I think the may have waited until the building around the site had been examined. Examining a 3 story building thoroughly is a multi-day task in many cases. Examing a large section of New York City took a while.
CNN did a similiar graphic of the destruction on one of the first days, but did not color code what buildings were damaged, etc.
I suspect they did this graphic right after the results were announced by New York. As I recall yesterday was the first day that many people were allowed back into a lot of the buildings in the area, and therefore the inspections were only completed in the last couple of days.
He said forms, not docs. I use abiword a lot, but often I have to go to the dusty machine and load Word because some manager wants a form filled out right in word.
Never mind that 9 times out of 10 if we don't rename the file he overwrites everybodies response the next time he gets anothere response. Forms is what it has a problem with, and you got to love the pages of spam if you run abiword from a terminal telling you insane, I said insane formatting.
That is why the put the fine print on the outside of the box, that the sale of this BOX is subject to additional licensing terms. Then they also tell you to return the product if you don't like the terms.
Look at the bottom of that page. The guidelines tell you how to use it but then they disclaim the whole thing, saying even against infringement.
To me that seems to say, you can use it by the following rules but if you find a way around it we will hit you with a infringement lawsuit.
In addition anybody besides me notice how fast Microsoft Pages CHANGE? Look at the link they tell you to point it to, stating it must be an active link. Translation: If we move the page, we can revoke your use of the logo.
The academic military internet still exists, and is STILL used by a great many people. In many cases it also carries some of the commercial traffic that you seem so proud of.
As for people not having used it in the past. I have used it since 1990. (Yes, that would be before Al Gore invented it.) I can remember quite a large and vibrant community on the net. The same community which gave birth to your precious Open Source software.
What was the two worst milestones for the internet?
1) When it became no longer illegal to play internet games like MUDs from Oz. I have not personally dealt with Elz, but he sounds like many of the obstinate Australians I have had to deal with admining MUDs.
2) When http was developed. I would much rather see slashdot as a text file I could download via ftp. Or perhaps telnet into it.
MUDs which are a internet game that have been around for a while, run on relatively little code. Many people are shocked when I tell them that I have a, to use the current marketing term, Massively Multiplayer Online RPG, that uses less than 2 megs of source code, can be e-mail in an under 800k file, etc, and can be compiled on Win32 and Unix systems.
However, it doesn't compare to this, the 16k MUD competition that was held a while back. http://www.andreasen.org/16k.shtml (yeah, I could have made it a link, but didn't want people to think it was something else.
Yeah, both of those 'features' were turned on by Earthlink under threat of lawsuit by either MAPS or ORBS. I don't remember which one.
The way to work around it are as follows:
Use your domain address in the reply-to address to get around the FROM issue. Domains that are hosted with Earthlink, or that customers have e-mail addresses through Earthlink with are exempt from this, they are considered valid FROM addresses examples:
mac.com
Set your SMTP server to listen on a different port.
These were turned on to defeat the typical script kiddie, and because as part of the settlement Earthlink agreed to implement end-to-end accountability for when users spam. It isn't about the resources of the mail server, although it is cloaked in that by many.
The problem is spammers used to simply use the incorrect FROM field to try and hide. That is easy to stop because with the ISP headers on the e-mail it is easy to track down the spammer and cancel their account. SMTP auth is set up.
Next step spammers took was to sign up with DSL with one provider and use open relay SMTP servers all day. Yes, you can run around swatting open relays all day and get nowhere to stop spammers. So MAPS or ORBS went after Earthlink to set up some accountability for people connecting with them and then using open relays.
While I dislike port 25 blocking it is here to stay. Yes, spam is bad, but fighting it should not inconvenience the average user, or legitimate business use. Mindspring had it for about year before they merged with Earthlink.
There is one exception to Port 25 blocking on that network. Customers with static IP IDSL, SDSL, Frame and Point to Point, since many of them host their own mail servers and are responsible for their own actions.
Another thing that is used as a simple measure to prevent incoming spam is only accepting mail from hosts which meet the following criteria:
- You can reverse look up the IP
- The resulting name is listed in the mx for the record they reverse as.
When you run a line for a specific purpose, such as an alarm, you either pay the telco's inflated cost of running it, or committ to service for a period of time, and pay a lower installation. If you cancel before the committment, you pay a penalty.
