Hahaha. Wow... really? you know that WSL comes with full, real distros, like Ubuntu, right? Cygwin still doesn't have a command line way to install packages. No apt-get install anything, or (ugh) rpm -ivh some.rpm. Updates are non-trivial, you have to use a GUI, instead of just do-release-upgrade (or whatever Suse/Redhat/etc. use). Give me WSL any day of the week over Cygwin.
Just because the recommendations were "in flux" doesn't magically absolve potential liability. You are not a US criminal lawyer. And reasonable effort is decided by a judge and/or jury - not a CEO, a lawyer, or the public, unwashed masses of social media. And it can be decided many years after the fact, since the law is now on the books. The fact that you don't know, for sure, exactly HOW to follow it doesn't mean you're absolved from needing to follow it anyways.
The hell I donâ(TM)t own it. I paid good money for my device. My insurance is crap, so I had to pay for everything- the at home testing, the device, masks, hoses. I own it, and I can do what I want with it, including decrypting the data so I can use it myself. They can go fork themselves.
Yet itâ(TM)s the atypical day that scares me with automated driving. Can a car understand a cop waving you around an accident? Can a car see a frisbee about to fly into the street, with a kid (currently in the yard) running after it? Can a car understand snowy roads covered with ice and a truck kareening out of control on a cross street? Can it understand itâ(TM)s cameras are blinded and drive slower in a snowstorm, or does it assume nothing is there and go full speed? If you can control the entire environment, then automated driving makes a lot of sense. But in the real world, things are always more complicated, and I do not trust the computers have enough knowledge yet to navigate that.
He is PRESIDENT. Yes, I expect him to be able to figure out how to use a phone. Dear G-d, how low will you set your standards? They actually have training for WH personnel on how to use their phones, so unless he was playing on Twitter during the session he was already brought up to speed. Also, itâ(TM)s not his first month, so I do expect heâ(TM)s had to use it before now.
So, yeah, if he doesnâ(TM)t know by now heâ(TM)s never going to, or heâ(TM)s forgotten (which is scarier by far).
Right up until that company gets hacked. Then the data on where you go and where you shop is out. Data that doesnt need be collected in the first place for their business.
They may, as privately held properties, have the right to collect the data, for now, but by doing so they incur extra liability if they inadvertently leak that data about their customers. Not necessarily legal liability, but PR liability. Just because someone is legal doesnâ(TM)t mean one should do it, or that it has no consequences.
Ah, so in your company the CEO apparently gets to ignore any rule he wants. See, in reasonable companies, the CEO hires people who are experts in their field, and if they set rules he has to obey them, because THEY KNOW MORE THAN HE DOES. Otherwise why bother to hire them in the first place.
And the President isnâ(TM)t a King or Emperor - even he has to obey rules that he doesnâ(TM)t like, or approve. He has a specific role to fill and itâ(TM)s not to dictate what happens, but to Lead the country and Execute the laws thereof. Not to tweet every effing thing that comes to his head - thatâ(TM)s actually the job of his Press Secretary.
So what they want to do is mandate firmware for all phones to allow them to disable, complete, all functionality of a phone. We have only their word that they won't disable *MY* phone, or *YOUR* phone, that they won't accidentally read off the wrong IMEI and disabled Trump's phone..
And here's the way around this: buy your prison phone from Europe, or Asia, pop a US SIM in it, and you're good to go. Asia, in particular, has low cost phones that won't observe any firmware "shutdown" commands as they are made for use outside of FCC jurisdiction.
So you're SPF and DKIM signed - you can still be marked by Google as spam based on content, which is what their problem is here. I know - I've had to deal with it, and it's very annoying because no ESP out there cares about senders - you're not their customer.
What advertising network? They should be known, publicly shamed, and every website operator should know not to do business with them.
Honestly, I wish there was a way for me to report an ad that's violating browser rules. I hate when I go to a real newspaper site that uses ads, and I get served an ad that takes over the whole window, hiding stuff behind, but there's no way for me, on my phone / tablet, to know who served the ad or report the ad placement. Makes me want to block all ads everywhere on my personal devices and networks, but THAT comes with issues because many sites and even many mobile apps refuse to function if they can't talk to the ad networks and/or Google/Adobe/etc..
Nice try, but already several states have emissions standards, and had the Feds used their unconstitutional "right" to pass a law only permitting Federal jurisdiction over emission standards, CA's rules (which like 10 other states follow) would NEVER have seen the light of day. And those standards have helped push electric vehicles, even self-driving cars (which arguably would not exist if alternative fuel cars wasn't as big of a market as it is - it's sparked innovation in a previously dead market).
In the end, the Feds don't really have authority to do this, if the States would finally stand up and remind the federal government of their rights under the 10th amendment. Great point: I may not be a leftie or rightie (I'm actually centrist), but how would you feel if the Feds also demanded concealed carry reciprocity nation-wide? Or blocked LGBT marriage nation-wide? Most liberals squirm, at best, at the thought, yet ITS THE SAME IDEA - the feds taking away the right for a State to determine its own laws entirely within that state. It's only when something is commerce cross-state boundaries that the feds should be doing anything like this, and several states (esp. out west) are larger than many European countries, so I have a hard time believing they are having a hard time doing business in California (practically its own country already).
