Oh.. and one more thing.. Isn't there enough stuff named 'Chevy Chase' around here? It makes me sick. I never understood, is the town and everything else named after him? Or was he named after the town?
The i60+ have this functionality I believe (Styles). However, I don't think you can limit alerts to only a certain email address.. Unless there's some way that I don't know about?
Here's another thing non-nextel users don't realize about nextel phones. They are built to be ANNOYING. By that I mean, they are given typically by companies to their employees as ways to get in touch with them. A result of this is that the default settings for many things on nextel phones never give up on alerting you until you acknowledge them. An example would be when you receive voicemail, it will ring every 30 seconds or so non-stop until you acknowledge it. If you receive a 2 way message, it will beep every 3 seconds or so until you acknowledge it, etc.
I, for one, would be extremely pissed off if I received SMS spam in the middle of the night on my Nextel phone. It is equivalent to someone sending it to your pager. It is built to wake you up. I do not pay per message for SMS with nextel, so that's not the factor with me, for me it's the annoyance. I can't and won't deal with that kind of hassle.
I completely agree. I was saying that I wasn't sure if he really believed that or not. But that it didn't need to modded down as it's really impossible to determine. I really imagine if it were flamebait it would be much worse than that, and it would be AC.
I'm not sure if the parent is a troll or not. But I don't think it needed to be modded flamebait simply because the poster disagreed with a ruling. That said, I *DO* agree with the ruling.
What some people don't understand is that the Supreme Court has one job. That job is to determine the constitutionality of the various rulings and laws that are brought before them. Their job is not to make judgment calls for the rest of the country based on their own morals. It is to make calls for the country based on what they interpret from a single document. Granted, not all of them appear to do this. As I don't see how this could be considered constitutional at all (and yet it still got 4 votes). However, that is their job.
I really do believe that if people have strong feelings in this direction that perhaps they need to live in a different country which will protect its people from things which the government deems to be unfit for the population. Try China? It sounds like a better fit in this regard. I'm sure you can find plenty of others as well. However, the Constitution is what this country is supposed to be based on. Lately this foundation appears to have been slowly crumbling due to people like the parent poster. I do believe though that in time, these things will work themselves out. Or at least, that's my hope.
That's not necessarily true. You can make up for college/education with work experience. The trouble is that now it is going to be hard to get that initial work experience without something additional. I managed to do it for a couple of reasons:
1) The year was 2000 when I started (economy) 2) I had done a lot of random sysadmin type work for random companies and people throughout middle school and high school that I could put on my resumé. (It's better than a blank resumé).
But generally after about 2 or 3 jobs, you're fine.. At least that's what I've found. If you're good enough, all you need is to get them to interview you. That's all your resumé needs to accomplish.
I will concede, however, that doing what I did would be harder now than it was 4 years ago, but not impossible.
New York has finals in June.. So does New Jersey and a lot of the east coast. It wasn't until I moved to Colorado that the school year began and ended a month earlier.
If you read the specs page, it says that the airport express has no 'LAN port' and only a 'WAN port'. This leads me to believe that it will not act in the way that you are hoping, unless of course you have a wireless adapter for your xbox.
I've found dan's documentation to be quite good. Most of his documentation is in a step by step format, and after following it you have something that works.
This is pet peeve of mine.. Who gives a shit what your serial number is as long as it incrememts. tinydns's method is perfectly fine as far as I'm concerned. Saves me a lot of time. In case you haven't read my post above, I currently run tinydns with over 100,000 RRs and 1000 domains. I have had no problems except for with one registrar who complained that our serial numbers weren't in the 'yearmonthdatenum' format. They got over it though and just delegated the domain. Why people care about such trivial crap is beyond me..
As another testimonial, I use djbdns for over 900 domains and over 100,000 RRs. We receive about 300 queries/sec with tinydns using about 2% CPU and about 800K of memory. I love the rsync method of syncing dns data, it works especially well for Dynamic DNS (which is something I provide).
As an aside, long ago, ODS (the service I run) ran BIND. At the time BIND used 90+% CPU consistently. Mainly because of the constant dynamic updates being sent to BIND via the update daemon. It also used about 50MB of memory or so (back in 1999 or therabouts). The switch to djbdns came shortly thereafter and I haven't looked back. Granted, djbdns cannot provide immediate dynamic updates because of its use of CDB. However, I find that every 30 seconds proves to be sufficient, especially when the 'secondaries' get updated immediately as well (thanks to rsync). Building the cdb is also remarkably fast, with it taking 0.55 seconds to hash the cdb with over 100k records.
Yup.. My girlfriend goes there now and has fiber running directly to her room. However, the media converter they give you outputs 10mbit if I remember correctly.
I also have well over 100k messages.. Now here's the reason that I don't use Mail.app.. I DO NOT want all of my messages to be stored on my mac as well. That is what IMAP is for. But instead of Mail.app even giving me the option of using server side searching as most complete IMAP clients should, it insists on indexing everything locally in order to provide searching functionality.
