For instance, most enterprise grade routers are rated for packets per second (PPS).
A cheap enterprise-grade 4-5 port router with a 2-core 500Mhz processor will most likely be rated around 1 million PPS while a 4-core at 1Ghz will be able to handle over 3 million PPS.
For comparison, the latest version of the of the TP-Link Archer C1200 mentioned in the article has only a 1-core processor running at 900Ghz processor which I assume would be rated around 800,000 PPS.
So, if one model of home device alone puts out 100,000 packets suddenly and there are more than one of the device in the house (Google Home in 2-3 rooms, Chrome Cast on 2-3 TVs), it all adds up pretty quickly on top of normal use in the background.
I agree, the problem is since most developers use Windows they will design their applications on it.
If we can get more developers in the industrial sectors to swap to something more cross-platform then they could use locked down ARM devices like Raspberry Pi's that can be swapped out more easily to check for security audits.
Reading through Altheide's document, it seems like he was actively virtue signaling as much as possible on intranet forums and was somehow hurt that a high level Google executive went out of their way to reign him in.
In the document, he calls an HR worker a liar even though the emails he presents do not show the woman saying what he said she said (she never mentioned a managers name nor who would be on the call).
And half of the document seems to have language where he's offended that he was not allowed to break company policy's because his views were in his words "just", which again is more virtue signaling.
Way to lie and then provide the proof you were lying.
Democrat votes for the Act are higher in both House and Senate according to your Wikipedia article. The majority of both parties supported the Act, you could have just said that and been done with it without the need to be dishonest.
But I guess Republicans are so use to saying the opposite of what is fact that you probably didn't notice.
A few real facts to dispute your fake news, Bernie Sanders isn't a member of the DNC, he's an Independent. The fake news you're referring to was contrived by a failed political boss (Donna Brazile) who wrote a book and spewed hate at Clinton to try to get the book sold (knowing people like you would eat it up). Brazile is the same woman who passed a question to Clinton before a town hall, so her calling anything unethical (her words for the campaign spending agreement she uses as proof of collusion) is pretty hypocritical.
The campaign agreement mentioned let Clinton help the DNC pay off it's debts while Sanders offered little more than the bare minimum. He and his campaign openly admit to ignoring the campaign agreement they made with the party for it's support, again because he's an Independent and only used the DNC for it's data systems and such.
But go ahead and repeat the fake news propped up by the Russian propaganda you seem to support.
Wrong, the 3D data can easily be recreated from multiple photographs of your face using photogrammetry. So, if you've already shared enough photos of your face (ei. selfies, vacation photos, etc.), then someone can already create the 3D information to break the technology.
Excuse me? "Already baked into Chrome"? The web works on open, clearly defined standards. If Chrome is doing something that's not a standard, then it's the problem not the other browsers.
Chrome quickly became the newest version of Internet Explorer with all the "standards" Google is deciding to make up and change without any consensus from anyone outside Mountain View.
And I make that comparison without regret, because Google is using the same creative dissonance Microsoft did to try to force Internet Explorer's dominance back in the day, but everyone using Chrome probably doesn't remember that, either too young, too ignorant or too gullible.
For people to lazy to look, the White population has 4.5% of the population in top 10 surnames (last names) and would require 239 surnames to make up 25% of the population.
The Black population has 13% in the top 10 surnames and only 43 surnames to make up 25% of population.
And the the Hispanic population is 16.3% for top 10 surnames and 26 surnames to cover 25% of population.
Nice try being an apologist, but there's no excuse for them to wipe the server and the backups. Now, the only last remaining copy is in the hands of a law enforcement agency that half the country barely trusts after the last two years.
That should have never happened. There's no reason they couldn't have left the server and backups intact, especially since they knew someone had filed a lawsuit to seek it. They should have been preserved and held under independent security the moment the lawsuits were filed.
I hope the IT staff at the center get 20 years in jail for destruction of evidence.
I try using it, just to give it a chance but there's no way to organize bookmarks easily, it has constant problems on popular sites like Flickr and it's hard as hell it find the settings you want to tweak it to something comfortable for your use.
