"This paragraph contained useful information or context, but was removed by the sub-editor to keep the article within an arbitrary word limit in case the internet runs out of space." The snark is strong with this one.
I can get a really decent laptop for what the iPad runs. I'm lugging around a pretty but huge Dell Vostro laptop to class, which makes me drool over the tiny netbooks. They fit on the desks easily and can run more then 2.5 hours without hunting for a power outlet.
I have yet to actually find an instance where a desktop firewall helped in any way. Mostly they just get in the way of things and create another piece of software that has to be naggingly trained and updated.
I did a write up like this back in 1997 with Win95 and some flavor of Red Hat. It has been thirteen years and the basic arguments still haven't changed.
Seriously, Google, don't do it. Facebook sucks. It is a pit of wasted time, shitty Zanga apps, and pictures of people's cats. Let Facebook (or someone else) be Facebook and let Google stay Google.
I canceled my cable TV service a few months ago. My living room TV gets by with an antenna (whose picture is better then cable), PS3, PlayOn, Netflix, and uTorrent.
The article says most of the flaws were unpatched installations of Java, Acrobat, and Windows. When new patches for those come out every week it is easy to let that slip without some sort of patch management tool. I wonder what they used other then WSUS.
I was very happy when I turned in my iPhone for a Droid and could remove that POS iTunes from my machine. I would block it by group policy on every network I run if I could.
It is a neat idea, but you could get the same kind of benefits from writing assembly for Pentiums or modern micro-controllers. Easier to find equipment and more relevant and interesting.
The problem with steno is that the program has to leave footprints in the image file so it can extract the encoded text. If the BBG (Big Bad Government) knows what those footprints look like they can search the web for images that contain them. After 9/11 there was a lot of interest in terrorists using steno to communicate, so someone decided to search the whole Internet for images with known steno identifiers. Now where did I read about that...oh yeah: http://slashdot.org/yro/01/09/26/1418252.shtml
I'm curious about the timing here. The movie came out, had a long run, came out on BR, and now back in theaters just when kids (and some adults) are going back to school. Too soon. If they had waited a year or so I might be tempted to see it again on the big screen. As it is, I'm kind of tired of the movie. The cynic in me says they just threw it out now so the new BR could be out in time for Xmas shopping season.
"Well look, I already told you! I deal with the goddamn customers so the engineers don't have to! I have people skills! I am good at dealing with people! Can't you understand that? What the hell is wrong with you people?"
C++ seems kinda kludgy. Until you start writing programs in assembly. After that C++ looks elegant.
Gogol Bordello has the good doctor beat then: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jFBTmclJrto
"This paragraph contained useful information or context, but was removed by the sub-editor to keep the article within an arbitrary word limit in case the internet runs out of space." The snark is strong with this one.
This is because of all those moose pirates up in Canuck territory. You would download music too if all you had were Alanis Morriset and Bryan Addams.
I can get a really decent laptop for what the iPad runs. I'm lugging around a pretty but huge Dell Vostro laptop to class, which makes me drool over the tiny netbooks. They fit on the desks easily and can run more then 2.5 hours without hunting for a power outlet.
I have yet to actually find an instance where a desktop firewall helped in any way. Mostly they just get in the way of things and create another piece of software that has to be naggingly trained and updated.
Avatar sold 2.7 million blu-ray disks in four days.
Next on the reading list is Goat.se 101 and The Beginner's Guide to Rick Rolling.
The customizations many vendors tack on to Android suck (for the most part). Just leave Android alone and it works fine.
I did a write up like this back in 1997 with Win95 and some flavor of Red Hat. It has been thirteen years and the basic arguments still haven't changed.
Seriously, Google, don't do it. Facebook sucks. It is a pit of wasted time, shitty Zanga apps, and pictures of people's cats. Let Facebook (or someone else) be Facebook and let Google stay Google.
Let me save those guys some time: 42
It would be cooler to find a mega-shark in a mega-volcano on an exoplanet.
I canceled my cable TV service a few months ago. My living room TV gets by with an antenna (whose picture is better then cable), PS3, PlayOn, Netflix, and uTorrent.
The article says most of the flaws were unpatched installations of Java, Acrobat, and Windows. When new patches for those come out every week it is easy to let that slip without some sort of patch management tool. I wonder what they used other then WSUS.
Now we need a robot Samuel L. Jackson to complain about them being on a MFing plane.
Heh. There are more then five posts with a "gaping hole" headline and no one has made the obvious reference. What is /. coming to?
I was very happy when I turned in my iPhone for a Droid and could remove that POS iTunes from my machine. I would block it by group policy on every network I run if I could.
It is a neat idea, but you could get the same kind of benefits from writing assembly for Pentiums or modern micro-controllers. Easier to find equipment and more relevant and interesting.
The problem with steno is that the program has to leave footprints in the image file so it can extract the encoded text. If the BBG (Big Bad Government) knows what those footprints look like they can search the web for images that contain them. After 9/11 there was a lot of interest in terrorists using steno to communicate, so someone decided to search the whole Internet for images with known steno identifiers. Now where did I read about that...oh yeah: http://slashdot.org/yro/01/09/26/1418252.shtml
The nuns heard that helping science was a good habit to get into.
Since the total he stole was $1 million, he would still need a lot more shoe boxes.
I'm curious about the timing here. The movie came out, had a long run, came out on BR, and now back in theaters just when kids (and some adults) are going back to school. Too soon. If they had waited a year or so I might be tempted to see it again on the big screen. As it is, I'm kind of tired of the movie. The cynic in me says they just threw it out now so the new BR could be out in time for Xmas shopping season.
Because someone might use it?
"Well look, I already told you! I deal with the goddamn customers so the engineers don't have to! I have people skills! I am good at dealing with people! Can't you understand that? What the hell is wrong with you people?"