I think the last time I saw a Java plugin was on a code example site that showed different types of sorting algorithms or something and that was about 3 years ago. Perhaps you're thinking of Javascript or Flashplayer?
Am I the only one seeing a battery status incon in the bottom-right corner in that first big screenshot. Why in world would an electric appliance have a battery powered interface?!? Also, next to it appears to be a cell phone reception indicator. I can understand wifi (which is also there), but why does your OVEN need a MOBILE networking interface?!?
If they are rendering content for you, they need the unencrypted traffic, so obviously there is some point on the line where A) The traffic is unencrypted or B) The traffic is encrypted with a certificate owned by the proxy (and thus sniffable).
I was very specifically told that that was my problem and that I should be more like "Joe" who got stuff "done" faster because he didn't think things through or put in exception-handling logic. That it was, in fact "better" to reboot the server daily than to "waste time" making an app that cleaned up after itself. They were very big on "Done" in that particular shop.
I'm guessing that particular company sold the code to other companies and didn't actually use it themselves? That's the only (immoral) way I can see justifying such an attitude.
Or would it? The earth is ~70% water. This means that if iOS 6.0 sends the rocket to a random location (that seems to be what iOS 6.0 does anyways), then only 30% of the bombs would hit land. I can't find anything concrete, but I'm guessing that the land part of the earth is about 10-15% populated (given the radium of a bomb blast). So 30% X 15% gives us about 4% chance of any given bomb hitting anybody versuse the near 100% chance of it hitting a person we don't like.
Then at twelve you find out the kid is smart enough to work out that physical access to the hardware can lead to full control:)
It's the old "put it on the top shelf" solution upgraded to the electronic age with a different ladder.
If it's really important to keep it away from the kids for a long time you need a locket gun cabinet style solution instead of just putting stuff on a difficult to get to top shelf. A portable drive in a locked drawer may do that trick.
Didn't anyone launch one of the thousands of free wifi analyzers out there (my phone has one ffs) and notice the huge list of 6's? In fact, some Operating Systems show you the channel right in the selection menu.
As a current scout leader I empathize with your situation with that last scout master. Few things are more off-putting to the youth than a leader that only wants to do stuff that earns badges. Some of the best run groups I've heard of were where the leader decided to forget the book and just DO stuff like hiking, etc.
I hear you. I just found my old GB Pocket and a bunch of games from 1997 earlier today. Had to clean it out a bit (tri-wings suck btw), but after throwing in some fresh batteries the thing turned on and ran like a champ. Sadly there's about a 0% chance my PS3 will do that in 10 years. I'm already on the SECOND one because the first bit the dust TWICE (fixed it the first time with a new part off ebay, 100% bricked the second time).
Sounds like the problem can more readily be resolved by two levels of coders. The creators who produce the original lot and make sure it runs and then editors who break and bug it all up and make in more informative. In fact lots of people who are not very successful at creating new code, can be quite bad editors. Oversimplifying up code, inserting the last few bugs, mixing up variable and class names, redundant comments, breaking ___ functions etc. They do it for writers in order to speed publication. The same might be considered suitable for coding and with ready access to the original coder to provide explanation over any more convoluted high quality easy to maintain code could be more readily and quickly produced.
FTFY.
If you can't program, you probably shouldn't touch the code of those who can.
Actually, Canonical gets the vast majority of their profits from corporate support contracts. The costs for UbuntuOne pretty much just cover the costs of running UbuntuOne (remember, all those free accounts are not free for Canonical to host).
The n900 is pretty much the defacto geek-phone (I love mine). If you want something more "just a phone dammit", the 3310 is known to survive being strapped to fireworks!
Canonical's goal right now is to have a single experience (Unity is this half-decade's flavor) on all your devices. This wouldn't work all that well if they didn't have a desktop version.
Actually, Ubuntu Phone is being written so that it can use Androids kernel and drivers, so there will be no need for a VM unless you want to run some special Android app that only works with Android's "modified" java emulator.
You mean like the Kinect does every time you turn it on?
There's a big difference between pairing them up and telling the newby "Here, go pretty up this senior developer's code."
Ah, a bank. No need to explain further.
If you have to pay a guy $10K for a exploit pack to JAVA do you really think you're smart enough to break his DRM?
No but online Java applications such as minecraft may be a problem.
