I have been getting these emails for years, and I *always* knew it was a fake - I never logged on to actually see that it was a fake robot posting, because that would have been too depressing.I think probably everyone on this sight has enough experience with "popular" not to have fallen for this:-)If you did fall for it, well what a pathetic loser you are!:-)
Cassandra is basically a sloppy implementation of UniVerse and elated products. Why sloppy? Because the idea of a separate file access for each column sucks - use a union or struct as necessary, people!
See, your ISPs appear to be honest about the speeds you get. The rest of ours typically aren't. That's one of the things we'd like to see change. And market forces aren't going to do it.
They can trace the IP, but it will lead them to your provider, not your house. I think the idea here is to learn about speed according to geographic location (i.e., neighborhood) rather than by provider.
The problem is that the *AAs are facing a battle against time.As time goes by, internet connections are going to improve and the citizenry is going to become more aware. In 4 years all of those 14 year olds today using Limewire will be 18 and eligible to vote in many countries.It's a battle they are (eventually) going to lose to sanity. ACTA was probably going to be a stopgap. They tried to do it too big and have it too far-reaching, though, so they basically shot themselves in the foot.I await the day 50 y
I suspect the banks do have insurance that covers the loss during a robbery. I also suspect that the small to mid-size businesses don't have insurance that covers someone logging in and emptying their bank accounts, which can sink a small company.
Does it really matter though? If they're using something like this, they should had have hardened and test the system properly. Things like this are completely unacceptable. I would have thought they did as otherwise its going to backfire so good, but it seems stupid people never cease to amaze you.
It's not Microsoft's support if IE6 that you should be concerned with. It's the whole of the web, and web development standards which is increasingly built of standards that IE6 does not support. Before long, IE6 simply won't be able to display a majority of webpages, at which point you'll be left with a choice to either switch to a modern browser, or stop using the web.You have a wide variety of options. If you don't like IE8 (and I personally can't blame you), then there's always Google Chrome, Mozilla Fi
HOW IS THIS INFORMATIVE?? There are no links in your post that point us to the contract that supposedly directly Mr. Childs to reveal the passwords ONLY to the mayor. Furthermore, your posts seem to link to a couple of rather obscure blogs, which in turn link to all of the other InfoWorld and other articles that we've all been discussing. Next please.
'Just because you give someone a password doesn't mean that person knows how to use it. Childs's security measures would have included access lists that blocked attempted logins from non-specified IP addresses or subnets. I
Don't use a non-specified IP address.
Or more specifically: graph a console cable, plug it into the device, and do what you need to do.
That an unskilled individual would not necessarily be able to easily use them does not mean Childs did anything wrong.
In fact, this is exactly how things should be
Exactly what type of fair, democratic system do you propose where 36% of the people supporting an issue is enough to get it passed? I don't see how any sort of system, no matter how many parties there are, could possibly be more democratic by allowing 36% of the nation to pass a measure that 64% don't want. It seems to me the system is not the problem, and if you all feel so passionately about the issue you should be debating it, educating people on your viewpoint and rallying more support for it.But what do I know, maybe trying to convince people to rewrite our entire system of democracy and governance that countless people have died fighting for would be waaaaay easier then convincing them that legalizing some mary jay would be beneficial for the nation.
As already suggested, there's a "sweet spot". Different customers tolerate different levels. Lots of my friends enthuse about AC2, so they must be willing to tolerate this DRM. I wouldn't, partly because my internet connection is so flaky that I'd never be able to progress with the game. On the other hand, I am willing to tolerate having to have a disk in the drive, possibly because I've been gaming since the days that a decent game wouldn't fit in memory so it was a technical, not a DRM, requirement. You p
$250 Million for the free to air channels around Australia with no strings attached. I wonder why there is little to no coverage in the main stream press now days?
what I don't like about a netbook:
keyboard too small for real typing
not much cheaper than an introductory laptop
lousy processing and ram compared to same introductory laptop
made of same low quality parts as same introductory laptop
windows sucks on small screens
I see it as confirmation that Blogging and the "Blogosphere" is an empty and thoughtless echo chamber.
Wow. Your brush was so broad, you tarred yourself in the process. Nice.
given the number of topless asian chicks in the photos on the wiki page, I'd say the danger is off-set by enough awesome to let them slide... for now.
I have been getting these emails for years, and I *always* knew it was a fake - I never logged on to actually see that it was a fake robot posting, because that would have been too depressing.I think probably everyone on this sight has enough experience with "popular" not to have fallen for this :-)If you did fall for it, well what a pathetic loser you are! :-)
Cassandra is basically a sloppy implementation of UniVerse and elated products. Why sloppy? Because the idea of a separate file access for each column sucks - use a union or struct as necessary, people!
I suspect the banks do have insurance that covers the loss during a robbery. I also suspect that the small to mid-size businesses don't have insurance that covers someone logging in and emptying their bank accounts, which can sink a small company.
Not that people would die in large numbers or anything.
Does it really matter though? If they're using something like this, they should had have hardened and test the system properly. Things like this are completely unacceptable. I would have thought they did as otherwise its going to backfire so good, but it seems stupid people never cease to amaze you.
Oops my /nelson tag got eaten.
"Remember, no German!"
HOW IS THIS INFORMATIVE?? There are no links in your post that point us to the contract that supposedly directly Mr. Childs to reveal the passwords ONLY to the mayor. Furthermore, your posts seem to link to a couple of rather obscure blogs, which in turn link to all of the other InfoWorld and other articles that we've all been discussing. Next please.
'Just because you give someone a password doesn't mean that person knows how to use it. Childs's security measures would have included access lists that blocked attempted logins from non-specified IP addresses or subnets. I Don't use a non-specified IP address. Or more specifically: graph a console cable, plug it into the device, and do what you need to do. That an unskilled individual would not necessarily be able to easily use them does not mean Childs did anything wrong. In fact, this is exactly how things should be
He's talking about Java. Does Java have a KeyPressed event?
yeah but they don't work, GIL.
Get off my lawn! But this being the government, they just won't get it.
Exactly what type of fair, democratic system do you propose where 36% of the people supporting an issue is enough to get it passed? I don't see how any sort of system, no matter how many parties there are, could possibly be more democratic by allowing 36% of the nation to pass a measure that 64% don't want. It seems to me the system is not the problem, and if you all feel so passionately about the issue you should be debating it, educating people on your viewpoint and rallying more support for it.But what do I know, maybe trying to convince people to rewrite our entire system of democracy and governance that countless people have died fighting for would be waaaaay easier then convincing them that legalizing some mary jay would be beneficial for the nation.
As already suggested, there's a "sweet spot". Different customers tolerate different levels. Lots of my friends enthuse about AC2, so they must be willing to tolerate this DRM. I wouldn't, partly because my internet connection is so flaky that I'd never be able to progress with the game. On the other hand, I am willing to tolerate having to have a disk in the drive, possibly because I've been gaming since the days that a decent game wouldn't fit in memory so it was a technical, not a DRM, requirement. You p
and if you find a girfriend without DRM on her sweet spot, she will likely have a virus problem
$250 Million for the free to air channels around Australia with no strings attached. I wonder why there is little to no coverage in the main stream press now days?
what I don't like about a netbook: keyboard too small for real typing not much cheaper than an introductory laptop lousy processing and ram compared to same introductory laptop made of same low quality parts as same introductory laptop windows sucks on small screens
I see it as confirmation that Blogging and the "Blogosphere" is an empty and thoughtless echo chamber. Wow. Your brush was so broad, you tarred yourself in the process. Nice.