HP was a big fan of the Itanic when HP was still HP, and dumped their PA-RISC roadmap in the 90s for it. the thought was that they'd get Intel to carry most of the cost of developing and fabbing, they could swing the HP-UX and (RSC? -- brain fade on the old mainframe codeset line) software teams over to a common hardware architecture, and save money there, too. so HP joined in the party, hearty.
they actually got stronger into it when they got compaq, even though Intel and Samsung were the Alpha partners at that point.
woe betide them all when the first Itanic came out, and the performance sucked against PA-RISC, and the second and third generation silicon didn't get them in the MIPS game, either, as seen in the roadmap.
For a lot of reasons, AMD Opteron looks better and better every day to the former Itanic fans. they should keep an eye out for Power5 and Power6 as well, the IAM coalition would like more customers. AMD didn't lose sight of what the users want.
bastard should be ordered to pay every computer user $233.57 for violating their space and wasting their resources... and the owners of every bot he 0wn3d should get $10,000.
that ought to shut his crap down.
remember, this is the same dude who invented the junk fax, who was one of the first into spam, and now proven to be into sinister bots. death is too good for him.
misdemeanor, punishable for up to $5000 and up to 90 days in the clink for every instance of deliberate malware causing loss or damage to a computer.
somebody should document their machine, and when they get hit by this kerrrrrrrrrap, file a case with the police, and drag the overpeer weasels into court.
it would be nice to see some RIAA execs sitting in the can for years and years because they play like russian script kiddies.
as good as I expected to hear. thanks, lacklan76. I don't think I will be rooting around while VPC is up, that's a compatibility box for particular app possibilities to me.
one thing about the sandbox, if it's not leaky, all the "cats" on Da ISH can dump in it and stink it up, but the native kernel being protected is always upwind. you can restart VPC if things get bad.
granted that the world's weasels are lining up six wide to get the next windoze crack out there and on the SANS list. granted that a cardboard sign being held by the highway reading "hit me, take my money, run and have fun" confers greater security than windows. there are still things that need running, according to corporate characters, that require the MS OS to run them.
Now, the real question. is the sandbox secure in virtual PC / XP running on MacOS X, by any chance? I either have to upgrade a machine with XP-SP2 for the fiancee or get her a Mac with VPC on it, due to some work possibilities.
ONE good password that I can use across all the platforms, change-controlled when I want to, and no silly C3 limit of 11 months before your old passwords drop off the list, and I don't need two sheets of cribs.
besides, I've already used up all the good Cu55w0rd$...
yup. I try to read up on things that could be useful in treatment of my continuing medical issues. when it's doctor time again, I'll tell him how I'm doing, not what I'm thinking unless I clearly label it separately... whether I have hitches in my side from sour muscles or whatever... and eventually after he does the poke and prod routine will mention, "say, wouldn't it be interesting if the research I saw bowdlerized on the ap website about how leeches cure chilblains actually proves out in a year or two?" IMHO that's the way to open up wide-ranging discussion in whatever is left of the regulated ten minutes... the doctor (I've got a good one down here in the twin cities) isn't on the spot or having to fight a case of severe "readers' digest syndrome," he knows I'm trying to keep up and interested in taking further action that isn't detrimental, and he also knows that I respect his harvard medical, beth israel, hughes institute credentials and residencies as meaning that he should probably know something I might not. bedside manner works both ways;)
someday, I hope sooner than later, we can fix our national structural problems in providing health care and affordable medicine. and it isn't going to be done by allowing wall street weasels to take all the money.
right now, as in R F N, if you feel things popping inside, if you are coughing up funny chunks, if you can't breathe and that elephant is dancing on your chest, you must call 911 or get to a local emergency room as soon as possible, preferably NOT under your own power, in case that runs out while you're pulling up to the crosswalk at the school.
palliative care while diagnosing the root cause is always better than no care at all. and much better than playing doctor with reduced faculties and no instruments.