Very large mailboxes (30k+ messages?) also take a bit to open in Mail.app as well. In my opinion, if you're using a good IMAP client, the amount of messages you have should be irrelevant to the speed in which you can use your mail client. I currently use Mulberry and am satisfied at the performance which it gives me. It only loads headers for the ~20 messages surrounding where you're scrolled to and therefore provides excellent performance on any size mailbox. The other thing I like is that all searches are performed server side and usually 4 at a time (customizable just like everything in mulberry is). This means that my mail store on my local drive? Zero.. I store nothing locally, including my mail settings. Those are all stored on an IMSP server. This is how I like my mail to be.
I have a honda civic hybrid and I typically get around 42mpg.. It is advertised as 47. I think the main issue is that they are driven in 55 zones where as most of the highways around here are 65. If I drive 55 in the car, I can easily get 50mpg. The extra 10 mph can make a big difference. But what it boils down to for me, is that I get better mileage with this car than I would in a standard civic.
The only difference between FairPlay v2 and FairPlay v1 is the way that the key store was encrypted (SC Info/iSCInfo is now iSCInfo 2). The actual keys contained inside are the same.
Who's 'they'? It's one person and his name is Jon Lech Johansen. Though there has been help on drms.c as far as styling and layout goes from someone else. But the actual reverse engineering was done by one person.
I'm not saying that it's impossible. I'm sure any dedicated individual could do it. However, tours in datacenters are typically guided (especially at equinix). As far as getting in via unlocked doors, I'd say definitely would not happen here. You have to go through about 4 doors and 4 hand scanners to get in. There are no other entrances.
Of course, most of it is more for show than practicality. I mean, they have hand scanners on every single cage. Definitely a little bit excessive:). However, I'm sure it impresses many decision makers.
The way I was picturing what he was saying in my head was:
A label-less keyboard with transparent keys. A light behind the key would project the correct value for that key onto it, essentially giving it a label.
I don't think this was what he was actually saying, but I do think that a keyboard like that would be cool, albeit expensive;).
Oh.. and one more thing.. Isn't there enough stuff named 'Chevy Chase' around here? It makes me sick. I never understood, is the town and everything else named after him? Or was he named after the town?
I'm going for Annapolis.. But I may be biased ;)
The i60+ have this functionality I believe (Styles). However, I don't think you can limit alerts to only a certain email address.. Unless there's some way that I don't know about?
Regards,
-JD-
Here's another thing non-nextel users don't realize about nextel phones. They are built to be ANNOYING. By that I mean, they are given typically by companies to their employees as ways to get in touch with them. A result of this is that the default settings for many things on nextel phones never give up on alerting you until you acknowledge them. An example would be when you receive voicemail, it will ring every 30 seconds or so non-stop until you acknowledge it. If you receive a 2 way message, it will beep every 3 seconds or so until you acknowledge it, etc.
I, for one, would be extremely pissed off if I received SMS spam in the middle of the night on my Nextel phone. It is equivalent to someone sending it to your pager. It is built to wake you up. I do not pay per message for SMS with nextel, so that's not the factor with me, for me it's the annoyance. I can't and won't deal with that kind of hassle.
I've personally used this. As well as the full name: Dev Null
ods=> select count(*) from users;
:) (no email verification is performed by us)
count
--------
104046
(1 row)
ods=> select count(*) from users where lower(email)='someone@somewhere.com';
count
-------
0
(1 row)
ods=> select count(*) from users where lower(email)='noone@nowhere.com';
count
-------
0
(1 row)
We must either have very honest users or they're more creative with their bogus addresses
I completely agree. I was saying that I wasn't sure if he really believed that or not. But that it didn't need to modded down as it's really impossible to determine. I really imagine if it were flamebait it would be much worse than that, and it would be AC.
Regards,
-JD-
I'm not sure if the parent is a troll or not. But I don't think it needed to be modded flamebait simply because the poster disagreed with a ruling. That said, I *DO* agree with the ruling.
What some people don't understand is that the Supreme Court has one job. That job is to determine the constitutionality of the various rulings and laws that are brought before them. Their job is not to make judgment calls for the rest of the country based on their own morals. It is to make calls for the country based on what they interpret from a single document. Granted, not all of them appear to do this. As I don't see how this could be considered constitutional at all (and yet it still got 4 votes). However, that is their job.
I really do believe that if people have strong feelings in this direction that perhaps they need to live in a different country which will protect its people from things which the government deems to be unfit for the population. Try China? It sounds like a better fit in this regard. I'm sure you can find plenty of others as well. However, the Constitution is what this country is supposed to be based on. Lately this foundation appears to have been slowly crumbling due to people like the parent poster. I do believe though that in time, these things will work themselves out. Or at least, that's my hope.
Regards,
-JD-
That's not necessarily true. You can make up for college/education with work experience. The trouble is that now it is going to be hard to get that initial work experience without something additional. I managed to do it for a couple of reasons:
1) The year was 2000 when I started (economy)
2) I had done a lot of random sysadmin type work for random companies and people throughout middle school and high school that I could put on my resumé. (It's better than a blank resumé).
