I was streaming my favorite AM station from back home using iheartradio on my phone and they carried the test - New EAS data bursts, then the good old "the Russians are coming" EBS tone, then a recording with horrible background noise, echoes, and looping of some dude spieling the EAS spiel
And in the days of tightening budgets, reduced police forces, etc why dedicate several teams (it takes more than 1 person to pull off a "good tail" where you're not seen) of officers, use up expensive gas, possibly endanger the public by driving, and adding to pollution when you can track them with an Internet connection? I see no difference between using personnel and using technology to follow a vehicle.
ExMerge assumes you have physical access to a command line on the Exchange Server logged in with appropriate privileges. BTW ExMerge with Exchange 2003 was awesome to use when the mailbox is greater than 2GB;)
In Outlook 2007 and earlier (I don't have 2010 here at the office and aren't sure where it is in 2010), click on File | Import and Export ~ Export to a File and select your poison (PST being the "best" of the choices) and export away. Can this be GPOd out? *shrug* In fact, unless you clicked on (to paraphrase) "Don't do this and don't ask me again", Outlook may be building an "archive" PST folder buried deep in the bowels of your/%USER_PROFILE%/AppData directory for you of certain folders I can't remember at the moment.
Multi-select, click on "Forward" will get you copies of multiple messages to the mailbox of your choice
I'm not sure what happens if your corporation has implemented a server-side archiving application. It may be a little more difficult to get the mails out then (since only stubs to the actual messages are stored in the Exchange Server mailbox), but even then, if you can see it on the screen, you can copy it;)
HTML5 and mobile device manufacturers have been pushing this paradigm for years:) Plug-ins are non-existent in iOS and Flash is an afterthought on Android. Hell, even Windows Phone 7 doesn't support Silverlight inside the browser. This is just the current trend in web development.
As soon as Frontierville ships an HTML5 version, I'm set;)
The IE 10 "platform preview" was first released in April of this year... They just released the third preview (and the whole thing in the Windows 8 Dev Preview).
Hell, in Firefox-Time (c) that's at least 2 major versions!
Metro IE is plug-in free... Click a button in it to view it in the "other IE" or launch IE from the "Desktop" and you get good old IE 10 complete with chrome and plug-ins and all the blinky Flash ads you can handle!
We're in the beginnings of a 2 year migration from Windows XP to Windows 7... Seeing how that's going, I'll probably get Windows 7 at the office by the time Windows 9 RTMs
"I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies. If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around [the banks] will deprive the people of all property until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered. The issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the people, to whom it properly belongs." -Thomas Jefferson
It doesn't get anymore prophetic than that.
I often see this quote (or something close to it) bandied about so I fired up the Interweb to research it. Snopes.com offers a different view of that purported Jefferson quote http://www.snopes.com/quotes/jefferson/banks.asp
Among the highlights...
In addition to the lack of documentation, an entry in Respectfully Quoted: A Dictionary of Quotations labels this quotation as "obviously spurious" for contextual reasons, noting that the Oxford English Dictionary's (OED) earliest citation for the word "deflation" (as related to currency) dates only to 1920. (The OED's earliest citation for the word "inflation" used in a financial sense dates to 1838, which means that usage might have been known during Jefferson's lifetime.)
Thats total, not at once. Lend out $100 Billion to someone on Monday night, they pay it back Tuesday morning, and borrow it again Tuesday night to pay back Wednesday morning. Do that for a week and you just lent out a Trillion.
Or $700 billion but what's a few billion between friends:)
*snip* A new drilling technique is opening up vast fields of previously out-of-reach oil in the western United States, helping reverse a two-decade decline in domestic production of crude. Companies are investing billions of dollars to get at oil deposits scattered across North Dakota, Colorado, Texas and California. By 2015, oil executives and analysts say, the new fields could yield as much as 2 million barrels of oil a day — more than the entire Gulf of Mexico produces now. *snip*
California isn't even close to being "on APCO-25". The California Highway Patrol is still on analog VHF-Lo (12 MHz above the CB band) and has recently invested big bucks in upgrading and maintaining that equipment. The hundreds of countywide and local law enforcement agencies around the state are spread all over the radio spectrum with various technologies. California has been investigating implementing a "statewide radio system" but given the state of the budget and the variety of terrain this system would have to work in, it will be a long, long time before that becomes a reality.
Very few states have statewide APCO-25 systems. Most states are made of many counties who may or may not have countywide systems of some kind (very few APCO-25). Those counties may have many municipalities who themselves are spread all over the radio spectrum. While Motorola (and the other P-25 vendors) would love everyone to be on APCO-25 systems and buy their $4,000 radios (plus additional $$$ for encryption), the reality is that budgets are tight everywhere.
Besides, there are better ways of transmitting sensitive data than cell phones or encrypted radio traffic. Around here (small town in the midwest) that information is sent via the Mobile Data Computer in the squad cars (that's run on the Verizon cell network).
I was streaming my favorite AM station from back home using iheartradio on my phone and they carried the test - New EAS data bursts, then the good old "the Russians are coming" EBS tone, then a recording with horrible background noise, echoes, and looping of some dude spieling the EAS spiel
And in the days of tightening budgets, reduced police forces, etc why dedicate several teams (it takes more than 1 person to pull off a "good tail" where you're not seen) of officers, use up expensive gas, possibly endanger the public by driving, and adding to pollution when you can track them with an Internet connection? I see no difference between using personnel and using technology to follow a vehicle.