UND also has a community medicine clinic down on 5th street in Fargo next to the (former?) St. John's Hospital.. but they intern students in all the area hospitals. MeritCare in Fargo is right up there and if clued to the possibility of an unusual infection, they are on it like green on grass. They found a lot of tainted mouthwash a few years back and got it all recalled. MeritCare docs who also fly down from their Fargo homes to practice weekly at Mayo also found the links from phen-fen to heart failure. they aren't brain pate, and since Patrick comes from there (long, strong MSUM-Moorhead, fka MSU ties and his parents are there) he ought to know that. besides, he's ten minutes away on buckboard, let alone taxi or the folks driving, if he's still in the Gateway to the West.
nodules? well, OK, you say so. a more general presentation of asthma is little chunks of normal white mucus (or two handsful of juicy, gooey, clear stuff in the front of a classroom, don't ask me how I know that.) the ER tagged it for me with a shot of epinephrine in the forearm muscle, cleared it in three minutes.
regardless, if he's symptomatic like that, he needs to hit the ER, not the bulletin boards. hitting the boards cures procrastination, not disease;)
for doctoring stuff; Fargo is schytte haute medically, what with staff docs flying to Mayo for rounds and operating a daVinci surgical robosuite. He should bring a sleeping bag and camp out at MeritCare ER with a copy of his "last post?" printout until they run him upstairs and aspirate a sample for culturing (also known as sucking up a little gob from inside the lung.) once the bug(s) are known for sure, they can put him on a drip.
he needs a workup, a monitor station, and a bed, not a black-market source of drugs and offsite diagnosis.
I wish Patrick all the best, and he needs to take a couple weeks to a month off and get a treatment regimen underway under competent medical supervision. if anybody's in contact, that means RFN, pard, take the taxi now. 701-235-5535.
or perhaps nobody has been by the big-box store lately and seen the several dozen DVD recorder models on the shelf to look at, or the dual-deck units that record as well as play both DVDs and VCR tapes, and that are almost one-button copy between the two formats.
sony's new toy has a different interface on the display panel. and it sits on edge. those are their breakthroughs.
if you don't offer VoIP in telcoLand, you will lose customers. if you do, you lose revenue. what you have to do from the telcoLand perspective is be in-stock on whatever the customer wants.
having said that, because I work there, there is a lot of internal trunking that has been changed over from private line T1s to CBR on ATM for years, and it's just another bit stream multiplexed over a transport. you put the gateway card in the PBX, reconfigure, and go.
VoIP is more of a customer challenge in that you have to have priority running in your ethernet stacks, and the VoIP stuff has to go first every time. this means smarter switches and actually engineering the ethernet so you have enough bandwidth in those vlans. a customer doesn't do that, they are schytte out of luck on everything. it doesn't do in business to have your connections drop out on incoming calls in the support or order queues because somebody snuck a trojan into the enterprise.
PBX generally still being a proprietary real-time OS on dedicated hardware with no major entry points for mischief, should appear to be a security feature for lots of users.
future of music. oh, silly me, turns out it's the lawyers and filing clerks and bling-bling weasels.
if they're the future of music, they should make all their briefs on staff paper in operatic form, recording it as performed in court so appellate courts can either boogie or throw beer mugs, as appropriate to the pleading.
every one. a button that stops the current operations and goes back to stasis. in the case of a car, no forward energy would seem to be the logical application. in the case of OS, the only one I've ever seen that would almost always stop a current operation (like a SQL search on the null set) was NeXTStep, ctrl-period IIRC.
screw the goddamn law, if you Respect The Artist, you buy your license to listen, IMHO. no way would I rip off SMiLE, for instance... one iTunes purchase, two CDs, and I just ordered the vinyl. Brian is going to reap his reward despite you, crook.
HP was a big fan of the Itanic when HP was still HP, and dumped their PA-RISC roadmap in the 90s for it. the thought was that they'd get Intel to carry most of the cost of developing and fabbing, they could swing the HP-UX and (RSC? -- brain fade on the old mainframe codeset line) software teams over to a common hardware architecture, and save money there, too. so HP joined in the party, hearty.
they actually got stronger into it when they got compaq, even though Intel and Samsung were the Alpha partners at that point.
woe betide them all when the first Itanic came out, and the performance sucked against PA-RISC, and the second and third generation silicon didn't get them in the MIPS game, either, as seen in the roadmap.
