Due to the amount of read writes & the life span of SSD's they are some of the worst drives you can get for a high availability web server. ext3 should work fine for you, especially if you're not too familiar with the different types of file systems. Two things I might recommend is if you're looking at really high traffic, you need to separate out your database, email, & web server into 3 different entities. If not... again the file system is not really a concern for you. Last, but not least, redundancy is what will save you a lot of time and headache, make sure you have some sort of mirroring going on, or if your server is at a datacenter, they probably take care of it for you.
If everybody jumped at everything proposed in legislature at all the foreign governments, obesity would be a thing of the past.
Every once in a great while I'll get what I need form the summary of that page (ex. definition, reference), but the other 99.5% I click the link and go to the page like I normally would & I don't think my googling habits are unique in any way, so this type of law would make websites have to adapt... more descriptive page headers & titles for starters, or... they can just keep using the current system, which nobody seems to mind, but I doubt google would pay however many sites are out there to promote their content for them, it's the other way around.
I'm kind of amused I had to read about 10 posts before I found a response that's even relevant.
Patching is huge...
inventory is kind of vague, a licensing model capable of servicing a large # of customers maybe?
Enterprise support definitely involves tech support, so if corp A can't figure out a software issue they call the software developers who have an on-call system.
The other thing I can think of is customization, if you're willing to pay for it options are available to tailor the system to your business processes.
We're more in the realm of software than OS level with these options, for an OS it mainly looks like tech support thinking of red hat, not sure what else they provide besides a licensing model. I think they might also write / build stuff for you, but I don't know if that level of support extends to the kernel. In Windows, it does not.
This situation needs a communication standard for phones communicating with dash boards that is forwards compatible due to consistency in the calls. That or, COM ports on all the in-dashs and firmware support.
I'm going to go ahead and challenge you on the word "capable", in a way outsourcing to India creates such poor results that the ongoing maintenance of crap that comes out of there is job security for us here in the states.
A lot of companies are catching on though and bringing development back to the states and if they outsource it's typically to a U.S. consulting firm. I'm pretty sure that every last line of code imported from India needs to be burned with fire.
And I still can't understand the tech support... a few experiences and I now shy away from HP products because I don't ever want to have to deal with the warranty.
Right... but surely somebody over there has got to consider the fact that despite this showmanship, if they actually do get invaded and they don't have said drones / nukes to protect them, they will go the way of Iraq even quicker.
Why not just fall in line with the rest of the world and let the nuclear inspectors inspect their facilities when asked? Nuclear technology affects the world, not just Iran, so it's important to regulate it. Then again it sounds like a bunch of clowns are trying to run Iran and not a real government, if the do get invaded, they only have themselves to blame.
Alternatively, they can go invent everything the "West" has invented real quick, win a couple of world wars, acquire vast natural resources, forefront technology, and then maybe they can decline the inspection legitimately.
Agreed, what's the point of reviews / criticisms if the people providing them are dumber than nails. TFA is a good example of why you should make your own opinions about things.
Then again, maybe she just wrote this book in jest as a tribute to her fandom of star wars, trekkies have probably done worse.
Because for some people it's almost replaced telephone communication. Also it's harder for a girl to ignore a wall post in front of all her friends than a 1on1 text message, there's other reasons... most of them indicative of our society going to hell & us thinking too highly of ourselves to engage in meager face to face conversation. Coincidentally, the amount of mass shootings has gone up considerably in the last decade.
Some people include a lot of family and co-workers in their facebook friends list, this becomes a problem when another friend posts those new year's photos and tags you in them setting visibility to friends of friends... my personal opinion is it's none of their f'in business, but life doesn't always work that way.
A determined enough attacker(s) can punch through just about anything in time. The only way to truly secure a network permanently is to unplug it from the rest of the world. VPN isn't an exception.
Consider how many government organizations have been compromised by an email with an attachment or a link lately. With just that single port open to the water's network, multiple attack vectors immediately present themselves that don't necessarily involve brute forcing the vpn.
