I'm curious why these computers so willingly accept connections from IP addresses willy nilly; whatever happens to deny all accept (Trusted host IP) at the firewall?
For analysis the entire data set has to be decrypted.
Well lets see:
Transparent Data Encryption
Oracle Advanced Security Transparent Data Encryption (TDE) stops would-be attackers from bypassing the database and reading sensitive information from storage by enforcing data-at-rest encryption in the database layer. Applications and users authenticated to the database continue to have access to application data transparently (no application code or configuration changes are required), while attacks from OS users attempting to read sensitive data from tablespace files and attacks from thieves attempting to read information from acquired disks or backups are denied access to the clear text data. Transparent Data Encryption
Summary: With the introduction of transparent data encryption (TDE) in SQL Server 2008, users now have the choice between cell-level encryption as in SQL Server 2005, full database-level encryption by using TDE, or the file-level encryption options provided by Windows. TDE is the optimal choice for bulk encryption to meet regulatory compliance or corporate data security standards. TDE works at the file level, which is similar to two Windows® features: the Encrypting File System (EFS) and BitLocker Drive Encryption, the new volume-level encryption introduced in Windows Vista®, both of which also encrypt data on the hard drive. TDE does not replace cell-level encryption, EFS, or BitLocker. Database Encryption in SQL Server 2008 Enterprise Edition
It's because consulting firms are unable to find high skilled computer experts in the US, so they must expand the H1-B program to bring in more foreigners to compensate for the lack of competent Americans!
That should be
It's because consulting firms are unwilling to pay competitive wages for highly skilled computer experts in the US, so they must expand the H1-B program to bring in more foreigners to compensate for the lack of competent Americans willing to work for peon wages!
Only one comment has ever been delete in the history of slashdot and that on court order due to a law suit filed by the Church of Scientology; so your claims of censorship are highly over-rated.
Europeans just can't process the concept of individual sovereignty and that rights and privileges originate with the individual and Governmental Authority is granted to the government by the individuals and Government governs only at the pleasure of the People not the other way around. Centuries of being conditioned to except sovereignty as top-down coming from God -> Pope -> King -> Duke -> Serf, makes the concept of individual sovereignty too alien; Government Bureaucrats like the top-down fine.
Sounds good in theory, but in practice kids tend to tune-out that type of parental advice beginning around 12 or 13 and it lasts until around 27,28; or at least hear "don't do" as "don't get caught doing"/
Maybe, but there's a lot less gunning down of civilians by the police in Europe compared to the U.S. (I don't know whether that's down to less racism or less guns or some other socio-political difference).
Don't worry, you'll be catching up fast, and the report of it will be considered illegal hate speech. Europe has enough drug and human trafficking to be approaching a tipping-point. With increased immigration, European Country's historical advantage of cultural homogeneity will turn into a liability and you'll be wrestling with the same problems as the US.
When people say Detroit, they mean the Greater Metropolitan Detroit Area, Detroit proper has lost 25% of it's population, not dissimilar to places like Ethiopia, Darfur and Rowanda; where as you mean Detroit meaning the area including the new General Motors data center in Rochester Hills I'm seeing ads and job fairs for anything IT, Software Engineering, mechanical and or automotive engineering. There's lots of startups and high-tech 50 minutes down the road near Ann Arbor (where/. started BTW) and in between. The cost of living is favorable in Michigan right now.
The problem with propane or any other LNG is they don't want some "Luke Skywalker" to get off one lucky shot and blow the whole thing up, which is what flammable highly compressed gasses tend to do. Most ships run on bunker fuel, and that's more like thick fuel oil rather than traditional diesel, they even have to heat it to get it to burn in the engines.
Primary and secondary loops are, cooling for the secondary loop is seawater, I strongly suspect there are evaporators for fresh water use, I suspect that even gas turbine powered ships will have evaporators in their exhaust stream primarily for IR signature reduction and fresh water as a secondary benefit.
If somebody spent a 1,000hrs of CPU time and finds out that "Susie replied to your comment on Facebook! Click here to login and see.", how likely are they to keep crunching away until they find the good stuff?
One advantage would be that right now only high value information is encrypted, so the opposing entities can assume that anything encrypted is high value info. Encryption works because it keeps the cost of decrypting higher than the value of the information, if all of the crap flying was encrypted then the cost of getting the high value info would skyrocket so my sales presentation would be more secure from industrial spies because "Mary found a lost lamb on her farm" notices are encrypted too.
