https://www.measurementlab.net... has some good tests. Sadly, some of old Net Neutrality tests have died there - but some of their stuff remains and is good. Back when this fight started, Google backed some groups working to make speed tests that detect if specific slowing was going on - all those tests are at this site - even though the public servers behind them are offline now. Cheers.
So I got into computers early on - having been a technological terror growing up - taking apart everything. My friends dad had gotten a SWTPC 6800 with an SS50 bus and I used that to get my early knowledge on - we were typing in BASIC code on the thing, either adapting games found in issues of Creative Computing magazine, or modifying them to have some fun while figuring out how to do things we wanted. That was early on - later on, when the TRS-80 became more mainstream, the games in the magazine got more platform specific - and Creative Computing printed all the source code for the game in the magazine. Back then there were no "downloads" or "OCR" that could replace simply typing in all the content and trying it. That's what we did. And people weren't perfect - so after typing in 10k lines of code to make a dancing robot, getting random errors at various lines in the code was inevitable - it was that "post entry" debugging where the code education comes in - now you're checking your own work for syntax and other little bits - but to really know what's going on takes time - and then it clicks. The incentive was when the new space shooter was Commodore specific and you had an Apple ][ - this forced you to figure out what they did, convert to Apple, and try your own version.
The "programming" nerd switch, for me, took some years before it clicked - around the middle/end of 10th grade before I became dangerously knowledgeable in this stuff - enough to write a game that summer and get hired by a software firm during my Junior year in high school. That was some 6 years of hands on, with 3 of it focused on learning to code in my off-time.
Season 2, Episode 6: The Ricks Must Be Crazy. "He knew that once I got back to my car, one of two things were gonna happen-- I was gonna have to toss a broken battery, or the battery wouldn't be broken." Peace among worlds, Rick.
I don't know anyone that supports the US Government on this - at least - I don't know anyone who supports them and knows anything about PKI encryption and what it means - if you really want to support the folks arguing for the US Gov in this case, ask if they'll hand all their passwords and PIN's to the FBI. See what their reaction is then.
Back a long time ago, Tsutomu Shimomura (the engineer who ID'd Kevin Mitnick's famous sequence-number attacks), got pissed about Microsoft's FTP server trying to connect on the identd port after he FTP'd into them for any reason.
To get back at Microsoft, Tsutomu setup the chargen service on the identd port (port 113) with a rate-limit. When he FTP'd to Microsoft after that, any connections to port 113 would stay open as his computer would stream all ASCII characters out.
Seeing as you are likely having ports scanned like 80/443 and so on - why not chargen those? The scans will get stuck, and the data will keep flowing until they die. Even better, if they're collecting all the returns - chargen will ensure they get all the ASCII their disks can hold.
Cheers.
https://www.facebook.com/help/...
How old do you have to be to sign up for Facebook? To be eligible to sign up for Facebook, you must be at least 13 years old.
In the header for this, your last sentence: "This article takes readers from the first Crypto War of the early 1990s to the present-day political battle to keep everyone who uses the Internet safe."
The present day battle is not about keeping people safe - it's breaking down people's ability to keep secrets. The cost for this level of protection is way too high.
Google offers free Google Apps for Business for domains with less than 10 users on them - and it's free. Just gotta setup the MX records - I get DNS control for free from GoDaddy as they are my registrar, but I don't host a site at all on my 3-character domain. With that, I can point my MX records to google, and the domain has multiple email accounts on it, all for free. The trick is that the google hides the "get it for free" link on the setup page.
Homeopathy may be crap, but there's no doubt that one of our worlds largest problems is the connection between patents, drug development, and commercial interests focused on profiting on new creations, and not actually spending any time or interest on curing diseases and solving problems using what nature gives us.
Examples of this are rife everywhere - from my own experience, any asthmatic can tell you in the 2000's their rescue inhaler only cost them $15 for the generic - however, when the gas inside the inhaler was changed from a CFC-based propellant to nitrogen, they filed new drug status (for the same ancient drug), purely because they changed the propellant - asthmatics now pay $45 for the same inhaler (with insurance, FYI) with the new gas. Who's to say they won't switch to oxygen or CO2 as a propellant when the next round of patents expire and the prices drop to generic levels?
