You seem to be just taking all changes and rebooting. I do that all the time on my ubuntu laptops but I wouldn't manage my servers that way.
More so because some package managers (such as CentOS) tend to replace customized init.d files with the stock ones (renaming the ones you had). This is not really a big deal, but it sometimes breaks some services.
The main complexities seem to have to do with the sheer diversity related to the multi-carrier and multi-hardware aspects of the BB platform (e.g. the author mentions 10 different ways of getting a network connection and shortcomings of the built-in SDK UI widgets).
And yet as a user that's what attract me the most to the blackberry platform. I wouldn't mind using an iphone, but where I live they require you to tether yourself to a specific provider. Blackberry, on the other hand, is supported by all of the local carriers in all or most of it's flavors (bis, bes, etc).
As it happens, my current provider (one I'm very happy with) is not the one that supports iphone, so I guess it's not for me.
For a while, I whished for a layer 7 filter for pfsense but in the end, using squid + squiguard eliminated almost all unauthorized net access (p2p, im, sending of zombie generated spam).
I still believe the best policy is to have a talk with the users about proper net usage and the consequences of not following guidelines, but there will always be someone who thinks he can get away with it and get everyone (mostly me) in trouble.
They also didn't include Untangle, http://www.untangle.com/ which is available free, and is a direct competitor to the things tested.
Free with an asterisk on it. It seems if your needs go beyond the very basic, you have to pay for the professional version.
According to their website, creating different policies for specific groups of users or time-based is not available in the free version. Nor is wan failover.
I'm not against paying for the product, it seems quite capable and the $250 a year subscription is not unreasonable. But the free version doesn't seem to do much to compare to other offerings.
Dictators can be elected, altho I can't think of any modern example of this happening. A dictator is an abosolute ruler (and considered above the law). Sulla (or Cilla) was elected dictator and so was Caesar (how fair were those elections is a matter of debate).
Today's dictators don't style themselves as such. They usually have a legislative body even if it's full of puppet legislators.
I guess the fall of the Soviet Union left Ryan without a clear cut enemy to go after. Aimlessly, Ryan/Clancy went after the Japanese first, then the Chinese and finally the Islamic terrorists (in that awful Ryan Jr. novel)
Regardless of political ideologies, he did write some pretty cool spy novels. The Cardinal of the Kremlin and The Hunt for Red October were my favorites. It kind of went downhill from there.
Can anyone recommend a good political intrigue novel (espionage is always a plus)?
For instance, The Wheel of Time dragged on so long that the author died before he finished it.
On a more positive note, maybe Sanderson will manage to tie everything in the last book. The Mistborn books as a trilogy worked quite well. No loose threads in the end.
I'm hoping Patrick Rothfuss's Kingkiller Chronicles does the same.
Another one is GRRM's Song of Ice and Fire, he's not a young man keeps pushing dates back
I'll say... according to Amazon, now it's scheduled for september 29. And it's not even a sequel, but parts he left out in Feast of Crows.
Leave youtube videos loaded in the tab until you are sure you won't want to watch it again. I typically turn the sound off and allow a youtube video to load while I am surfing in another tab. When the video is done loading, I turn the sound back on and watch it from the beginning.
Or you can hit pause, switch to another window/tab and it will continue to load. When done, unpause.
I'll second Zabbix. It has gone through some growing pains, but I like it for its ease of use as well as its flexibility. Until this last version, it did not have good escalations or repeat notifications, which was a big problem. However, with 1.6, that has been corrected.
As a current user of Zabbix who happens to like it despite perceived shortcomings, I have to say that tears nearly came to my eyes when 1.6 was released. It even has a dashboard which was the feature I had missed the most from Nagios (when you have more than a handful of systems the overview screen gets quite crowded).
I'm no fan of Whatsup, but I use it and it's quite flexible when it comes to monitoring and "remediation" if you dabble on jscript or vbscripts.
I tried Zenoss and found it superior to Hyperic (imho), but sorely lacking in documentation and not so active community forums. This was last year, I guess it's time give it (and OpenNMS) another try.
Is there an opensource product that centralizes network and systems monitoring? Every product I've tried leans toward one end or the other. And things like netflow/sflow are a bear to implement with the current tools.
