My belief is that pro-life means taking care of children from conception to adulthood. Not just to make sure it is born. If you want a baby born but not a baby clothed, fed, and cared for, you are anti-abortion not pro-life.
Even though I hate abortion and think it is immoral and wrong, banning it, punishing the women that go through with it or even punishing the doctors that perform it, will never stop it. Abortions happened before Roe vs Wade and they will continue to happen even if they are outlawed. It is better to have it happen in hospitals where at least the mother can survive. Leaving abortion as legal is also helpful in gaining information on why people do it. If you can eliminate the reason(s) people have for abortion, you can get really close to eliminating it without banning it.
+1 for Synergy.
My setup is one laptop on a dock and one PC all hooked up to three monitors. (One dedicated to the PC and the other two connected to the dock.) My PC is running Windows and my laptop is running Linux and they get along quite well.
Since I use it at work, I payed the $29 for the encrypted version. No one is going to sniff my keyboard data. ^_^
Really? Linux can do this? Right. So here we have Mr. Linux and he can setup groups and all of a sudden the "freetard" ring gets one build and the "It's GNU/Linux damn it" ring gets a different build, and the "I still want to run the 2.3 kernel" ring gets an older build? No, Linux CAN'T do that. In fact, Linux is decentralized and is made up of distros and forks and all and has no central control. It is ridiculous to claim that Linux can do this.
No, Mr. Linux (AKA Linus Torvalds) doesn't set up the groups. He is interested in just kernel stuff. Also, it is because of the decentralized nature that allows Linux the flexibility to do this for over a DECADE before windows finally caught up.
Mr. Debian, Miss Ubuntu, Mrs. Fedora, Mr. Arch, and Mr. Gentoo make their respective groups. They set up the rings of development.
For example, Mr. Debian has Unstable, Testing, and Stable rings for his development systems. He also runs security updates for his previous Stable platform for at least a year. He is slow and methodical, but he has some of the most stable systems in the world
Miss Ubuntu likes Mr. Debian's ideas but thinks they are too slow and just repackages and improves on the Unstable and testing branches with some of her own packages and repositories for flair. But she also realizes the need for a long support build to go with her rapidly evolving six-month builds.
Mrs. Fedora helps out her husband Red Hat by releasing test builds of the latest and greatest stuff. She packages up a build every 6 months and supports it for a year. She only supports the last two builds and will not support a long term release... her husband will do that for her with his product.
Mr. Arch and Mr. Gentoo have a different approach. They run with the latest and greatest all the time and it is up to the individual users to know when to update their components.
X2go would be another option. It will do the X forwarding to a very nice client. I use it to remote into my Linux systems at home then RDP from there.
http://wiki.x2go.org/
From what I understand of your requirements, you want to be able to remote into Mixed OS systems to do technical support more then the need for a VPN. In that case I would recommend Screen Connect. It works like it uses SSL and has client initiated connections and persistent clients. Since it is a piece of installed software it can be installed anywhere you need it. It is a little pricey at $375 for a single persistent self-hosted solution. The licence includes one year of software updates and support. On top of it, if you do not want to renew after the year is up you can continue to use it without additional cost.
https://www.screenconnect.com/
Since you don't have any programming languages, you obviously haven't got a CompSci degree, so you're looking at "lower" IT work (services, not design). This means that you'll likely be working for lower wages, and need a lot of on-the-job training.
This idea that you need programming skills to work in IT is misguided. I know plenty of Windows server admins, Active directory admins, Storage and backup admins, network engineers and architects, and even a Linux admin that either do not know how to code or know very little.
Knowing how to program is not required for IT in the Business world unless you are a developer. Knowing your particular technology and how to configure it is.
If this guy knows his Windows Server, and Active Directory stuff, he could get a job being a server admin. Unfortunately, Windows admins are a dime a dozen and the pay is not that great.
Solar roofs are looking better and better. All While blending into your neighborhood.
It doesn't take much research to find far better options to the bulky solar panel design.
It is more like owning a cruise ship and calling it a bath toy.
The US government did try to force them to assimilate. They forcibly took children from their families and made them attend boarding schools that forbade the culture which they came from.
https://www.history.com/news/h...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
I'm not "free" to use a private internet service when there is a competing "public" option; you're forcing me to pay for that "public" option TOO.
B.S. My local muni broadband is funded by those who use it. http://swiftel.net/
The LG V20 has a second screen. I like it.
http://www.techradar.com/revie...
