Hey, we had a pipeline going across Alaska since the late 70's. With drunken idiots with guns trying to shoot holes in it and the occasional maintenance mishap leading to spills, Alaska has somehow not turned into a barren oil-soaked wasteland yet.
I never thought of it that way. You are right, I'm sure. Never any damage caused to the environment in Alaska due to an oil spill.
Came here for the lectures on how Nuclear Energy is the safest and cleanest. How it is so much more reliable and green than solar, wind, or hydro Left disappointed, will check back later.
Flashbangs can indeed injure people, and they are regularly used against protesters. I'm guessing the protesters called them concussion grenades because that is a good description, though it means something else. The video from the snopes article on the subject shows flashbangs being used against the crowd at about 1:13. http://www.snopes.com/2016/11/...
(The article doesn't indicate whether or not the accusations or rebuttals are true)
I'm disappointed as well. Like many others, I switched to a Macbook Pro after running Linux for years, with something not quite working, whether wireless or hibernation.
But I looked at System76 15" laptops... 1080p screens, and a numpad. I wouldn't care about numpads, except it means that the trackpad and keyboard are offset from center. Won't ever do it.
I looked. A Dell XPS 15 is the most likely replacement, but for now I'll stay on my 15" 2012 MBP Retina, hoping that Apple will update the older form factor with Kaby Lake, DDR4 with at least 32GB Ram. Would update in a heartbeat.
There is just about 0 chance that either Apple or Microsoft will produce even mostly open source operating systems. I think the concept is so stupid that I'm more likely to ignore anything else he says, other than to respond:
"Use the best tool for the job. There is value added if you can read, modify, and fix tools that are open source, as is the great value of not being required to pay for it. If there is a closed source tool that is free, there is value in that as well. And if there is an expensive closed source tool that is a better value than others because it is much closer to what you need/want: Use that."
I really enjoyed the movie adaptation of the book. For me, the cut the right bits, had a wink and a nod for those that had read the book. They kept the movie manageable and enjoyable...
Except that I didn't like their choices in the last 15 minutes. Without spoilers, an idea dismissed as ludicrous in the book was nonetheless implemented in the movie, and it annoyed me a bit.
That said, read the book. See the movie. And if you are in to that sort of thing, the audiobook is really quite enjoyable as well.
I used the wrong Supermicro box to make my point - I selected the pure storage, vs server with storage. So 72 drives instead of 90 per 4U. 5.5 PB per 72U instead of "over 6". The rest of my points stand.
Some company was doing this in the Bay area in 2000. Hotplug is expensive. Cases are expensive. Making room for human access is expensive. Design for nothing but airflow and drive density, keeping pieces as absolutely cheap as possible. Gigabit instead of 10G. At exabyte scale, why do you care about the loss of 4TB? Using Super Micro boxes w/4TB Drives, you can have over 6 petabytes of raw storage in a 72u rack / cabinet
Metadata servers keep track of where the copies of blocks are. Put copies of the blocks on completely disparate systems. If there is heavy read usage of a block, make more copies. Head servers scale and have some beef to them. They are all about getting info from the commodity stuff and packaging it for (subscribers, clients, whatever).
If a drive dies or has issues - mark it bad and leave it at that. Ignore it. If a server dies, mark it as bad. Leave it. In 4 years you are forklifting the equipment and replacing it with new storage.
There is no "RAID", other than there are multiple copies of blocks throughout the system.
I met with a company in the bay area doing this in 2000 (I don't remember which one). It was dealing with Filesystems and not block, but with NFS, VMDKs, VHD, etc, who cares. I don't see anything new here at all.
So let me get this straight: There is this site. A site designed for illegal activities... And all I need to do is load their software onto my computer? Gosh, where do I sign up.
I mean, I always trust software from shady characters. That sounds totally safe.
I've tried to recreate the issue, and so far I can't. iPhone 5 iOS 6.1, Exchange 2010 I created an appointment - no abnormal increase in logs I invited someone internal - no abnormal increase in logs I was invited from an internal account, rejected one, accepted another - no abnormal increase in logs I was invited from an external account, rejected one, accepted another, also declined after accepting - no abnormal increase in logs
For each of these, there was the expected 20 or so packets associated with the changes, and no ongoing network traffic.
On the other hand, we had a client that had the runaway log issue last week - I'll be following up with him to find the iOS versions involved
Dear Apple : Microsoft believes that the PC is dead. Would you please go ahead and release your OS for generic hardware? Or simply release a mid-tower box. Good enough for me.
