Look, I agree. After I posted, I had looked up SELinux (I have no experience with it) and it's very different. Granted in a Windows environment I could achieve a similar effect to what you wanted - but it wouldn't be all Windows' utilities. It would require scripting for most of the work (if not all). As I look more into SELinux I'm very impressed with the application restrictions/allowances and the granularity in which you can control them.
SELinux is something else entirely - it's a form of mandatory access control, and it's applied to applications instead of users. A SELinux profile defines what an application is allowed to do - which system calls it may use, what files it has access to, and so on. This runs alongside the Unix permissions.
Sounds like Group Policy Objects in Windows (running in a Domain).
Mine is better - remove the cat5 (or phone) cable. I'd like to see the chances of something getting in then! (from the Web, stupid users with viruses on portable media excluded from test results)
As long as people and companies complain about it enough they'll just announce a newer version and allow users to use their legacy OS until it comes out.
1. Release OS that people accept
2. Release OS people hate
3. Re-release old OS for more and charge for downgrade to old OS
4. Profit!
I think this is a really good concept for the PC gamer. This would allow the removal of minimum system requirements being long and drawn out, you need AMD GAME! or higher. I'm very interested in how this will play out with the community overall. The average gamer now has a rally point to know what is needed to play the games and the developers now have a baseline to what they need to achieve for compatibility.
On the whole, I think it's a good initiative on AMD's part.
Time to emulate the service's functionality with PvPGN!
Because I like to scambait.
"Should've" = "Should have".
Periods and commas always go inside quotation marks, even inside single quotes.
Most certainly. Naturally the link doesn't work any more... should of just used this.
We all know he just steals all of his discoveries. Should totally be a Fry Hole.
Could possibly have Aboulia.
Needs more OCP imo.
they would have better luck pushing out their ARM chips.
Oh, no no, you'd want fixed rates. ARMs are just too risky in this economy!
Look, I agree. After I posted, I had looked up SELinux (I have no experience with it) and it's very different. Granted in a Windows environment I could achieve a similar effect to what you wanted - but it wouldn't be all Windows' utilities. It would require scripting for most of the work (if not all). As I look more into SELinux I'm very impressed with the application restrictions/allowances and the granularity in which you can control them.
SELinux is something else entirely - it's a form of mandatory access control, and it's applied to applications instead of users. A SELinux profile defines what an application is allowed to do - which system calls it may use, what files it has access to, and so on. This runs alongside the Unix permissions.
Sounds like Group Policy Objects in Windows (running in a Domain).
Mine is better - remove the cat5 (or phone) cable. I'd like to see the chances of something getting in then! (from the Web, stupid users with viruses on portable media excluded from test results)
Perhaps the ISP installed an IronPort system.
And skip nanoscope altogether?
a micro-microscope?
As long as people and companies complain about it enough they'll just announce a newer version and allow users to use their legacy OS until it comes out.
1. Release OS that people accept
2. Release OS people hate
3. Re-release old OS for more and charge for downgrade to old OS
4. Profit!
this guys just walked in with default windows passwords...
Windows has default passwords? Just curious.
Uh-oh! ... memories...
welcome the development of our robotic overlords.
I think this is a really good concept for the PC gamer. This would allow the removal of minimum system requirements being long and drawn out, you need AMD GAME! or higher. I'm very interested in how this will play out with the community overall. The average gamer now has a rally point to know what is needed to play the games and the developers now have a baseline to what they need to achieve for compatibility. On the whole, I think it's a good initiative on AMD's part.