Bourne Supremacy has nothing on the opening scenes from Scooby Doo 2: Monsters Unleased. Man I can understand the first part being like that as the followed the tyradactal but they continued the shaky stuff through out the museum bit after.
Some of Burton's stuff is awful but some was very good. Big Fish was a interesting tale and Sleepy Hollow was great. Even in the Batman series you see differences in his work.
Give me your PHP/MySQL solution and I bet I can bring it to its knees with a few properly placed bad queries and/or data structures.
Of course, bad code will bring anything to its knees, no point there. That's the nice thing about advanced database methods; using stored procedures, transactions and the like can help maintain data integrity even if you've got a couple of bad developers in house, although it can act against you when considering performance.
Yeah I don't think he's talking about bad code he's talking about customer provided data. Customer data if not parsed right can cause serious damage to your database. This is stuff you need to handle yourself because php doesn't do it for you.
1) Hydrogen isn't explosive, it's combustable. 2) Hydrogen is the lightest substance so if a leak occurs it dispates quickly. You will not get build up like you will with gas vapor, propane or natural gas which is heavier than air.
People forget the heat waste problems of nuclear plants. Lake Ontario has 3 nuclear power plants and, If I remember correctly, they raise the temperature of the lake by a couple of degrees. That might not seem significant but the increased evaporation rates from the extra heat may be to blame for the increased percipitation rates around the lake.
Considering they have only measured percipitation over the last century, how do you know that the level have increased? Maybe the century experienced some leaner years.
no in-space refueling (you actually have to go to the ground-game to get restocked on missiles etc!
If you only know what you were talking about maybe someone would listen to your crap. You can reload in space, you can even replace parts once you have reached a certain skill level.
The "next Superman movie" has been in development (many tens of millions of dollars worth, at this point, with nary a frame shot) since the early 90s, at which point Tim Burton was the director, Kevin Smith the writer, and Nic Cage pegged for Superman (crazy, huh?).
That was the second attempt. There was even film shot for Superman V with Reeve as Superman. Apparently some scenes were taken from IV's cutting room floor. Just be glad the plug was pulled on that project. It could have killed superman forever.
You still don't know anything about networking. You will not necessarily get the person MAC address with that code but the MAC address of the last router between you and him.
How do you expect to get the MAC address? MAC addresses are only used for routing on a local subnet only. Not only that MAC addresses are trivial to change.
It's going to get harder to prevent people from getting your SSN number. It's now required on anything imported by you. So if you purchase a $30 cd-burner from Canada, you now has to supply the vendor with your SSN number so he can ship it to you.
It use to be that was only required on shipments over $1000 but now it's required on all shipments. So you government isn't helping the situation.
Right, but if you could get by on 100 watts, or less, then why do you need 350, 400, 500, or larger PSU? Because you will need most of that and the remainder is a safety margin or room to expand.
Not really. Yes some room is left for expansion but that's hardily the reason. Most systems today are shipped with Power Supplies that are overkill for general running of the system but there is a reason for that.
1) At the start up the current draw is at it's highest so you need a powersupply that meets those start up levels. Duing run time the system can run at a lot lower power especially if it has lots of hard disks.
2) Power supplies running at full capacity steady don't tend to last. You will find that if you use a power supply with extra room that it will tend to last much longer.
I know my powerbill doubled after I built my home PC and it's not even overclocked (declocked a bit actually) and I can put my hand behind the PSU fan and feel that warm air coming out as anecdotal eveidence that AC current is being converted to heat somwhere in the box.
I have real trouble believing this. A personal computer setup right is going to be running very low power during most times of the day. During heavy use it might hit 250Watts. (Excluding Monitor).
So lets say you run dnetc steady on your system for a month..25Kwh * 720 hours = 180 Kwh
That's not very much when most homes use well over a 1000 Kwh hours per month.
No that's not true. They all use 200 level chips but not the same ones. the 9000 for instance uses rv280 which is consider the fastest of the lot but had some compability problems with dual head support.
