> most of the people are not soldiers, but rather support staff.
Actually, that's how it used to be... once upon a time the US Army had about a 3:1 ratio for support personnel vs. shooters on the ground. Rumor has it (read: my old company 1SG has claimed) that these days, that ratio is close to being reversed.
Konqueror 2.2.1 is blocked with default user agent. Change to report as MSIE 5.5 on Win98 and it works. Also amusing, is that visiting MSNBC.COM, page view was minorly garbled. Changed user agent for that site as well, and suddenly the site rendered correctly. Can anyone duplicate this?
Deploying tactical communications equipment in Manhatten would be... interesting. You *can* do it, but you'd probably be better off using commercial, off the shelf equipment. Military equipment has, shall we say, a different set of limitations and generally requires more gear to service x customers than similar civilian equipment.
Now, Slackware is finally coming out with platform ports just as everyone else is dumping support on other platforms. I don't get the logic.
I don't care what the logic is, I just want to keep using Slack when I move over to Alpha hardware!
Seriously, what are the motivating factors for Open Source developers? Many times, it's just scratching an itch of thier own that gets people started. Seeing that there's others who need/want/will help with packages, and....
The benifits to an agency that only posts links instead of the full advisory are mostly perceptual, so the image I've gotten from MS and AOL taking this stance is that they just want tracking (MS is (was?) using web bugs in articles). The l0pht doing this doesn't make any sense to me. What gives?
Are there any plans to virtualize (or emulate) MMX stuff in Plex86? or any other extensions to the x86 hardware like that and whats the timetable as far as network card emulation in plex86?
Missing the point. The code runs natively except when trapped. If the CPU supports an instruction, it can be used under the VMM.
Kyle MacLachlan did a much better job as Paul. Due to the pathetic actor in this series, I am abstaining from watching it.
I would say Kyle did a better job, rather than a much better job.
Overall I like the Miniseries better than the movie as the storyline is much better developed. While the acting isn't doing a terribly great job of making the individual characters very believable, the situations (as presented) speak to me...
As an aside, MacLachlans' acting in the original didn't impress me terribly, and (humorous to me, though of no real relevance) there were those Kyle worked in theatre with in during highschool who thought he couldn't act his way out of a wet paper bag.
I could be wrong (and I'm sure somebody will let me know if I am), but Quantum Mechanics dictates that there are a finite number of discrete wavelengths within the visible spectrum, thus a finite (though very very large) number of colors within it.
You are correct sir nojomofo. But recall that (as said in a previous post) there is a complex waveform to light reflected, covering many frequencies. We get a sampling of this. Get enough variation in the sampling, combined with the fact that the granularity in changes of frequency (stepping space between quanta) is pretty small... number of possible colors might as well be infinite.
And my friends ask me why i'm switching from Windows 2000 to Linux... Rubbish like this is a great reason. But from my trolling of the web, it's also the best way to assure privacy. No Cuteftp/Gozilla installed spy advert software, no being refused access to the programs I've payed for. With open source, the chance of trojan code being buried is way less. Not impossible of course, but pretty well down there. This could be a really good marketing angle, for somebody who knows what they're doing.
If you're really concerned about privacy, don't use Netscape 4.7 or later. Notice the spare packets it throws around at startup (and who knows when else) ?
Re:it is our fault heres why...
on
Copyrant
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· Score: 1
As long as we sit behind our computers and just bitch about these things and not take direct action of making public statements outside geek forums like slashdot we are all guilty [...]
I make a habit of evangelizing alternative OS's, bashing MS, and having references to back it up. Any time someone gives me an excuse (i.e. bitches about MS products) I'll give them references to BugTraq annoucements, Halloween documents, etc. It's a slow way to go about it, but word spreads.
But what about terrorists? What if some terrorist organization sees Sealand as a get rich quick scheme, and wants to capture and hold hostage the sensitive data of some of the worlds largest companies? Threats to divulge internal secrets, data loss, exposure of personal information of clients and accounting records have all got to sound like a good opportunity to someone out there.
