I was suggesting that the person running the app on their LAN register a domain name and get an SSL cert for it. That means the domain would have to be publicly accessible for the Let's Encrypt registration process, but wouldn't need to stick around indefinitely, nor would it be required to host the app publicly: the LAN's internal DNS server could resolve that domain to the app's internal IP, even if the domain resolves to a different, public IP outside the LAN.
Also, not all cert issuers require the automated verification step (they verify your identity via other, non-programmatic means) and thus don't require the domain to every be publicly visible.
Installing a cert into a browser is not actually hard, but just because the domain name is public doesn't mean the web-app has to be. You'll probably want a nice domain name for your app anyway, so running an internal DNS server is going to be desired anyway.
If the channel is compromised during registration, it would be trivial to MITM the phone number as well. I.e., send the attacker's phone number to Yahoo instead of the user's, and forward the verification code to the user. There's not a reliable way for the user to verify the source number of the text, and there are ways, such as using an internet-SMS gateway, to mask the attacker's number from the user.
It's more like a lot of people have Schrödinger boxes, and they have noticed that the boxes are different sizes. This group is claiming that the difference in sizes is tied to the probability of the cat being alive or dead; i.e., if you open a smaller box, you're more likely to find a dead cat, though it is still not certain. You would think that maybe there are just different sized boxes from different manufacturers, but they claim that the box size is continuous and matches the probabilities of living vs dead, and they have an explanation for how being able to see the size of the box doesn't violate QM or collapse the wave function.
I don't think the assumption was that the universe "solves" the equation to "compute" reality. Rather, I think the point was that the "breakdown" of quantum behavior into macroscopic behavior seems to happen around the same scale that the interactions described by Schrödinger's equation start to run into fundamental limits of computability in the form of the Planck Length, and that this can help "explain" the transition to macroscopic behavior as simply being the point at which the system becomes too complicated, in a fundamental complexity theory sense, for Schrödinger's equation to accurately describe it any longer.
Distribution (a.k.a. land area or population density) probably plays a large role in the disparity. Europe has a much smaller land area than the US. It would be interesting to see emissions stats per capita adjusted for land area.
Neither am I, but I'm having to deal with a lot of time and space recently.
Tell me about it. Seems like I've been dealing with time and space forever. No matter where I go, all hours of the day, it's time and space! Even on the weekends, time and space! I just can't get away from it.
Yeah, for the most part TMO has really great customer service and plans. But coverage depends heavily on your area. I live in Gainesville, FL and I get "3G" coverage that caps out at around 750Kb at full bars, and much of the city doesn't have coverage at all. When I was in Austin recently, tho, I was getting upward of 4Mb rates. I think they're much better on the west coast.
I really wish it were not the case, but I will probably have to give up my N1 and switch to another carrier with decent data rates and coverage here.
If NASA times it just right, we could put people on the moon, launch the moon at Mars and have people walking on Mars just months later.
...
Next, we use the tide from the sun to travel to Alpha Centauri.
Wait, are you suggesting that we ride the sun to Alpha Centauri, or put kites in the tides on the sun caused by Earth and launch Earth toward Alpha Centauri?
No, I'm not saying every system would die within two weeks without maintenance, but enough of them would that it would create som real freaggin' huge problems! Not to mention the user's need to be led by the hand through the nigh unfathomable maze that is finding files you've saved, finding the right icon to click to launch the application you use every day, sending e-mail, etc.
It occurs to me that this points to most IT systems (particularly interfaces) being poorly designed.
Over the past 10 months, five feet have been found on shorelines along the Strait of Georgia, southwest of Vancouver.... Four of the feet are right feet. The fifth is a left foot.... There are more than 2,000 people missing in British Columbia alone, says Ebbesmeyer, so there's a good likelihood that they come from one of them.
One of the missing people had 4 right feet and a left foot? And I thought I was bad at dancing...
Picture a rubber sheet with a grid of parallel lines drawn on it. These lines represent the trajectory of objects moving along straight paths. An object with mass causes the sheet to shrink in toward the object in all directions, causing those parallel lines to curve in toward the object as well, and consequently the paths of traveling objects to curve in toward the object as well. (The stretch [pun intended], of course, is that the traveling objects are constrained to follow the lines, but you have to realize that the objects are not rolling along on top of the sheet, but are in fact moving within it.)
Extend this to three dimensions, and you have gravity. Now the only thing to determine is why objects warp space, and that is beyond my ken.
The G1 was released in October of 2008, yet they still had 70% of the number of project releases that the iPhone had in 2008. 70% as many OSS projects in a quarter the number of months.
(Granted, the SDK was available for longer, but still very few people, developers included, actually had a phone; they were excited enough about it to develop apps solely on the emulator, without being able to actually use them until October.)
Perhaps if the distortion of space-time caused the distance between the stick and the earth to change unevenly along the length of the stick, it would cause the stick to appear to tilt from the beads perspective. Thus, what would actually cause the bead to move is the earth's gravitational field. Would that still count as transmitting energy? I don't really understand this stuff, so it probably wouldn't even work that way, anyway.
It would be so much fun to F with people's brains. I wouldn't physically hurt my subjects, just puzzle the sh*t out of them for the shear fun hell of it.
I believe you've figured out what the hell's up with Quantum Mechanics.
they are "pro-Caucasian"
Heh. I like the idea of using the term "pro-Caucs" for these dicks.
