There really shouldn't be an advantage once the actual transfer starts going. In both cases they can copy direct from the disk cache to the network and push packets out as fast as the connection will allow.
The downside of FTP is it's convoluted protocol, it's throwback to the days when everyone had a public IP and it makes a lot of connections assuming it can just connect in both directions without restriction. In modern times, Firewalls have to maintain a lot of code just to keep FTP functional.
FTP *really* needs to just die.
My friend works at a Sprint store. They have a Microsoft Windows phone that sits in the storage room and no one ever asks to see it. Unless Microsoft is willing to put money behind their promotions like Samsung, HTC and LG, my friend has no incentives to sell a Microsoft Windows phone.
They tried this while I was in Spain. They spent a fortune on advertising and discounts as well as unleashed a full on FUD campaign against Android. It worked, sortof, Their share jumped by 7% but many people switched back when they bought their next phone and now Windows Mobile is back down to almost nothing.
Without those emails who gets blamed? Recently, I had someone tell me they didn't ask for what I did, what saved me? A months old email from them telling me to do exactly what I did. In another case, a judge sent a demand for a bunch of 3 year old emails(old sysadmin, old mail server), and we could not provide them the lawsuit with the customer did not go well after that.
And then there are government retention laws, For example, we are required to keep call records for some countries for 10 years and we have had demands for 7 year old information in the past.
Not to mention it's sometimes just nice to go back and see how you did something a couple of years ago when a similar project happens again
Break even is $45 000 CAD per hour? I think you need to rethink your math.
The subway runs 20 hour a day from Monday to Saturday and 18 hours a day on Sunday that's 138 hours a week or 7176 hours a year.
The TTC cost $1.795 Billion to run last year. Divide that by 7176 and you get $250 139.35 per hour to run the entire system / 69 stations and you get $3625 per hour for each station to run.
A basic Linux install also tends to have an office package and other productivity apps so it's not comparable.
For a better comparison, I just checked my monitoring station and it uses 4 GB of drive space and that includes two web browsers but not an office package. We recently tried to install Windows on one of those machines and abandoned the idea after windows filled the 14 GB MMC drive to the point where it installed but barely and without enough room to install updates.
It is good for servers with complicated boot dependencies such as a clustered fs on top of iSCSI which before systemd, used to require me to hack the init files every time. Systemd was designed to solve problems on servers and that was it's primary justification. The fact that is makes desktops boot faster was a happy side affect, despite the meme.M
CentOS did the Systemd transition badly, Debian's was more smooth with the exception that I wish they hadn't abandoned/etc/default at the same time.
If the program really was there to fill a labour pool deficit, it never would have allowed for visas for positions where the wage was below the current median wage (for those employed, not for empty positions waiting to be filled). You'd still get downward pressure on wages as labour supply increased, but it'd be slower.
If the program was there to fill a labour pool deficit, it would never be allowed to be used in an instance where employees have to train their H1B replacements before being let go.
There is no need to disable the whole button, only the unlock functionality. You can still have the return to home button work without compromising security.
I don't think anyone is defending NASA's budget, only correcting the statement that NASA is the easiest to go to for pork barrel politics. NASA is bad, but the defense spending is far worse mainly because if you question defense spending your loyalty to your country is questioned so it's a great place to force the military to buy overpriced things, or worse yet, things they don't even need.
I just checked my DMARC inbox, Yahoo and Microsoft are sending DMARC reports so that's the big three email providers plus a bunch of smaller providers.
That is of course, assuming that the IPMI controllers are net accessible and that the IPMI controllers allow you to update the SSL certificate to something with modern encryption. The first problem is solvable by creating a local certificate authority. The second one is not solvable at all..
Actually, I've come to the conclusion that many forum bug reports are just trolls who cut and paste bugs they find online. There is no other way to account for the constant reports of bugs fixed years ago while missing actual bugs that still exist.
Once when someone thought it would be funny to send a link to one of the sales staff that flooded his screen with porn popups. He called for me, I walked up and yanked the power cord out of the back of his machine figuring that cleaning up after an unclean shutdown was better than having to look at the pictures.
