"Translated, the Internet Safety Act applies not just to AT&T, Comcast, Verizon, and so on--but also to the tens of millions of homes with Wi-Fi access points or wired routers that use the standard method of dynamically assigning temporary addresses. (That method is called Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol, or DHCP.)"
So if I just use static IP addresses I don't have to log anything?
Yes I read most the article and perhaps reading the rest would answer this, but how is a key/value database different from a MySQL databse running MyISAM where you store a bunch of different objects as a string, maybe json_encoded or whatever in the row?
Last time I was looking I would see about 3 a day posted and sometimes more. Glad I stuck with the company I'm at! Granted I only checked one job board today but this was 1 of 3 jobs posted in the past 7 days.
Web Developer:
- Must know PHP extremely well and have worked with it for at least one year consistently
- Must know MySQL
- Must know Linux
- Must be willing to accept 25K-35K, DOE
- Must be able to work a day shift: M-F, 8am-5pm
- We are looking for someone entry-level but with the skill to work quickly, efficiently, and with little supervision.
Web Designer:
- Must know JavaScript and Photoshop extremely well and have worked with them for at least one year consistently
- Must know HTML, (D)HTML, and (X)HTML
- Must know CSS
- Must be willing to accept 25K-30K, DOE
- Must be able to work a day shift: M-F, 8am-5pm
- We are looking for someone entry-level but with the skill to work quickly, efficiently, and with little supervision.
I agree the browser shouldn't be the end all platform for business apps. There are many cases where you need better performance and/or more control which you can't get out of some web applications, but web applications can be rapidly developed, easily deployed, and maintained so why not use them when it makes sense.
It's client-server all over again? How else do you anticipate we share data? We need centralized storage, table locking etc...
Web UI's are a mess? Yes, they are but javascript frameworks, testing in multiple browsers, and good XHTML and CSS make this not so much of hassle. Plus companies can standardize on one browser to reduce QA and development time.
Browser tech is too limiting? True, but it works fine in many cases.
We'll I'm done debunking this joker who clearly was reaching for a topic to write. What a hack.
The article does not mention the mental state of these students, any adverse health problems they may already be suffering from, a genetic disposition towards these behaviors or anything like that. These "scientists" are clearly out to get you, me, and everyone else.
If it sounds like there is an intruder in your house, doesn't that gave the police reasonable cause to enter? I see little difference here, though privacy geeks would probably cringe....
I consider myself a pretty knowledgeable computer user as I've been in IT for 6 years now working in technical support, network administration, and development. Spybot and AVG would not even run and I couldn't reinstall them. Trend Micro's online scanner would stop working half way through. I installed adaware and that removed some of the junk. Then I installed Avast and that removed a bit more. At this point I was able to run SpyBot and that removed a bit more. Finally after running malware bytes or whatever its called + spybot + adaware + avast + malware bytes again for good measure my XP system is "clean." Though who really knows? My system is speedy again, as well as my internet, but I have the sneaking suspicion my pc is working the grave yard shift for a botnet....
I am by no means an expert, in fact I bet I am still doing a lot of things wrong, but here's a few things I've learned so far from a web developer centric point of view:
1. Get clients technical details (hosting provider, php version, mysql version).
2. Take the amount of time you think the project will take and add 50% of that time to it. So instead of quoting them at 80 hours, quote them at 120 hours cause you will most likely go over that 80 hours.
3. Get some business cards (yeah I learned this most recently and felt like an idiot for not having any).
I have more on my blog if you checks the profile.
I've been a Debian user since 2005 and have used it for running various servers. I have been pleased with its performance etc. So why would I switch to Ubuntu server edition? Does it give me a nice GUI to manage more difficult things like using samba as a domain controller? Easier management of email? How about apache, do I get a GUI that will allow me to forget about mod-rewrite rules?
Just wondering, cause if so then I'd be willing to give it a shot, otherwise I'll stuck to managing my Debian servers via the shell.
I got my first computer when I was 10 around 95-96, within a year I discovered that I could pretend to be someone else by setting up a somewhat legitimate email account and sounding official. My friend and I would email tripod users, geocities users etc... posing as someone who offered free web services. Eventually we would get passwords to their accounts, change the password, and vandalize the web page (eventually we got tired of doing of this, i think we discovered girls around age 12). I didn't learn that this was called phishing until I was in high school.
On the plus side it forced me to learn HTML (I wanted my vandalizing to look good), which eventually lead to a career in web development. Hopefully these delinquents can be saved too.
