I know it's not scientific. But of the 30 + patients that I saw in my uncle's Alzheimers ward, only one was obese. Maybe by that stage they have all gotten thinner because they forgot to eat. But I really would like to know more about the cause and effect here.
Do Web hosting services even have a fiduciary duty to protect their clients, or is this all legal bluff and bluster?
If you want legal advice, why don't you go to Harvard or Yale law, bulletin board or something.
If you haven't noticed lately, our expertise lies mainly in games, which usually involves shooting people or blowing shit up. We're not to interested in the subtleties of legal discussion. If you can't shoot it or blow it the fuck up, we really don't have the patience for it.
Unless you are basically giving us a chance to call a member of the female persuasion whose twat we will never touch, a skank whore, then this article serves no purpose.
Didn't anybody watch this? there have been other story lines along this genre, and it never works out, never, they always get the wrong person and it's used for evil.
Okay if your going to do this anyway, here let me gaze into my crystal ball. Blacklist China, North Korea, and major parts of Russia.
I seem to recall a great hub bub, when a number of people were targeting over flying jets with green lasers.
Maybe they should dump the targetting computers and get some nerd boys to play around with their cool laser.
This way we could finally find these dweebs a job.
Despite his use of a homonym, I think he has a pretty good point.
Sometimes trying to follow OOP coding can just flat out be a nightmare and it is especially frustrating when procedural code would have worked just as efficiently without out everything being created into a complex objects. Maybe I mean that it would be a hell of a lot easier to read. But I guess the opposite could also be said,sometimes a few complex objects would help, but frankly I don't recall running into this in the last 5 years.
Sometimes during orientation I wish that they would emphasize that they are now in Texas and people here have guns.
Python, e.g, was not designed to be a scripting language. It can be used in that role with great success, but that does not make it one.
Just to be safe up front, I'm not just asking a question and trying to get/gain some insite.
I have usually classified anything that doesn't get compiled until runtime as scripting languages. I know that scripting is also associated with easy, non-complex, toys despite their professional usefulness in areas such as system administration. Personally I will use scripting languages to prototype and test algorithms (Yes, sometimes it seems to be a waste of time, because the differences can be immense).
I have also been using some of my php and perl prototypes for a couple of years, just never got around to making that translations.
Non-scripting languages, I usually associate with being faster and less clunky at runtime. That was until I had some run ins with some Java applications. This is also the reason I haven't tried to do anything serious with Java. Mainly I use C and C++, but I have recently been faced with some code that is in Java that I would like to use.
So, my questions are, What really defines a language as a scripting language? And do I have a misconception about Java being slow (I really don't know how this could be, if it is being compiled to machine language, but maybe the compilers are inefficient)?
I guess I've also wondered why can't python, perl, php... have a modified language fork, so that they can be precompiled? Is it because the end result, just wouldn't be worth it and you would just end up with another Java (He said half joking).
I don't know. AC is the network administrator at KFC. He's got the network and computers working so well, he spends most of his time working the drive through window.
Basic system administration should be required for business and management degrees, enough to maintain the disconnected key server and the separated subnet that handles all the most sensitive data.
This is a prime illustration of the diconnect between IT and business. If you can't see it, then that's why it's there.
Most business people struggle to turn on a computer. They just want it to work.
Having business educated people in charge of the most sensitive systems, how is that going to improve things. I'd say this is a good way of increasing the probability of putting the fox in the hen house.
If you are really concerned about the security, hire a security group to audit the sysadmins on occasions. If the security group knows what they are doing they will make an untrustworthy sysadmin very very nervous.
But now you've got to find a competent security group to do that and it's going to cost more money. Which is what the original author was trying to avoid by outsourcing?
Basically, if you can't trust your sysadmin and it really bothers you, then you are screwed.
Working as sysadmin in house and as consultant, I've usually found that those who don't trust me are usually the most unethical or the most power hungry. I usually find that it's best to move on before my tolerance limit is reached.