My belief is that pro-life means taking care of children from conception to adulthood. Not just to make sure it is born. If you want a baby born but not a baby clothed, fed, and cared for, you are anti-abortion not pro-life. Even though I hate abortion and think it is immoral and wrong, banning it, punishing the women that go through with it or even punishing the doctors that perform it, will never stop it. Abortions happened before Roe vs Wade and they will continue to happen even if they are outlawed. It is better to have it happen in hospitals where at least the mother can survive. Leaving abortion as legal is also helpful in gaining information on why people do it. If you can eliminate the reason(s) people have for abortion, you can get really close to eliminating it without banning it.
Wouldn't this get around the app store restriction of Windows S?
CGP Gray just released a really good video on encryption.
Dr. Utopia's Cure: the ISM https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
+1 for Synergy.
My setup is one laptop on a dock and one PC all hooked up to three monitors. (One dedicated to the PC and the other two connected to the dock.) My PC is running Windows and my laptop is running Linux and they get along quite well.
Since I use it at work, I payed the $29 for the encrypted version. No one is going to sniff my keyboard data. ^_^
I love Notepad++. I have been looking for a good replacement for awhile.
Really? Linux can do this? Right. So here we have Mr. Linux and he can setup groups and all of a sudden the "freetard" ring gets one build and the "It's GNU/Linux damn it" ring gets a different build, and the "I still want to run the 2.3 kernel" ring gets an older build? No, Linux CAN'T do that. In fact, Linux is decentralized and is made up of distros and forks and all and has no central control. It is ridiculous to claim that Linux can do this.
No, Mr. Linux (AKA Linus Torvalds) doesn't set up the groups. He is interested in just kernel stuff. Also, it is because of the decentralized nature that allows Linux the flexibility to do this for over a DECADE before windows finally caught up.
Mr. Debian, Miss Ubuntu, Mrs. Fedora, Mr. Arch, and Mr. Gentoo make their respective groups. They set up the rings of development.
For example, Mr. Debian has Unstable, Testing, and Stable rings for his development systems. He also runs security updates for his previous Stable platform for at least a year. He is slow and methodical, but he has some of the most stable systems in the world
Miss Ubuntu likes Mr. Debian's ideas but thinks they are too slow and just repackages and improves on the Unstable and testing branches with some of her own packages and repositories for flair. But she also realizes the need for a long support build to go with her rapidly evolving six-month builds.
Mrs. Fedora helps out her husband Red Hat by releasing test builds of the latest and greatest stuff. She packages up a build every 6 months and supports it for a year. She only supports the last two builds and will not support a long term release... her husband will do that for her with his product.
Mr. Arch and Mr. Gentoo have a different approach. They run with the latest and greatest all the time and it is up to the individual users to know when to update their components.
X2go would be another option. It will do the X forwarding to a very nice client. I use it to remote into my Linux systems at home then RDP from there. http://wiki.x2go.org/
From what I understand of your requirements, you want to be able to remote into Mixed OS systems to do technical support more then the need for a VPN. In that case I would recommend Screen Connect. It works like it uses SSL and has client initiated connections and persistent clients. Since it is a piece of installed software it can be installed anywhere you need it. It is a little pricey at $375 for a single persistent self-hosted solution. The licence includes one year of software updates and support. On top of it, if you do not want to renew after the year is up you can continue to use it without additional cost. https://www.screenconnect.com/
Obligational 1940's video:
Prophetic Cartoon Warning of -isms
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
Since you don't have any programming languages, you obviously haven't got a CompSci degree, so you're looking at "lower" IT work (services, not design). This means that you'll likely be working for lower wages, and need a lot of on-the-job training.
This idea that you need programming skills to work in IT is misguided. I know plenty of Windows server admins, Active directory admins, Storage and backup admins, network engineers and architects, and even a Linux admin that either do not know how to code or know very little.
Knowing how to program is not required for IT in the Business world unless you are a developer. Knowing your particular technology and how to configure it is.
If this guy knows his Windows Server, and Active Directory stuff, he could get a job being a server admin. Unfortunately, Windows admins are a dime a dozen and the pay is not that great.
Well, either vote them out or do like Iceland and peacefully force them out and rewrite the Constitution... http://guardianlv.com/2013/12/icelanders-overthrow-government-and-rewrite-constitution-after-banking-fraud-no-word-from-us-media/