Why do you bother? I mean, your screen is lit, and surely lights up your keyboard....
Yes, yes, most people need papers or books or something as they work, I know. But more seriously, a low-wattage LED task light might be more efficient & less annoying.
I'm lucky to have a private office, and the overhead lights are almost always off. It's just a personal preference, but I keep a number of smaller, softer, perhaps more power efficient lights on, to make the space more attractive.
You should be able to inhibit sleep w/o a special program - just set it to Never in Energy Saver in System Preferences.
I can't help much with the lid, though I recall hearing something about running them closed with a keyboard, mouse, & monitor attached, so there may be a way.
There may not be quite as little cross-over as you think. I know at least some of the Resistor folks are hams, for example. And the TAPR license is one of the better known Open Hardware licenses; Open Hardware being a related movement and TAPR being a group that concentrates on digital amateur radio.
There is some culture clash, I'm sure, as there are individuals we're talking about. Although IME, both groups are very welcoming to newcomers.
You probably won't find hackerspace types rag-chewing on HF much, but doing cool stuff on VHF+? Sure.
If you know an ARC and a hackerspace community in close-ish range, have you tried introducing them? Maybe try to work with both groups to get a fox hunt on, or something.
I stayed in a hotel like that a couple of times. It was over Christmas, so you might've seen people at other times, but I checked in via credit card at a terminal in the vestibule, and got my keycard which gave me access to the lobby and room. The next morning, I checked out via the same system, got my receipt, and moved on. It was really very peaceful.
Whooosh! The ridges the GP was referring to are on Klingons, playing on their change in appearance between TOS and the first movie. The character Checkov on TOS used to talk about how Russia invented everything, and later the Klingons did they did (even Shakespeare was Klingon).
The other examples are good, thank you. And you're right, the joke became unfunny through over use & should have died before Worf got to it.;)
I'm sorry, but you still don't quite have it. Classified Sources And Methods Information (SAMI) can be protected as Sensitive Compartmented Information (SCI) or any other Special Access Program (SAP). These types of information are marked with a compartment name. However, per DCID 6/5 there is also non-SCI SAMI, which is marked with a label that controls dissemination but does not require SCI or SAP access. This marking is similar to other caveats like PROPIN (proprietary information) or RELROK (Releasable to the Republic of Korea).
So you could have something like SECRET//MAJIC//RELROK for secret (causes serious damage to national security) UFO info that can be given to Korea, but that doesn't necessarily tell anyone how we got the UFO data. It's classified, it's compartmented, but it's not SAMI. OTOH, you could have SECRET//-//SAMI that does tell how the goods were got, but anyone with a secret clearance & a need to know can have. Also classified, but no compartment, and sources. I guess you could have UNCLASSIFIED//-//SAMI, but I'm not sure & can't imagine anyone would bother
Note: All information in this post was prepared from unclassified sources, authorized for public release.
If you are sending PHI via encrypted email, you are almost certainly doing it wrong, regardless of outsourcing. Sending it unencrypted could be considered disclosing it to the receiver's email service provider, and maybe anyone along its path, because the definition of disclosure includes "the release, transfer, provision of" data.
That has been my position since (as I understand it) they sued Lik Sang out of existence. Lik Sang existed to make money by making geeks happy. I do not give money to people who seem to be actively engaged in stopping me from being happy.
It may be true that the lack of a paper trail is a major draw. It's also true, though, that it is then cash immediately in your pocket, and not in control of your employer. With a credit card tip, the employer controls when you get your money, and even "if" to some extent, in that they can institute mandatory tip-sharing. Personally, I prefer that the person who actually provided me the service gets the gesture of appreciation I send, rather than tip-sharing that tends to flatten out the motivation for everyone.
Ha! Yeah, it can be, if you go the pseudo-Latin pluralization route. I prefer it just because I think it looks a little more elegant than Unixes, which is probably more sensible.:)
Both seem to be accepted on the Internet, and I'm not aware of any reasonable authoritative* sources that would indicate that I should really stop.
Hell, I'm not a newbie, I'm a crusty old UNIX guy* with experience in multiple commercial Unicies, *BSD*, and came fairly late to Linux (by which I mean pre-Fedora Redhat). And I don't want to hand-compile a kernel either! Been there, done that, now I just want the bloody thing to work so I can do something more interesting.
*There are people who've been at it plenty longer than me, no doubt.
Understood. However, the history is that we haven't fought a war against an opponent with that level of technical sophistication since Korea. They do other innovative stuff, and plenty of it, but things like night vision and computer-based situational awareness systems just don't seem to be happening very much.
And maybe the next fight is against someone who can see in the dark, in which case this just won't be as effective. That happens all the time, it's just the nature of war.
You're right about there being lots of amazingly good recordings out there, usually for a couple bucks each. No doubt I could have bought all this music for much less than I'm donating. I'm not doing this so that I can have these recordings. I'm doing it so *everyone* can have them.
Why do you bother? I mean, your screen is lit, and surely lights up your keyboard....
Yes, yes, most people need papers or books or something as they work, I know. But more seriously, a low-wattage LED task light might be more efficient & less annoying.
I'm lucky to have a private office, and the overhead lights are almost always off. It's just a personal preference, but I keep a number of smaller, softer, perhaps more power efficient lights on, to make the space more attractive.
I would like to draw your attention to the second definition at the link you posted, "of little or no practical value or meaning; purely academic."
