*ding, ding, ding* Drop that duck. You said the phrase of the day: "interesting accounting"
While the markets may be cash flow positive, the administration overhead is the big sucking sound that's draining off that cash. The company hq, the salaries, etc. In essence, everything but the colocated equipment and a techie or two.
heh. it's always 11pm to 6am somewhere. shouldn't be much trouble for any site that already sports server side scripting to add a paragraph to its disclaimer page.
"...I am not a cop, prude, or religious freak looking to make an example of this site.
Um. Good. Give people skills that'll help 'em land a decent job. But the Web Development market is already oversupplied. Try something like nursing or home health care, or even airport security, where they might actually find work!
I had the same experience. Then I upgraded to the 4-plex switch in the same line (PS2KVM4) for about 120 bucks. The keyboard switching is a little more complex (ctrl-shift-alt then a 1,2,3, or 4) but doesn't interfere with gaming.
Totally agree with the review about cable layout tho. It's a mess. Thank goodness for twist ties.
I have noticed I can lose the mouse if I use it while switching. It'll come back after another switch and it's hard to do, but it's a nit to pick.
The only thing I'd add is a virtual clipboard, but I can live without it.
...and Skylarov were an American in Russia, being held after taking a trip to a conference in Moscow to present scientific research sponsored by his employer, and was arrested for spying because of that research, the American press would go apesh*t (as Slashdot has previously noted). Today on dailynews.yahoo.com:
The individuals in the USAG's office from Ashcroft on down need to be held accountable for every day of the immoral, obscene detention of Dmitri Sklyarov. His release is inevitable, but I fear it won't be soon. For it, I say SHAME!
2. NAT is the answer? No, for true secure internet you need end to end connectivity. This means live IP addresses, not hiding behind NAT. Also NAT can't pass everything through. e.g. try to pass ESP for several devices through NAT. Also try to run several independent servers of the same service type (e.g. web sites) behind a NAT. Gets very difficult.
Substantiate your assertions on this point. They ring hollow.
Past the first hub/switch, there's no secure end to end communication with or without NAT, in the way you're implying. Your data packets are passed from hand to hand to reach their destination, and can be intercepted, altered, or dropped anywhere along the chain.
As for multiple servers, you don't like header translation? I can't say as I blame you. Have you tried ipchains?
code is like sheet music, and computers are like instruments.
2. What examples of fair uses absolutely require access to the work in its most modern, digital, uncorrupted, un-macrovisioned form? The only one that jumped out at me is making a backup copy in case the original is destroyed. But perhaps there are others.
If only we had originals of Shakespeare. He makes a great case study of how fair use (folios), and even piracy (quartos) actually contributed more to SAVING his work than the author/copyright owner did.
Get your company to pick a book on QA/Functional Testing.
A good practical one that spends a lot of time discussiong bug reporting and problem tracking is:
Kaner, Falk, Nguyen, Testing Computer Software, 2nd ed, 1993, Thomson Computer Press. Widely available, from your favorite tech. book store.
Another, less practical, more eggheady book is:
Beizer, Black-Box Testing, 1995, John Wiley & Sons.
It's important to have a well-documented bug classification and tracking system, that everyone involved in the project, especially the non-techie (read marketing and management) types can understand.
*ding, ding, ding* Drop that duck. You said the phrase of the day: "interesting accounting"
While the markets may be cash flow positive, the administration overhead is the big sucking sound that's draining off that cash. The company hq, the salaries, etc. In essence, everything but the colocated equipment and a techie or two.
With accounting like that, why only 40/50?
heh. it's always 11pm to 6am somewhere. shouldn't be much trouble for any site that already sports server side scripting to add a paragraph to its disclaimer page.
"...I am not a cop, prude, or religious freak looking to make an example of this site.
I currently reside in GMT-1 to GMT+6.
I think she looks 18...."
The site www.doi.gov is running Apache/1.3.12 (Unix) on Solaris.
The site www.blm.gov is running Apache/1.3.22 (Unix) PHP/4.0.6 on unknown.
The site www.nps.gov is running Netscape-Enterprise/4.1 on Solaris.
Oh, and nps is still up....
This just in:
Slashdot automatically mods higher any comments posted from mozilla or opera.
You heard it here first.
Um. Good. Give people skills that'll help 'em land a decent job. But the Web Development market is already oversupplied. Try something like nursing or home health care, or even airport security, where they might actually find work!
I had the same experience. Then I upgraded to the 4-plex switch in the same line (PS2KVM4) for about 120 bucks. The keyboard switching is a little more complex (ctrl-shift-alt then a 1,2,3, or 4) but doesn't interfere with gaming.
Totally agree with the review about cable layout tho. It's a mess. Thank goodness for twist ties.
I have noticed I can lose the mouse if I use it while switching. It'll come back after another switch and it's hard to do, but it's a nit to pick.
The only thing I'd add is a virtual clipboard, but I can live without it.
...and Skylarov were an American in Russia, being held after taking a trip to a conference in Moscow to present scientific research sponsored by his employer, and was arrested for spying because of that research, the American press would go apesh*t (as Slashdot has previously noted). Today on dailynews.yahoo.com:
The individuals in the USAG's office from Ashcroft on down need to be held accountable for every day of the immoral, obscene detention of Dmitri Sklyarov. His release is inevitable, but I fear it won't be soon. For it, I say SHAME!
Substantiate your assertions on this point. They ring hollow.
Well, really, the easiest way is if we all scramble our phone lines.
There is no idiot-proof way to encrypt data. The idiots will always leave their passwords on yellow stickies on the monitor.
Bingo! Why haven't you been voted up?
code is like sheet music, and computers are like instruments.
If only we had originals of Shakespeare. He makes a great case study of how fair use (folios), and even piracy (quartos) actually contributed more to SAVING his work than the author/copyright owner did.
Get your company to pick a book on QA/Functional Testing. A good practical one that spends a lot of time discussiong bug reporting and problem tracking is: Kaner, Falk, Nguyen, Testing Computer Software, 2nd ed, 1993, Thomson Computer Press. Widely available, from your favorite tech. book store. Another, less practical, more eggheady book is: Beizer, Black-Box Testing, 1995, John Wiley & Sons. It's important to have a well-documented bug classification and tracking system, that everyone involved in the project, especially the non-techie (read marketing and management) types can understand.