It is only DSL from the DSLAM, everything else is the typical phone company frame/fiber/copper cloud. When you support DSL you worry about the DSLAM to customer, and Redback. The cloud in between with the PVC you bitch at the phone company to fix. If it is aDSL, you have to wait. If it is SDSL or IDSL and a business you can usually bitch louder and get it fixed in 72 hours. Not always, but 72 hours is light speed for a phone company.
And people wonder why DSL providers have to raise rates, it costs to pay people to bitch at phone companies all day.
In danger of being moderated as redundant. Yours works because you havea mini-DSLAM. They are second or third generation DSLAMs designed to be placed further out in the field. If Verizon were to put one of these in the original askers area, he could get DSL, but they would have to share the box with every DSL provider in the area who wanted to use it, at cost of operation.
In many cases this cost of operation is next to nothing, and they would never recoup the money it took to install it put it in. If they put it in at the request of a specific CLEC or ISP, the CLEC or ISP would have to pay for the installation. My understanding is with the situation in the DSL markets the regional telcos have stopped installng these.
The reasons for stopping are too fold. Many of the debts that Northpoint went under with were for these. Not installing them on their own helps squeeze the remaining ones out of the market, and the LEC's (telcos) don't want to spend money on uncertainty.
Yes, you could have an alarm line put in. However, because the alarm uses the high frequency range that DSL uses for it's monitoring, you won't get DSL on that line.
Before things looked so bad for them I would have suggested a dedicated line, instead of line sharing, from Covad or one of their resellers in your area. To get it you might have had to sign up for SDSL.
If you know a business with bandwidth, you might want to look up the Roll your own DSL article that was on slashdot last year. Request the line be run point to point with somebody willing to share bandwidth. Not, cheap, but workable.
It is illegal to say you are going to kill the President, or you would like to kill him, even in passing or joking. It falls under the category of making terrorist threats, and can be a felony. While I have not seen or heard of anybody being prosecuted for that ALONE. I have heard it is grounds for a wiretap, and several other nasty things I don't like thinking of the government doing.
I must say the area of "terrorist threats" has been taken a bit far. I know of an individual who while drunk said he would like to kill him neighbors, and because of a past history of "careless acts" (DUI) while drinking, was prosecuted for making "terrorist threats" and is now on probabation, and was informed it was one strike, towards California's three strike law.
While I dislike the person on probation, I think that is a bit extreme.
Slightly off-topic. This thread to and from CmdrTaco, emphasizes the general quality of users. It seems the lower the number, the more thoughtful the user. Of course, there are exceptions, like they guy below with a 45xxxx number over the FAQ/and good to discuss it.
There is an RPM in Mandrake 8.0 for backward compatibility with older Mandrake releases. Mandrake 8 by default only installs 2.2,and not the backward compatibility.
Go into rpmdrake and search for glibc you will find it.
Yes, this paint was (and may still be), quite popular in a lot of applications. Hence, if you read any old accounts of World War I or II Naval warfare, you will here reference to the paint burning on bulkheads.
First, read the article before you post. The generoter is only about 3 inches at the largest part.
Second this is methanol, which is basically an alcohol, it burns yes, but it isn't going to explode in the massive fireball your are talking about.
Third the generator is placed inside the pack, chances of hitting, are pretty slim.
You can't see it to target it
If spray enough lead around to hit it, then you are going to have taken the soldier down anyways, and the little poof, or fire at worst that results would be a minor thing compared to the fact that he is already KIA.
I remember back in 1998 there was MUD that run on a box that was plugged into a connection that was not on the schematics for the school in a basement somewhere.
It was found, shortly thereafter it was backup on another Linux box in another tucked away corner. I would have to do some digging to find it again.
Trying to remember the name of it, and the home page for it used to have pictures. Can't remember though which school it was. I want to say it was in the Western US somewhere.
No, they would not route around their chunk. I can think of a few companies they could buy and NOT be able to route well around.
Is the first that comes to mind uu.net - which owns alter.net, grid.net, and a bunch of others. Most ISPs route through them or a subisdiary in one form or another.
I work for an ISP, doing tech support. I started at about 30% higher per hour, and Issues like this are the issue of Customer Service, and not tech support, thank god.
As for the familynet idea, you can do it with a variety of ways not requiring the ISP offer it.
