Hi,
I am a Christian but for the majority of my life I was not. I have quite a few friends who are Ph.D's or currently doing there's. The common viewpoint I see with them is that they believe in micro evolution but not macro evolution.
A great book is Case for a Creator by Lee Strobel. The book looks at the scientific truth that points towards God. It is interesting to learn that incorrect information (e.g. Stanley Miller Experienment, Ernst Haeckel's drawing of Embryos) that has been scientifically proven to be wrong is still included in textbooks as factual information.
Another interesting thing to research is the Cambrian Explosion. All of a sudden a ton of new species came into existence where there were no creatures similar to them previously.
The following textbook is being used in my honours linear algebra class. The textbook is great, well laid out, and has answers for all exercises. The link is:
The author once distributed the answers in PDF form but no longer does unless you request it from him. He states that the answers are no longer downloadable but if you download the full postscript package it includes the answers in postscript format. Good Luck!!
I think alot of people are missing this. If you are on the same subnet as an OpenBSD machine you can exploit this problem as no routing is required. Alot of networks are just one huge subnet or for that matter networks are misconfigured, so you can send packets directly to machines, even though routing is supposed to be required. I used to work for a very large company (to remain nameless), and I was messing around one day and decided to set my machine to a/16 network, and voila, I was able to talk to all machines in the company (stupid cisco routers, and the network admins didn't correctly configure everything). The address space was 172.28.0.0/16. So if you are on a company network, or on the same subnet, you can usually exploit this.
It would be difficult if packets go through many different routes to get to a single location. My take (which could be completely incorrect) seems like they want to control more of the routing tables on the Internet to make it easier to tap communications.
Web interfaces are great for monitoring computers / sites. I work for one of the largest ecommerce companies on the web and we use netsaint for monitoring of our site. It allows us to have network operation folks monitor what is happening in an intuitive interface. They can alert the appropiate folks when a problem happens (also they get paged:-)). You can immediately get a great insight into all services being run and their current status. I wrote a few command line tools to gather the logs also from netsaint logs. Eventually when digging deeper into what the problem is people will use command line, but web interfaces are great for monitoring of how a web site / corporate network is operating and a large outside view. I think its great what has been put together and look forward at reviewing it.
This camera will make a big change on the professional photo industry. Currently for a studio setting the sony studio camera 2560x2048 pixels (~$16K) is the best one out. A few web sites for interest are Sienna (Maker of the Mileca and mid format Fibre Optic CRT digital printers) and Cymbolic Sciences, makers of large format digital focrt printers. If this camera comes with a small price tag it will have a huge influence on professional photo labs converting to digital. It would also be a big plus if they could get the size down:-)
A great book is Case for a Creator by Lee Strobel. The book looks at the scientific truth that points towards God. It is interesting to learn that incorrect information (e.g. Stanley Miller Experienment, Ernst Haeckel's drawing of Embryos) that has been scientifically proven to be wrong is still included in textbooks as factual information.
Another interesting thing to research is the Cambrian Explosion. All of a sudden a ton of new species came into existence where there were no creatures similar to them previously.
The following textbook is being used in my honours linear algebra class. The textbook is great, well laid out, and has answers for all exercises. The link is:
http://joshua.smcvt.edu/linearalgebra/
The author once distributed the answers in PDF form but no longer does unless you request it from him. He states that the answers are no longer downloadable but if you download the full postscript package it includes the answers in postscript format. Good Luck!!
I think alot of people are missing this. If you are on the same subnet as an OpenBSD machine you can exploit this problem as no routing is required. Alot of networks are just one huge subnet or for that matter networks are misconfigured, so you can send packets directly to machines, even though routing is supposed to be required. I used to work for a very large company (to remain nameless), and I was messing around one day and decided to set my machine to a /16 network, and voila, I was able to talk to all machines in the company (stupid cisco routers, and the network admins didn't correctly configure everything). The address space was 172.28.0.0/16. So if you are on a company network, or on the same subnet, you can usually exploit this.
I somewhat agree but Euler seems to fall under quite the contrary (published great works up until his death)
It would be difficult if packets go through many different routes to get to a single location. My take (which could be completely incorrect) seems like they want to control more of the routing tables on the Internet to make it easier to tap communications.
Web interfaces are great for monitoring computers / sites. I work for one of the largest ecommerce companies on the web and we use netsaint for monitoring of our site. It allows us to have network operation folks monitor what is happening in an intuitive interface. They can alert the appropiate folks when a problem happens (also they get paged :-)). You can immediately get a great insight into all services being run and their current status. I wrote a few command line tools to gather the logs also from netsaint logs. Eventually when digging deeper into what the problem is people will use command line, but web interfaces are great for monitoring of how a web site / corporate network is operating and a large outside view. I think its great what has been put together and look forward at reviewing it.
What about nautilus? Its been around from years.
This camera will make a big change on the professional photo industry. Currently for a studio setting the sony studio camera 2560x2048 pixels (~$16K) is the best one out. A few web sites for interest are Sienna (Maker of the Mileca and mid format Fibre Optic CRT digital printers) and Cymbolic Sciences, makers of large format digital focrt printers. If this camera comes with a small price tag it will have a huge influence on professional photo labs converting to digital. It would also be a big plus if they could get the size down :-)