I'd mod you up.
But this is the customer line they are looking for. We currently use 6 computers with Phenom II 940's onboard at this time for data analysis. When comparing these with Intel computers the cost would have been much higher. What we found repeatedly during matrix calculations was that the performance vs cost just wasn't a contest.
I am really really beginning to wonder how much calculation stress people put on their computer in this mid-range market, because I hear and see all of these benchmarks and people discussing their performance and I just don't see a cost performance comparison. I have talked with other people who do some of the same type of work and they see the same thing.
We do take some added cautions with air circulation just to make sure that we don't run into issues. We repeatedly have cranked these things for 24 hours straight with cpu's running at 70 to 95% of capacity and actually had one occasion where the systems ran over a weekend (limits weren't set correctly).
There is user opt in. But it is in the fine print and when you set up the phone. When I got mine the sales person set up the phone, but handed it to me to click this page. So I believe in this case they are legally covered.
But if how do they know if all the sales people are doing this for sure? That's another question, which getting the answer to would be fun. Especially if it involves a lawsuit.
I have a palm pre and I will probably be giving it back or moving to something else. This was just the icing on the cake.
The navigation doesn't work half the time, which is one of the main reasons I updated to it.
There is also a lack of apps. Specifically one where I can store information encrypted. Apparently they had tried to port the app which did this on my previous palm, but a number of users are complaining that they are losing this data.
I think the palm pre was the right idea but isn't ready for prime time.
At this time I definitely wish that I had saved myself a couple of hundred bucks and gotten a blackberry or just waited.
For what I spent I could have installed a navigation system in my car and been better off.
I was recommending Dell lattitudes, IBM thinkpads primarily a few years back.
An executive wanting to be cost conscious because he didn't use any serious programs wanted to get a Sony. Lasted 2 years. Went and got another one and lasted about the same amount of time. Has yet another one, this one is going on 3 years. The remaining users (4) that got the Dells and the IBM's have been chugging along for 5++ years.
As for OS. I have some data mining software that I use and for the last year I have seen people complain over and over again that they are seeing slow performance on Vista. In some cases it is 4x. It's proprietary software and the people who do the programming just aren't that literate on what is going on. But basically it boils down to, they do not understand why their program runs slower in some cases on Vista. So Vista users in this case are screwed, blame it on Vista or the 3rd party vendor.
Maybe sooner or later consumers will realize that they are getting less with the latest computers primarily because the OS and the software on top just runs less efficiently.
And I can't really say that Linux is immune to this.
I recently looked into purchasing some data analysis software and found that it cost $1000 dollars extra to be able to run it in SMP mode.
I think they are looking for a government rebate much like "Cash for Clunkers".
Turn in those old gas guzzling 747's.
Get the new propeller driven Hindenburg, designed by high school kids and get $45 million back from the government
Ahh the analogies never end.
I just went to the vmware site to look into running Vmware on FreeBSD. They have a thread from 2005 where users wanted to migrate vmware hosts from Linux to FreeBSD for stability reasons.
Can you give some links to information on how to do this? We are looking at getting some more printers and currently have a Zebra printer connected to a windows client.
It would be nice to be able to integrate this into usage with our database system to print labels.
We currently use the Zebra software and copy and paste into a template.
This printer appears to come with software to make barcodes.
Do you print barcodes or are you printing standard labels? How do you print barcode labels?
I ask because we have a Zebra and we are looking to get another printer or 2 soon for barcodes.
I know it's not scientific. But of the 30 + patients that I saw in my uncle's Alzheimers ward, only one was obese. Maybe by that stage they have all gotten thinner because they forgot to eat. But I really would like to know more about the cause and effect here.
Do Web hosting services even have a fiduciary duty to protect their clients, or is this all legal bluff and bluster?
If you want legal advice, why don't you go to Harvard or Yale law, bulletin board or something.