For a lot of reasons, AMD Opteron looks better and better every day to the former Itanic fans. they should keep an eye out for Power5 and Power6 as well, the IAM coalition would like more customers. AMD didn't lose sight of what the users want.
bastard should be ordered to pay every computer user $233.57 for violating their space and wasting their resources... and the owners of every bot he 0wn3d should get $10,000.
that ought to shut his crap down.
remember, this is the same dude who invented the junk fax, who was one of the first into spam, and now proven to be into sinister bots. death is too good for him.
misdemeanor, punishable for up to $5000 and up to 90 days in the clink for every instance of deliberate malware causing loss or damage to a computer.
somebody should document their machine, and when they get hit by this kerrrrrrrrrap, file a case with the police, and drag the overpeer weasels into court.
it would be nice to see some RIAA execs sitting in the can for years and years because they play like russian script kiddies.
as good as I expected to hear. thanks, lacklan76. I don't think I will be rooting around while VPC is up, that's a compatibility box for particular app possibilities to me.
one thing about the sandbox, if it's not leaky, all the "cats" on Da ISH can dump in it and stink it up, but the native kernel being protected is always upwind. you can restart VPC if things get bad.
granted that the world's weasels are lining up six wide to get the next windoze crack out there and on the SANS list. granted that a cardboard sign being held by the highway reading "hit me, take my money, run and have fun" confers greater security than windows. there are still things that need running, according to corporate characters, that require the MS OS to run them.
Now, the real question. is the sandbox secure in virtual PC / XP running on MacOS X, by any chance? I either have to upgrade a machine with XP-SP2 for the fiancee or get her a Mac with VPC on it, due to some work possibilities.
if the sandbox is secure, life will be cool.
anybody know for sure?
maybe one of the "lost" landers has a crush on opportunity ;) OK, enough slashdot, back to the egg nog....
finally, a sensible comment on passwords.
ONE good password that I can use across all the platforms, change-controlled when I want to, and no silly C3 limit of 11 months before your old passwords drop off the list, and I don't need two sheets of cribs.
besides, I've already used up all the good Cu55w0rd$...
... that there are so many holes to patch, that you should change your applications to open source ?????
shut the fsckers down, all of 'em. if they can do it to us, we can do it to them. let 'em go back to selling their "italian rolexes" on the streets.
journalism also forms the basic archive for history. the rest is finding details in contemporary documents.
unless you can show me the CD reader they will be buying in 4500 AD, I want to keep some stuff on good old paper.
if it's part of the buggy, keystroke-peeping, popup=generating worm-filled wallowing hog of a download package that is kazaa.
funny, I thought they were another VoIP outfit. guess they're just malware if they're running with the likes of kazaa.
and Control Data already did that in the early 80s. I think that qualifies as prior art. Bad monolith, BAD. No cookies for you.
yup. I try to read up on things that could be useful in treatment of my continuing medical issues. when it's doctor time again, I'll tell him how I'm doing, not what I'm thinking unless I clearly label it separately... whether I have hitches in my side from sour muscles or whatever... and eventually after he does the poke and prod routine will mention, "say, wouldn't it be interesting if the research I saw bowdlerized on the ap website about how leeches cure chilblains actually proves out in a year or two?" IMHO that's the way to open up wide-ranging discussion in whatever is left of the regulated ten minutes... the doctor (I've got a good one down here in the twin cities) isn't on the spot or having to fight a case of severe "readers' digest syndrome," he knows I'm trying to keep up and interested in taking further action that isn't detrimental, and he also knows that I respect his harvard medical, beth israel, hughes institute credentials and residencies as meaning that he should probably know something I might not. bedside manner works both ways ;)
someday, I hope sooner than later, we can fix our national structural problems in providing health care and affordable medicine. and it isn't going to be done by allowing wall street weasels to take all the money.
right now, as in R F N, if you feel things popping inside, if you are coughing up funny chunks, if you can't breathe and that elephant is dancing on your chest, you must call 911 or get to a local emergency room as soon as possible, preferably NOT under your own power, in case that runs out while you're pulling up to the crosswalk at the school.
palliative care while diagnosing the root cause is always better than no care at all. and much better than playing doctor with reduced faculties and no instruments.
guess that makes three (present or former) north dakotans... four if you count volkerding himself.