I think the last time I saw a Java plugin was on a code example site that showed different types of sorting algorithms or something and that was about 3 years ago. Perhaps you're thinking of Javascript or Flashplayer?
Am I the only one seeing a battery status incon in the bottom-right corner in that first big screenshot. Why in world would an electric appliance have a battery powered interface?!? Also, next to it appears to be a cell phone reception indicator. I can understand wifi (which is also there), but why does your OVEN need a MOBILE networking interface?!?
Except that with Skype you have the key and it STILL hasn't been broken properly.
And you're assuming MSN didn't have that to start with?
If they are rendering content for you, they need the unencrypted traffic, so obviously there is some point on the line where A) The traffic is unencrypted or B) The traffic is encrypted with a certificate owned by the proxy (and thus sniffable).
I was very specifically told that that was my problem and that I should be more like "Joe" who got stuff "done" faster because he didn't think things through or put in exception-handling logic. That it was, in fact "better" to reboot the server daily than to "waste time" making an app that cleaned up after itself. They were very big on "Done" in that particular shop.
I'm guessing that particular company sold the code to other companies and didn't actually use it themselves? That's the only (immoral) way I can see justifying such an attitude.
Or would it? The earth is ~70% water. This means that if iOS 6.0 sends the rocket to a random location (that seems to be what iOS 6.0 does anyways), then only 30% of the bombs would hit land. I can't find anything concrete, but I'm guessing that the land part of the earth is about 10-15% populated (given the radium of a bomb blast). So 30% X 15% gives us about 4% chance of any given bomb hitting anybody versuse the near 100% chance of it hitting a person we don't like.
Riiiiight, kill the person that pays for the internet that got turned off. Ladies and gentlement, we've found ourselves a GENIUS!
Then at twelve you find out the kid is smart enough to work out that physical access to the hardware can lead to full control :)
It's the old "put it on the top shelf" solution upgraded to the electronic age with a different ladder.
If it's really important to keep it away from the kids for a long time you need a locket gun cabinet style solution instead of just putting stuff on a difficult to get to top shelf. A portable drive in a locked drawer may do that trick.
Think again
Also check which channels your neighbours are using!
Didn't anyone launch one of the thousands of free wifi analyzers out there (my phone has one ffs) and notice the huge list of 6's? In fact, some Operating Systems show you the channel right in the selection menu.
As a current scout leader I empathize with your situation with that last scout master. Few things are more off-putting to the youth than a leader that only wants to do stuff that earns badges. Some of the best run groups I've heard of were where the leader decided to forget the book and just DO stuff like hiking, etc.
I hear you. I just found my old GB Pocket and a bunch of games from 1997 earlier today. Had to clean it out a bit (tri-wings suck btw), but after throwing in some fresh batteries the thing turned on and ran like a champ. Sadly there's about a 0% chance my PS3 will do that in 10 years. I'm already on the SECOND one because the first bit the dust TWICE (fixed it the first time with a new part off ebay, 100% bricked the second time).
Sounds like the problem can more readily be resolved by two levels of coders. The creators who produce the original lot and make sure it runs and then editors who break and bug it all up and make in more informative. In fact lots of people who are not very successful at creating new code, can be quite bad editors. Oversimplifying up code, inserting the last few bugs, mixing up variable and class names, redundant comments, breaking ___ functions etc. They do it for writers in order to speed publication. The same might be considered suitable for coding and with ready access to the original coder to provide explanation over any more convoluted high quality easy to maintain code could be more readily and quickly produced.
FTFY.
If you can't program, you probably shouldn't touch the code of those who can.
* nmp3bot dances :D-<
:D|-<
:D/-<
* nmp3bot dances
* nmp3bot dances
Actually, Canonical gets the vast majority of their profits from corporate support contracts. The costs for UbuntuOne pretty much just cover the costs of running UbuntuOne (remember, all those free accounts are not free for Canonical to host).
The n900 is pretty much the defacto geek-phone (I love mine). If you want something more "just a phone dammit", the 3310 is known to survive being strapped to fireworks!
Canonical's goal right now is to have a single experience (Unity is this half-decade's flavor) on all your devices. This wouldn't work all that well if they didn't have a desktop version.
Actually, Ubuntu Phone is being written so that it can use Androids kernel and drivers, so there will be no need for a VM unless you want to run some special Android app that only works with Android's "modified" java emulator.
I think you need to read the next line...