If you haven't noticed lately, our expertise lies mainly in games, which usually involves shooting people or blowing shit up. We're not to interested in the subtleties of legal discussion. If you can't shoot it or blow it the fuck up, we really don't have the patience for it.
Unless you are basically giving us a chance to call a member of the female persuasion whose twat we will never touch, a skank whore, then this article serves no purpose.
Liskula Cohen, you skank whore.
Didn't anybody watch this? there have been other story lines along this genre, and it never works out, never, they always get the wrong person and it's used for evil.
Okay if your going to do this anyway, here let me gaze into my crystal ball. Blacklist China, North Korea, and major parts of Russia.
I seem to recall a great hub bub, when a number of people were targeting over flying jets with green lasers.
Maybe they should dump the targetting computers and get some nerd boys to play around with their cool laser.
This way we could finally find these dweebs a job.
Do you get paid for your personal Python projects?
Despite his use of a homonym, I think he has a pretty good point.
Sometimes trying to follow OOP coding can just flat out be a nightmare and it is especially frustrating when procedural code would have worked just as efficiently without out everything being created into a complex objects. Maybe I mean that it would be a hell of a lot easier to read. But I guess the opposite could also be said,sometimes a few complex objects would help, but frankly I don't recall running into this in the last 5 years.
Sometimes during orientation I wish that they would emphasize that they are now in Texas and people here have guns.
Python, e.g, was not designed to be a scripting language. It can be used in that role with great success, but that does not make it one.
Just to be safe up front, I'm not just asking a question and trying to get/gain some insite.
I have usually classified anything that doesn't get compiled until runtime as scripting languages. I know that scripting is also associated with easy, non-complex, toys despite their professional usefulness in areas such as system administration. Personally I will use scripting languages to prototype and test algorithms (Yes, sometimes it seems to be a waste of time, because the differences can be immense).
I have also been using some of my php and perl prototypes for a couple of years, just never got around to making that translations.
Non-scripting languages, I usually associate with being faster and less clunky at runtime. That was until I had some run ins with some Java applications. This is also the reason I haven't tried to do anything serious with Java. Mainly I use C and C++, but I have recently been faced with some code that is in Java that I would like to use.
So, my questions are, What really defines a language as a scripting language? And do I have a misconception about Java being slow (I really don't know how this could be, if it is being compiled to machine language, but maybe the compilers are inefficient)?
I guess I've also wondered why can't python, perl, php... have a modified language fork, so that they can be precompiled? Is it because the end result, just wouldn't be worth it and you would just end up with another Java (He said half joking).
Sometimes, they need to be able to mode things higher than just 5.
I don't know. AC is the network administrator at KFC. He's got the network and computers working so well, he spends most of his time working the drive through window.
Basic system administration should be required for business and management degrees, enough to maintain the disconnected key server and the separated subnet that handles all the most sensitive data.
This is a prime illustration of the diconnect between IT and business. If you can't see it, then that's why it's there.
Most business people struggle to turn on a computer. They just want it to work.
Having business educated people in charge of the most sensitive systems, how is that going to improve things. I'd say this is a good way of increasing the probability of putting the fox in the hen house.
If you are really concerned about the security, hire a security group to audit the sysadmins on occasions.
If the security group knows what they are doing they will make an untrustworthy sysadmin very very nervous.
But now you've got to find a competent security group to do that and it's going to cost more money. Which is what the original author was trying to avoid by outsourcing?
Basically, if you can't trust your sysadmin and it really bothers you, then you are screwed.
Working as sysadmin in house and as consultant, I've usually found that those who don't trust me are usually the most unethical or the most power hungry. I usually find that it's best to move on before my tolerance limit is reached.
I'd mod you up.
But this is the customer line they are looking for. We currently use 6 computers with Phenom II 940's onboard at this time for data analysis. When comparing these with Intel computers the cost would have been much higher. What we found repeatedly during matrix calculations was that the performance vs cost just wasn't a contest.