As for censorware that was mentioned above, I have also resisted installing on my in-laws computer. They have a 16 year old who is turning into a real slut, because even the best censorware is not perfect. Instant Messaging is a problem, and considered installing Cybersnoop. It doesn't censor automatically, rather it logs the pages visited. I know you will find porn even on accident out there, clicking off it quickly is one thing. Lingering is another. And yes, pop-ups look different in the logs than lingering.
Newsgroups are a little different than a user accessing a website that is based overseas. You can configure your news servers to carry or not to carry any newsgroup.
Does anybody know which newsgroup this was? Seems like any common sense admin would refuse to carry alt.sex.child.binary.pictures if that is what it is. However if it was alt.child.pictures, it is kinda ambigous.
Linux has come down a few times and said you can't use that word. I remember somewhere about a porn site with linux in the domain name or something.
Also to retain a trademark yu have to exercise it.
It doesn't matter what commercial use? Put a store on the project page that sells project buttons. They can sell at cost. Heck, you just have to try and sell them. You then have commercial use.
CNN did a similiar graphic of the destruction on one of the first days, but did not color code what buildings were damaged, etc.
I suspect they did this graphic right after the results were announced by New York. As I recall yesterday was the first day that many people were allowed back into a lot of the buildings in the area, and therefore the inspections were only completed in the last couple of days.
Never mind that 9 times out of 10 if we don't rename the file he overwrites everybodies response the next time he gets anothere response. Forms is what it has a problem with, and you got to love the pages of spam if you run abiword from a terminal telling you insane, I said insane formatting.
Yes, that is how he got the 170MB. He was running the services that WOULD be run in the office on the server.
That is why the put the fine print on the outside of the box, that the sale of this BOX is subject to additional licensing terms. Then they also tell you to return the product if you don't like the terms.
To me that seems to say, you can use it by the following rules but if you find a way around it we will hit you with a infringement lawsuit.
In addition anybody besides me notice how fast Microsoft Pages CHANGE? Look at the link they tell you to point it to, stating it must be an active link. Translation: If we move the page, we can revoke your use of the logo.
The academic military internet still exists, and is STILL used by a great many people. In many cases it also carries some of the commercial traffic that you seem so proud of.
As for people not having used it in the past. I have used it since 1990. (Yes, that would be before Al Gore invented it.) I can remember quite a large and vibrant community on the net. The same community which gave birth to your precious Open Source software.
What was the two worst milestones for the internet?
1) When it became no longer illegal to play internet games like MUDs from Oz. I have not personally dealt with Elz, but he sounds like many of the obstinate Australians I have had to deal with admining MUDs.
2) When http was developed. I would much rather see slashdot as a text file I could download via ftp. Or perhaps telnet into it.
MUDs which are a internet game that have been around for a while, run on relatively little code. Many people are shocked when I tell them that I have a, to use the current marketing term, Massively Multiplayer Online RPG, that uses less than 2 megs of source code, can be e-mail in an under 800k file, etc, and can be compiled on Win32 and Unix systems. However, it doesn't compare to this, the 16k MUD competition that was held a while back. http://www.andreasen.org/16k.shtml (yeah, I could have made it a link, but didn't want people to think it was something else.
Use your domain address in the reply-to address to get around the FROM issue. Domains that are hosted with Earthlink, or that customers have e-mail addresses through Earthlink with are exempt from this, they are considered valid FROM addresses examples: mac.com
Set your SMTP server to listen on a different port.
These were turned on to defeat the typical script kiddie, and because as part of the settlement Earthlink agreed to implement end-to-end accountability for when users spam. It isn't about the resources of the mail server, although it is cloaked in that by many.
The problem is spammers used to simply use the incorrect FROM field to try and hide. That is easy to stop because with the ISP headers on the e-mail it is easy to track down the spammer and cancel their account. SMTP auth is set up.
Next step spammers took was to sign up with DSL with one provider and use open relay SMTP servers all day. Yes, you can run around swatting open relays all day and get nowhere to stop spammers. So MAPS or ORBS went after Earthlink to set up some accountability for people connecting with them and then using open relays.
While I dislike port 25 blocking it is here to stay. Yes, spam is bad, but fighting it should not inconvenience the average user, or legitimate business use. Mindspring had it for about year before they merged with Earthlink.
There is one exception to Port 25 blocking on that network. Customers with static IP IDSL, SDSL, Frame and Point to Point, since many of them host their own mail servers and are responsible for their own actions.
