Shouldn't draft-N routers have to be updated so they be compliant with final-N? Buying a draft-N product implies the standard is not yet set. So people who bought them "ought" to know that product may not be compatible with the ratified version.
Just because they're name brands don't mean they're good. I would think the biggest would OEM from the cheapest source. I only buy Taiyo Yuden recordable media.
Several seconds is not a problem; I never ran into this because my temp directories and stuff are cleaned up often and the issue seems to occur only after a cold boot (I may be mistaken about this latter part). So my startup times are 5 secs or so since I hardly turn off my machine.
But others were waiting for minutes, 1-4 minutes for some. Pretty annoying if I were hit with those times. I think these individuals had hundreds of MB for their IE cache and their temp folders were large as well.
Boot the Linux kernel and nothing else. What can you do with it? Not very much, therefore, just the kernel is not an operating system.
Your original post states that the Linux code base has never been forked you imply that OpenBSD has. I don't think OpenBSD has been forked after its creation. Who really cares what the code's history was before it became OpenBSD? This article is about OpenBSD release engineering. If it were about BSD release engineering, you would have a point.
I believe automatic updates would still work. If you manually updated via a browser I don't think that would work since you're required to use Active-X. But you could download all of the updates manually and launch them offline. Still a pain but it would work.
The most significant thing is support for more than 3GB of memory. Although I've waited, it will be harder to justify buying 64-bit without proper software support. Of course, maybe it would be better to install 64-bit Linux and run a XP-based VM.
Interesting. That does lend credence to the theory that they have an exploit for an old version of sshd, since it's explicitly mentioned in their script output that the servers were running openssh-4.5.
Then again, it's not unthinkable that the script output is faked, and they're just trying to ride the publicity from the supposed break. Without more details it's impossible to be sure.
Others have linked to other sites on this thread that speculates a 0-day vuln for the most up-to-date version of OpenSSH exists and this is a way for them to target more people. That would be interesting. It will show if the open method is good for exposing bugs in a timely manner. It will also show how a lot of sysadmins not have the time or maybe skill to go over all changes in a distribution to see if it's secure. I know many times I would download a dist. and compile and if make test passes, I install.
The parent is correct: it appears the submitter wants 4:3 displays. The Asus and Viewsonic have 16:9/16:10 ratios. Unfortunately more companies will be selling widescreen monitors due to the size of the TV market as monitor companies can leverage off TV's scale. Read it in some article within the last 6 months. Wikipedia has a page that displays most standard resolutions and 1680x1050 is the closest that will meet the submitter.
Pricegrabber (and other places will probably show you similar results) shows 17" higher than 1280x1024 is 1440x900. Going up to 19" and you'll get 1680x1050.
Personally, I'd get 1920x1200 or at least 1600x1200. They take less space than a 17" CRT depth wise, which is more important than a wider display.
"An arena where the forces of good and evil do battle in order to see who's the best? Sounds like a blast! Wait, all they do is talk to each other and have their robots fight? What the fuck?"
Sounds like the real world where leaders of countries do the same thing and have other people fight for them.
The problem is in order to install the.NET update, you need to be admin. Security-minded people who use Windows do so as a normal user. Therein lies the problem. Admin writes the registry entry in HKLM but running Firefox as a normal user, one cannot write in HKLM, only HKLU. I don't like having to run Firefox every time I update something on my system to see if some extension has been installed.
Sun did this same shit for their recent update of Java.
So after most updates, I now have to go to HKLM/Software/Mozilla/Firefox/extensions and clear out crap I don't recognize. Imagine if extensions were created by many other software companies that hijack their competitors' installs and we'll have a much bigger problem.
The strategy is to sacrifice parts of your routine/life for the sake of attending to your kids. Of course, it's easier said than done as you're used to a certain type of routine.
Infants are another matter, but kids who are 2-3 years old will probably sleep for 12 hours in one shot then a 2-3 hour nap in the middle of the day.
I have some educational games that only work under 98 so I have an old notebook that runs that. It would be nice to have the latest version of FF running but it's good enough that cygwin runs and I use ssh as a thether to the network.
Shouldn't draft-N routers have to be updated so they be compliant with final-N? Buying a draft-N product implies the standard is not yet set. So people who bought them "ought" to know that product may not be compatible with the ratified version.
This entry appears to imply Falcon OEMs from Ricoh. http://www.videohelp.com/dvdmedia/falcon-media-dvd-r-ricohjpnd01-8/4722
Just because they're name brands don't mean they're good. I would think the biggest would OEM from the cheapest source. I only buy Taiyo Yuden recordable media.
Several seconds is not a problem; I never ran into this because my temp directories and stuff are cleaned up often and the issue seems to occur only after a cold boot (I may be mistaken about this latter part). So my startup times are 5 secs or so since I hardly turn off my machine.
But others were waiting for minutes, 1-4 minutes for some. Pretty annoying if I were hit with those times. I think these individuals had hundreds of MB for their IE cache and their temp folders were large as well.
