You'd have to have some trust for the proxy, but I'd feel better if I were able to upload my public key and have it encrypt everything against that before it saved to the database. The logs would be sent to me encrypted and I would decrypt on my side. A simple client could handle this for me.
Sure, they could write the raw data out also if they wanted to be mischievous, but at least there would be protection if their site was compromised.
> The crisis had nothing to do with the particular software the researcher was using. The problem had to do with a system called ''spanning tree protocol,'' which finds the most efficient way to move information through the network and blocks alternate routes to prevent data from getting stuck in a loop. The large volume of data the researcher was uploading happened to be the last drop that made the network overflow.
He apparently does have a problem if he can't use the DSL service he has chosen because of a limitation of the OS he has installed.
So your recommendation would be that he not upgrade (with an exclamation mark no less) and have to deal with modem speeds when DSL is available?
And no, I don't think that is the mantra of the OSS community. This was played up years ago before cheap little routers and such were available that are easier to manage and use far less electricity. At least in the US, fast computers are relativly inexpensive and readily available. OSS is not about being a freeloader and a cheap bastard. Running on older hardware may be a benefit to many, but much development over the last few years has focused on high end workstation and server class functionality.
I guess it depends on what your definition of "broke" is.
The BSD demon may be cool to college kids and back room admins, but as far as corporate acceptance is concerned it is a big hinderence to BSD. I have actually had clients who would refuse to allow it into their business.
I'm not a fanatic about it, but I could see how it might offend some people.
They could fork the show and let Bart, Lisa, and Maggie grow up a bit. I'm sure they could come up with some good original storylines with Bart and Lisa as teenagers and Maggie in talking and in school.
We've already seen that in the future we find out Rod and TOdd Flanders are gay. Their coming out story might be good as a sideline. I wonder how ol' Neddy handled that news?
Seymour and Edna could get married. All kinds of neat stuff.
conventional long form: People's Republic of China conventional short form: China local long form: Zhonghua Renmin Gongheguo local short form: Zhong Guo
So where do we get China from if they call it Zhong Guo?
The biggest problem I have with GNU is that it is too hard to say. How many people pronounce Gnome 'gahnome' rather than 'nome'. GNU is just an annoying name. And if you don't pronounce it 'gahnu' it sounds like you are saying New/Linux.
Man: Would you make love to me for $1,000,000? Woman: Yes! Man: Will you f*ck me for $50? Woman: You asshole! What kind of a woman do you think I am? Man: We've already established that. Now we're just quibling over the price.
Speaking of hooking up floppy drives, does anyone remember the Tandy computers that decided it would be a good idea to send power to the drive down the ribbon cable?
I had a client who had a drive go out and he replaced it with a standard floppy. The cables were exactly the same. He said his office smelled like smoke for a week.
Yeah, why did they do it in the very last minutes of the show? I understand they had to keep you in anticipation as long as possible, but what if they had found something? Would they have extended the show? My Tivo would have missed it. Surely they wouldn't say, "We just discovered an alian spacecraft behind the door, but that's all the time we have so we better say goodnight."
I got a MS mouse for the extra buttons and the optical pickup. I've really enjoyed working with it. However, I've noticed recently that the mouse wheel seems to be going. The clicks as you scroll are much softer, and it has a tendency to get stuck mid-catch and scroll uncontrollably.
I thought I had my mouse problems licked without having a mouse ball mechanism to get all messed up. I guess my hopes of an eternal mouse won't be granted in the near future.
Yes, I know, and that's the explanation I've seen for the names many times. However, I swear I heard mention that there was more to ls than the rest of them... that it was actually the authors initials. It must have been 5 or 6 years ago that I heard this and haven't seen any mention of it since.
I was starting to doubt that I had heard it at all when I saw the parent post saying the same thing. It's too big of a coincidence to just write off. Somebody else must have heard the same thing I did.
If anyone can corroborate that there is more to the naming of ls than simply LiSt, please let me know!
Thanks
Re:They're running out of book topics
on
Vi IMproved -- Vim
·
· Score: 2
I heard this a long time ago and have been unable to find anything about it. Does anyone have a reference to about it? I'd really like to know.
Oh no! So this isn't a totally new concept? Then why bother? Seriously, what would happen if subjects couldn't be handled by more than one movie? We'd have only one buddy/cop movie, or one Italian mafia movie.
Every story has been told.
Or is it that we are supposed to be impressed that you can search imdb?
What are you talking about? Are you blaming Mr. Bush and his fellow Republicans up on the Hill for this? Do you think that none of this was going on while Clinton was at the helm? Of course it was. Clinton initiated a climate where lying was not seen as a horrible thing.
Please. It is only now under the eyes of the Republican party that all of this is coming out into the open.
Now, I'm not some kind of Republican fanatic. In fact I'm pretty liberal. My rebuttal is based on the stupidity of such remarks.
It's interesting that the Crazy Aaron thinking putty has the same pictures on their site of how to tear it as Thinkgeek does. It's $12.00 at Thinkgeek and $7 at Crazy Aaron's.
If New Orleans were rebuilt 30-40 miles upriver
Wouldn't that be Baton Rouge?
You'd have to have some trust for the proxy, but I'd feel better if I were able to upload my public key and have it encrypt everything against that before it saved to the database. The logs would be sent to me encrypted and I would decrypt on my side. A simple client could handle this for me.
Sure, they could write the raw data out also if they wanted to be mischievous, but at least there would be protection if their site was compromised.
The commentator did specify thin crust. The author said that HE had never tried thin crust before. ./pizza_party -p -m 1 medium thin
;)
Get your facts straight!