My monitoring needs are currently met by Nagios, Cacti (several of each), Whatsup, Orion and Zabbix (hooray for lightweight monitoring agents!) Of course this leaves a mess of "dashboards" to check when trying to get a birds eye view of the network's health.
So what exactly is this game going to give us that these other games don't? Alright... boobies.
I used to complain about all the griefing that was going on on this game until I realized that it was the only fun to be had.
*Everything else* sucked about the game. The graphics were pretty, but not that amazing (LOTRO's better), the quests boring, the voice acting bad and unnecesary and the storyline ridiculous for a multiplayer game (so I'm "the chosen one", right?).
Not to mention that the "zonified" world felt like a huge step backwards. And I don't mean the instances, but going from a zone to another meant a loading screen (?!).
I played until lvl 25 or so and uninstalled it and never looked back.
Warhammer on the other hand is so frigging fun even when I'm getting my ass handed over to me.
The game is full of "why didn't someone think of this before" ideas
Indeed. The public quests and open parties, for example (at least they are new to me) make *very* easy to jump onto a group and start playing (not that you can't play solo, mind you).
Of course it also has a couple of "who the heck came up with this crap?" ideas. The cultivation profession, for example. Whoever thought of that one needs to be taken out back and flogged. In fact, the whole crafting system seems underdone. They could have left it out and brought in when complete in a future patch or expansion.
Ah, so we're supposed to care because he had money and we've lost someone better than the rest of us.
I get it now.
Actually, you are not supposed to care of experience any other feeling/emotion towards the man.
Lots of people do (did) care about him, tho. That's why it's news. It doesn't mean that he was better/worthier than many of the other people that dissappear on a daily basis, so please don't take the reporting of this finding as a personal matter (I don't mean you directly, Goldberg's Pants, but all those who somehow seem affronted that this event got reported when so many others didn't)
IMAP under Exchange 2003 is such a joke I can't imagine they actually fixed in Exchange 2007. Exchange IMAP routinely fails on every system I have running thunderbird, Windows, Linux or Mac. It works for awhile but eventually I have to restart Thunderbird to get messages to load.
This might not be an Exchange issue (tho I've never used Exchange so I can't be 100% sure). But I've experienced similar symptoms with thunderbird with IMAP on other servers. The thing is, I can't pin down a single circumstance. Sometimes it happens when I access a folder with a huge amount of messages (200000 +), sometimes when I navigate away from a "search folder" (with a small number of messages on the source folder), etc.
Loial kills Rand al'Thor. But only after Rand flips out and kills Elayne Avhienda and Min in a rather grisly way.
Fearing reprisals, the Ogier declare war on the White Tower and lose. The entire Ogier race goes extinct.
A pack of wolves mistake Perrin's continued brooding for an illness and give him a mercy killing.
Nynaeve breaks her neck in a freak braid-pulling incident.
Mat wakes up and finds Bobby Ewing in his shower and realizes it was all a dream.
Not saying that Jordan is shitty, but quality is not a prerequisite for post-mortem whoring.
Ever read V.C. Andrews?
You seem to be just taking all changes and rebooting. I do that all the time on my ubuntu laptops but I wouldn't manage my servers that way.
More so because some package managers (such as CentOS) tend to replace customized init.d files with the stock ones (renaming the ones you had). This is not really a big deal, but it sometimes breaks some services.
Because we all saw how "Super Size Me" managed to kill McDonalds and every other unhealthy fast food outlet and franchise.
The main complexities seem to have to do with the sheer diversity related to the multi-carrier and multi-hardware aspects of the BB platform (e.g. the author mentions 10 different ways of getting a network connection and shortcomings of the built-in SDK UI widgets).
And yet as a user that's what attract me the most to the blackberry platform. I wouldn't mind using an iphone, but where I live they require you to tether yourself to a specific provider. Blackberry, on the other hand, is supported by all of the local carriers in all or most of it's flavors (bis, bes, etc).
As it happens, my current provider (one I'm very happy with) is not the one that supports iphone, so I guess it's not for me.
The attack was uncalled for, but do we know for a fact that they were agent of a foreign goverment?
"Appeared to be Iranian or Lebanese". Unless they showed him their passports, physical appearance will not really tell you where they are from.
Think about the implications. If they are really agents of a foreign goverment, would it be an act of war?
>Seriously, once you notice the resemblance it's impossible to see it as anything else.