And once when some kiddy porners were using my employer's top list system to evade website shutdowns and I found it completely by accident when browsing the lists..
Didn't take long for me to quit that job which turned out to be a good call considering my boss ended up closing the Montreal office, moving back to Russia and becoming a hard core spammer (in jail now, assuming he is still alive)
The opt out link doesn't always work even for legitimate senders. I have had a few places keep sending me email after the return link errored out.. or in one case, I lost the password and they would not change the account settings without it.
In both cases, I blocked them at the mail server (rejected, not bounced) and when I got around to removing the block 6 months to a year later, I was removed from whatever list I was on.
Doing it from procmailrc doesn't really get the point across since they never know it didn't get delivered. It is better to block it at the SMTP level and refuse to accept the message in the first place.
It's not just the under 25 crowd and you are nuts if you think that stragegy will help. A user who learns by rote memorisation will lose it on version changes or even if they click on the wrong spot and now everything is different. And yes I've seen it happen.. it's a large percentage of the "my computer is broken" calls II get at work.
Innovation is secondary. The whole advantage to HP was their service and that has been sacrificed since the HPE split.
We had a server whose RAID controller was throwing an NMI error and the support process was a nightmare. First level tech support never wanted to escalate to second level. When they finally stopped changing motherboards and Raid caches/batteries, the actual server replacement took two weeks because our 3 year old server was "too old" to keep in stock. Our parent company has been complaining about the same level of service reduction.
They guarunteed that the support contracts will not continue beyond this year and that the next servers will not be HP
As much as I hate RPM and NetworkManager, Redhat does employ many of the people who do the under the hood work on the software that we all depend on. For example the glibc maintainer worked for Redhat for the longest time.
There really shouldn't be an advantage once the actual transfer starts going. In both cases they can copy direct from the disk cache to the network and push packets out as fast as the connection will allow. The downside of FTP is it's convoluted protocol, it's throwback to the days when everyone had a public IP and it makes a lot of connections assuming it can just connect in both directions without restriction. In modern times, Firewalls have to maintain a lot of code just to keep FTP functional. FTP *really* needs to just die.
My friend works at a Sprint store. They have a Microsoft Windows phone that sits in the storage room and no one ever asks to see it. Unless Microsoft is willing to put money behind their promotions like Samsung, HTC and LG, my friend has no incentives to sell a Microsoft Windows phone.
They tried this while I was in Spain. They spent a fortune on advertising and discounts as well as unleashed a full on FUD campaign against Android. It worked, sortof, Their share jumped by 7% but many people switched back when they bought their next phone and now Windows Mobile is back down to almost nothing.
Without those emails who gets blamed? Recently, I had someone tell me they didn't ask for what I did, what saved me? A months old email from them telling me to do exactly what I did. In another case, a judge sent a demand for a bunch of 3 year old emails(old sysadmin, old mail server), and we could not provide them the lawsuit with the customer did not go well after that.
And then there are government retention laws, For example, we are required to keep call records for some countries for 10 years and we have had demands for 7 year old information in the past.
Not to mention it's sometimes just nice to go back and see how you did something a couple of years ago when a similar project happens again
Break even is $45 000 CAD per hour? I think you need to rethink your math.
The subway runs 20 hour a day from Monday to Saturday and 18 hours a day on Sunday that's 138 hours a week or 7176 hours a year.
The TTC cost $1.795 Billion to run last year. Divide that by 7176 and you get $250 139.35 per hour to run the entire system / 69 stations and you get $3625 per hour for each station to run.
A basic Linux install also tends to have an office package and other productivity apps so it's not comparable.
For a better comparison, I just checked my monitoring station and it uses 4 GB of drive space and that includes two web browsers but not an office package. We recently tried to install Windows on one of those machines and abandoned the idea after windows filled the 14 GB MMC drive to the point where it installed but barely and without enough room to install updates.