If you can get them to work with a new 2.6 kernel. Every other kernel revision the drivers break. Not a viable solution. I would rather run a Radeon 9200 which is still an adequate card because it has open source drivers that work.
A quick peek at google seems to support the idea that it's possible.
Apparently you didn't read this. This is for setuping secure access to an smb server from Windows. Which by the way is the exact opposite of what you are suggesting. They tell you to turn off file and printer sharing in the article for a good reason.
If the customer doesn't deal with the OS directly tell them it's a windows compatible box and leave it at that. You aren't a Macdonald's Casher or Walmart Stockboy, the customer is not always right.
You are the expert not them. They tell you what it needs to do, you supply them with a solution that works. They don't have the expertise to be telling you how to do your job.
Ultimately this all comes down to free market economics. The solutions are written in Windows not because the customer wants it in Windows but because that's the cheapest way to develop and deploy it. Thus you can bid lower.
In critical operations lowest bid shouldn't get the contract but often that's what happens. Safety is sacrificed for the bottom line.
1) Fine that will work 2) How are you going to get the windows boxes to do this without openning up SMB to the world unencrypted. (Hint you pretty much can't without a firewall box extern to windows) 3) See previous point. Windows doesn't support this. 4) See previous points. 5) See previous points.
The rsync was to be done over a ssh tunnel. Read the other posts. Either way you don't know what you are talking about so I suggest you clam up.
I build and sell Linux based NAS boxes for a living.
I know what I am talking about. Though $69 dollars for those 160GB 7200RPM Hard Drives is way too low which suggests they are grey market. Also they only come with a 1 year warranty. Finally I can guarrantee you that the failure rate on Maxtor Hard Disks right now is higher than those from Western Digital and Seagate.
Hmm I mean Shaq
Didn't Shack already destroy a Shazam movie?
I,Robot was a selection of short stories. Did you expect them to make a selection of short films?
Bourne Supremacy has nothing on the opening scenes from Scooby Doo 2: Monsters Unleased. Man I can understand the first part being like that as the followed the tyradactal but they continued the shaky stuff through out the museum bit after.
Some of Burton's stuff is awful but some was very good. Big Fish was a interesting tale and Sleepy Hollow was great. Even in the Batman series you see differences in his work.
Give me your PHP/MySQL solution and I bet I can bring it to its knees with a few properly placed bad queries and/or data structures.
Of course, bad code will bring anything to its knees, no point there. That's the nice thing about advanced database methods; using stored procedures, transactions and the like can help maintain data integrity even if you've got a couple of bad developers in house, although it can act against you when considering performance.
Yeah I don't think he's talking about bad code he's talking about customer provided data. Customer data if not parsed right can cause serious damage to your database. This is stuff you need to handle yourself because php doesn't do it for you.
I've seen the video. A flair out is not an explosion. What you saw was the burning of rapidly escaping hydrogen. Not an explosion.
If the blimp had exploded no one would have survived.
1) Hydrogen isn't explosive, it's combustable.
2) Hydrogen is the lightest substance so if a leak occurs it dispates quickly. You will not get build up like you will with gas vapor, propane or natural gas which is heavier than air.
People forget the heat waste problems of nuclear plants. Lake Ontario has 3 nuclear power plants and, If I remember correctly, they raise the temperature of the lake by a couple of degrees. That might not seem significant but the increased evaporation rates from the extra heat may be to blame for the increased percipitation rates around the lake.
Considering they have only measured percipitation over the last century, how do you know that the level have increased? Maybe the century experienced some leaner years.
no in-space refueling (you actually have to go to the ground-game to get restocked on missiles etc!
If you only know what you were talking about maybe someone would listen to your crap. You can reload in space, you can even replace parts once you have reached a certain skill level.
The "next Superman movie" has been in development (many tens of millions of dollars worth, at this point, with nary a frame shot) since the early 90s, at which point Tim Burton was the director, Kevin Smith the writer, and Nic Cage pegged for Superman (crazy, huh?).