"Translated, the Internet Safety Act applies not just to AT&T, Comcast, Verizon, and so on--but also to the tens of millions of homes with Wi-Fi access points or wired routers that use the standard method of dynamically assigning temporary addresses. (That method is called Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol, or DHCP.)" So if I just use static IP addresses I don't have to log anything?
Yes I read most the article and perhaps reading the rest would answer this, but how is a key/value database different from a MySQL databse running MyISAM where you store a bunch of different objects as a string, maybe json_encoded or whatever in the row?
Last time I was looking I would see about 3 a day posted and sometimes more. Glad I stuck with the company I'm at! Granted I only checked one job board today but this was 1 of 3 jobs posted in the past 7 days. Web Developer: - Must know PHP extremely well and have worked with it for at least one year consistently - Must know MySQL - Must know Linux - Must be willing to accept 25K-35K, DOE - Must be able to work a day shift: M-F, 8am-5pm - We are looking for someone entry-level but with the skill to work quickly, efficiently, and with little supervision. Web Designer: - Must know JavaScript and Photoshop extremely well and have worked with them for at least one year consistently - Must know HTML, (D)HTML, and (X)HTML - Must know CSS - Must be willing to accept 25K-30K, DOE - Must be able to work a day shift: M-F, 8am-5pm - We are looking for someone entry-level but with the skill to work quickly, efficiently, and with little supervision.
I agree the browser shouldn't be the end all platform for business apps. There are many cases where you need better performance and/or more control which you can't get out of some web applications, but web applications can be rapidly developed, easily deployed, and maintained so why not use them when it makes sense. It's client-server all over again? How else do you anticipate we share data? We need centralized storage, table locking etc... Web UI's are a mess? Yes, they are but javascript frameworks, testing in multiple browsers, and good XHTML and CSS make this not so much of hassle. Plus companies can standardize on one browser to reduce QA and development time. Browser tech is too limiting? True, but it works fine in many cases. We'll I'm done debunking this joker who clearly was reaching for a topic to write. What a hack.
The article does not mention the mental state of these students, any adverse health problems they may already be suffering from, a genetic disposition towards these behaviors or anything like that. These "scientists" are clearly out to get you, me, and everyone else.
If it sounds like there is an intruder in your house, doesn't that gave the police reasonable cause to enter? I see little difference here, though privacy geeks would probably cringe....
I consider myself a pretty knowledgeable computer user as I've been in IT for 6 years now working in technical support, network administration, and development. Spybot and AVG would not even run and I couldn't reinstall them. Trend Micro's online scanner would stop working half way through. I installed adaware and that removed some of the junk. Then I installed Avast and that removed a bit more. At this point I was able to run SpyBot and that removed a bit more. Finally after running malware bytes or whatever its called + spybot + adaware + avast + malware bytes again for good measure my XP system is "clean." Though who really knows? My system is speedy again, as well as my internet, but I have the sneaking suspicion my pc is working the grave yard shift for a botnet....
I am by no means an expert, in fact I bet I am still doing a lot of things wrong, but here's a few things I've learned so far from a web developer centric point of view: 1. Get clients technical details (hosting provider, php version, mysql version). 2. Take the amount of time you think the project will take and add 50% of that time to it. So instead of quoting them at 80 hours, quote them at 120 hours cause you will most likely go over that 80 hours. 3. Get some business cards (yeah I learned this most recently and felt like an idiot for not having any). I have more on my blog if you checks the profile.
You all made fun of me for eating all that hippy organic food my mom feed me when I was a youngin, but look who is swinging the big bat now!
I've been a Debian user since 2005 and have used it for running various servers. I have been pleased with its performance etc. So why would I switch to Ubuntu server edition? Does it give me a nice GUI to manage more difficult things like using samba as a domain controller? Easier management of email? How about apache, do I get a GUI that will allow me to forget about mod-rewrite rules? Just wondering, cause if so then I'd be willing to give it a shot, otherwise I'll stuck to managing my Debian servers via the shell.
Lets just say I was far more efficient in "phishing" for passwords, than girl fishing.
you must have operated a hanson site back then, that was the primary target.
Its wrong, and dangerous. I prefer free lance work for compensating for my low salary.
I got my first computer when I was 10 around 95-96, within a year I discovered that I could pretend to be someone else by setting up a somewhat legitimate email account and sounding official. My friend and I would email tripod users, geocities users etc... posing as someone who offered free web services. Eventually we would get passwords to their accounts, change the password, and vandalize the web page (eventually we got tired of doing of this, i think we discovered girls around age 12). I didn't learn that this was called phishing until I was in high school. On the plus side it forced me to learn HTML (I wanted my vandalizing to look good), which eventually lead to a career in web development. Hopefully these delinquents can be saved too.