If everyone has a government job, everyone does pay 100% of their salary back to the government. If everyone has a government job, there's nobody else to give the money to.
You spew a racist diatribe but self-censor the word 'fuck'? Or are you actually trying to convey that the teachers' filesystems may have been corrupted because they lost power suddenly?
You store the salt and the hash of (password + salt). The salt is randomly generated and unique to each user. If an attacker has the salt, they can use it, in combination with a dictionary, to make a rainbow table. However, because the salt is unique to each user and has high entropy, the rainbow table is useless for finding any other user's password.
The only situation in which a rainbow table is useful for cracking a properly salted password is when the salt can be obtained more easily than the hash of the salt with the password. For example, one might prepare rainbow tables for the strongest nearby WPA encrypted WLANs, just in case, without actually sniffing an authentication.
On the contrary. The existence of disagreement as to the most beneficial course of action for all requires either ignorance, stupidity, malice, or prejudice on the part of one or both parties.
...unless the end user requests to have such prioritization.
Put a check box in the paperwork that says, "Yes, please prioritize voice telephony traffic.", and have the people who come by to install the lines nag you again if you didn't check it.
After it's been around a few years, residential gateways will prioritize traffic on standard VoIP ports by default.
The watts don't get sucked when they're not under load. Load:idle power consumption has greatly improved since the 90s. My 4 year old GPU is better than 10:1.
The TDP rating assumes (or should assume, anyway) that the specified power is the maximum the component can consume with default settings. The stock heat sink is then specified to be able to dissipate this power safely when properly installed.
To do otherwise would invite all sorts of problems, like people suing after they tried to rip a DVD and the switching supply on their motherboard burnt out.
DNS requests are sent in plaintext. To defeat my apartment's filter, I had to ssh into another machine, nslookup the sites that were being blocked, and add them to my hosts file. Only then was https effective.
Yep. There is way too much horizontal space being wasted by that sidebar, and by all the crap on the right on the front page. I know that was there before, but it really should have gotten fixed. The summaries get about four words per line on 800x480.
Yes you could: have 3D stations identify themselves with a magic number in the metadata or video stream. On a 2D set this would be shown as one or two slightly off-color pixels every few seconds. 3D sets would be directed to a second channel containing the other frames. The only difference 2D viewers would notice would be two stations showing the same thing from slightly different angles.
There is no such thing as a reasonable level of NAT. I speak from behind the single IPv4 address for my entire apartment building. I can't seed properly. I can't use i2p. I can't ssh into my own box. It's horrible.
Hypertext syndrome. I middle-click anything that looks vaguely interesting and try to get around to it later. Today's number may be a little higher than usual, however, as you caught me in the middle of a TV tropes binge.
If everyone has a government job, everyone does pay 100% of their salary back to the government. If everyone has a government job, there's nobody else to give the money to.
You spew a racist diatribe but self-censor the word 'fuck'? Or are you actually trying to convey that the teachers' filesystems may have been corrupted because they lost power suddenly?
You store the salt and the hash of (password + salt). The salt is randomly generated and unique to each user. If an attacker has the salt, they can use it, in combination with a dictionary, to make a rainbow table. However, because the salt is unique to each user and has high entropy, the rainbow table is useless for finding any other user's password. The only situation in which a rainbow table is useful for cracking a properly salted password is when the salt can be obtained more easily than the hash of the salt with the password. For example, one might prepare rainbow tables for the strongest nearby WPA encrypted WLANs, just in case, without actually sniffing an authentication.
Assuming what you say is true, why is is better to choose foreigners over Americans, when deciding who to screw over for you own personal gain?
After all, people you have no attachment to or will never even meet are the lion's share of both groups.
So, Google with more ads and latency?
If IPv6 allowed NAT just like IPv4 it would be just as broken as IPv4.
20G in a month? You poor bastard. I used 40G yesterday.
Bandwidth != latency.
If that happens, just sheepishly walk over, pick the bomb back up, and try somewhere else. You can still use the remote detonator.
The only difference is the amount of administrative overhead, unless someone receives more in subsidies than they pay in taxes.
The obvious solution is a 'bulk traffic' flag. Packets with the flag set do not contribute to your monthly cap.
There's still your whim to go knock on your neighbor's door and request that he set his bulk traffic bits properly.
On the contrary. The existence of disagreement as to the most beneficial course of action for all requires either ignorance, stupidity, malice, or prejudice on the part of one or both parties.
...unless the end user requests to have such prioritization.
Put a check box in the paperwork that says, "Yes, please prioritize voice telephony traffic.", and have the people who come by to install the lines nag you again if you didn't check it.
After it's been around a few years, residential gateways will prioritize traffic on standard VoIP ports by default.
The watts don't get sucked when they're not under load. Load:idle power consumption has greatly improved since the 90s. My 4 year old GPU is better than 10:1.
The TDP rating assumes (or should assume, anyway) that the specified power is the maximum the component can consume with default settings. The stock heat sink is then specified to be able to dissipate this power safely when properly installed. To do otherwise would invite all sorts of problems, like people suing after they tried to rip a DVD and the switching supply on their motherboard burnt out.
DNS requests are sent in plaintext. To defeat my apartment's filter, I had to ssh into another machine, nslookup the sites that were being blocked, and add them to my hosts file. Only then was https effective.
Yep. There is way too much horizontal space being wasted by that sidebar, and by all the crap on the right on the front page. I know that was there before, but it really should have gotten fixed. The summaries get about four words per line on 800x480.
Sure! Why the hell not?
Hells yeah! They make 100 ft HDMI cables for a reason!
Using a CRT at 1600x1200 right now. If I get around to ordering the non-conductive screwdrivers to adjust the focus, it'll be running at 2048x1536.
It's actually 5:4. Remember that when you set your CRT to 1280x1024. What you're looking for is 1280x960.
Rogue program silently removes some files.
Standard operations overwrite those sectors.
Backups get rotated.
Nobody notices.
???
Yes you could: have 3D stations identify themselves with a magic number in the metadata or video stream. On a 2D set this would be shown as one or two slightly off-color pixels every few seconds. 3D sets would be directed to a second channel containing the other frames. The only difference 2D viewers would notice would be two stations showing the same thing from slightly different angles.
There is no such thing as a reasonable level of NAT. I speak from behind the single IPv4 address for my entire apartment building. I can't seed properly. I can't use i2p. I can't ssh into my own box. It's horrible.
Hypertext syndrome. I middle-click anything that looks vaguely interesting and try to get around to it later. Today's number may be a little higher than usual, however, as you caught me in the middle of a TV tropes binge.