I'm surprised that they still recommend 32-bit for desktop instead of 64. Programs probably just not quite ready for LTS on 64, but disappointing nonetheless.
No two-way pagers (how I started), no phones, no laptops. Come in, complete your agenda, manage the meeting so if participants need to cover something in detail, go off and do it and give a quick report at the next meeting, or send it to the project manager to distribute to the group. If you are to busy to focus, then don't attend.
I agree with Virtualization (really, it is a must for any lab). If your budget is low, crank up the specs on your desktop machine, and use VMWare Workstation (or some such).
If you budget is a bit higher, get that machine and dedicate it with Xen Server or vSphere (or whatever)
Higher yet? Get a couple of boxes, and an iSCSI solution so that you can support clusters (iSCSI is much cheaper than fibrechannel, and you can do windows clustering as well as your virtualization platform clustering.)
You want brands? I did it with generic computing hardware (24GB core i7 boxes) and a Thecus iSCSI solution (because I didn't want to take the time to build the iSCSI myself). WD RE4 drives. Get funky with quad-port Intel NICS and a linksys switch that supports VLANS. Make sure to get a Microsoft TechNet subscription if you are working with Microsoft platforms. Have fun.
Gonna grow it? Start with VMware Workstation. The VMs you create can migrate to dedicated virtualization platforms as you move up in expenditures.
1.1E6 m/s .0037c
Or
What could possibly go wrong?
All it really needs is a sticker saying "Do not look at laser with remaining eye"
Hey, we had a pipeline going across Alaska since the late 70's. With drunken idiots with guns trying to shoot holes in it and the occasional maintenance mishap leading to spills, Alaska has somehow not turned into a barren oil-soaked wasteland yet.
I never thought of it that way.
You are right, I'm sure. Never any damage caused to the environment in Alaska due to an oil spill.
Came here for the lectures on how Nuclear Energy is the safest and cleanest.
How it is so much more reliable and green than solar, wind, or hydro
Left disappointed, will check back later.
Flashbangs can indeed injure people, and they are regularly used against protesters.
I'm guessing the protesters called them concussion grenades because that is a good description, though it means something else.
The video from the snopes article on the subject shows flashbangs being used against the crowd at about 1:13.
http://www.snopes.com/2016/11/...
(The article doesn't indicate whether or not the accusations or rebuttals are true)
I'm disappointed as well. Like many others, I switched to a Macbook Pro after running Linux for years, with something not quite working, whether wireless or hibernation.
But I looked at System76 15" laptops... 1080p screens, and a numpad. I wouldn't care about numpads, except it means that the trackpad and keyboard are offset from center. Won't ever do it.
I looked. A Dell XPS 15 is the most likely replacement, but for now I'll stay on my 15" 2012 MBP Retina, hoping that Apple will update the older form factor with Kaby Lake, DDR4 with at least 32GB Ram. Would update in a heartbeat.
Please tell me this is satire.
There were exactly 3 emails that had sections marked with (c) indicating classified, though it was meaningless without the related headers.
Additionally, zero of those 3 emails actually contained classified information.
Thought you were serious at first with just the one line summary displaying.
Clicked reply just to say "802.1x".... but instead I'll only chuckle.
There is just about 0 chance that either Apple or Microsoft will produce even mostly open source operating systems.
I think the concept is so stupid that I'm more likely to ignore anything else he says, other than to respond:
"Use the best tool for the job. There is value added if you can read, modify, and fix tools that are open source, as is the great value of not being required to pay for it. If there is a closed source tool that is free, there is value in that as well. And if there is an expensive closed source tool that is a better value than others because it is much closer to what you need/want: Use that."
See? Easy.
I really enjoyed the movie adaptation of the book.
For me, the cut the right bits, had a wink and a nod for those that had read the book. They kept the movie manageable and enjoyable...
Except that I didn't like their choices in the last 15 minutes. Without spoilers, an idea dismissed as ludicrous in the book was nonetheless implemented in the movie, and it annoyed me a bit.
That said, read the book. See the movie. And if you are in to that sort of thing, the audiobook is really quite enjoyable as well.
Except for the last twenty years or so.
What?
Are you saying the system hasn't been warming up?
Because if you are, you are wrong.
If that isn't what you are saying, then you did a poor job of communicating clearly.
I used the wrong Supermicro box to make my point - I selected the pure storage, vs server with storage.
So 72 drives instead of 90 per 4U. 5.5 PB per 72U instead of "over 6".
The rest of my points stand.
Some company was doing this in the Bay area in 2000.