On the opposite side of the spectrum, herbal remedies can for some things be quite helpful - and some of the "herbal cures" in that realm like Slippery Elm for diverticulitis work very well but are not prescribed by any doctor lawfully as these cures are not tested by anyone officially - because doing so won't guarantee the researchers investment in testing will be paid back because they cannot control who sells that herbal cure afterwards. There are cures in nature that are not being directly researched, presented or even considered by the big pharma community because of this. Many cures in nature are being researched so that the potentially patent-able bits are pulled out for testing and potential commercialization. If they found that chewing a certain leaf or making tea of it cured something important, big pharma would never tell us - not until they pulled the active parts out and sold that to us 15 years later at a premium after extensive testing as well.
I suppose the FDA should be doing this on their own, but that's an extra that's not in their charter..
I don't know about your PowerBall setup - but the payout is when you do the power-play because that engages the multiplier - without it you cannot win the "monster payout" that is advertised. Those are $3 each.
When I do play the lotto, I don't even waste my time with PowerBall @ $3 per ticket unless the jackpot is over $250m, and then I know I'm tossing my money away anyway.
If you want something to fear, you should focus on politicians. I for one would welcome our digital leaders with open arms - I'd fear them far less than the cold logic of a machine. At least logic can be used at that point. Lord knows, logic has no purpose in politics..
This video and it's immediate predecessor might have some cool stuff in it, but frankly, the format, run length, Etc. is 100% totally boring. This could be likely summarized in a viral video with some just animation and summaries - seeing 3 people talk in an overlong video is more boring that reading while on the can.
So my first two keyless cars were nice, Nissan, and reliable. However, I must state something here - except for GM's more than obvious mistake, keys don't generally fail that badly. In the case of my Nissan Cube, when it hit 3 years old and around 40k miles, I had a key die on it. This wasn't covered by the warranty, and I had to replace it. Then I had to hit the dealer for them to program it.
The only time I have to deal with the dealer on key issues before was when I lost a key and had to re-train a smart-key with the car, and the pricing of the pure-electronic keys is not friendly. My lost Nissan key was replaced for $80 on eBay, plus $50 a the dealer to program it. My co-worker who just lost his 2009 Mazda CX-9 keycard, and who's second key is flaky, is now looking at a combination of smart-key and physical chip-key replacement, times two - that's $500 just for the two keys themselves, plus $100 from the dealer to program it all up. These keycards from the dealer are $450 each, and just like tires, you can't drive without them.
Ouch! I like my car's key. It's something that can be replaced and doesn't cost like someone stole all four of your tires.
The idea of making an evil bastard serve a 1000 year sentence sounds like a clever idea, however, I do believe it falls under the tenants of cruel and unusual punishment. That being said, if a person could serve a 60 or 90-day sentence in 5 days, that would be beneficial to society from a cost perspective if the same level of rehabilitation takes place.
On that note, I must ask - if time moves more slowly to the person on this fictional drug, does that mean that learning over time could be ramped up? Could we distort someones internal clock and then feed their brain information that all gets stored? This could be one way to upload someone with all the knowledge they need to complete an education..
Turbo Pascal changed *everything*
It turned Mr. Borland into a millionaire overnight, and completely changed how software is marketed, and changed the way software is developed forever.
Microsoft needs to desperately flush the toilet of all the old. The fact that the Surface Tablet, a supposed walled garden that supports only Flash, but not Java, still needed to perform a Windows Defender scan after it's first update, proves it. They can't break out of their old ways, and they're still not trying.
When did power steering become a safety feature?? Personally, as a commuter who uses drives to a train every day, I'm all for getting a car that's cheap and efficient - and this one sounds perfect. Airbags make perfect sense to me as a safety requirement, but I don't see where traction control should be required - this is what insurance is for. I do see the mileage going down however once it's got the weight added to the doors to prevent passenger smush in side collisions.. and in this country, that means the passengers have to live through an SUV collision.
Latency that high is unacceptable - you can't use an IP phone with that kind of lag. You can't play games online, and I seriously doubt you could watch youtube with it. I'd call in again and escalate the issue. If they can deliver that with their contract, you're screwed.