So why not, instead of teaching these 11 year olds computer programs i.e. clear, concise, logical instructions to machines, we teach them to give clear, concise, logical instructions in general? If an 11 yo has a mind that is wired to program, it's going to be impossible to stop him, if it isn't you'll probably turn him off for life; unless by programing your talking about Logo which the kids would love, but learning a Lisp dialect at that tender age could very likely make learning procedural languages more difficult later in life.
Dude If that thing spawns an "Earth eating black hole" living next door to it would be like about Mars. What everybody forgets is a blackhole has conservation of mass, charge and angular momentum, so a blackhole whizzing around the LHC ring would act pretty much like every other thingy whizzing around with the same mass, charge and angular momentum. Even if the blackhole escaped the ring, it would only be a blackhole as long as it's energy was high enough to maintain it's event horizon; that energy is dependant on it's velocity, which is a vector involving speed and direction! Yeah that's right a quantum blackhole can un-blacken if it collides with another particle and loses energy, it can un-blacken through Hawking radiation and it's only black if your close enough to it's direction of travel.
Imagine a "theory" with a bunch of adjustments. So many adjustmentrs that no matter what happens, there is some adjustment that canm be made such that it "retroactively) predicts it. That is string theory.
The big problem with string "theory" is that it predicts everything and so, nothing.
String toolkit might be a better name. It is just that, a bag of parts and tools that might one day be used to construct a theory that predicts something in particular.
So your saying that Climatology is a sub-discipline of String Theory?
Close but the Schwartzschild radius solution only applies to non-rotating bodies and any particle I can think of that is subject to relativistic mass increases also have spin, a closer fit would be a Kerr–Newman metric, however I'd assume that these solutions ignore external gravitational fields, which might be valid approximation over interstellar distances, it might not be valid in Earth's atmosphere for cosmic rays or inside the LHC. Perhaps a real physicist could chime in with a more learned point of view.
Don't worry, Bruce, now that the Air Force has experienced real competition, they want to keep it even if they have to pay a lot more to keep United Launch Alliance in business.
Mann, I think he honestly believes his stuff, but is on some kind of a Narcissistic-Messianic complex; so you can't really blame him for being who he is. Hansen, man oh man you have to give him props for turning off the Air Conditioners during congressional testimony on global warming, definitely an A+ for theatrics and he's been arrested at environmental protests, I'd have fired him, but I respect him.
In 2011, Gleick was the launch Chairman[5] of the "new task force on scientific ethics and integrity" of the American Geophysical Union.[6]... In February 2012, Gleick admitted to unauthorized distribution of documents he had obtained from The Heartland Institute under someone else's name, and took a voluntary leave of absence from the Pacific Institute; he was reinstated following an investigation.[8]... a two-page 'Strategy Memo', had been forged.[43] Gleick denied forging the document.... Gleick described his actions as "a serious lapse of my own and professional judgment and ethics" and said that he "deeply regret[ted his] own actions in this case" and "offer[ed his] personal apologies to all those affected".... Peter Gleick
Gleick, chairing an ethics committee while committing pretexting, copyright infringement and possibly forgery!
And usually they're on another line, so if you want to talk to me don't call, then ask me to hold please.
I'm curious why these computers so willingly accept connections from IP addresses willy nilly; whatever happens to
deny all
accept (Trusted host IP)
at the firewall?
Nope.
For analysis the entire data set has to be decrypted.
Well lets see:
The major players seem to do it out of the box.
It's because consulting firms are unable to find high skilled computer experts in the US, so they must expand the H1-B program to bring in more foreigners to compensate for the lack of competent Americans!
That should be
I get mod-points so often that I don't bother adjusting up from -1, but the mod system does protect the faint of heart.
Only one comment has ever been delete in the history of slashdot and that on court order due to a law suit filed by the Church of Scientology; so your claims of censorship are highly over-rated.
Europeans just can't process the concept of individual sovereignty and that rights and privileges originate with the individual and Governmental Authority is granted to the government by the individuals and Government governs only at the pleasure of the People not the other way around. Centuries of being conditioned to except sovereignty as top-down coming from God -> Pope -> King -> Duke -> Serf, makes the concept of individual sovereignty too alien; Government Bureaucrats like the top-down fine.
Sounds good in theory, but in practice kids tend to tune-out that type of parental advice beginning around 12 or 13 and it lasts until around 27,28; or at least hear "don't do" as "don't get caught doing"/
Maybe, but there's a lot less gunning down of civilians by the police in Europe compared to the U.S. (I don't know whether that's down to less racism or less guns or some other socio-political difference).
Don't worry, you'll be catching up fast, and the report of it will be considered illegal hate speech. Europe has enough drug and human trafficking to be approaching a tipping-point. With increased immigration, European Country's historical advantage of cultural homogeneity will turn into a liability and you'll be wrestling with the same problems as the US.
