So you want a router on level 7 that does a asymmetric crypto on every client_hello that's passing by. Even if such a machine existed and the border ISPs were compensated for additional costs caused by it, I doubt they'd put up with it. Traditional technologies like TOR or VPNs are already available and seem a lot less insane than "Telex".
I dislike these 'pay-up-or-else-schemes' as much as anybody else. But in shouldn't each ISP customer be accountable for what happens on their connection? If you decide to share the connection with your family/friends/neighbours it's your job to ensure that they don't abuse it.
Otherwise anyone could set up an open wifi and deny any responsibilities for what happens on the connection...
The title says it. Adobe's plugin can display slideshows the way they are supposed to work, by instantly displaying the next page when hitting down. Chrome's viewer just acts like a word processor sliding the pages up slowly, which sucks for reading some slides online.
I also had streaming search last weekend or even before that. It worked for a few days but then sadly disappeared.
It certainly felt very responsive with next to no latency. They also had an option to turn "streaming" off.
Oh yeah, I still remember when a couple of years ago you would see the Intel logo in _every_ TV ad of the big German electronic stores. I don't think I ever saw an ad for an AMD machine on TV.
Looks like you need a bit more than 45 cameras, http://drnorth.files.wordpress.com/2010/12/m1_bullet-time01.jpg but I guess you don't have to do a full circle...
Also, according to the report the kernel driver is x86 only.
But if you have to renegotiate down to 1.0 because the server does not support it, you are still vulnerable.
Sure, but then what's the point of the fix?
that I'm not alone out there ;)
I don't think your browser runs prefetched javascript. So Google Analytics won't be triggered.
So you want a router on level 7 that does a asymmetric crypto on every client_hello that's passing by. Even if such a machine existed and the border ISPs were compensated for additional costs caused by it, I doubt they'd put up with it. Traditional technologies like TOR or VPNs are already available and seem a lot less insane than "Telex".
Maybe they'll start charging passengers for in-flight meals. If it works at 10 km altitude it should work at 300 km. :D
(so you land at cbs.com or comedycentral.com, etc., and wind up watching via different, lower-quality, proprietary players).
Hulu stopped using Flash?
That's exactly what I thought. However, isn't the "full version" of .NET too big (a few GB) for mobile devices?
I dislike these 'pay-up-or-else-schemes' as much as anybody else. But in shouldn't each ISP customer be accountable for what happens on their connection? If you decide to share the connection with your family/friends/neighbours it's your job to ensure that they don't abuse it. Otherwise anyone could set up an open wifi and deny any responsibilities for what happens on the connection...
While AJAX has the Same-Origin-Policy you can load an image- or script-file from any domain you want.
I hope the Zune is excluded in your statement, because it had/has a pretty nice GUI that exactly fits its purpose.
The title says it. Adobe's plugin can display slideshows the way they are supposed to work, by instantly displaying the next page when hitting down. Chrome's viewer just acts like a word processor sliding the pages up slowly, which sucks for reading some slides online.
You sir, are absolutely right!
I also had streaming search last weekend or even before that. It worked for a few days but then sadly disappeared. It certainly felt very responsive with next to no latency. They also had an option to turn "streaming" off.
Oh yeah, I still remember when a couple of years ago you would see the Intel logo in _every_ TV ad of the big German electronic stores. I don't think I ever saw an ad for an AMD machine on TV.