The way you quoted your original comment made it seem like you were saying the opposite.
I was suggesting that the person running the app on their LAN register a domain name and get an SSL cert for it. That means the domain would have to be publicly accessible for the Let's Encrypt registration process, but wouldn't need to stick around indefinitely, nor would it be required to host the app publicly: the LAN's internal DNS server could resolve that domain to the app's internal IP, even if the domain resolves to a different, public IP outside the LAN.
Also, not all cert issuers require the automated verification step (they verify your identity via other, non-programmatic means) and thus don't require the domain to every be publicly visible.
Installing a cert into a browser is not actually hard, but just because the domain name is public doesn't mean the web-app has to be. You'll probably want a nice domain name for your app anyway, so running an internal DNS server is going to be desired anyway.
If the channel is compromised during registration, it would be trivial to MITM the phone number as well. I.e., send the attacker's phone number to Yahoo instead of the user's, and forward the verification code to the user. There's not a reliable way for the user to verify the source number of the text, and there are ways, such as using an internet-SMS gateway, to mask the attacker's number from the user.
It's more like a lot of people have Schrödinger boxes, and they have noticed that the boxes are different sizes. This group is claiming that the difference in sizes is tied to the probability of the cat being alive or dead; i.e., if you open a smaller box, you're more likely to find a dead cat, though it is still not certain. You would think that maybe there are just different sized boxes from different manufacturers, but they claim that the box size is continuous and matches the probabilities of living vs dead, and they have an explanation for how being able to see the size of the box doesn't violate QM or collapse the wave function.
I don't think the assumption was that the universe "solves" the equation to "compute" reality. Rather, I think the point was that the "breakdown" of quantum behavior into macroscopic behavior seems to happen around the same scale that the interactions described by Schrödinger's equation start to run into fundamental limits of computability in the form of the Planck Length, and that this can help "explain" the transition to macroscopic behavior as simply being the point at which the system becomes too complicated, in a fundamental complexity theory sense, for Schrödinger's equation to accurately describe it any longer.
Distribution (a.k.a. land area or population density) probably plays a large role in the disparity. Europe has a much smaller land area than the US. It would be interesting to see emissions stats per capita adjusted for land area.
Grues are really terrible neighbors.
Neither am I, but I'm having to deal with a lot of time and space recently.
Tell me about it. Seems like I've been dealing with time and space forever. No matter where I go, all hours of the day, it's time and space! Even on the weekends, time and space! I just can't get away from it.
Yeah, for the most part TMO has really great customer service and plans. But coverage depends heavily on your area. I live in Gainesville, FL and I get "3G" coverage that caps out at around 750Kb at full bars, and much of the city doesn't have coverage at all. When I was in Austin recently, tho, I was getting upward of 4Mb rates. I think they're much better on the west coast. I really wish it were not the case, but I will probably have to give up my N1 and switch to another carrier with decent data rates and coverage here.
Wait, are you suggesting that we ride the sun to Alpha Centauri, or put kites in the tides on the sun caused by Earth and launch Earth toward Alpha Centauri?
Yes, but that doesn't mean all dogs are capable of getting a degree.
This fails to explain running gags. Even regular jokes are, in fact, often funny again (even if no longer novel).
No, I'm not saying every system would die within two weeks without maintenance, but enough of them would that it would create som real freaggin' huge problems! Not to mention the user's need to be led by the hand through the nigh unfathomable maze that is finding files you've saved, finding the right icon to click to launch the application you use every day, sending e-mail, etc.
It occurs to me that this points to most IT systems (particularly interfaces) being poorly designed.
The demo video in TFA showed that you can do exactly that.
One of the missing people had 4 right feet and a left foot? And I thought I was bad at dancing...
Yeah, it does.
I find this a better analogy:
Picture a rubber sheet with a grid of parallel lines drawn on it. These lines represent the trajectory of objects moving along straight paths. An object with mass causes the sheet to shrink in toward the object in all directions, causing those parallel lines to curve in toward the object as well, and consequently the paths of traveling objects to curve in toward the object as well. (The stretch [pun intended], of course, is that the traveling objects are constrained to follow the lines, but you have to realize that the objects are not rolling along on top of the sheet, but are in fact moving within it.)
Extend this to three dimensions, and you have gravity. Now the only thing to determine is why objects warp space, and that is beyond my ken.
I, for one, welcome our new polite pedantic overlords. ;)
An essay.
The G1 was released in October of 2008, yet they still had 70% of the number of project releases that the iPhone had in 2008. 70% as many OSS projects in a quarter the number of months.
(Granted, the SDK was available for longer, but still very few people, developers included, actually had a phone; they were excited enough about it to develop apps solely on the emulator, without being able to actually use them until October.)
Yeah, for one thing, it heals undead. Obviously, this means that string theory is just a conspiracy perpetrated by vampires.
Perhaps if the distortion of space-time caused the distance between the stick and the earth to change unevenly along the length of the stick, it would cause the stick to appear to tilt from the beads perspective. Thus, what would actually cause the bead to move is the earth's gravitational field. Would that still count as transmitting energy? I don't really understand this stuff, so it probably wouldn't even work that way, anyway.
I believe you've figured out what the hell's up with Quantum Mechanics.