DESCRIPTION
The mtree utility compares the file hierarchy rooted in the current
directory against a specification read from the standard input. Mes-
sages are written to the standard output for any files whose character-
istics do not match the specifications, or which are missing from
either the file hierarchy or the specification.
The helpdesk closes the issue as "User error". The engineer closes the issue as "Showed documentation". The senior engineer opens an "Usability issue".
It are the same kind of (bullshit)stories as the deck of cards stopping the bullet, or the cigarette case stopping the bullet, or the bible stopping the bullet.
How many other people at the airport which got shot did have their macbook with them and didn't get the chance to use it as a shield?
> Finally, Bitcode. Instead of uploading pre-compiled binaries, developers upload what Apple calls an âoeintermediate representationâ of the app. The App Store then automatically compiles the app just before downloading. This allows it to automatically implement part of App Slicing even if the developer hasnâ(TM)t bothered to tag their code, downloading only the 32- or 64-bit code as required.
That will bring up a nice amount of Heisenberg bugs.
From all the stations you could come up with, you came up with the one which handles these kind of issues worst.
Go for ABC 702, it is mentally relaxing listening to this while my colleagues are shitting their pants around the various commercial TV station broadcasts: http://streema.com/radios/ABC_...
Soldiers told her that attachment to their robots didn't affect their performance, yet acknowledged they felt a range of emotions such as frustration, anger and even sadness when their field robot was destroyed.
Anybody who has seen an episode of Mythbusters knows their positive relationship with Buster and the other dummies they have or craft.
So everybody is complaining about bad software patents, but are there any good software patents which are actually doing something tricky/interesting worth patenting?
As somebody who left the network / sysadmin business before the attacks started from the inside (send enough malware to everybody inside a company and you will get lucky at a certain moment), how would you protect it best?
Airgap it (or properly firewall it), and people will complain about the costs of duplicate infrastructure, remote support from vendors will be a pain etc.
Monitor the network and spot anomalies, it's a hard task but could be the way to go. Except that you need skilled people there (not saying that there aren't, my experiences in a TAC shows that there aren't many).
Letting the attackers waste time in a honey-pot while your own network is isolated? At least you learn from it and you give them a false sense of victory.
There is not a single ISP on the NBN in Australia who provides IPv6 over FTTC. That is new technology launched in 2018. Way to go NBNco!
NAME
mtree -- map a directory hierarchy
SYNOPSIS
mtree [-LPUcdeinqruxw] [-f spec] [-f spec] [-K keywords] [-k keywords]
[-p path] [-s seed] [-X exclude-list]
DESCRIPTION
The mtree utility compares the file hierarchy rooted in the current
directory against a specification read from the standard input. Mes-
sages are written to the standard output for any files whose character-
istics do not match the specifications, or which are missing from
either the file hierarchy or the specification.
Time to dust of these Fidonet Technical Standards printouts!
I think he got a dare. And lost. And then had to do this.
That's Qualcomm you are thinking about.
The helpdesk closes the issue as "User error".
The engineer closes the issue as "Showed documentation".
The senior engineer opens an "Usability issue".
Currently the only way to update included apps when you purchase a new phone is via an iOS upgrade.
As such this whole drama could be prevented by being able to upgrade a single included app via the AppStore instead of via an (i)OS upgrade.
It are the same kind of (bullshit)stories as the deck of cards stopping the bullet, or the cigarette case stopping the bullet, or the bible stopping the bullet.
How many other people at the airport which got shot did have their macbook with them and didn't get the chance to use it as a shield?
Trolling, and the media got caught hook, line and sinker. Well done!
With a patent system like this, who needs terrorists to attack you?
Fiber-based Ethernet has already different kind of connectors.
You would think that a company like GE would be big enough to be able to have their own private cloud infrastructure.
> Finally, Bitcode. Instead of uploading pre-compiled binaries, developers upload what Apple calls an âoeintermediate representationâ of the app. The App Store then automatically compiles the app just before downloading. This allows it to automatically implement part of App Slicing even if the developer hasnâ(TM)t bothered to tag their code, downloading only the 32- or 64-bit code as required.
That will bring up a nice amount of Heisenberg bugs.
> You have outsourced your networking experts to foreign countries.
"This is IP Soft, how can I help you?"
> The fact that the systems are VME is simply a reflection on the vast amount of logic that went into developing some substantial business systems
In my approach: Logic should be in configuration files, not in the code.
From all the stations you could come up with, you came up with the one which handles these kind of issues worst.
Go for ABC 702, it is mentally relaxing listening to this while my colleagues are shitting their pants around the various commercial TV station broadcasts: http://streema.com/radios/ABC_...
Because the social "everybody is allowed to wear guns" experiment is doing so great in the USA.
Now if there was an easy way to get it out of all these stars....
You should ask your synthesizer company why they have so much problems replicating the sound of a violin.
Soldiers told her that attachment to their robots didn't affect their performance, yet acknowledged they felt a range of emotions such as frustration, anger and even sadness when their field robot was destroyed.
Anybody who has seen an episode of Mythbusters knows their positive relationship with Buster and the other dummies they have or craft.
So everybody is complaining about bad software patents, but are there any good software patents which are actually doing something tricky/interesting worth patenting?
As somebody who left the network / sysadmin business before the attacks started from the inside (send enough malware to everybody inside a company and you will get lucky at a certain moment), how would you protect it best?
Airgap it (or properly firewall it), and people will complain about the costs of duplicate infrastructure, remote support from vendors will be a pain etc.
Monitor the network and spot anomalies, it's a hard task but could be the way to go. Except that you need skilled people there (not saying that there aren't, my experiences in a TAC shows that there aren't many).
Letting the attackers waste time in a honey-pot while your own network is isolated? At least you learn from it and you give them a false sense of victory.
What is wisdom, any thoughts?
I'm waiting for the sequel: More time.
(before anybody flames, I follow it every couple of days via http://geekwagon.net/projects/xkcd1190/).
Why was there no self-destruct happening?
Where was the guy with his finger on the "press here to explode rocket" button?
Like AS numbers, network blocks etc?
Oh wait, they don't make money out of that will be thrown out?