Or youâ(TM)re a network admin and need to share hundreds of network credentials for internal and vendor systems with your team. Thereâ(TM)s a lot more use cases than what you are magically aware of.
You're kidding, right? The certificate location doesn't change. Once you setup the certificate, you just run letsencrypt-auto renew once a week and when it's done do an apachectl reload. I run over a hundred websites across 10 servers and haven't had any issues integrating LE into my flow. I will admit I use nginx and not apache, but given that the path to the certificate, chain and key don't change and are all symlinks, I fail to see how it's "complicated".
Ignoring the feasibility of this, if this were to happen mental clarity and focus training will be in high demand. Learning to focus ones thoughts, purify them for a machine to read. Makes me think of Vulcan society.
So you remain "connected" at a junction box, but just don't use it. Turn off those breakers. And have a qualified electrician put in a separate one that you run off generators, solar, batteries, etc... Shoot, run a light bulb off of it if you really want.
On the other hand, his change could have affected a major production system (think: VPNs to customers/partners, or external access to federation identity servers, or a message queue server that partners/integrations use) that could have cost the company thousands of dollars a minute. Process exists for a reason, and you did have an emergency process - use that. The cost of cleaning up those computers can be quantified and is well-known, can be insured against, but the chance that a rogue (for that is what he was) employee changing the firewall costs an unknown, but high, amount, and exposes the company to serious liability.
Imagine if Amazon decided to push an update to S3 to "fix" a virus that was making the rounds and suddenly S3 was down for half a day....
Then why haven't they yet? Open source isn't just for software - but no one yet has devised a scalable (to 1000+ units), open, reliable, and low-cost voice and data network that Just Works.
It's the band - radio operators have names for the bands, from 3m-30m, 30m-300m, etc... It's all around the number 3 for mathematical reasons relating wavelength to frequency. The band itself is often called the "terahertz" band, because it contains that frequency in the band. K0DEN
This. Sorry guys but open office and libre office suck both at UX and just being able to do complex shit that Excel handles pretty well. I cannot in any seriousness tell my data analysts they are going to use OpenOffice, they would laugh me out of the room!
Hahaha. Wow... really? you know that WSL comes with full, real distros, like Ubuntu, right? Cygwin still doesn't have a command line way to install packages. No apt-get install anything, or (ugh) rpm -ivh some.rpm. Updates are non-trivial, you have to use a GUI, instead of just do-release-upgrade (or whatever Suse/Redhat/etc. use). Give me WSL any day of the week over Cygwin.
Just because the recommendations were "in flux" doesn't magically absolve potential liability. You are not a US criminal lawyer. And reasonable effort is decided by a judge and/or jury - not a CEO, a lawyer, or the public, unwashed masses of social media. And it can be decided many years after the fact, since the law is now on the books. The fact that you don't know, for sure, exactly HOW to follow it doesn't mean you're absolved from needing to follow it anyways.
The hell I donâ(TM)t own it. I paid good money for my device. My insurance is crap, so I had to pay for everything- the at home testing, the device, masks, hoses. I own it, and I can do what I want with it, including decrypting the data so I can use it myself. They can go fork themselves.
Yet itâ(TM)s the atypical day that scares me with automated driving. Can a car understand a cop waving you around an accident? Can a car see a frisbee about to fly into the street, with a kid (currently in the yard) running after it? Can a car understand snowy roads covered with ice and a truck kareening out of control on a cross street? Can it understand itâ(TM)s cameras are blinded and drive slower in a snowstorm, or does it assume nothing is there and go full speed? If you can control the entire environment, then automated driving makes a lot of sense. But in the real world, things are always more complicated, and I do not trust the computers have enough knowledge yet to navigate that.
He is PRESIDENT. Yes, I expect him to be able to figure out how to use a phone. Dear G-d, how low will you set your standards? They actually have training for WH personnel on how to use their phones, so unless he was playing on Twitter during the session he was already brought up to speed. Also, itâ(TM)s not his first month, so I do expect heâ(TM)s had to use it before now.
So, yeah, if he doesnâ(TM)t know by now heâ(TM)s never going to, or heâ(TM)s forgotten (which is scarier by far).
Right up until that company gets hacked. Then the data on where you go and where you shop is out. Data that doesnt need be collected in the first place for their business.
They may, as privately held properties, have the right to collect the data, for now, but by doing so they incur extra liability if they inadvertently leak that data about their customers. Not necessarily legal liability, but PR liability. Just because someone is legal doesnâ(TM)t mean one should do it, or that it has no consequences.
Did th girls thing. Itâ(TM)s a resource hog like nothing Iâ(TM)ve ever seen. Moved to gogs and itâ(TM)s been night and day!
Ah, so in your company the CEO apparently gets to ignore any rule he wants. See, in reasonable companies, the CEO hires people who are experts in their field, and if they set rules he has to obey them, because THEY KNOW MORE THAN HE DOES. Otherwise why bother to hire them in the first place.
