For Java: Superwaba
For C: OnBoardC
For Lua: Lua
These are the environments I use and have lots of success with. There is also Pocket C, but I prefer ONBoardC as it is is free and generally works better.
The Liberty Alliance is a group of companies helping to define the specification. Sun propsed Project Liberty as an alternative to Passport. Sun have implemented the specification in their Sun ONE range of products. You will probably see Novell implement the specification within eDirectory as they are members of the alliance as well. As for selling the idea to anyone, it is not a matter of selling it, if you look at the specs it sells itself. Devolved identity management, no single company holding identity information, like Microsoft does with Passport.
AD is a veneer of LDAP compliance. It needs the ADSI libraries to 'use LDAP'. If you connect from a Linux (or other OS), you have to jump through numerous hoops to do it. It implements LDAPv3 like it does all of its standards based protocols. It always sort of implemented. It does the bare minimum to say "Hey, we support LDAP v3". All I can say is look at Microsofts POSIX compliance.
Have these ideas been rolled into possible attack signatures in Snort, etc?? The last time I looked at the Snort sigs, they were very attack specific sigs and not generic "please avoid every request taht has an *"
I have tried SwiftMQ, in which the main engine is free, but add ons are at a modest cost. What I would like to see are JMS implementations on top of Spread or Elvin. The OpenJMS and JBossMQ are okay, but still lag behind the commercial vendors, but are quickly catching up.
Does this only look at how american law would interpret the evidence, or international law. I know that many countries share that same policies, but if I live in Australia, and get a cease and desist, can I post it to this forum and get a response showing what rights I have avaliable to me based on Australian or international law.
The proliferation of public access WLAN's could possibly push servcies, such as Ricochet's to the wall. Sure, public access WLAN's are very scattered at the moment, but with the cost of setting up an AP with a decent range is only a few hundred dollars. More and more people seem to be setting up AP's, and have authorization to set up antennae on radio masts and providing a very good service. The community seems to be thriving, connecting zones together over the inernet using VPN software, and setting up full routing infrastructures to handle Internet access. Sure, there wont be any real SLA's in place, but with so many AP's connected to different ISP's, then network redundancy wouldn't be much of an issue.
I was looking back at previous Star Office related stories on Slashdot and found this one Link. It seems funny that Sun was trying to promote itself as the leading open source "corporate" company, and now, just 8 months later, it is changing the licence back.
IBM's 1.3 series of JVM's are faster, more stable and better supported than the line series. How long are we going to have to wait until IBM releases their version. IBM have been throwing their weight around recently with Java (& Linux). Lets see if they are willing to keep up that so called support.
Please do not take my post as a big thumbs down for SGI. I love their gear. Applications such as Alias/Wavefront are testament to the power that these boxes have. It is just like buying a pair of Nike shoes, are they really worth the premium, or can you get a cheaper version that can do 90% of the task. Now that Alias are releasing Maya for Linux, I am assuming that some high end boxes will be in order. Can Linux with heaps of hardware thrown at it compete at all with SGI's new range of gear.
I still wonder about SGI for its title of kings of graphics. They used to be the best, but have lagged behind. They charged large sumns of money for grunty boxes, but why not just get a custom box with 4 Voodoo5's or GeForce2 GTS's and whacks of RAM and throw in a couple of Athlon's. Box that does the same graphics processing, 1/10th the price. The boxes always look so cool though.
I would say that 90% of Australia's internationally bound traffic must pass through San Francisco at least. We have a few satellite links pointing elsewhere, but high latency and not good for a countries traffic. One company started laying cable to Indonesia and Malaysia to our north, but with recent problems in that part of the world, I have no idea when they or what traffic they intend to take.
I suppose this is were the open source people would say it doesn't affect them. I think it affects all users of Linux. I have had problems with certain packages (including source distros) were I could not use (or compile) unless I had a particular distribution of Linux. This solution, while being nothing more than a kludge, is a least some way forward towards the standard base. Go Redhat, or was is Debian, oh I forget.
NASA has been experimenting for sometime using long strands of wire and the earth's magnetic field to generate large amounts of electricity to power space stations and the like. Now they seem to be using it for a different purpose. Still relies on all the same principles. I suppose physics is just glorified math anyway.
If you are looking for old porn and warez from years back, this would be helpful. News is slowly dieing, (un)fortunately portals, like/. are becoming more the norm.
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization. It is funded by the Australian government.
A compnay called 321 Inc. has a product called LeanOnMe which does this. Based on JXTA. http://news.zdnet.com/2110-3513_22-5319920.html
Java, Open Source OLAP. Mondrian
For Java: Superwaba
For C: OnBoardC
For Lua: Lua
These are the environments I use and have lots of success with. There is also Pocket C, but I prefer ONBoardC as it is is free and generally works better.
