You have your main backup drive, and then occasionally back it up to the secondary drive. Since you are not using the 2nd drive as much, as long as you keep it in a safe place (not knocked around, good temp & humidity control), it should last for a long time. Using SSDs could also be an option, but others should chime in as I'm not very conversant with the state of tech in regards to SSDs.
Online solutions are an option, but then you are at the mercy of the company that is storing that data. Not a bad idea for a 2nd/3rd backup. But this all depends on how important all this photos & videos are to you.
All wrong. If you go live in the woods, none of what you said applies. But you'd still have to buy health insurance. Also, most of the stuff you mentioned is state/local mandated. If you have no job you don't pay into Social Security. But you would still have to buy health insurance.
At least it would make it more difficult. While working on NYC's subways, I found a lot of their SCADA systems were networked into the local station and the overall control center. Which in general is OK, since as of 8 years ago there was no outside connections, but if someone could sneaker-in a virus.... There could be some issues.
It is not so much of "will it" as opposed to "when will it." And to what degree of success & usefulness. I'll give the timeline roughly around the same time as fusion.
Don't offer a CEO 10's of millions of dollars and a golden parachute right off the bat. If they perform, then give them the big money. A certain percentage of them are only good at negotiating their compensation package, and, well, that's about it.
Here is a bit from TFA- "This means, according to the researcher, that it might be possible for an attacker to crack a users’ Lion password by attacking their system through a Java app hosted online. The attack vector would still require the owner of the computer running Mac OS X to allow the Java app to run — but it is possible."
It's not exactly a 1-2-3 step action. Also, the article never said he actually cracked any passwords, though he claims-
"Dunstan noted that due, no doubt, to Lion’s relatively short time being available for use, he could not find any major cracking software supporting the ability to crack encrypted passwords in the operating system — but he has published a simple script which allows users to do so. "
Little bit more backup would be a good thing, here.
I would separate capitalism from government bailouts. Capitalism punishes those who screw up, then the government comes riding in. I call that 2 separate mechanisms. You also then contradict yourself with the solar startup- they made a bad call while the government gave them money. Your burning the candle at both ends here.
Where did I read this, here or in IEEE?- A new datacenter is being put up to process transactions in NY state. It is touted to be "equal access," but in reality it's not. Those big guys pay for servers right next to the transaction servers and may have faster comm links. I forget the rest of the details, but in the end the promised equal access to normal folk is a smoke screen.
But you're right, no one in the trading industry is going to care as long as they can edge out someone by $0.01 on a million shares, 10,000 times a day. Actual humans can forecast all they want til Sunday, but if the computers say otherwise, there goes all that work into trying to figure out what is coming next. And don't dare outsmart the computers, as someone said above, you'll just get arrested.
So, if the computers get a time advantage and can guess where the stock is going and then set prices for the slower traders, that's OK. But if humans do it and beat the computers at their own game, not OK? Gotcha.
I know that feeling. My wife has Type 1 diabetes, and every once in a while a new 'breakthrough' is reached- only to be put to test for the next 7 years.
And what's wrong with cyborg augmentations? They're cool! Heh.
Yep, until a the mutant Mule showed up. Of course, no predictive science can guess when a mutation of that power will show up. Now I'm going to have to go read the series again, been too long.
He kept a million virtual monkeys gainfully employed for X amount of time. The job field is hard out there for virtual monkeys, too, you know. Bunch of anti-virtual monkey people, you are! Hmmmph!
Seriously, it's not nice out there right now. If it is a non-programming job, keep programming on the side so you have examples for later interviews that you kept up your programming skills.
But you get free drop bears!
Big time.
You have your main backup drive, and then occasionally back it up to the secondary drive. Since you are not using the 2nd drive as much, as long as you keep it in a safe place (not knocked around, good temp & humidity control), it should last for a long time. Using SSDs could also be an option, but others should chime in as I'm not very conversant with the state of tech in regards to SSDs.
Online solutions are an option, but then you are at the mercy of the company that is storing that data. Not a bad idea for a 2nd/3rd backup. But this all depends on how important all this photos & videos are to you.