ExMerge assumes you have physical access to a command line on the Exchange Server logged in with appropriate privileges. BTW ExMerge with Exchange 2003 was awesome to use when the mailbox is greater than 2GB ;)
At least you can filter by date
In Outlook 2007 and earlier (I don't have 2010 here at the office and aren't sure where it is in 2010), click on File | Import and Export ~ Export to a File and select your poison (PST being the "best" of the choices) and export away. Can this be GPOd out? *shrug* In fact, unless you clicked on (to paraphrase) "Don't do this and don't ask me again", Outlook may be building an "archive" PST folder buried deep in the bowels of your /%USER_PROFILE%/AppData directory for you of certain folders I can't remember at the moment.
Multi-select, click on "Forward" will get you copies of multiple messages to the mailbox of your choice
I'm not sure what happens if your corporation has implemented a server-side archiving application. It may be a little more difficult to get the mails out then (since only stubs to the actual messages are stored in the Exchange Server mailbox), but even then, if you can see it on the screen, you can copy it ;)
There are many ways to skin the proverbial cat.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1640843/
But it happened on CSI so in the majority's view, of course it has happened! ;)
Is it true that like the Eskimos have a dozen words for "ice" that the French have dozens of words for "surrender"? ;)
But less than thrice!
The chance that humans could impact such a large object in an way, is pretty slim.
This argument sounds familiar for some reason ...
HEAD!
MOVE!
NOW!
All that's missing is a link to Alex Jones' prisonplanet.com website.
I'm thoroughly convinced he's responsible for all of these types of articles lately! (A conspiracy involving conspiracy theorists!)
That's why the iPhone is the single best selling (and most profitable) individual smartphone out there. Because it works well.
Nice skew on the data ... Sure the iphone as a device may outsell a SINGLE android model, but in terms of market share of mobile OS devices, the market has spoken and Android outsells ios - http://www.businessinsider.com/android-versus-iphone-smartphone-share-2011-4
HTML5 and mobile device manufacturers have been pushing this paradigm for years :) Plug-ins are non-existent in iOS and Flash is an afterthought on Android. Hell, even Windows Phone 7 doesn't support Silverlight inside the browser. This is just the current trend in web development.
As soon as Frontierville ships an HTML5 version, I'm set ;)
The IE 10 "platform preview" was first released in April of this year... They just released the third preview (and the whole thing in the Windows 8 Dev Preview).
Hell, in Firefox-Time (c) that's at least 2 major versions!
Metro IE is plug-in free ... Click a button in it to view it in the "other IE" or launch IE from the "Desktop" and you get good old IE 10 complete with chrome and plug-ins and all the blinky Flash ads you can handle!
We're in the beginnings of a 2 year migration from Windows XP to Windows 7 ... Seeing how that's going, I'll probably get Windows 7 at the office by the time Windows 9 RTMs
Windows 7 (and I believe Vista too) won't let you move/copy to a destination if the destination doesn't have enough space at the time the copy starts
It was Bruce Willis with a Makita and Aerosmith singing power ballads in the background.
"I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies. If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around [the banks] will deprive the people of all property until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered. The issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the people, to whom it properly belongs." -Thomas Jefferson It doesn't get anymore prophetic than that.
I often see this quote (or something close to it) bandied about so I fired up the Interweb to research it. Snopes.com offers a different view of that purported Jefferson quote http://www.snopes.com/quotes/jefferson/banks.asp
...
Among the highlights
In addition to the lack of documentation, an entry in Respectfully Quoted: A Dictionary of Quotations labels this quotation as "obviously spurious" for contextual reasons, noting that the Oxford English Dictionary's (OED) earliest citation for the word "deflation" (as related to currency) dates only to 1920. (The OED's earliest citation for the word "inflation" used in a financial sense dates to 1838, which means that usage might have been known during Jefferson's lifetime.)
Thats total, not at once. Lend out $100 Billion to someone on Monday night, they pay it back Tuesday morning, and borrow it again Tuesday night to pay back Wednesday morning. Do that for a week and you just lent out a Trillion.
Or $700 billion but what's a few billion between friends :)
Nope, but I do now :)
I guess you do learn something new every day!
Btw it's not there anymore (if it ever was).
I can vouch for him, it most definitely was there ... I shoulda grabbed that screenshot I was gonna make
Good thing we can produce more domestically now
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110209/ap_on_re_us/us_shale_oil_3
*snip*
A new drilling technique is opening up vast fields of previously out-of-reach oil in the western United States, helping reverse a two-decade decline in domestic production of crude.
Companies are investing billions of dollars to get at oil deposits scattered across North Dakota, Colorado, Texas and California. By 2015, oil executives and analysts say, the new fields could yield as much as 2 million barrels of oil a day — more than the entire Gulf of Mexico produces now.
*snip*
California isn't even close to being "on APCO-25". The California Highway Patrol is still on analog VHF-Lo (12 MHz above the CB band) and has recently invested big bucks in upgrading and maintaining that equipment. The hundreds of countywide and local law enforcement agencies around the state are spread all over the radio spectrum with various technologies. California has been investigating implementing a "statewide radio system" but given the state of the budget and the variety of terrain this system would have to work in, it will be a long, long time before that becomes a reality.
Very few states have statewide APCO-25 systems. Most states are made of many counties who may or may not have countywide systems of some kind (very few APCO-25). Those counties may have many municipalities who themselves are spread all over the radio spectrum. While Motorola (and the other P-25 vendors) would love everyone to be on APCO-25 systems and buy their $4,000 radios (plus additional $$$ for encryption), the reality is that budgets are tight everywhere.
Besides, there are better ways of transmitting sensitive data than cell phones or encrypted radio traffic. Around here (small town in the midwest) that information is sent via the Mobile Data Computer in the squad cars (that's run on the Verizon cell network).
My fiance' has a Focus too and AT&T's lowest data-tier plan (200 megs?). She mainly uses wi-fi and hasn't come close to the limit.