Doesn't mean conviction and punishment. The reason corporations tend to get fined rather than individuals getting charged is stuff like distributed responsibility and less than stellar organizational hierarchies & less than clear job responsibilities. Basically, it's like playing pin the tail on the donkey.
A judge also may set bond conditions and other restrictions on the defendants, but the workers don't face arrest ahead of time, their lawyers said.
The same can be said about Windows also, newer versions of Windows can't really run on older hardware. You can make it, but you won't really be able to do much or get far. You can also hack the hardware of Android (manufacturers are the ones who don't want you to do this not the OS creators) and put something else up. I remember on the Atrix I got Gingerbread a long time before Motorola officially released it. iOS... well who cares, it's all Apple from the bottom up and they use that to make you buy newer iphones as a marketing strategy.
As long as the director of the water treatment plant doesn't want to drive in to work at 3 am in the morning to press a button to fix a problem... yes. Good luck making the security through obscurity argument to that person.
Yepppp... skipped vista in it's entirety, no plans for windows 8, now think alllll the way back to win 95 and you'll see a startling trend of it only makes sense to upgrade every other OS version. So one can argue, people already skip entire versions of windows.
I was wondering when they'd start packaging service packs as new versions of windows, seems the speculative day has come.
Also Android (when available) & iOS updates are free. Upgrading to Windows 8 however is not.
I'm curious to see how much MS has deviated from their staple OS market into other technologies like cloud based services and enterprise level stuff. I don't think windows 8 was ever meant to be the big money maker that windows xp was, however with this thought process typically comes a drop in QC & the occasional PR disaster (iOS maps anyone?)
Due to the amount of read writes & the life span of SSD's they are some of the worst drives you can get for a high availability web server. ext3 should work fine for you, especially if you're not too familiar with the different types of file systems. Two things I might recommend is if you're looking at really high traffic, you need to separate out your database, email, & web server into 3 different entities. If not... again the file system is not really a concern for you. Last, but not least, redundancy is what will save you a lot of time and headache, make sure you have some sort of mirroring going on, or if your server is at a datacenter, they probably take care of it for you.
If everybody jumped at everything proposed in legislature at all the foreign governments, obesity would be a thing of the past.
Every once in a great while I'll get what I need form the summary of that page (ex. definition, reference), but the other 99.5% I click the link and go to the page like I normally would & I don't think my googling habits are unique in any way, so this type of law would make websites have to adapt... more descriptive page headers & titles for starters, or... they can just keep using the current system, which nobody seems to mind, but I doubt google would pay however many sites are out there to promote their content for them, it's the other way around.
I'm kind of amused I had to read about 10 posts before I found a response that's even relevant.
Patching is huge...
inventory is kind of vague, a licensing model capable of servicing a large # of customers maybe?
Enterprise support definitely involves tech support, so if corp A can't figure out a software issue they call the software developers who have an on-call system.
The other thing I can think of is customization, if you're willing to pay for it options are available to tailor the system to your business processes.
We're more in the realm of software than OS level with these options, for an OS it mainly looks like tech support thinking of red hat, not sure what else they provide besides a licensing model. I think they might also write / build stuff for you, but I don't know if that level of support extends to the kernel. In Windows, it does not.
References to the transformers movies, those were aliens, this is a bit more local.
We'll probably have expanded to other planets by then, cheap moon labor anyone?
Imagine the possibilities:
Beer shower
Beer cereal
Beer cooking
Beer slides
This situation needs a communication standard for phones communicating with dash boards that is forwards compatible due to consistency in the calls. That or, COM ports on all the in-dashs and firmware support.
I'm going to go ahead and challenge you on the word "capable", in a way outsourcing to India creates such poor results that the ongoing maintenance of crap that comes out of there is job security for us here in the states.
A lot of companies are catching on though and bringing development back to the states and if they outsource it's typically to a U.S. consulting firm. I'm pretty sure that every last line of code imported from India needs to be burned with fire.