Recent article on Linuxworld Apache & Plan9 which describes another solution to identity management.
The Liberty Alliance is a group of companies helping to define the specification. Sun propsed Project Liberty as an alternative to Passport. Sun have implemented the specification in their Sun ONE range of products. You will probably see Novell implement the specification within eDirectory as they are members of the alliance as well. As for selling the idea to anyone, it is not a matter of selling it, if you look at the specs it sells itself. Devolved identity management, no single company holding identity information, like Microsoft does with Passport.
Accenture was orginally part of Anderson and was spun off a few years back. Anderson kept on doing accounting while Accenture was more IT consulting.
www.rebol.com. More stable, faster and better supported
Hot Interconnects sounds more like a techie porn site.
AD is a veneer of LDAP compliance. It needs the ADSI libraries to 'use LDAP'. If you connect from a Linux (or other OS), you have to jump through numerous hoops to do it. It implements LDAPv3 like it does all of its standards based protocols. It always sort of implemented. It does the bare minimum to say "Hey, we support LDAP v3". All I can say is look at Microsofts POSIX compliance.
Have these ideas been rolled into possible attack signatures in Snort, etc?? The last time I looked at the Snort sigs, they were very attack specific sigs and not generic "please avoid every request taht has an *"
I have tried SwiftMQ, in which the main engine is free, but add ons are at a modest cost. What I would like to see are JMS implementations on top of Spread or Elvin. The OpenJMS and JBossMQ are okay, but still lag behind the commercial vendors, but are quickly catching up.
point taken. It was not a dig at the P4 directly, more at how hot those processors can get.
With the amount of heat the P4 generates, you might be able to cook pizza, replace home central heating, ...
Does this only look at how american law would interpret the evidence, or international law. I know that many countries share that same policies, but if I live in Australia, and get a cease and desist, can I post it to this forum and get a response showing what rights I have avaliable to me based on Australian or international law.
The proliferation of public access WLAN's could possibly push servcies, such as Ricochet's to the wall. Sure, public access WLAN's are very scattered at the moment, but with the cost of setting up an AP with a decent range is only a few hundred dollars. More and more people seem to be setting up AP's, and have authorization to set up antennae on radio masts and providing a very good service. The community seems to be thriving, connecting zones together over the inernet using VPN software, and setting up full routing infrastructures to handle Internet access.
Sure, there wont be any real SLA's in place, but with so many AP's connected to different ISP's, then network redundancy wouldn't be much of an issue.
I was looking back at previous Star Office related stories on Slashdot and found this one Link. It seems funny that Sun was trying to promote itself as the leading open source "corporate" company, and now, just 8 months later, it is changing the licence back.
Timemto start looking at AbiWord and KOffice
IBM's 1.3 series of JVM's are faster, more stable and better supported than the line series. How long are we going to have to wait until IBM releases their version. IBM have been throwing their weight around recently with Java (& Linux). Lets see if they are willing to keep up that so called support.
Please do not take my post as a big thumbs down for SGI. I love their gear. Applications such as Alias/Wavefront are testament to the power that these boxes have. It is just like buying a pair of Nike shoes, are they really worth the premium, or can you get a cheaper version that can do 90% of the task. Now that Alias are releasing Maya for Linux, I am assuming that some high end boxes will be in order. Can Linux with heaps of hardware thrown at it compete at all with SGI's new range of gear.
I still wonder about SGI for its title of kings of graphics. They used to be the best, but have lagged behind. They charged large sumns of money for grunty boxes, but why not just get a custom box with 4 Voodoo5's or GeForce2 GTS's and whacks of RAM and throw in a couple of Athlon's. Box that does the same graphics processing, 1/10th the price. The boxes always look so cool though.
I would say that 90% of Australia's internationally bound traffic must pass through San Francisco at least. We have a few satellite links pointing elsewhere, but high latency and not good for a countries traffic. One company started laying cable to Indonesia and Malaysia to our north, but with recent problems in that part of the world, I have no idea when they or what traffic they intend to take.
I suppose this is were the open source people would say it doesn't affect them. I think it affects all users of Linux. I have had problems with certain packages (including source distros) were I could not use (or compile) unless I had a particular distribution of Linux. This solution, while being nothing more than a kludge, is a least some way forward towards the standard base. Go Redhat, or was is Debian, oh I forget.
NASA has been experimenting for sometime using long strands of wire and the earth's magnetic field to generate large amounts of electricity to power space stations and the like. Now they seem to be using it for a different purpose. Still relies on all the same principles. I suppose physics is just glorified math anyway.
If you are looking for old porn and warez from years back, this would be helpful. News is slowly dieing, (un)fortunately portals, like /. are becoming more the norm.