That was the second attempt. There was even film shot for Superman V with Reeve as Superman. Apparently some scenes were taken from IV's cutting room floor. Just be glad the plug was pulled on that project. It could have killed superman forever.
It did. Tell that to bill buckner that. I think they need to win 4 more games.
You still don't know anything about networking. You will not necessarily get the person MAC address with that code but the MAC address of the last router between you and him.
How do you expect to get the MAC address? MAC addresses are only used for routing on a local subnet only. Not only that MAC addresses are trivial to change.
I wish it was BS.
Fedex Note about it
It's going to get harder to prevent people from getting your SSN number. It's now required on anything imported by you. So if you purchase a $30 cd-burner from Canada, you now has to supply the vendor with your SSN number so he can ship it to you.
It use to be that was only required on shipments over $1000 but now it's required on all shipments. So you government isn't helping the situation.
Right, but if you could get by on 100 watts, or less, then why do you need 350, 400, 500, or larger PSU? Because you will need most of that and the remainder is a safety margin or room to expand.
Not really. Yes some room is left for expansion but that's hardily the reason. Most systems today are shipped with Power Supplies that are overkill for general running of the system but there is a reason for that.
1) At the start up the current draw is at it's highest so you need a powersupply that meets those start up levels. Duing run time the system can run at a lot lower power especially if it has lots of hard disks.
2) Power supplies running at full capacity steady don't tend to last. You will find that if you use a power supply with extra room that it will tend to last much longer.
I know my powerbill doubled after I built my home PC and it's not even overclocked (declocked a bit actually) and I can put my hand behind the PSU fan and feel that warm air coming out as anecdotal eveidence that AC current is being converted to heat somwhere in the box.
I have real trouble believing this. A personal computer setup right is going to be running very low power during most times of the day. During heavy use it might hit 250Watts. (Excluding Monitor).
So lets say you run dnetc steady on your system for a month.
That's not very much when most homes use well over a 1000 Kwh hours per month.
No that's not true. They all use 200 level chips but not the same ones. the 9000 for instance uses rv280 which is consider the fastest of the lot but had some compability problems with dual head support.
If you can get them to work with a new 2.6 kernel. Every other kernel revision the drivers break. Not a viable solution. I would rather run a Radeon 9200 which is still an adequate card because it has open source drivers that work.
There's no 3D support for R300 chipset and up only 2D works.
A quick peek at google seems to support the idea that it's possible.
Apparently you didn't read this. This is for setuping secure access to an smb server from Windows. Which by the way is the exact opposite of what you are suggesting. They tell you to turn off file and printer sharing in the article for a good reason.
And Like Windows packet filter is secure.
If the customer doesn't deal with the OS directly tell them it's a windows compatible box and leave it at that. You aren't a Macdonald's Casher or Walmart Stockboy, the customer is not always right.
You are the expert not them. They tell you what it needs to do, you supply them with a solution that works. They don't have the expertise to be telling you how to do your job.
Ultimately this all comes down to free market economics. The solutions are written in Windows not because the customer wants it in Windows but because that's the cheapest way to develop and deploy it. Thus you can bid lower.
In critical operations lowest bid shouldn't get the contract but often that's what happens. Safety is sacrificed for the bottom line.
Not big enough. The dictionaries they use now are probably a lot larger than all those documents put together.
1) Fine that will work
2) How are you going to get the windows boxes to do this without openning up SMB to the world unencrypted. (Hint you pretty much can't without a firewall box extern to windows)
3) See previous point. Windows doesn't support this.
4) See previous points.
5) See previous points.
The rsync was to be done over a ssh tunnel. Read the other posts. Either way you don't know what you are talking about so I suggest you clam up.
I build and sell Linux based NAS boxes for a living.
I know what I am talking about. Though $69 dollars for those 160GB 7200RPM Hard Drives is way too low which suggests they are grey market. Also they only come with a 1 year warranty. Finally I can guarrantee you that the failure rate on Maxtor Hard Disks right now is higher than those from Western Digital and Seagate.