I am really really beginning to wonder how much calculation stress people put on their computer in this mid-range market, because I hear and see all of these benchmarks and people discussing their performance and I just don't see a cost performance comparison. I have talked with other people who do some of the same type of work and they see the same thing.
We do take some added cautions with air circulation just to make sure that we don't run into issues. We repeatedly have cranked these things for 24 hours straight with cpu's running at 70 to 95% of capacity and actually had one occasion where the systems ran over a weekend (limits weren't set correctly).
Nope he's just resting.
Kind of like when a couple of planes crash into buildings.
There is user opt in. But it is in the fine print and when you set up the phone. When I got mine the sales person set up the phone, but handed it to me to click this page. So I believe in this case they are legally covered.
But if how do they know if all the sales people are doing this for sure? That's another question, which getting the answer to would be fun. Especially if it involves a lawsuit.
I have a palm pre and I will probably be giving it back or moving to something else. This was just the icing on the cake.
The navigation doesn't work half the time, which is one of the main reasons I updated to it.
There is also a lack of apps. Specifically one where I can store information encrypted. Apparently they had tried to port the app which did this on my previous palm, but a number of users are complaining that they are losing this data.
I think the palm pre was the right idea but isn't ready for prime time.
At this time I definitely wish that I had saved myself a couple of hundred bucks and gotten a blackberry or just waited.
For what I spent I could have installed a navigation system in my car and been better off.
I was recommending Dell lattitudes, IBM thinkpads primarily a few years back.
An executive wanting to be cost conscious because he didn't use any serious programs wanted to get a Sony. Lasted 2 years. Went and got another one and lasted about the same amount of time. Has yet another one, this one is going on 3 years. The remaining users (4) that got the Dells and the IBM's have been chugging along for 5++ years.
As for OS. I have some data mining software that I use and for the last year I have seen people complain over and over again that they are seeing slow performance on Vista. In some cases it is 4x. It's proprietary software and the people who do the programming just aren't that literate on what is going on. But basically it boils down to, they do not understand why their program runs slower in some cases on Vista. So Vista users in this case are screwed, blame it on Vista or the 3rd party vendor.
Maybe sooner or later consumers will realize that they are getting less with the latest computers primarily because the OS and the software on top just runs less efficiently.
And I can't really say that Linux is immune to this.
I recently looked into purchasing some data analysis software and found that it cost $1000 dollars extra to be able to run it in SMP mode.
If you only get it to fire 90 miles and locate it in Florida we can restart the cold war.
Or then again you could install it in Cuba and everyone could leave.
Whatever it works for me.
I think they are looking for a government rebate much like "Cash for Clunkers".
Turn in those old gas guzzling 747's.
Get the new propeller driven Hindenburg, designed by high school kids and get $45 million back from the government
If anybody in the US doesn't know that Fox doesn't check information, they deserve to get pwnd.
If you haven't noticed, the US has legalized this to protect our financial institutions.
'Survival is a far easier metric of intelligence to measure than replication of human intelligence,'
If you can't find the answer to the original problem, then change the problem. Is that the philosophy?
It doesn't even work as advertised most of the time and defeating it is so simple a 5 year old with some skill could do it.
Wouldn't that make them an 8 year old?
Ahh the analogies never end.
I just went to the vmware site to look into running Vmware on FreeBSD. They have a thread from 2005 where users wanted to migrate vmware hosts from Linux to FreeBSD for stability reasons.
Can you give some links to information on how to do this? We are looking at getting some more printers and currently have a Zebra printer connected to a windows client.
It would be nice to be able to integrate this into usage with our database system to print labels.
We currently use the Zebra software and copy and paste into a template.
This printer appears to come with software to make barcodes. Do you print barcodes or are you printing standard labels? How do you print barcode labels? I ask because we have a Zebra and we are looking to get another printer or 2 soon for barcodes.