UND also has a community medicine clinic down on 5th street in Fargo next to the (former?) St. John's Hospital.. but they intern students in all the area hospitals. MeritCare in Fargo is right up there and if clued to the possibility of an unusual infection, they are on it like green on grass. They found a lot of tainted mouthwash a few years back and got it all recalled. MeritCare docs who also fly down from their Fargo homes to practice weekly at Mayo also found the links from phen-fen to heart failure. they aren't brain pate, and since Patrick comes from there (long, strong MSUM-Moorhead, fka MSU ties and his parents are there) he ought to know that. besides, he's ten minutes away on buckboard, let alone taxi or the folks driving, if he's still in the Gateway to the West.
nodules? well, OK, you say so. a more general presentation of asthma is little chunks of normal white mucus (or two handsful of juicy, gooey, clear stuff in the front of a classroom, don't ask me how I know that.) the ER tagged it for me with a shot of epinephrine in the forearm muscle, cleared it in three minutes.
;)
regardless, if he's symptomatic like that, he needs to hit the ER, not the bulletin boards. hitting the boards cures procrastination, not disease
for doctoring stuff; Fargo is schytte haute medically, what with staff docs flying to Mayo for rounds and operating a daVinci surgical robosuite. He should bring a sleeping bag and camp out at MeritCare ER with a copy of his "last post?" printout until they run him upstairs and aspirate a sample for culturing (also known as sucking up a little gob from inside the lung.) once the bug(s) are known for sure, they can put him on a drip.
he needs a workup, a monitor station, and a bed, not a black-market source of drugs and offsite diagnosis.
I wish Patrick all the best, and he needs to take a couple weeks to a month off and get a treatment regimen underway under competent medical supervision. if anybody's in contact, that means RFN, pard, take the taxi now. 701-235-5535.
particularly in cornrows or hayfields. air-conditioned cab is extra. CD player is standard.
let them stop lying schyttebarstards running independent ads that are out of control first.
or perhaps nobody has been by the big-box store lately and seen the several dozen DVD recorder models on the shelf to look at, or the dual-deck units that record as well as play both DVDs and VCR tapes, and that are almost one-button copy between the two formats.
sony's new toy has a different interface on the display panel. and it sits on edge. those are their breakthroughs.
if you don't offer VoIP in telcoLand, you will lose customers. if you do, you lose revenue. what you have to do from the telcoLand perspective is be in-stock on whatever the customer wants.
having said that, because I work there, there is a lot of internal trunking that has been changed over from private line T1s to CBR on ATM for years, and it's just another bit stream multiplexed over a transport. you put the gateway card in the PBX, reconfigure, and go.
VoIP is more of a customer challenge in that you have to have priority running in your ethernet stacks, and the VoIP stuff has to go first every time. this means smarter switches and actually engineering the ethernet so you have enough bandwidth in those vlans. a customer doesn't do that, they are schytte out of luck on everything. it doesn't do in business to have your connections drop out on incoming calls in the support or order queues because somebody snuck a trojan into the enterprise.
PBX generally still being a proprietary real-time OS on dedicated hardware with no major entry points for mischief, should appear to be a security feature for lots of users.
future of music. oh, silly me, turns out it's the lawyers and filing clerks and bling-bling weasels.
if they're the future of music, they should make all their briefs on staff paper in operatic form, recording it as performed in court so appellate courts can either boogie or throw beer mugs, as appropriate to the pleading.
otherwise, STFU.
every one. a button that stops the current operations and goes back to stasis. in the case of a car, no forward energy would seem to be the logical application. in the case of OS, the only one I've ever seen that would almost always stop a current operation (like a SQL search on the null set) was NeXTStep, ctrl-period IIRC.
have you written one in lately?
screw the goddamn law, if you Respect The Artist, you buy your license to listen, IMHO. no way would I rip off SMiLE, for instance... one iTunes purchase, two CDs, and I just ordered the vinyl. Brian is going to reap his reward despite you, crook.