I found that my local dealer (the not so small type, but three shops in three different larger cities around here) offers the same books at about 25-50c(EUR) less for the same service (or you can choose to pick it up in town).
If you go to the site of Libri.de, you can even choose almost any book shop where you want to pick up your delivery.
And afterall, we surely know where to buy books online.
No use in a well-kept (i.e. Orwellian) dorm network. You'd usually hardwire the MAC in the switch, so if you change the MAC, you don't have
any connection at all.
Apart from printing and setting up an internal network, everything ought to be done by the installation program by default, with minimal user intervention.
I disagree. That's exactly the reason why I prefer BSD: If you've set it up yourself, you know how it works and how to fix it.
Bruce Schneier's friendly reminder that distributed/encrypted cloud storage interferes with the cloud providers' business models. It'd be terribly useful, but I'm afraid they will keep on throwing sticks between our legs there for quite a while.
...the CPUs suck :-)
Actually how (Free)BSD made use of available hardware resources back then in the 90s was the big reason for me to use it instead of Linux.
FWIW, Coverity is a spin-off of Dawson Engler's work at Stanford.
...he could rightly believe that even though innocent he couldn't prove it.
Damn, I always forget how you have to prove your innocence these days. Thanks for reminding me.
Why buy at Amazon if you don't have to?
I found that my local dealer (the not so small type, but three shops in three different larger cities around here) offers the same books at about 25-50c(EUR) less for the same service (or you can choose to pick it up in town).
If you go to the site of Libri.de, you can even choose almost any book shop where you want to pick up your delivery.
And afterall, we surely know where to buy books online.
No use in a well-kept (i.e. Orwellian) dorm network. You'd usually hardwire the MAC in the switch, so if you change the MAC, you don't have
any connection at all.
I wouldnt go that far and call a protocol based on the fixed TCP port 1214 a decentralized network. Less vulnerable, maybe.
#include Freenet.rant
The advantage is that we probably get the most obscure unames ever: Linux issan 2.4.13-benh+xfs+ipsec-snap+irda-hotfix #1
The most important part is
:-/),
6) pkg_delete foo.
You missed
3.5) Grab FreeBSD-patches (like adding #include before
too.
Poeple are working on background fsck which should help even more.
To avoid firewalls, try Freenet :)
Don't worry, your NOC will probably block port 1214 in a couple of days, anyway...
For Communicator, there was muttzilla. I don't know if this will work with Mozilla.
Okay, who rated this stupid broken link "Informative"?
You, in the back row! Stand in the corner for 15 minutes!
Everybody seems to be engaged in a shell-scripting d*ck-size contest.
:-)
The easiest solution for starting an ssh-agent is of course by using pam_ssh.so
Obviously the pam config has to be installed by root, though.
All these articles in the last few weeks sound like people actually did use WEP as the only means of security. They can't be that stupid, can they?
Damn, first I thought he wanted Freenet :-)
Theres no fear. Just certainty.
Once again time to mention JAP, which will at least take care of HTTP.
Unluckily, it`s still under development and servers are scarce.
Hell, better would be even running a node :-)
Are you envious because you coulnt pry the 1x1" badge out of your Wintel case?
What, you mean I should get a *plain* PowerBook?
:-)
Oh, wait, Ive already got one
I disagree. That's exactly the reason why I prefer BSD: If you've set it up yourself, you know how it works and how to fix it.
Hm, maybe, but usually the guys providing the backbone don't have a backbone and back down as soon as the first letter from a lawyer arrives.
Don't forget that it's costly to get sued, even if you'd win in the long run!
Reality check, please.
Although "nobody is using it", the ISPs handing out flat rates calculate with these unused periods, otherwise they`d be charging per volume.
So this approach will probably lead to a rise in costs in the long run.