Another thing that is used as a simple measure to prevent incoming spam is only accepting mail from hosts which meet the following criteria: - You can reverse look up the IP - The resulting name is listed in the mx for the record they reverse as.
When you run a line for a specific purpose, such as an alarm, you either pay the telco's inflated cost of running it, or committ to service for a period of time, and pay a lower installation. If you cancel before the committment, you pay a penalty.
And people wonder why DSL providers have to raise rates, it costs to pay people to bitch at phone companies all day.
In many cases this cost of operation is next to nothing, and they would never recoup the money it took to install it put it in. If they put it in at the request of a specific CLEC or ISP, the CLEC or ISP would have to pay for the installation. My understanding is with the situation in the DSL markets the regional telcos have stopped installng these.
The reasons for stopping are too fold. Many of the debts that Northpoint went under with were for these. Not installing them on their own helps squeeze the remaining ones out of the market, and the LEC's (telcos) don't want to spend money on uncertainty.
Before things looked so bad for them I would have suggested a dedicated line, instead of line sharing, from Covad or one of their resellers in your area. To get it you might have had to sign up for SDSL.
If you know a business with bandwidth, you might want to look up the Roll your own DSL article that was on slashdot last year. Request the line be run point to point with somebody willing to share bandwidth. Not, cheap, but workable.
I must say the area of "terrorist threats" has been taken a bit far. I know of an individual who while drunk said he would like to kill him neighbors, and because of a past history of "careless acts" (DUI) while drinking, was prosecuted for making "terrorist threats" and is now on probabation, and was informed it was one strike, towards California's three strike law.
While I dislike the person on probation, I think that is a bit extreme.
Slightly off-topic. This thread to and from CmdrTaco, emphasizes the general quality of users. It seems the lower the number, the more thoughtful the user. Of course, there are exceptions, like they guy below with a 45xxxx number over the FAQ/and good to discuss it.
There is an RPM in Mandrake 8.0 for backward compatibility with older Mandrake releases. Mandrake 8 by default only installs 2.2,and not the backward compatibility. Go into rpmdrake and search for glibc you will find it.
While there are some pages that MAY get more hits per day, I can't think of a better geek to geek endorsement.
Yes, this paint was (and may still be), quite popular in a lot of applications. Hence, if you read any old accounts of World War I or II Naval warfare, you will here reference to the paint burning on bulkheads.
Second this is methanol, which is basically an alcohol, it burns yes, but it isn't going to explode in the massive fireball your are talking about.
Third the generator is placed inside the pack, chances of hitting, are pretty slim.
You can't see it to target it
If spray enough lead around to hit it, then you are going to have taken the soldier down anyways, and the little poof, or fire at worst that results would be a minor thing compared to the fact that he is already KIA.
It was found, shortly thereafter it was backup on another Linux box in another tucked away corner. I would have to do some digging to find it again.
Trying to remember the name of it, and the home page for it used to have pictures. Can't remember though which school it was. I want to say it was in the Western US somewhere.
No, they would not route around their chunk. I can think of a few companies they could buy and NOT be able to route well around. Is the first that comes to mind uu.net - which owns alter.net, grid.net, and a bunch of others. Most ISPs route through them or a subisdiary in one form or another.
I work for an ISP, doing tech support. I started at about 30% higher per hour, and Issues like this are the issue of Customer Service, and not tech support, thank god.
As for the familynet idea, you can do it with a variety of ways not requiring the ISP offer it.
As for censorware that was mentioned above, I have also resisted installing on my in-laws computer. They have a 16 year old who is turning into a real slut, because even the best censorware is not perfect. Instant Messaging is a problem, and considered installing Cybersnoop. It doesn't censor automatically, rather it logs the pages visited. I know you will find porn even on accident out there, clicking off it quickly is one thing. Lingering is another. And yes, pop-ups look different in the logs than lingering.
Good 'ole Pine will do IMAP
Does anybody know which newsgroup this was? Seems like any common sense admin would refuse to carry alt.sex.child.binary.pictures if that is what it is. However if it was alt.child.pictures, it is kinda ambigous.
Linux has come down a few times and said you can't use that word. I remember somewhere about a porn site with linux in the domain name or something. Also to retain a trademark yu have to exercise it.
It doesn't matter what commercial use? Put a store on the project page that sells project buttons. They can sell at cost. Heck, you just have to try and sell them. You then have commercial use.