Yes, I'm bored today. And maybe --force takes away the yes/no are you sure question.
It didn't. From the article:
> The crisis had nothing to do with the particular software the researcher was using. The problem had to do with a system called ''spanning tree protocol,'' which finds the most efficient way to move information through the network and blocks alternate routes to prevent data from getting stuck in a loop. The large volume of data the researcher was uploading happened to be the last drop that made the network overflow.
> If violent games make kids violent, then why don't Tiger Woods video games make kids into ulti-million dollar golfers?
Because violence doesn't take skill. And I bet a some kids will be tempted to try golf by playing the game.
He apparently does have a problem if he can't use the DSL service he has chosen because of a limitation of the OS he has installed.
So your recommendation would be that he not upgrade (with an exclamation mark no less) and have to deal with modem speeds when DSL is available?
And no, I don't think that is the mantra of the OSS community. This was played up years ago before cheap little routers and such were available that are easier to manage and use far less electricity. At least in the US, fast computers are relativly inexpensive and readily available. OSS is not about being a freeloader and a cheap bastard. Running on older hardware may be a benefit to many, but much development over the last few years has focused on high end workstation and server class functionality.
I guess it depends on what your definition of "broke" is.
From browsing around on the site I noticed that some videos said 30 days and others said 3 days.
Not sure what formula they are using to determine this, but both seem to be correct.
The BSD demon may be cool to college kids and back room admins, but as far as corporate acceptance is concerned it is a big hinderence to BSD. I have actually had clients who would refuse to allow it into their business.
I'm not a fanatic about it, but I could see how it might offend some people.
As a Systems Administrator, I must concur that the most annoying error messages are the ones that tell me to "Consult your Systems Administrator".
They could fork the show and let Bart, Lisa, and Maggie grow up a bit. I'm sure they could come up with some good original storylines with Bart and Lisa as teenagers and Maggie in talking and in school.
We've already seen that in the future we find out Rod and TOdd Flanders are gay. Their coming out story might be good as a sideline. I wonder how ol' Neddy handled that news?
Seymour and Edna could get married. All kinds of neat stuff.
.
While reading that page I came across this:
conventional long form: People's Republic of China
conventional short form: China
local long form: Zhonghua Renmin Gongheguo
local short form: Zhong Guo
So where do we get China from if they call it Zhong Guo?
The biggest problem I have with GNU is that it is too hard to say. How many people pronounce Gnome 'gahnome' rather than 'nome'. GNU is just an annoying name. And if you don't pronounce it 'gahnu' it sounds like you are saying New/Linux.
Get a real name and then maybe we'll talk!
Man: Would you make love to me for $1,000,000?
Woman: Yes!
Man: Will you f*ck me for $50?
Woman: You asshole! What kind of a woman do you think I am?
Man: We've already established that. Now we're just quibling over the price.
Speaking of hooking up floppy drives, does anyone remember the Tandy computers that decided it would be a good idea to send power to the drive down the ribbon cable?
I had a client who had a drive go out and he replaced it with a standard floppy. The cables were exactly the same. He said his office smelled like smoke for a week.
SYS 64738
Yeah, why did they do it in the very last minutes of the show? I understand they had to keep you in anticipation as long as possible, but what if they had found something? Would they have extended the show? My Tivo would have missed it. Surely they wouldn't say, "We just discovered an alian spacecraft behind the door, but that's all the time we have so we better say goodnight."
Maybe you can have your cake THEN it it, but you can't have your cake AND eat it. Once you've eaten it, you no longer have it.
Around here, we call it interference.
I got a MS mouse for the extra buttons and the optical pickup. I've really enjoyed working with it. However, I've noticed recently that the mouse wheel seems to be going. The clicks as you scroll are much softer, and it has a tendency to get stuck mid-catch and scroll uncontrollably.
I thought I had my mouse problems licked without having a mouse ball mechanism to get all messed up. I guess my hopes of an eternal mouse won't be granted in the near future.
Yes, I know, and that's the explanation I've seen for the names many times. However, I swear I heard mention that there was more to ls than the rest of them... that it was actually the authors initials. It must have been 5 or 6 years ago that I heard this and haven't seen any mention of it since.
I was starting to doubt that I had heard it at all when I saw the parent post saying the same thing. It's too big of a coincidence to just write off. Somebody else must have heard the same thing I did.
If anyone can corroborate that there is more to the naming of ls than simply LiSt, please let me know!
Thanks
I heard this a long time ago and have been unable to find anything about it. Does anyone have a reference to about it? I'd really like to know.
Emeril... He'd just copy exactly what the other guy did, then "kick it up a notch."
.
Oh no! So this isn't a totally new concept? Then why bother? Seriously, what would happen if subjects couldn't be handled by more than one movie? We'd have only one buddy/cop movie, or one Italian mafia movie.
Every story has been told.
Or is it that we are supposed to be impressed that you can search imdb?
What are you talking about? Are you blaming Mr. Bush and his fellow Republicans up on the Hill for this? Do you think that none of this was going on while Clinton was at the helm? Of course it was. Clinton initiated a climate where lying was not seen as a horrible thing.
Please. It is only now under the eyes of the Republican party that all of this is coming out into the open.
Now, I'm not some kind of Republican fanatic. In fact I'm pretty liberal. My rebuttal is based on the stupidity of such remarks.
It's interesting that the Crazy Aaron thinking putty has the same pictures on their site of how to tear it as Thinkgeek does. It's $12.00 at Thinkgeek and $7 at Crazy Aaron's.