It's like Microsoft made a browser for speed but then forgot that people need to be able to USE it too!
That's how a figured it too, but I highly doubt every phone of a generation is using the same decryption key. They probably have different keys for different runs of the particular version of chipset. Can't imagine every phone of the generation has the exact same SEP chip version in it.
Supermarket industry is super competitive but also very fragile. I've seen chains disappear, stores go out of business from over-supply and lots of turn-over for the retail spaces made for them. If Amazon can disrupt, it could be a bigger deal than you think.
I am assuming each version of the iPhone SEP firmware is encrypted with it's own unique key, so we're talking just iPhone 5s with this particular version of firmware I think, unless I'm understanding this wrong.
It's a big step anyway, because once you know what's inside an encrypted file it is easier to decrypt later generations of that same file.
So, hacks are probably already out there splitting up this decrypted firmware and attempting to decrypt later versions.
You realize that makes it really easy for the opposition to stop your protest? All they do is send in hoodlums to make trouble and cast a shadow on your protest.
So, no. I'm not leaving if there are assholes there. The police should be targeting those breaking the law, not everyone on the street.
Why are you blaming Amazon for this? Apple runs iTunes, not Amazon.
Welcome to the walled garden, biaaatch!
He's talking about BitTorrent. Peer-to-peer services like it are notoriously stressful for routers.
You know you can just tell Windows Update to throttle, right?
https://thomas-barthelemy.gith...
No need to make your router do more work than it should when you can just tell the processes to behave.
Thanks for sharing the Gizmodo link. Wish I could up-mod.
There's more to throughput than simply bandwidth.
For instance, most enterprise grade routers are rated for packets per second (PPS).
A cheap enterprise-grade 4-5 port router with a 2-core 500Mhz processor will most likely be rated around 1 million PPS while a 4-core at 1Ghz will be able to handle over 3 million PPS.
For comparison, the latest version of the of the TP-Link Archer C1200 mentioned in the article has only a 1-core processor running at 900Ghz processor which I assume would be rated around 800,000 PPS.
So, if one model of home device alone puts out 100,000 packets suddenly and there are more than one of the device in the house (Google Home in 2-3 rooms, Chrome Cast on 2-3 TVs), it all adds up pretty quickly on top of normal use in the background.
I agree, the problem is since most developers use Windows they will design their applications on it.
If we can get more developers in the industrial sectors to swap to something more cross-platform then they could use locked down ARM devices like Raspberry Pi's that can be swapped out more easily to check for security audits.
Reading through Altheide's document, it seems like he was actively virtue signaling as much as possible on intranet forums and was somehow hurt that a high level Google executive went out of their way to reign him in.
In the document, he calls an HR worker a liar even though the emails he presents do not show the woman saying what he said she said (she never mentioned a managers name nor who would be on the call).
And half of the document seems to have language where he's offended that he was not allowed to break company policy's because his views were in his words "just", which again is more virtue signaling.
The cost to return on replacing a lot of workers with robots probably pales in comparison to the cost of replacing the CEO with an AI.
.....just saying. Maybe AI automation should start from the top down.
You can see that more Republicans than Democrats supported the Civil Rights act
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Way to lie and then provide the proof you were lying.
Democrat votes for the Act are higher in both House and Senate according to your Wikipedia article. The majority of both parties supported the Act, you could have just said that and been done with it without the need to be dishonest.
But I guess Republicans are so use to saying the opposite of what is fact that you probably didn't notice.
A few real facts to dispute your fake news, Bernie Sanders isn't a member of the DNC, he's an Independent. The fake news you're referring to was contrived by a failed political boss (Donna Brazile) who wrote a book and spewed hate at Clinton to try to get the book sold (knowing people like you would eat it up). Brazile is the same woman who passed a question to Clinton before a town hall, so her calling anything unethical (her words for the campaign spending agreement she uses as proof of collusion) is pretty hypocritical.