$55/month - unlimited voice/text/data. And Cricket is trying hard to make sure that the rate they post is the rate they charge - so that $55/month is actually $55.00 - not the $117.23/month you pay to Sprint (in Colorado) when you're getting the $99 simply everything plan.
If you live in a primarily Cricket area, your calls will be on Cricket's network first and foremost. If you're outside a native Cricket area, or in a city where MetroPCS is dominant, then you'll be using Sprints network with your Cricket phone - either way, no roaming charges, and the same flat rate.
The choice of handset does define call quality - their new droid - the Huawei Mercury is worth considering - most of their other droids are just okay - good for non power users/non movie watchers.
If you don't want the data plan at all, the basic talk and text plan is $35/month and they have phones that can do that, take pictures, Etc.
One thing that people notice about Cricket is that their handsets cost more - this is because Cricket does not subsidize their handsets through contracts like all the major players do - so you have to pay for your handset, then pay the month fee to use it - but that's it. Cricket can also port your existing number over as well, and just about any Cricket dealer can migrate your contacts from your old handset to a new one.
In the 3D printer world, how you feed your plastic and how you melt (extrude) your plastic are the LARGEST problems - period - free software does the rest of the work, and the circuitry and such are all open sourced as well. This Buildatron group seems to be holding on real tight to their X-Carriage design, as well as their feeder mechanism and their extruder design - plus, I don't see any public distribution of the document anywhere - and basically put - this is a derivative work of the Prusa - and all of that stuff is licensed under the GPL Free Documentation License - so I gotta ask, who goes after them for this potential violation? And short of paying them for one of their (way overpriced) kits, has anyone gotten one and can show pictures of how they're actually extruding?
Sure does look just like my Prusa. I guess the funny reel in the back made it more tech - that and the laser cut wooden box. For those really wanting to build these, go hit reprap.org - I built mine entire from parts found at lulzbot and ultimachine - and I got the Arduino from Hong Kong for $25. See mine in action on my Piratefish blog - the future is here - and Buildatron doesn't have the lock on it!
Oh, yeah, and for the wise guys saying I want one that prints other ones - well, they almost do. I want to build a Mendlemax in the worst way now...
https://www.measurementlab.net... has some good tests. Sadly, some of old Net Neutrality tests have died there - but some of their stuff remains and is good. Back when this fight started, Google backed some groups working to make speed tests that detect if specific slowing was going on - all those tests are at this site - even though the public servers behind them are offline now. Cheers.
So I got into computers early on - having been a technological terror growing up - taking apart everything. My friends dad had gotten a SWTPC 6800 with an SS50 bus and I used that to get my early knowledge on - we were typing in BASIC code on the thing, either adapting games found in issues of Creative Computing magazine, or modifying them to have some fun while figuring out how to do things we wanted. That was early on - later on, when the TRS-80 became more mainstream, the games in the magazine got more platform specific - and Creative Computing printed all the source code for the game in the magazine. Back then there were no "downloads" or "OCR" that could replace simply typing in all the content and trying it. That's what we did. And people weren't perfect - so after typing in 10k lines of code to make a dancing robot, getting random errors at various lines in the code was inevitable - it was that "post entry" debugging where the code education comes in - now you're checking your own work for syntax and other little bits - but to really know what's going on takes time - and then it clicks. The incentive was when the new space shooter was Commodore specific and you had an Apple ][ - this forced you to figure out what they did, convert to Apple, and try your own version. The "programming" nerd switch, for me, took some years before it clicked - around the middle/end of 10th grade before I became dangerously knowledgeable in this stuff - enough to write a game that summer and get hired by a software firm during my Junior year in high school. That was some 6 years of hands on, with 3 of it focused on learning to code in my off-time.
Season 2, Episode 6: The Ricks Must Be Crazy. "He knew that once I got back to my car, one of two things were gonna happen-- I was gonna have to toss a broken battery, or the battery wouldn't be broken." Peace among worlds, Rick.
I've always liked the idea of retiring in the sky - nothing keeps the relatives away better. Now maybe my solar-powered blimp can happen..
I don't know anyone that supports the US Government on this - at least - I don't know anyone who supports them and knows anything about PKI encryption and what it means - if you really want to support the folks arguing for the US Gov in this case, ask if they'll hand all their passwords and PIN's to the FBI. See what their reaction is then.