OS dependent. They coded for the case where Windows CE/2000 did not have a certain call and they wanted to get good entropy for their RNG in NSS. https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=501605
Boot the Linux kernel and nothing else. What can you do with it? Not very much, therefore, just the kernel is not an operating system.
Your original post states that the Linux code base has never been forked you imply that OpenBSD has. I don't think OpenBSD has been forked after its creation. Who really cares what the code's history was before it became OpenBSD? This article is about OpenBSD release engineering. If it were about BSD release engineering, you would have a point.
It's pretty cool they do this. As opposed to iTunes "updates" of 70+MB--really no updates at all since they're just the monolithic install package.
I believe automatic updates would still work. If you manually updated via a browser I don't think that would work since you're required to use Active-X. But you could download all of the updates manually and launch them offline. Still a pain but it would work.
The most significant thing is support for more than 3GB of memory. Although I've waited, it will be harder to justify buying 64-bit without proper software support. Of course, maybe it would be better to install 64-bit Linux and run a XP-based VM.
The MPAA recommends this procedure to record HD/DVD so I don't think they would mind.
Damn, I meant to say 998 doesn't show what version of SSH it runs.
img1...us is running on 4.5; there is no img998...us though. Yes, the logs definitely don't show all details nor do we have any way of knowing if they're all true. Their hack into two other sites appear to indicate they used a OpenSSH 4.3 vulnerability. http://romeo.copyandpaste.info/txt/nowayout.txt http://romeo.copyandpaste.info/txt/ssanz-pwned.txt
Others have linked to other sites on this thread that speculates a 0-day vuln for the most up-to-date version of OpenSSH exists and this is a way for them to target more people. That would be interesting. It will show if the open method is good for exposing bugs in a timely manner. It will also show how a lot of sysadmins not have the time or maybe skill to go over all changes in a distribution to see if it's secure. I know many times I would download a dist. and compile and if make test passes, I install.
It doesn't show the details but their website gives a summary. http://romeo.copyandpaste.info/txt/imageshack-pwned.txt How accurate, who knows.
The parent is correct: it appears the submitter wants 4:3 displays. The Asus and Viewsonic have 16:9/16:10 ratios. Unfortunately more companies will be selling widescreen monitors due to the size of the TV market as monitor companies can leverage off TV's scale. Read it in some article within the last 6 months. Wikipedia has a page that displays most standard resolutions and 1680x1050 is the closest that will meet the submitter.
Pricegrabber (and other places will probably show you similar results) shows 17" higher than 1280x1024 is 1440x900. Going up to 19" and you'll get 1680x1050.
Personally, I'd get 1920x1200 or at least 1600x1200. They take less space than a 17" CRT depth wise, which is more important than a wider display.
"An arena where the forces of good and evil do battle in order to see who's the best? Sounds like a blast! Wait, all they do is talk to each other and have their robots fight? What the fuck?"
Sounds like the real world where leaders of countries do the same thing and have other people fight for them.
May I suggest Madoff work here? http://www.newsweek.com/id/67483 In 1 page http://www.newsweek.com/id/67483/output/print
The problem is in order to install the .NET update, you need to be admin. Security-minded people who use Windows do so as a normal user. Therein lies the problem. Admin writes the registry entry in HKLM but running Firefox as a normal user, one cannot write in HKLM, only HKLU. I don't like having to run Firefox every time I update something on my system to see if some extension has been installed.
Sun did this same shit for their recent update of Java.
So after most updates, I now have to go to HKLM/Software/Mozilla/Firefox/extensions and clear out crap I don't recognize. Imagine if extensions were created by many other software companies that hijack their competitors' installs and we'll have a much bigger problem.
The strategy is to sacrifice parts of your routine/life for the sake of attending to your kids. Of course, it's easier said than done as you're used to a certain type of routine.
Infants are another matter, but kids who are 2-3 years old will probably sleep for 12 hours in one shot then a 2-3 hour nap in the middle of the day.
Did someone edit the review? I can't see anything wrong with the first 3 paragraphs' misuse of to/too, it/it's, and then/than.
I equally enjoyed DS9: The Visitor.
Command should be
perl -npe 's/\\x([0-9a-f]{2})/pack "c", hex($1)/ge' <content/noscript/MRD.js >MRD.unescaped.js
from http://forums.informaction.com/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=877&start=90#p3162 also posted by mattmccutchen.
You can install KernelEx http://x86.neostrada.pl/KernelEx http://www.msfn.org/board/index.php?act=ST&f=91&t=130936 and install some (not all) 2K/XP applications under 95/98. You certainly can install and run FireFox 3.
I have some educational games that only work under 98 so I have an old notebook that runs that. It would be nice to have the latest version of FF running but it's good enough that cygwin runs and I use ssh as a thether to the network.
Obama promised change. These appointments add gasoline to the fire.
Didn't know the man, but I love the product. It's comforting to know he won't have to worry about ads any more.
I think the poster was referring to Cisco/Linksys.