But generally after about 2 or 3 jobs, you're fine.. At least that's what I've found. If you're good enough, all you need is to get them to interview you. That's all your resumé needs to accomplish.
I will concede, however, that doing what I did would be harder now than it was 4 years ago, but not impossible.
Regards,
-JD-
New York has finals in June.. So does New Jersey and a lot of the east coast. It wasn't until I moved to Colorado that the school year began and ended a month earlier.
In a one party state, only one party needs to know. In this case it would be the recording party. In two party states.. well you get the idea.
Regards,
-JD-
How was that a troll? It was a completely legitamate question considering he was responding to a post that said 'there is no risk to security'.
-JD-
If you read the specs page, it says that the airport express has no 'LAN port' and only a 'WAN port'. This leads me to believe that it will not act in the way that you are hoping, unless of course you have a wireless adapter for your xbox.
-JD-
I've found dan's documentation to be quite good. Most of his documentation is in a step by step format, and after following it you have something that works.
This is pet peeve of mine.. Who gives a shit what your serial number is as long as it incrememts. tinydns's method is perfectly fine as far as I'm concerned. Saves me a lot of time. In case you haven't read my post above, I currently run tinydns with over 100,000 RRs and 1000 domains. I have had no problems except for with one registrar who complained that our serial numbers weren't in the 'yearmonthdatenum' format. They got over it though and just delegated the domain. Why people care about such trivial crap is beyond me..
As another testimonial, I use djbdns for over 900 domains and over 100,000 RRs. We receive about 300 queries/sec with tinydns using about 2% CPU and about 800K of memory. I love the rsync method of syncing dns data, it works especially well for Dynamic DNS (which is something I provide).
As an aside, long ago, ODS (the service I run) ran BIND. At the time BIND used 90+% CPU consistently. Mainly because of the constant dynamic updates being sent to BIND via the update daemon. It also used about 50MB of memory or so (back in 1999 or therabouts). The switch to djbdns came shortly thereafter and I haven't looked back. Granted, djbdns cannot provide immediate dynamic updates because of its use of CDB. However, I find that every 30 seconds proves to be sufficient, especially when the 'secondaries' get updated immediately as well (thanks to rsync). Building the cdb is also remarkably fast, with it taking 0.55 seconds to hash the cdb with over 100k records.
Overall, I'm quite happy.
Yup.. My girlfriend goes there now and has fiber running directly to her room. However, the media converter they give you outputs 10mbit if I remember correctly.
I also have well over 100k messages.. Now here's the reason that I don't use Mail.app.. I DO NOT want all of my messages to be stored on my mac as well. That is what IMAP is for. But instead of Mail.app even giving me the option of using server side searching as most complete IMAP clients should, it insists on indexing everything locally in order to provide searching functionality.
Very large mailboxes (30k+ messages?) also take a bit to open in Mail.app as well. In my opinion, if you're using a good IMAP client, the amount of messages you have should be irrelevant to the speed in which you can use your mail client. I currently use Mulberry and am satisfied at the performance which it gives me. It only loads headers for the ~20 messages surrounding where you're scrolled to and therefore provides excellent performance on any size mailbox. The other thing I like is that all searches are performed server side and usually 4 at a time (customizable just like everything in mulberry is). This means that my mail store on my local drive? Zero.. I store nothing locally, including my mail settings. Those are all stored on an IMSP server. This is how I like my mail to be.
-JD-
I have a honda civic hybrid and I typically get around 42mpg.. It is advertised as 47. I think the main issue is that they are driven in 55 zones where as most of the highways around here are 65. If I drive 55 in the car, I can easily get 50mpg. The extra 10 mph can make a big difference. But what it boils down to for me, is that I get better mileage with this car than I would in a standard civic.
The only difference between FairPlay v2 and FairPlay v1 is the way that the key store was encrypted (SC Info/iSCInfo is now iSCInfo 2). The actual keys contained inside are the same.
Who's 'they'? It's one person and his name is Jon Lech Johansen. Though there has been help on drms.c as far as styling and layout goes from someone else. But the actual reverse engineering was done by one person.
No it wasn't. You're thinking of the update daap protocol. FairPlay v2 took a few days.
I'm not saying that it's impossible. I'm sure any dedicated individual could do it. However, tours in datacenters are typically guided (especially at equinix). As far as getting in via unlocked doors, I'd say definitely would not happen here. You have to go through about 4 doors and 4 hand scanners to get in. There are no other entrances.
:). However, I'm sure it impresses many decision makers.
Of course, most of it is more for show than practicality. I mean, they have hand scanners on every single cage. Definitely a little bit excessive
-JD-
The way I was picturing what he was saying in my head was:
;).
A label-less keyboard with transparent keys. A light behind the key would project the correct value for that key onto it, essentially giving it a label.
I don't think this was what he was actually saying, but I do think that a keyboard like that would be cool, albeit expensive
-JD-
For those who will probably ask. The lighting can also be turned off and on, and its luminescence adjusted, from (ironically) the keyboard.