Back a long time ago, Tsutomu Shimomura (the engineer who ID'd Kevin Mitnick's famous sequence-number attacks), got pissed about Microsoft's FTP server trying to connect on the identd port after he FTP'd into them for any reason. To get back at Microsoft, Tsutomu setup the chargen service on the identd port (port 113) with a rate-limit. When he FTP'd to Microsoft after that, any connections to port 113 would stay open as his computer would stream all ASCII characters out. Seeing as you are likely having ports scanned like 80/443 and so on - why not chargen those? The scans will get stuck, and the data will keep flowing until they die. Even better, if they're collecting all the returns - chargen will ensure they get all the ASCII their disks can hold. Cheers.
https://www.facebook.com/help/... How old do you have to be to sign up for Facebook? To be eligible to sign up for Facebook, you must be at least 13 years old.
In the header for this, your last sentence: "This article takes readers from the first Crypto War of the early 1990s to the present-day political battle to keep everyone who uses the Internet safe." The present day battle is not about keeping people safe - it's breaking down people's ability to keep secrets. The cost for this level of protection is way too high.
Google offers free Google Apps for Business for domains with less than 10 users on them - and it's free. Just gotta setup the MX records - I get DNS control for free from GoDaddy as they are my registrar, but I don't host a site at all on my 3-character domain. With that, I can point my MX records to google, and the domain has multiple email accounts on it, all for free. The trick is that the google hides the "get it for free" link on the setup page.
Examples of this are rife everywhere - from my own experience, any asthmatic can tell you in the 2000's their rescue inhaler only cost them $15 for the generic - however, when the gas inside the inhaler was changed from a CFC-based propellant to nitrogen, they filed new drug status (for the same ancient drug), purely because they changed the propellant - asthmatics now pay $45 for the same inhaler (with insurance, FYI) with the new gas. Who's to say they won't switch to oxygen or CO2 as a propellant when the next round of patents expire and the prices drop to generic levels?
On the opposite side of the spectrum, herbal remedies can for some things be quite helpful - and some of the "herbal cures" in that realm like Slippery Elm for diverticulitis work very well but are not prescribed by any doctor lawfully as these cures are not tested by anyone officially - because doing so won't guarantee the researchers investment in testing will be paid back because they cannot control who sells that herbal cure afterwards. There are cures in nature that are not being directly researched, presented or even considered by the big pharma community because of this. Many cures in nature are being researched so that the potentially patent-able bits are pulled out for testing and potential commercialization. If they found that chewing a certain leaf or making tea of it cured something important, big pharma would never tell us - not until they pulled the active parts out and sold that to us 15 years later at a premium after extensive testing as well.
I suppose the FDA should be doing this on their own, but that's an extra that's not in their charter..
I equate computer expertise to a mastery of tools. We all have a word processor. How many of us have actually written a book?
I don't know about your PowerBall setup - but the payout is when you do the power-play because that engages the multiplier - without it you cannot win the "monster payout" that is advertised. Those are $3 each. When I do play the lotto, I don't even waste my time with PowerBall @ $3 per ticket unless the jackpot is over $250m, and then I know I'm tossing my money away anyway.
If you want something to fear, you should focus on politicians. I for one would welcome our digital leaders with open arms - I'd fear them far less than the cold logic of a machine. At least logic can be used at that point. Lord knows, logic has no purpose in politics..
This video and it's immediate predecessor might have some cool stuff in it, but frankly, the format, run length, Etc. is 100% totally boring. This could be likely summarized in a viral video with some just animation and summaries - seeing 3 people talk in an overlong video is more boring that reading while on the can.
So my first two keyless cars were nice, Nissan, and reliable. However, I must state something here - except for GM's more than obvious mistake, keys don't generally fail that badly. In the case of my Nissan Cube, when it hit 3 years old and around 40k miles, I had a key die on it. This wasn't covered by the warranty, and I had to replace it. Then I had to hit the dealer for them to program it. The only time I have to deal with the dealer on key issues before was when I lost a key and had to re-train a smart-key with the car, and the pricing of the pure-electronic keys is not friendly. My lost Nissan key was replaced for $80 on eBay, plus $50 a the dealer to program it. My co-worker who just lost his 2009 Mazda CX-9 keycard, and who's second key is flaky, is now looking at a combination of smart-key and physical chip-key replacement, times two - that's $500 just for the two keys themselves, plus $100 from the dealer to program it all up. These keycards from the dealer are $450 each, and just like tires, you can't drive without them. Ouch! I like my car's key. It's something that can be replaced and doesn't cost like someone stole all four of your tires.