You can find the reasons here
It is good for servers with complicated boot dependencies such as a clustered fs on top of iSCSI which before systemd, used to require me to hack the init files every time. Systemd was designed to solve problems on servers and that was it's primary justification. The fact that is makes desktops boot faster was a happy side affect, despite the meme.M
CentOS did the Systemd transition badly, Debian's was more smooth with the exception that I wish they hadn't abandoned /etc/default at the same time.
Keep in mind that much of this is thanks to the content providers signing regional deals. Netflix original content does not have that problem.
If the program really was there to fill a labour pool deficit, it never would have allowed for visas for positions where the wage was below the current median wage (for those employed, not for empty positions waiting to be filled). You'd still get downward pressure on wages as labour supply increased, but it'd be slower. If the program was there to fill a labour pool deficit, it would never be allowed to be used in an instance where employees have to train their H1B replacements before being let go.
There is no need to disable the whole button, only the unlock functionality. You can still have the return to home button work without compromising security.
Youtube already has a fix for this problem. Just use their Content ID sytem
that lets you decide how to deal with other people using your music. You can block, mute, or monetize the infringing video.
I don't think anyone is defending NASA's budget, only correcting the statement that NASA is the easiest to go to for pork barrel politics. NASA is bad, but the defense spending is far worse mainly because if you question defense spending your loyalty to your country is questioned so it's a great place to force the military to buy overpriced things, or worse yet, things they don't even need.
I just checked my DMARC inbox, Yahoo and Microsoft are sending DMARC reports so that's the big three email providers plus a bunch of smaller providers.
DMARC is definitely being adopted.
If the cloud provider supports SPF, you can include their record so if they change, so do you.
Did not know that. Thanks for the heads up. Gerhard
That is of course, assuming that the IPMI controllers are net accessible and that the IPMI controllers allow you to update the SSL certificate to something with modern encryption. The first problem is solvable by creating a local certificate authority. The second one is not solvable at all..
Actually, I've come to the conclusion that many forum bug reports are just trolls who cut and paste bugs they find online. There is no other way to account for the constant reports of bugs fixed years ago while missing actual bugs that still exist.
If the contract is large enough, you can get a third party to make the batteries for you.
I have, twice.
Once when someone thought it would be funny to send a link to one of the sales staff that flooded his screen with porn popups. He called for me, I walked up and yanked the power cord out of the back of his machine figuring that cleaning up after an unclean shutdown was better than having to look at the pictures.
And once when some kiddy porners were using my employer's top list system to evade website shutdowns and I found it completely by accident when browsing the lists..
Didn't take long for me to quit that job which turned out to be a good call considering my boss ended up closing the Montreal office, moving back to Russia and becoming a hard core spammer (in jail now, assuming he is still alive)
The opt out link doesn't always work even for legitimate senders. I have had a few places keep sending me email after the return link errored out.. or in one case, I lost the password and they would not change the account settings without it. In both cases, I blocked them at the mail server (rejected, not bounced) and when I got around to removing the block 6 months to a year later, I was removed from whatever list I was on.
Doing it from procmailrc doesn't really get the point across since they never know it didn't get delivered. It is better to block it at the SMTP level and refuse to accept the message in the first place.
No group chat for Linux? This is actually a step backwards.
Even more fun: What if the attack involved spoofed packets?
It's not just the under 25 crowd and you are nuts if you think that stragegy will help. A user who learns by rote memorisation will lose it on version changes or even if they click on the wrong spot and now everything is different. And yes I've seen it happen.. it's a large percentage of the "my computer is broken" calls II get at work.
Innovation is secondary. The whole advantage to HP was their service and that has been sacrificed since the HPE split.
We had a server whose RAID controller was throwing an NMI error and the support process was a nightmare. First level tech support never wanted to escalate to second level. When they finally stopped changing motherboards and Raid caches/batteries, the actual server replacement took two weeks because our 3 year old server was "too old" to keep in stock. Our parent company has been complaining about the same level of service reduction.
They guarunteed that the support contracts will not continue beyond this year and that the next servers will not be HP
As much as I hate RPM and NetworkManager, Redhat does employ many of the people who do the under the hood work on the software that we all depend on. For example the glibc maintainer worked for Redhat for the longest time.