No, I'm not going to even try to install that piece of crap. It's a shame that after so many years the OpenJDK is still so useless.
In this state of affairs, for me Java is dead and buried. In all respects.
I'm very happy using Mikrotik (mikrotik.com) products. You can buy a ~49$ license and install their software -RouterOS, a Linux derivative- on an old PC.
You can also get one of their hardware products (routerboard.com), excellent choice if you care about power consumption. I highly recommend the RB750G wich is a small SOHO router in a nice plastic case.
With RouterOS you can do a whole lot of interesting things, monitoring bandwidth usage is just one of these things.
A statically linked app written in C++, with Trolltech's Qt4.4 + SQLite3 support will do the trick.
If the statically linked binary results too big, just shrink it with UPX, or install the dynamically linked dlls with the app.
Yeah, that's why users of private ISPs didn't noticed the hijacking. I personally didn't, before I read about it in a forum post. Once I confirmed the issue, I immediately registered a domain name (partidocoloradoantrodeladrones.org) to put a complaint.
The fact is this Telco has a great share of ADSL users in the country. The common user doesn't know any means of configuring DNS adresses, they just know how to plug their routers and go for pr0n. And currently, being a hot topic, people also visit sites related to politics.
from now on, January 18 "Thiago Macieira Appreciation Day".
No, I'm not going to even try to install that piece of crap. It's a shame that after so many years the OpenJDK is still so useless. In this state of affairs, for me Java is dead and buried. In all respects.
That's why people keeps their diamonds in safe-deposit boxes, you fool.
"A $150 Camera vs. a $5,000 Camera" http://www.kenrockwell.com/tech/150-vs-5000-dollar-camera.htm
but I haven't yet finished fine tuning my new and shiny Kubuntu installation.
I'm very happy using Mikrotik (mikrotik.com) products. You can buy a ~49$ license and install their software -RouterOS, a Linux derivative- on an old PC. You can also get one of their hardware products (routerboard.com), excellent choice if you care about power consumption. I highly recommend the RB750G wich is a small SOHO router in a nice plastic case. With RouterOS you can do a whole lot of interesting things, monitoring bandwidth usage is just one of these things.
the Openwall website groans and moans imploring for a facelift. it's so poignant..
Not so anonymous, though: http://i53.tinypic.com/faa61k.png
A statically linked app written in C++, with Trolltech's Qt4.4 + SQLite3 support will do the trick. If the statically linked binary results too big, just shrink it with UPX, or install the dynamically linked dlls with the app.
Yeah, that's why users of private ISPs didn't noticed the hijacking. I personally didn't, before I read about it in a forum post. Once I confirmed the issue, I immediately registered a domain name (partidocoloradoantrodeladrones.org) to put a complaint. The fact is this Telco has a great share of ADSL users in the country. The common user doesn't know any means of configuring DNS adresses, they just know how to plug their routers and go for pr0n. And currently, being a hot topic, people also visit sites related to politics.
absolutely :)