The idea of making an evil bastard serve a 1000 year sentence sounds like a clever idea, however, I do believe it falls under the tenants of cruel and unusual punishment. That being said, if a person could serve a 60 or 90-day sentence in 5 days, that would be beneficial to society from a cost perspective if the same level of rehabilitation takes place. On that note, I must ask - if time moves more slowly to the person on this fictional drug, does that mean that learning over time could be ramped up? Could we distort someones internal clock and then feed their brain information that all gets stored? This could be one way to upload someone with all the knowledge they need to complete an education..
What about my subscription? Back when they went under, I had 18 months left and they died. Are you gonna make that up to me?
Turbo Pascal changed *everything* It turned Mr. Borland into a millionaire overnight, and completely changed how software is marketed, and changed the way software is developed forever.
And this is why Apple is still winning.
Microsoft needs to desperately flush the toilet of all the old. The fact that the Surface Tablet, a supposed walled garden that supports only Flash, but not Java, still needed to perform a Windows Defender scan after it's first update, proves it. They can't break out of their old ways, and they're still not trying.
When did power steering become a safety feature?? Personally, as a commuter who uses drives to a train every day, I'm all for getting a car that's cheap and efficient - and this one sounds perfect. Airbags make perfect sense to me as a safety requirement, but I don't see where traction control should be required - this is what insurance is for. I do see the mileage going down however once it's got the weight added to the doors to prevent passenger smush in side collisions.. and in this country, that means the passengers have to live through an SUV collision.
Latency that high is unacceptable - you can't use an IP phone with that kind of lag. You can't play games online, and I seriously doubt you could watch youtube with it. I'd call in again and escalate the issue. If they can deliver that with their contract, you're screwed.
$55/month - unlimited voice/text/data. And Cricket is trying hard to make sure that the rate they post is the rate they charge - so that $55/month is actually $55.00 - not the $117.23/month you pay to Sprint (in Colorado) when you're getting the $99 simply everything plan. If you live in a primarily Cricket area, your calls will be on Cricket's network first and foremost. If you're outside a native Cricket area, or in a city where MetroPCS is dominant, then you'll be using Sprints network with your Cricket phone - either way, no roaming charges, and the same flat rate. The choice of handset does define call quality - their new droid - the Huawei Mercury is worth considering - most of their other droids are just okay - good for non power users/non movie watchers. If you don't want the data plan at all, the basic talk and text plan is $35/month and they have phones that can do that, take pictures, Etc. One thing that people notice about Cricket is that their handsets cost more - this is because Cricket does not subsidize their handsets through contracts like all the major players do - so you have to pay for your handset, then pay the month fee to use it - but that's it. Cricket can also port your existing number over as well, and just about any Cricket dealer can migrate your contacts from your old handset to a new one.
In the 3D printer world, how you feed your plastic and how you melt (extrude) your plastic are the LARGEST problems - period - free software does the rest of the work, and the circuitry and such are all open sourced as well. This Buildatron group seems to be holding on real tight to their X-Carriage design, as well as their feeder mechanism and their extruder design - plus, I don't see any public distribution of the document anywhere - and basically put - this is a derivative work of the Prusa - and all of that stuff is licensed under the GPL Free Documentation License - so I gotta ask, who goes after them for this potential violation? And short of paying them for one of their (way overpriced) kits, has anyone gotten one and can show pictures of how they're actually extruding?
Sure does look just like my Prusa. I guess the funny reel in the back made it more tech - that and the laser cut wooden box. For those really wanting to build these, go hit reprap.org - I built mine entire from parts found at lulzbot and ultimachine - and I got the Arduino from Hong Kong for $25. See mine in action on my Piratefish blog - the future is here - and Buildatron doesn't have the lock on it! Oh, yeah, and for the wise guys saying I want one that prints other ones - well, they almost do. I want to build a Mendlemax in the worst way now...
Agreed. Kind of like Fox News...