I used KDE 3.5 until problems with the early versions of 4 necessitated a switch to Gnome 2. I liked Gnome 2 quiet a lot and recently upgraded to Gnome 3 with Fedora 15 which has been my primary system for over two months now. I have to say, I love it. It's fast, work well and looks great. I've been able to configure it to my liking with tools such as the gnome-tweak-tool and gconfeditor, and other minor annoyances have been resolved by reading the documentation and learning how drive the new application panel properly. I've used Gnome 2 on a couple of systems since the upgrade and it's made me realise that I can't go back.
Good article, I don't think it's too long, and as a tech that has been trying to deal with this SPAM I appreciate the research that has gone into it. This is the only SPAM which currently makes it through my filters which work on DNSBL's and Greylisting. I'm frustrated the MS has allowed this to go on for so long. Maybe the people who run Spamhaus, SORBS and other blacklists should take action by listing Hotmail's servers. If there was a security breach that isn't being remedied on anyone else's servers they would take action. Maybe that would get MS's attention.
Not really, It's more like being given access to something like an office that remains on company property. The former employee then hides the keys preventing anyone else from gaining access to the office.
Ownership of the office and the keys always remains with the company. Hiding the keys is a nuisance act which disrupts the company, so if the employee knowingly and deliberately disrupted the company they should be liable for any losses the company incurred as a result of those actions.
I'm guessing?
I used KDE 3.5 until problems with the early versions of 4 necessitated a switch to Gnome 2. I liked Gnome 2 quiet a lot and recently upgraded to Gnome 3 with Fedora 15 which has been my primary system for over two months now. I have to say, I love it. It's fast, work well and looks great. I've been able to configure it to my liking with tools such as the gnome-tweak-tool and gconfeditor, and other minor annoyances have been resolved by reading the documentation and learning how drive the new application panel properly. I've used Gnome 2 on a couple of systems since the upgrade and it's made me realise that I can't go back.
Good article, I don't think it's too long, and as a tech that has been trying to deal with this SPAM I appreciate the research that has gone into it. This is the only SPAM which currently makes it through my filters which work on DNSBL's and Greylisting. I'm frustrated the MS has allowed this to go on for so long. Maybe the people who run Spamhaus, SORBS and other blacklists should take action by listing Hotmail's servers. If there was a security breach that isn't being remedied on anyone else's servers they would take action. Maybe that would get MS's attention.
IBM Lotus Notes and Domino Server. Domino server can run on Linux and I think they either have, or are working on a native Notes client for Linux.
Cyrix make x86 processors.
Not really, It's more like being given access to something like an office that remains on company property. The former employee then hides the keys preventing anyone else from gaining access to the office. Ownership of the office and the keys always remains with the company. Hiding the keys is a nuisance act which disrupts the company, so if the employee knowingly and deliberately disrupted the company they should be liable for any losses the company incurred as a result of those actions. I'm guessing?