund to the support costs, which are ongoing and variable. If you need to send an engineer to a desk (and, shudder, one that has the skills to replace a component) that is a big big cost.

    Don't focus on the hardware savings (though, for a refresh, it can be significant).

  2. Re:It doesn't help the passwords are well known on Apple Outs Anti-Jailbreak Update · · Score: 1

    I stand corrected :) thx marcansoft, that's useful to know

  3. Re:It doesn't help the passwords are well known on Apple Outs Anti-Jailbreak Update · · Score: 1

    Are you sure that there isn't an su and you just don't have any ability to run ie (ie command line access) - I don't think the jailbreak updates the OS to include su, you just can't access the terminal.

    Either way, thats not my point, what I meant was that if you have an exploit like the PDF exploit and are able to run arbitrary code, then you can su and the root password is known

    Does anyone know if the jailbreak requires the root password to be alpine to work?

  4. If that works... on North Korea Offers To Pay Debt In Ginseng · · Score: 1

    ..I'm going to drop into my bank and offer to clear my overdraft with some herbs I found in the fridge. Why did I never think of that before?!

    Govt official: Prsident, I have secured payment of north korea's debts. I have 300 thousand tonnes of ginseng arriving tomorrow
    President: We make heavy machinery. We make trucks. We make trams. WHat do we want a life supply of dietary supplements for? If we wee in Korea you would be doing hard labor now.

  5. Re:Oh for shame! on Apple Outs Anti-Jailbreak Update · · Score: 1

    AFAIK comex's jailbreak isn't patched, just the delivery method used on his web site

  6. It doesn't help the passwords are well known on Apple Outs Anti-Jailbreak Update · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I still am amazed that Apple releases the iPhone code with simple, easy to discover passwords that are the same across every device. That is UNIX rule 101 - "protect root". Knowing the password means that if you can execute arbitrary code on the iPhone via any means, you can su to root and break out of the user space security protection. User priviledge controls have been the basis of UNIX security for as long as UNIX has been around (as it has been for most OSs to more or less a degree)

    If the iPhone had random root passwords on each device, and used certificates to trust iTunes, the risk of a driveby attack doing permanent (ie surviving reboot) damage must be lower? Or have I missed something obvious here?

  7. Re:Stupid enough to choose Computer Science on In UK, Computer Science Graduates the Least Employable · · Score: 1

    So true. I left uni with a 2:1 in CS with a Networks specialisation and got a job, walked in and found I knew nothing about networks. In hindsight what use was a networks degree when I had never touched a router or heard of Cisco?! Yes, i could draw an IP packet structure and explain the TCP/IP protocol, not something I have ever had to do in the real world.

    It is wasnt for the grad scheme, I could never have got a job in networks. I may as well have skipped uni, saved the beating my liver got, and done a CCIE

  8. I can't say I am surprised.... on In UK, Computer Science Graduates the Least Employable · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When I left 8 years ago, most of the best grads were in sponsorship schemes with the likes of Nortel and Marconi - and as it turned out they all left with no job to go to.

    Given the number of people who came out of these courses, and given the number of brilliant grads in my dept who had no job for months at that time, what hope have the 60% who scraped by?

    Mutliply that by the huge rise in these courses available from UK unis and ex-polys today and it isnt a surprise that McDonald's has a continuous employment pool.

    And the ridiculous thing is that I have been involved in trying to fill a backlog in recruitment for about a year and there are no candidates with decent experience in the market (it would seem). So its all about that first job still.

  9. Does NASA keep the control system? on Send your name to Pluto · · Score: 1

    Does this mean that NASA will have to keep a box ina cupboard for 50000 years. Wouldn't that be much like us opening a door and finding a neanderthal's rock behind it.

    I can see the ebay entry now -

    Control system for Pluto explorer - returns in 52005 - be the one to guide it to land in your enemy's garden..... (cash transfer via western union to china only, deposit required)

  10. Re:Uhm.. So? on Photoshop CS Adds Banknote Image Detection, Blocking? · · Score: 1

    Exactly, this was part written by my uncle years and years ago for DeLaRue (the currency designers) to integrate into scanner drivers to stop the average joe bloggs scanning notes. And has anyone really noticed.....

    --Zuzzy

  11. Re:Boilerplate? on Google vs. Boilerplate Activism · · Score: 1

    Call this a silly question, but isnt a form letter sent by hundreds just a badly organised petition?! There are plenty of petitions in the form of "Dear x I believe that ... Signed," followed by 100s of signatures. In this case rather than getting the signatures together, they just organise a rainforest to be delivered to a politician in pieces.

    --Zuzzy