I would like to see an actual evidence based reason before I put Kaspersky on my shit list (Russia is already on it). Working with a government to track down DDoS attackers is not a low point for a security company.
In Texas, when I took my Engineer-In-Training (Fundamentals of Engineering) exam we had at least 2 tests to choose from, one for Civil Engineering and one for General Engineering. The general exam could not later qualify for a Civil PE and practice in that field, so that is not correct in Texas and I assume elsewhere.
for fun I put this in my ~/.bash_login/home/uname/kpcli-2.8.pl --kdb=/home/uname/pass.kdbx ||/home/uname/kpcli-2.8.pl --kdb=/home/unamepass.kdbx || ( echo "FAILED LOGIN -`date`." >> FAILED_LOGIN && exit )
its not really secure because of scp/sftp can bypass bash.
I watch the logs its amazing how many attempts to access root their are these days. But ssh is as secure as you could ever hope to be if set up correctly, and its a bare bones, plus I do have added lockout protections above the normal ssh config stuff. Having your passwords on multiple computers (work/home) is a must, and 1 password to rule them all is stupid. I see no other choice.
I find ssh'ing into my own raspberry pi with keepass-cli http://sourceforge.net/project... the best way to get passwords so far. Slow but trustworthy. I sure wish that was not a sourceforge project though.
The absolutely quickest notebook to date is the Inspiron 8100.
It came out around late July 2001, and is the first labtop that I know of that has a 133 MHz bus and 512kb level 2 cashe. Plus the fact that it is a 1.13GHz-M (Mobile I think) processor, there is not much left to say. So new, that I have not seen it up at the http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/kharker/linux-lapto p/ list yet. But I am sure it will eventually get there.
I just ordered the Inspiron 8000, 1GHz, 32MB Gforce 2, 30GB, 256MB (will upgrade to 512MB(max)), DVD, 56k + 10/100 (internal), but I think I might return it and spend the extra $270 to upgrade to the 8100 (same spec.) What the hell its my college grad. present, so its not my money:)
total price was around $2550 for the 8000 at dell.com
occurred in this movie as the same as "The Sixth Sense"
ie: The color Red...
Which kinda gave away half the plot before anything happened.
But still I also liked it
Same two authors wrote an article from 2015 with the same intent.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news...
and a great retort from that 2015 article https://www.grahamcluley.com/k...
I would like to see an actual evidence based reason before I put Kaspersky on my shit list (Russia is already on it). Working with a government to track down DDoS attackers is not a low point for a security company.
Bezos could sue Trump for his 1-click twitter posts. I think I read that the patent is expiring this year.
In Texas, when I took my Engineer-In-Training (Fundamentals of Engineering) exam we had at least 2 tests to choose from, one for Civil Engineering and one for General Engineering. The general exam could not later qualify for a Civil PE and practice in that field, so that is not correct in Texas and I assume elsewhere.
I should have proof-read that better, remove the "-d" on apt-get update, that is download only, and /kpcli-*.pl.
for fun I put this in my ~/.bash_login /home/uname/kpcli-2.8.pl --kdb=/home/uname/pass.kdbx || /home/uname/kpcli-2.8.pl --kdb=/home/unamepass.kdbx ||
( echo "FAILED LOGIN -`date`." >> FAILED_LOGIN && exit )
its not really secure because of scp/sftp can bypass bash.
also sudo crontab -e /dev/null && echo "sucess! -`date`." >> /root/upgrade
30 4 * * * apt-get update && apt-get -y -d upgrade >
and watch the logs.
I watch the logs its amazing how many attempts to access root their are these days. But ssh is as secure as you could ever hope to be if set up correctly, and its a bare bones, plus I do have added lockout protections above the normal ssh config stuff. Having your passwords on multiple computers (work/home) is a must, and 1 password to rule them all is stupid. I see no other choice.
I find ssh'ing into my own raspberry pi with keepass-cli http://sourceforge.net/project... the best way to get passwords so far. Slow but trustworthy. I sure wish that was not a sourceforge project though.
I alwasy though it was some kind of AI thing.
The absolutely quickest notebook to date is the Inspiron 8100.o p/ list yet. But I am sure it will eventually get there.
:)
It came out around late July 2001, and is the first labtop that I know of that has a 133 MHz bus and 512kb level 2 cashe. Plus the fact that it is a 1.13GHz-M (Mobile I think) processor, there is not much left to say.
So new, that I have not seen it up at the http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/kharker/linux-lapt
I just ordered the Inspiron 8000, 1GHz, 32MB Gforce 2, 30GB, 256MB (will upgrade to 512MB(max)), DVD, 56k + 10/100 (internal), but I think I might return it and spend the extra $270 to upgrade to the 8100 (same spec.) What the hell its my college grad. present, so its not my money
total price was around $2550 for the 8000 at dell.com
or somthing like that
GREAT POINT rkukreja
The Train Wreck never had an explosion, just a before and after look, that is it. I heard explosion all over (airport), but certainly did not see any
occurred in this movie as the same as "The Sixth Sense" ie: The color Red... Which kinda gave away half the plot before anything happened. But still I also liked it