You can get more throughput out of fiber over copper with WDM where different wavelengths of light can go through a single piece of fiber without interference. Sure, a WDM upgrade would be expensive but not as expensive as laying more copper. The upgrades would be done at strategic places where they would be easy as opposed to cable where the infrastructure is inherently shared in the last mile. Fiber brings the congestion points to locations that are easily upgraded if more speed is required.
Assuming you work with people in your office. Due to globalization, there are a lot of groups that are dispersed and people work with others across cities, states, continents for a majority of their work.
Free is the French ISP whose business model influenced sonic.net in the US--no limits/caps, all features included for one price. If Free continues its disruptive model, I think that would be a good thing for consumers.
Did they fix the update printing out diffs based on Mint's modifications of some configuration files and one needs to choose the conflict resolution?
Re:Never used this keystroke
on
Goodbye, Ctrl-S
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· Score: 1
If you've been using computers for 30 years, you should have used it but not in this article's context. My first thought was XON/XOFF was being deprecated, as in ^S/^Q in a TTY.
I got an account to afraid.org several days ago. I thought as an owner of a private domain, you are allowed to reject the subdomains before they can be active. Isn't this so?
I think you meant Windows does the same thing? Indeed, netsh is used to manage firewall rules on the command line level, and the Windows firewall snapin uses netsh. There are 3rd-party programs that replace the snapin or make it more intuitive like wfc from BiniSoft. I'm not sure if it replaces the regular snapin or runs on top of it.
I just saw a new AT&T subscriber where its Motorola 3347 router allowed it to be managed via the WAN port. But it does have the password set to a number on the label. Most routers today are capable of TR-069 so the ISPs are more than capable enough to do this management. But do they?
Exactly this. It's just like PKI is sound but the security of a system comes down to its implementation. Unless these Bitcoin exchanges are audited or have best practices put in place one could never know who the next victim of these hacks would be and therefore a person's wallet would always be in jeopardy. If I were to have a Bitcoin wallet, I would have used Mt. Gox since they're the biggest, oldest, and original founding member of the Bitcoin Foundation. Little did everyone know they could come down so soon.
I'm not against Bitcoin but it's much too soon to start relying on it as a stable currency.
You can get more throughput out of fiber over copper with WDM where different wavelengths of light can go through a single piece of fiber without interference. Sure, a WDM upgrade would be expensive but not as expensive as laying more copper. The upgrades would be done at strategic places where they would be easy as opposed to cable where the infrastructure is inherently shared in the last mile. Fiber brings the congestion points to locations that are easily upgraded if more speed is required.
Wikipedia has a table that shows various bandwidth tiers depending on the number of channels configured. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Irrelevant since these big private companies already do that.
> In the next Presidential election, vote for the a candidate who will push for net neutrality if that's important to you.
The current president did say he was going to change a lot of stuff but changed his tune after he got in office.
Cygwin's bash 4.1.11(6) is no longer vulnerable.
Ubuntu's bash 4.3.11(1) is no longer vulnerable
Assuming you work with people in your office. Due to globalization, there are a lot of groups that are dispersed and people work with others across cities, states, continents for a majority of their work.
> unless you'd like to point out what makes you remotely credible in this field
slashdotter with low id number.
How quickly would those filters clog up when bombarded with concentrated pollutants and probably high heat?
Free is the French ISP whose business model influenced sonic.net in the US--no limits/caps, all features included for one price. If Free continues its disruptive model, I think that would be a good thing for consumers.
They're either selling or sold the vulnerability to government agencies or just FUD against Tails.
An easier way is just cheap speakers doing what they do best.
They either need their own repository or clearly mark their changes. In the past, there have been changes where it's not clear what is Mint-specific.
Heard good things about xmission.
Did they fix the update printing out diffs based on Mint's modifications of some configuration files and one needs to choose the conflict resolution?
If you've been using computers for 30 years, you should have used it but not in this article's context. My first thought was XON/XOFF was being deprecated, as in ^S/^Q in a TTY.
You're assuming the medium in which you've saved your FLAC files is safe from bitrot.
A program like SuRun will take care of exceptions automatically.
I got an account to afraid.org several days ago. I thought as an owner of a private domain, you are allowed to reject the subdomains before they can be active. Isn't this so?
You a word there.
I think you meant Windows does the same thing? Indeed, netsh is used to manage firewall rules on the command line level, and the Windows firewall snapin uses netsh. There are 3rd-party programs that replace the snapin or make it more intuitive like wfc from BiniSoft. I'm not sure if it replaces the regular snapin or runs on top of it.
Outlook also had AJAX first. GMail was the among the first free webmail to use AJAX.
F1 comes to mind
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v...
I just saw a new AT&T subscriber where its Motorola 3347 router allowed it to be managed via the WAN port. But it does have the password set to a number on the label. Most routers today are capable of TR-069 so the ISPs are more than capable enough to do this management. But do they?
Ask that to people who have lost homes.
Exactly this. It's just like PKI is sound but the security of a system comes down to its implementation. Unless these Bitcoin exchanges are audited or have best practices put in place one could never know who the next victim of these hacks would be and therefore a person's wallet would always be in jeopardy. If I were to have a Bitcoin wallet, I would have used Mt. Gox since they're the biggest, oldest, and original founding member of the Bitcoin Foundation. Little did everyone know they could come down so soon.
I'm not against Bitcoin but it's much too soon to start relying on it as a stable currency.
Juniper advisory:
http://kb.juniper.net/InfoCent...
JunOSe and ScreenOS unaffected.