Hotplug is expensive. Cases are expensive. Making room for human access is expensive.
Design for nothing but airflow and drive density, keeping pieces as absolutely cheap as possible. Gigabit instead of 10G.
At exabyte scale, why do you care about the loss of 4TB? Using Super Micro boxes w/4TB Drives, you can have over 6 petabytes of raw storage in a 72u rack / cabinet
Metadata servers keep track of where the copies of blocks are.
Put copies of the blocks on completely disparate systems. If there is heavy read usage of a block, make more copies.
Head servers scale and have some beef to them. They are all about getting info from the commodity stuff and packaging it for (subscribers, clients, whatever).
If a drive dies or has issues - mark it bad and leave it at that. Ignore it.
If a server dies, mark it as bad. Leave it.
In 4 years you are forklifting the equipment and replacing it with new storage.
There is no "RAID", other than there are multiple copies of blocks throughout the system.
I met with a company in the bay area doing this in 2000 (I don't remember which one). It was dealing with Filesystems and not block, but with NFS, VMDKs, VHD, etc, who cares. I don't see anything new here at all.
So let me get this straight:
There is this site. A site designed for illegal activities...
And all I need to do is load their software onto my computer? Gosh, where do I sign up.
I mean, I always trust software from shady characters. That sounds totally safe.
For all of those that think this is a good idea, there will be a number of schools requiring Ayn Rand... /shudder/
I've tried to recreate the issue, and so far I can't.
iPhone 5 iOS 6.1, Exchange 2010
I created an appointment - no abnormal increase in logs
I invited someone internal - no abnormal increase in logs
I was invited from an internal account, rejected one, accepted another - no abnormal increase in logs
I was invited from an external account, rejected one, accepted another, also declined after accepting - no abnormal increase in logs
For each of these, there was the expected 20 or so packets associated with the changes, and no ongoing network traffic.
On the other hand, we had a client that had the runaway log issue last week - I'll be following up with him to find the iOS versions involved
Dear Apple :
Microsoft believes that the PC is dead.
Would you please go ahead and release your OS for generic hardware?
Or simply release a mid-tower box. Good enough for me.
Signed : A Lover of PCs
I'm surprised that they still recommend 32-bit for desktop instead of 64.
Programs probably just not quite ready for LTS on 64, but disappointing nonetheless.
Actually, that's when I realized that the guy writing the article didn't have a clue. Since when is throughput measured in IOPS?
No two-way pagers (how I started), no phones, no laptops.
Come in, complete your agenda, manage the meeting so if participants need to cover something in detail, go off and do it and give a quick report at the next meeting, or send it to the project manager to distribute to the group.
If you are to busy to focus, then don't attend.
I agree with Virtualization (really, it is a must for any lab).
If your budget is low, crank up the specs on your desktop machine, and use VMWare Workstation (or some such).
If you budget is a bit higher, get that machine and dedicate it with Xen Server or vSphere (or whatever)
Higher yet? Get a couple of boxes, and an iSCSI solution so that you can support clusters (iSCSI is much cheaper than fibrechannel, and you can do windows clustering as well as your virtualization platform clustering.)
You want brands? I did it with generic computing hardware (24GB core i7 boxes) and a Thecus iSCSI solution (because I didn't want to take the time to build the iSCSI myself). WD RE4 drives. Get funky with quad-port Intel NICS and a linksys switch that supports VLANS.
Make sure to get a Microsoft TechNet subscription if you are working with Microsoft platforms.
Have fun.
Gonna grow it? Start with VMware Workstation. The VMs you create can migrate to dedicated virtualization platforms as you move up in expenditures.
Which phones out there get vendor supplied updates after 3 years? Certainly not any that I've ever owned.
My company got me a Droid Eris (I had no choice). 6 months later, no update to Android 2.2. (Maybe 8. Whatever)
I'm not sure why Apple is getting dinged for not supporting a 3 year old phone. No one that I know of supports 3 year old phones.
You look at the bills, you look at laws, you look at the decisions.
It is obvious that most of congress has very little to no understanding of science
If they think that scientific theory and hypotheses are just guesses, why should they fund it?
Especially the ones that believe that evolution doesn't exist and that intelligent design is either science or the equivalent of science.
Look, there are lots of benefits of scale to living in an urban area.
There are also lots of benefits to living in a rural area
These benefits are not the same. If you want benefits like infrastructure, live where infrastructure makes sense.
If you want to live in the middle of nowhere, all by yourself, enjoy your dialup and/or satellite connection.