The campaign agreement mentioned let Clinton help the DNC pay off it's debts while Sanders offered little more than the bare minimum. He and his campaign openly admit to ignoring the campaign agreement they made with the party for it's support, again because he's an Independent and only used the DNC for it's data systems and such.
But go ahead and repeat the fake news propped up by the Russian propaganda you seem to support.
Wrong, the 3D data can easily be recreated from multiple photographs of your face using photogrammetry. So, if you've already shared enough photos of your face (ei. selfies, vacation photos, etc.), then someone can already create the 3D information to break the technology.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
By my calculations from the numbers in the article, it's processing around 1 million cosmic ray strikes a year.
So, how are they going to get to 10 billion in five years?
Excuse me? "Already baked into Chrome"? The web works on open, clearly defined standards. If Chrome is doing something that's not a standard, then it's the problem not the other browsers.
Chrome quickly became the newest version of Internet Explorer with all the "standards" Google is deciding to make up and change without any consensus from anyone outside Mountain View.
And I make that comparison without regret, because Google is using the same creative dissonance Microsoft did to try to force Internet Explorer's dominance back in the day, but everyone using Chrome probably doesn't remember that, either too young, too ignorant or too gullible.
Page seven of 2010 Census' surname data.
https://www2.census.gov/topics...
For people to lazy to look, the White population has 4.5% of the population in top 10 surnames (last names) and would require 239 surnames to make up 25% of the population.
The Black population has 13% in the top 10 surnames and only 43 surnames to make up 25% of population.
And the the Hispanic population is 16.3% for top 10 surnames and 26 surnames to cover 25% of population.
Nice try being an apologist, but there's no excuse for them to wipe the server and the backups. Now, the only last remaining copy is in the hands of a law enforcement agency that half the country barely trusts after the last two years.
That should have never happened. There's no reason they couldn't have left the server and backups intact, especially since they knew someone had filed a lawsuit to seek it. They should have been preserved and held under independent security the moment the lawsuits were filed.
I hope the IT staff at the center get 20 years in jail for destruction of evidence.
You can drag links in but you can't drag links out. So, if I want to make a URL file, I need to copy/paste into Firefox and drag the address out.
I'm not asking for much. We're talking 2-3 common, expected features.
IT HAS SO FEW FEATURES!
I try using it, just to give it a chance but there's no way to organize bookmarks easily, it has constant problems on popular sites like Flickr and it's hard as hell it find the settings you want to tweak it to something comfortable for your use.
It's like Microsoft made a browser for speed but then forgot that people need to be able to USE it too!
That's how a figured it too, but I highly doubt every phone of a generation is using the same decryption key. They probably have different keys for different runs of the particular version of chipset. Can't imagine every phone of the generation has the exact same SEP chip version in it.
Supermarket industry is super competitive but also very fragile. I've seen chains disappear, stores go out of business from over-supply and lots of turn-over for the retail spaces made for them. If Amazon can disrupt, it could be a bigger deal than you think.
I am assuming each version of the iPhone SEP firmware is encrypted with it's own unique key, so we're talking just iPhone 5s with this particular version of firmware I think, unless I'm understanding this wrong.
It's a big step anyway, because once you know what's inside an encrypted file it is easier to decrypt later generations of that same file.
So, hacks are probably already out there splitting up this decrypted firmware and attempting to decrypt later versions.
Nope. If the majority are there to be peaceful and only a few are being violent, the entire protest is not a riot.
Nice try extending limited logic on a complex situation, but there's plenty of precedent over the last hundred years against your position.
You realize that makes it really easy for the opposition to stop your protest? All they do is send in hoodlums to make trouble and cast a shadow on your protest.
So, no. I'm not leaving if there are assholes there. The police should be targeting those breaking the law, not everyone on the street.
The unemployment rates for 20-25 year olds is twice that of the other age groups. Males being the worst off group.
Source:
https://www.bls.gov/web/empsit...
There's no worse alternative to a pyramid scheme hidden beneath obtuse concepts and over-hyped technology.