And I still can't understand the tech support... a few experiences and I now shy away from HP products because I don't ever want to have to deal with the warranty.
Right... but surely somebody over there has got to consider the fact that despite this showmanship, if they actually do get invaded and they don't have said drones / nukes to protect them, they will go the way of Iraq even quicker.
Why not just fall in line with the rest of the world and let the nuclear inspectors inspect their facilities when asked? Nuclear technology affects the world, not just Iran, so it's important to regulate it. Then again it sounds like a bunch of clowns are trying to run Iran and not a real government, if the do get invaded, they only have themselves to blame.
Alternatively, they can go invent everything the "West" has invented real quick, win a couple of world wars, acquire vast natural resources, forefront technology, and then maybe they can decline the inspection legitimately.
Agreed, what's the point of reviews / criticisms if the people providing them are dumber than nails. TFA is a good example of why you should make your own opinions about things.
Then again, maybe she just wrote this book in jest as a tribute to her fandom of star wars, trekkies have probably done worse.
Vista wireless *shudder*
Because for some people it's almost replaced telephone communication. Also it's harder for a girl to ignore a wall post in front of all her friends than a 1on1 text message, there's other reasons... most of them indicative of our society going to hell & us thinking too highly of ourselves to engage in meager face to face conversation. Coincidentally, the amount of mass shootings has gone up considerably in the last decade.
Some people include a lot of family and co-workers in their facebook friends list, this becomes a problem when another friend posts those new year's photos and tags you in them setting visibility to friends of friends... my personal opinion is it's none of their f'in business, but life doesn't always work that way.
You mean those right wing anti-abortionists who attack people?
Right wingers are some of our dumbest people in addition.
Then again they are posting political opinions on fb, can't think of a better place than that to do so.
lmfao, it's the most extreme form in a 1/2 joking format, now crawl back in your troll hole newb.
P.S. air gapping a network involves A LOT more than unplugging the ethernet cord, but what would you know about it?
Doesn't sound like something you can prove "beyond a reasonable doubt" does it?
A determined enough attacker(s) can punch through just about anything in time. The only way to truly secure a network permanently is to unplug it from the rest of the world. VPN isn't an exception.
Consider how many government organizations have been compromised by an email with an attachment or a link lately. With just that single port open to the water's network, multiple attack vectors immediately present themselves that don't necessarily involve brute forcing the vpn.
A judge also may set bond conditions and other restrictions on the defendants, but the workers don't face arrest ahead of time, their lawyers said.
Not your typical criminal manslaughter treatment.
The same can be said about Windows also, newer versions of Windows can't really run on older hardware. You can make it, but you won't really be able to do much or get far. You can also hack the hardware of Android (manufacturers are the ones who don't want you to do this not the OS creators) and put something else up. I remember on the Atrix I got Gingerbread a long time before Motorola officially released it. iOS... well who cares, it's all Apple from the bottom up and they use that to make you buy newer iphones as a marketing strategy.
As long as the director of the water treatment plant doesn't want to drive in to work at 3 am in the morning to press a button to fix a problem... yes. Good luck making the security through obscurity argument to that person.
There's... sex, drugs, & rock n' roll... but maybe not for most slashdotters, enjoy your insanity sir.
Yepppp... skipped vista in it's entirety, no plans for windows 8, now think alllll the way back to win 95 and you'll see a startling trend of it only makes sense to upgrade every other OS version. So one can argue, people already skip entire versions of windows.
I was wondering when they'd start packaging service packs as new versions of windows, seems the speculative day has come.
Also Android (when available) & iOS updates are free. Upgrading to Windows 8 however is not.
I'm curious to see how much MS has deviated from their staple OS market into other technologies like cloud based services and enterprise level stuff. I don't think windows 8 was ever meant to be the big money maker that windows xp was, however with this thought process typically comes a drop in QC & the occasional PR disaster (iOS maps anyone?)
rofl +1 if I had mod pts today, nice BSG reference.
If you're a commercial airliner and see that red strobe coming, you're in for one hell of a ride.