First it was microcells, then nanocells, now femtocells. What's next, QuantumCells? PlanckCells? Eesshh.
All wrong. If you go live in the woods, none of what you said applies. But you'd still have to buy health insurance. Also, most of the stuff you mentioned is state/local mandated. If you have no job you don't pay into Social Security. But you would still have to buy health insurance.
Not really hard to understand.
At least it would make it more difficult. While working on NYC's subways, I found a lot of their SCADA systems were networked into the local station and the overall control center. Which in general is OK, since as of 8 years ago there was no outside connections, but if someone could sneaker-in a virus.... There could be some issues.
Depends on the flavor of cat.
It is not so much of "will it" as opposed to "when will it." And to what degree of success & usefulness. I'll give the timeline roughly around the same time as fusion.
OK, those are much, much better. The guy above me picked pretty much the worst picture out there.
Err. Missed that 2nd part.
See subject line.
Don't offer a CEO 10's of millions of dollars and a golden parachute right off the bat. If they perform, then give them the big money. A certain percentage of them are only good at negotiating their compensation package, and, well, that's about it.
Or is that Columbia? Not sure.
Anyhoo- with the coffee powered car article + iPad = 3x perfomance! Yee ha!
Here is a bit from TFA-
"This means, according to the researcher, that it might be possible for an attacker to crack a users’ Lion password by attacking their system through a Java app hosted online. The attack vector would still require the owner of the computer running Mac OS X to allow the Java app to run — but it is possible."
It's not exactly a 1-2-3 step action. Also, the article never said he actually cracked any passwords, though he claims-
"Dunstan noted that due, no doubt, to Lion’s relatively short time being available for use, he could not find any major cracking software supporting the ability to crack encrypted passwords in the operating system — but he has published a simple script which allows users to do so. "
Little bit more backup would be a good thing, here.
I would separate capitalism from government bailouts. Capitalism punishes those who screw up, then the government comes riding in. I call that 2 separate mechanisms. You also then contradict yourself with the solar startup- they made a bad call while the government gave them money. Your burning the candle at both ends here.
Where did I read this, here or in IEEE?- A new datacenter is being put up to process transactions in NY state. It is touted to be "equal access," but in reality it's not. Those big guys pay for servers right next to the transaction servers and may have faster comm links. I forget the rest of the details, but in the end the promised equal access to normal folk is a smoke screen.
But you're right, no one in the trading industry is going to care as long as they can edge out someone by $0.01 on a million shares, 10,000 times a day. Actual humans can forecast all they want til Sunday, but if the computers say otherwise, there goes all that work into trying to figure out what is coming next. And don't dare outsmart the computers, as someone said above, you'll just get arrested.
So, if the computers get a time advantage and can guess where the stock is going and then set prices for the slower traders, that's OK. But if humans do it and beat the computers at their own game, not OK? Gotcha.
No, the Pope dropped the ban on condoms about a year ago.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/religion/the-pope/8148944/The-Pope-drops-Catholic-ban-on-condoms-in-historic-shift.html
Now if there are still crazy people out there insisting on it, well, it's not an official stance.
I know that feeling. My wife has Type 1 diabetes, and every once in a while a new 'breakthrough' is reached- only to be put to test for the next 7 years.
And what's wrong with cyborg augmentations? They're cool! Heh.
Wow, I want some of what you're smoking!
I, for one, look forward to our new Facebook overlords.
"All your Book are belong to us." ?
Yep, until a the mutant Mule showed up. Of course, no predictive science can guess when a mutation of that power will show up. Now I'm going to have to go read the series again, been too long.
Maybe she is thinking of the tunnel that carries all the internet tubes?
She looks like a horse.
He kept a million virtual monkeys gainfully employed for X amount of time. The job field is hard out there for virtual monkeys, too, you know. Bunch of anti-virtual monkey people, you are! Hmmmph!
Seriously, it's not nice out there right now. If it is a non-programming job, keep programming on the side so you have examples for later interviews that you kept up your programming skills.