Do people not see the connection between increases in privacy breeches and the moves to cloud systems?
The correlation is negative. Cloud companies have better security than a typical small company trying to roll their own solution.
It's all mote, P@ssw0rd will get you into 50% of the cloud.
When people say Detroit, they mean the Greater Metropolitan Detroit Area, Detroit proper has lost 25% of it's population, not dissimilar to places like Ethiopia, Darfur and Rowanda; where as you mean Detroit meaning the area including the new General Motors data center in Rochester Hills I'm seeing ads and job fairs for anything IT, Software Engineering, mechanical and or automotive engineering. There's lots of startups and high-tech 50 minutes down the road near Ann Arbor (where /. started BTW) and in between. The cost of living is favorable in Michigan right now.
The problem with propane or any other LNG is they don't want some "Luke Skywalker" to get off one lucky shot and blow the whole thing up, which is what flammable highly compressed gasses tend to do. Most ships run on bunker fuel, and that's more like thick fuel oil rather than traditional diesel, they even have to heat it to get it to burn in the engines.
Primary and secondary loops are, cooling for the secondary loop is seawater, I strongly suspect there are evaporators for fresh water use, I suspect that even gas turbine powered ships will have evaporators in their exhaust stream primarily for IR signature reduction and fresh water as a secondary benefit.
If somebody spent a 1,000hrs of CPU time and finds out that "Susie replied to your comment on Facebook! Click here to login and see.", how likely are they to keep crunching away until they find the good stuff?
One advantage would be that right now only high value information is encrypted, so the opposing entities can assume that anything encrypted is high value info. Encryption works because it keeps the cost of decrypting higher than the value of the information, if all of the crap flying was encrypted then the cost of getting the high value info would skyrocket so my sales presentation would be more secure from industrial spies because "Mary found a lost lamb on her farm" notices are encrypted too.
I think you have Nerd and Geek culture mixed up with plain Geeks.
So why not, instead of teaching these 11 year olds computer programs i.e. clear, concise, logical instructions to machines, we teach them to give clear, concise, logical instructions in general? If an 11 yo has a mind that is wired to program, it's going to be impossible to stop him, if it isn't you'll probably turn him off for life; unless by programing your talking about Logo which the kids would love, but learning a Lisp dialect at that tender age could very likely make learning procedural languages more difficult later in life.
Get back with me when they make a prediction outside their error bars.
Those 400MHz klystrons must have some hellatious waveguides to feed!
Dude If that thing spawns an "Earth eating black hole" living next door to it would be like about Mars. What everybody forgets is a blackhole has conservation of mass, charge and angular momentum, so a blackhole whizzing around the LHC ring would act pretty much like every other thingy whizzing around with the same mass, charge and angular momentum. Even if the blackhole escaped the ring, it would only be a blackhole as long as it's energy was high enough to maintain it's event horizon; that energy is dependant on it's velocity, which is a vector involving speed and direction! Yeah that's right a quantum blackhole can un-blacken if it collides with another particle and loses energy, it can un-blacken through Hawking radiation and it's only black if your close enough to it's direction of travel.
Imagine a "theory" with a bunch of adjustments. So many adjustmentrs that no matter what happens, there is some adjustment that canm be made such that it "retroactively) predicts it. That is string theory.
The big problem with string "theory" is that it predicts everything and so, nothing.
String toolkit might be a better name. It is just that, a bag of parts and tools that might one day be used to construct a theory that predicts something in particular.
So your saying that Climatology is a sub-discipline of String Theory?
It's not that bad, you just have to read "The Jabberwocky" to them for a warm up first.
Close but the Schwartzschild radius solution only applies to non-rotating bodies and any particle I can think of that is subject to relativistic mass increases also have spin, a closer fit would be a Kerr–Newman metric, however I'd assume that these solutions ignore external gravitational fields, which might be valid approximation over interstellar distances, it might not be valid in Earth's atmosphere for cosmic rays or inside the LHC. Perhaps a real physicist could chime in with a more learned point of view.
Don't worry, Bruce, now that the Air Force has experienced real competition, they want to keep it even if they have to pay a lot more to keep United Launch Alliance in business.
Mann, I think he honestly believes his stuff, but is on some kind of a Narcissistic-Messianic complex; so you can't really blame him for being who he is. Hansen, man oh man you have to give him props for turning off the Air Conditioners during congressional testimony on global warming, definitely an A+ for theatrics and he's been arrested at environmental protests, I'd have fired him, but I respect him.
Gleick, chairing an ethics committee while committing pretexting, copyright infringement and possibly forgery!