Strong crypto. Have it be the end users' responsibility to encrypt anything they want to be kept confidential,so that authorities in Sealand cannot tell what the data is. Possibly even make this a requirement to have an account/storage space.
Oh man, that ruined a few years of my early life... I remember one of my first non-pointless programming projects was an extensive modification of Nibbles.
One of my early projects was modifying Nibbles so the computer could play one or both snakes. WoW or something;-)
> most of the people are not soldiers, but rather support staff.
Actually, that's how it used to be... once upon a time the US Army had about a 3:1 ratio for support personnel vs. shooters on the ground. Rumor has it (read: my old company 1SG has claimed) that these days, that ratio is close to being reversed.
Konqueror 2.2.1 is blocked with default user agent. Change to report as MSIE 5.5 on Win98 and it works. Also amusing, is that visiting MSNBC.COM, page view was minorly garbled. Changed user agent for that site as well, and suddenly the site rendered correctly. Can anyone duplicate this?
Deploying tactical communications equipment in Manhatten would be ... interesting. You *can* do it, but you'd probably be better off using commercial, off the shelf equipment. Military equipment has, shall we say, a different set of limitations and generally requires more gear to service x customers than similar civilian equipment.
There's an answer to this: RSYNC!!
Know it, use it, love it.
Heh, main reason I noticed Slack 8 was out is because my daily rsync update of Slack-current failed this morning.
I don't care what the logic is, I just want to keep using Slack when I move over to Alpha hardware!
Seriously, what are the motivating factors for Open Source developers? Many times, it's just scratching an itch of thier own that gets people started. Seeing that there's others who need/want/will help with packages, and....
Anonymous Cowards need not reply.
The benifits to an agency that only posts links instead of the full advisory are mostly perceptual, so the image I've gotten from MS and AOL taking this stance is that they just want tracking (MS is (was?) using web bugs in articles). The l0pht doing this doesn't make any sense to me. What gives?
Anonymous Cowards need not reply.
Missing the point. The code runs natively except when trapped. If the CPU supports an instruction, it can be used under the VMM.
Anonymous Cowards need not reply.
I would say Kyle did a better job, rather than a much better job.
Overall I like the Miniseries better than the movie as the storyline is much better developed. While the acting isn't doing a terribly great job of making the individual characters very believable, the situations (as presented) speak to me...
As an aside, MacLachlans' acting in the original didn't impress me terribly, and (humorous to me, though of no real relevance) there were those Kyle worked in theatre with in during highschool who thought he couldn't act his way out of a wet paper bag.
kthulhu for president
Anonymous Cowards need not reply.
You are correct sir nojomofo. But recall that (as said in a previous post) there is a complex waveform to light reflected, covering many frequencies. We get a sampling of this. Get enough variation in the sampling, combined with the fact that the granularity in changes of frequency (stepping space between quanta) is pretty small... number of possible colors might as well be infinite.
chrome at elltel dot net
If you're really concerned about privacy, don't use Netscape 4.7 or later. Notice the spare packets it throws around at startup (and who knows when else) ?
I make a habit of evangelizing alternative OS's, bashing MS, and having references to back it up. Any time someone gives me an excuse (i.e. bitches about MS products) I'll give them references to BugTraq annoucements, Halloween documents, etc. It's a slow way to go about it, but word spreads.
Thing globally, act locally.
Strong crypto. Have it be the end users' responsibility to encrypt anything they want to be kept confidential,so that authorities in Sealand cannot tell what the data is. Possibly even make this a requirement to have an account/storage space.
I know the 6510's added a few more opcodes, never did find a listing of them... always bugged me the info didn't seem to be avialable anywhere.
One of my early projects was modifying Nibbles so the computer could play one or both snakes. WoW or something ;-)
Nah, it'd be MUCH more fun to apply smell tags to The Naked Dancing Llama page.