And the President isnâ(TM)t a King or Emperor - even he has to obey rules that he doesnâ(TM)t like, or approve. He has a specific role to fill and itâ(TM)s not to dictate what happens, but to Lead the country and Execute the laws thereof. Not to tweet every effing thing that comes to his head - thatâ(TM)s actually the job of his Press Secretary.
So what they want to do is mandate firmware for all phones to allow them to disable, complete, all functionality of a phone. We have only their word that they won't disable *MY* phone, or *YOUR* phone, that they won't accidentally read off the wrong IMEI and disabled Trump's phone..
And here's the way around this: buy your prison phone from Europe, or Asia, pop a US SIM in it, and you're good to go. Asia, in particular, has low cost phones that won't observe any firmware "shutdown" commands as they are made for use outside of FCC jurisdiction.
So you're SPF and DKIM signed - you can still be marked by Google as spam based on content, which is what their problem is here. I know - I've had to deal with it, and it's very annoying because no ESP out there cares about senders - you're not their customer.
What advertising network? They should be known, publicly shamed, and every website operator should know not to do business with them.
Honestly, I wish there was a way for me to report an ad that's violating browser rules. I hate when I go to a real newspaper site that uses ads, and I get served an ad that takes over the whole window, hiding stuff behind, but there's no way for me, on my phone / tablet, to know who served the ad or report the ad placement. Makes me want to block all ads everywhere on my personal devices and networks, but THAT comes with issues because many sites and even many mobile apps refuse to function if they can't talk to the ad networks and/or Google/Adobe/etc..
Nice try, but already several states have emissions standards, and had the Feds used their unconstitutional "right" to pass a law only permitting Federal jurisdiction over emission standards, CA's rules (which like 10 other states follow) would NEVER have seen the light of day. And those standards have helped push electric vehicles, even self-driving cars (which arguably would not exist if alternative fuel cars wasn't as big of a market as it is - it's sparked innovation in a previously dead market).
In the end, the Feds don't really have authority to do this, if the States would finally stand up and remind the federal government of their rights under the 10th amendment. Great point: I may not be a leftie or rightie (I'm actually centrist), but how would you feel if the Feds also demanded concealed carry reciprocity nation-wide? Or blocked LGBT marriage nation-wide? Most liberals squirm, at best, at the thought, yet ITS THE SAME IDEA - the feds taking away the right for a State to determine its own laws entirely within that state. It's only when something is commerce cross-state boundaries that the feds should be doing anything like this, and several states (esp. out west) are larger than many European countries, so I have a hard time believing they are having a hard time doing business in California (practically its own country already).
Or youâ(TM)re a network admin and need to share hundreds of network credentials for internal and vendor systems with your team. Thereâ(TM)s a lot more use cases than what you are magically aware of.
You're kidding, right? The certificate location doesn't change. Once you setup the certificate, you just run letsencrypt-auto renew once a week and when it's done do an apachectl reload. I run over a hundred websites across 10 servers and haven't had any issues integrating LE into my flow. I will admit I use nginx and not apache, but given that the path to the certificate, chain and key don't change and are all symlinks, I fail to see how it's "complicated".
Ignoring the feasibility of this, if this were to happen mental clarity and focus training will be in high demand. Learning to focus ones thoughts, purify them for a machine to read. Makes me think of Vulcan society.
Sorry but I'm actually not finding much on google to debunk this. Makkng PV panels appears to be seriously toxic.
So you remain "connected" at a junction box, but just don't use it. Turn off those breakers. And have a qualified electrician put in a separate one that you run off generators, solar, batteries, etc... Shoot, run a light bulb off of it if you really want.
Wow... here in Colorado you must show proof of insurance to renew your vehicleâ(TM)s license plates every year.
On the other hand, his change could have affected a major production system (think: VPNs to customers/partners, or external access to federation identity servers, or a message queue server that partners/integrations use) that could have cost the company thousands of dollars a minute. Process exists for a reason, and you did have an emergency process - use that. The cost of cleaning up those computers can be quantified and is well-known, can be insured against, but the chance that a rogue (for that is what he was) employee changing the firewall costs an unknown, but high, amount, and exposes the company to serious liability.
Imagine if Amazon decided to push an update to S3 to "fix" a virus that was making the rounds and suddenly S3 was down for half a day....
Then why haven't they yet? Open source isn't just for software - but no one yet has devised a scalable (to 1000+ units), open, reliable, and low-cost voice and data network that Just Works.
You can now setup an Amazon box and tunnel through them (finally!!), so it was great but makes sense, saves costs for them.
Except web mail clients. Which is most people now.
It's the band - radio operators have names for the bands, from 3m-30m, 30m-300m, etc... It's all around the number 3 for mathematical reasons relating wavelength to frequency. The band itself is often called the "terahertz" band, because it contains that frequency in the band. K0DEN
This. Sorry guys but open office and libre office suck both at UX and just being able to do complex shit that Excel handles pretty well. I cannot in any seriousness tell my data analysts they are going to use OpenOffice, they would laugh me out of the room!
Do we finally have a 2400b mode? Would love to do digital but when existing FM transceivers. Due to HOA I can't (and yes have tried) do HF reliably.