You should be able to inhibit sleep w/o a special program - just set it to Never in Energy Saver in System Preferences.
I can't help much with the lid, though I recall hearing something about running them closed with a keyboard, mouse, & monitor attached, so there may be a way.
There may not be quite as little cross-over as you think. I know at least some of the Resistor folks are hams, for example. And the TAPR license is one of the better known Open Hardware licenses; Open Hardware being a related movement and TAPR being a group that concentrates on digital amateur radio.
There is some culture clash, I'm sure, as there are individuals we're talking about. Although IME, both groups are very welcoming to newcomers.
You probably won't find hackerspace types rag-chewing on HF much, but doing cool stuff on VHF+? Sure.
If you know an ARC and a hackerspace community in close-ish range, have you tried introducing them? Maybe try to work with both groups to get a fox hunt on, or something.
I stayed in a hotel like that a couple of times. It was over Christmas, so you might've seen people at other times, but I checked in via credit card at a terminal in the vestibule, and got my keycard which gave me access to the lobby and room. The next morning, I checked out via the same system, got my receipt, and moved on. It was really very peaceful.
Whooosh! The ridges the GP was referring to are on Klingons, playing on their change in appearance between TOS and the first movie. The character Checkov on TOS used to talk about how Russia invented everything, and later the Klingons did they did (even Shakespeare was Klingon).
The other examples are good, thank you. And you're right, the joke became unfunny through over use & should have died before Worf got to it. ;)
Google is your friend: http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2011/01/how-to-strip-drm-from-kindle-e-books-and-others/
Unfortunately, OCSP has been defeated with the character 3.
Those 2/3rds covered by water produce half of the oxygen you breathe.
I'm sorry, but you still don't quite have it. Classified Sources And Methods Information (SAMI) can be protected as Sensitive Compartmented Information (SCI) or any other Special Access Program (SAP). These types of information are marked with a compartment name. However, per DCID 6/5 there is also non-SCI SAMI, which is marked with a label that controls dissemination but does not require SCI or SAP access. This marking is similar to other caveats like PROPIN (proprietary information) or RELROK (Releasable to the Republic of Korea).
So you could have something like SECRET//MAJIC//RELROK for secret (causes serious damage to national security) UFO info that can be given to Korea, but that doesn't necessarily tell anyone how we got the UFO data. It's classified, it's compartmented, but it's not SAMI. OTOH, you could have SECRET//-//SAMI that does tell how the goods were got, but anyone with a secret clearance & a need to know can have. Also classified, but no compartment, and sources. I guess you could have UNCLASSIFIED//-//SAMI, but I'm not sure & can't imagine anyone would bother
Note: All information in this post was prepared from unclassified sources, authorized for public release.
In general, the line is drawn at the threshold of originality.
Well, frisking is safe & aid security...are you of the opinion that frisking you every time you enter a spot is a good idea?
Good point, the USPTO never flubs checking for prior art...
If you are sending PHI via encrypted email, you are almost certainly doing it wrong, regardless of outsourcing. Sending it unencrypted could be considered disclosing it to the receiver's email service provider, and maybe anyone along its path, because the definition of disclosure includes "the release, transfer, provision of" data.
That has been my position since (as I understand it) they sued Lik Sang out of existence. Lik Sang existed to make money by making geeks happy. I do not give money to people who seem to be actively engaged in stopping me from being happy.
I..I might never leave.
Aside from time spent seeking treatment for lead poisoning, that it.
There are other ways to do that: http://netcat.sourceforge.net/
That said, as long as the telnet client is already installed, I see your point.
They're running Microsoft OSes. They come with the bugs built in!
Then you haven't been under them when they start falling,
It may be true that the lack of a paper trail is a major draw. It's also true, though, that it is then cash immediately in your pocket, and not in control of your employer. With a credit card tip, the employer controls when you get your money, and even "if" to some extent, in that they can institute mandatory tip-sharing. Personally, I prefer that the person who actually provided me the service gets the gesture of appreciation I send, rather than tip-sharing that tends to flatten out the motivation for everyone.
Ha! Yeah, it can be, if you go the pseudo-Latin pluralization route. I prefer it just because I think it looks a little more elegant than Unixes, which is probably more sensible. :)
Both seem to be accepted on the Internet, and I'm not aware of any reasonable authoritative* sources that would indicate that I should really stop.
Hell, I'm not a newbie, I'm a crusty old UNIX guy* with experience in multiple commercial Unicies, *BSD*, and came fairly late to Linux (by which I mean pre-Fedora Redhat). And I don't want to hand-compile a kernel either! Been there, done that, now I just want the bloody thing to work so I can do something more interesting.
*There are people who've been at it plenty longer than me, no doubt.
This was a beta of the F-14?!? Talk about old news; that plane entered operational status in, what, 1974 and is now retired, at least by the US.
Understood. However, the history is that we haven't fought a war against an opponent with that level of technical sophistication since Korea. They do other innovative stuff, and plenty of it, but things like night vision and computer-based situational awareness systems just don't seem to be happening very much.
And maybe the next fight is against someone who can see in the dark, in which case this just won't be as effective. That happens all the time, it's just the nature of war.
They're up to almost U$60K now.
You're right about there being lots of amazingly good recordings out there, usually for a couple bucks each. No doubt I could have bought all this music for much less than I'm donating. I'm not doing this so that I can have these recordings. I'm doing it so *everyone* can have them.