I was about to call you out on this, and then I clicked the link. Now, all I'm saying is: "screw you guys, I'm going home"
I'll second that emotion.
For a while, I whished for a layer 7 filter for pfsense but in the end, using squid + squiguard eliminated almost all unauthorized net access (p2p, im, sending of zombie generated spam).
I still believe the best policy is to have a talk with the users about proper net usage and the consequences of not following guidelines, but there will always be someone who thinks he can get away with it and get everyone (mostly me) in trouble.
Free with an asterisk on it. It seems if your needs go beyond the very basic, you have to pay for the professional version.
According to their website, creating different policies for specific groups of users or time-based is not available in the free version. Nor is wan failover.
I'm not against paying for the product, it seems quite capable and the $250 a year subscription is not unreasonable. But the free version doesn't seem to do much to compare to other offerings.
Dictators can be elected, altho I can't think of any modern example of this happening. A dictator is an abosolute ruler (and considered above the law). Sulla (or Cilla) was elected dictator and so was Caesar (how fair were those elections is a matter of debate).
Today's dictators don't style themselves as such. They usually have a legislative body even if it's full of puppet legislators.
So long as it's pump is primed backwards...
I guess the fall of the Soviet Union left Ryan without a clear cut enemy to go after. Aimlessly, Ryan/Clancy went after the Japanese first, then the Chinese and finally the Islamic terrorists (in that awful Ryan Jr. novel)
Regardless of political ideologies, he did write some pretty cool spy novels. The Cardinal of the Kremlin and The Hunt for Red October were my favorites. It kind of went downhill from there.
Can anyone recommend a good political intrigue novel (espionage is always a plus)?
In the olden days, sometimes it was a loose SATA cable
SATA? Olden days? Come on, it's only been what, like 5 years?
On a more positive note, maybe Sanderson will manage to tie everything in the last book. The Mistborn books as a trilogy worked quite well. No loose threads in the end.
I'm hoping Patrick Rothfuss's Kingkiller Chronicles does the same.
I'll say... according to Amazon, now it's scheduled for september 29. And it's not even a sequel, but parts he left out in Feast of Crows.
Buy the Steam version. You can burn as many backup copies as you want (using Steam's backup feature) and you don't need a disc to play.
Of course, you will have to endure the 6 GB download.
(Cue in all the same old pro/against Steam arguments...)
Or you can hit pause, switch to another window/tab and it will continue to load. When done, unpause.
I'll second Zabbix. It has gone through some growing pains, but I like it for its ease of use as well as its flexibility. Until this last version, it did not have good escalations or repeat notifications, which was a big problem. However, with 1.6, that has been corrected.
As a current user of Zabbix who happens to like it despite perceived shortcomings, I have to say that tears nearly came to my eyes when 1.6 was released. It even has a dashboard which was the feature I had missed the most from Nagios (when you have more than a handful of systems the overview screen gets quite crowded).
You lose some things like forming groups
That's actually a pretty big loss, if you ask me.
I'm no fan of Whatsup, but I use it and it's quite flexible when it comes to monitoring and "remediation" if you dabble on jscript or vbscripts.
I tried Zenoss and found it superior to Hyperic (imho), but sorely lacking in documentation and not so active community forums. This was last year, I guess it's time give it (and OpenNMS) another try.
Is there an opensource product that centralizes network and systems monitoring? Every product I've tried leans toward one end or the other. And things like netflow/sflow are a bear to implement with the current tools.
My monitoring needs are currently met by Nagios, Cacti (several of each), Whatsup, Orion and Zabbix (hooray for lightweight monitoring agents!) Of course this leaves a mess of "dashboards" to check when trying to get a birds eye view of the network's health.
So what exactly is this game going to give us that these other games don't? Alright... boobies.
I used to complain about all the griefing that was going on on this game until I realized that it was the only fun to be had.
*Everything else* sucked about the game. The graphics were pretty, but not that amazing (LOTRO's better), the quests boring, the voice acting bad and unnecesary and the storyline ridiculous for a multiplayer game (so I'm "the chosen one", right?).
Not to mention that the "zonified" world felt like a huge step backwards. And I don't mean the instances, but going from a zone to another meant a loading screen (?!).
I played until lvl 25 or so and uninstalled it and never looked back.
Warhammer on the other hand is so frigging fun even when I'm getting my ass handed over to me.
The game is full of "why didn't someone think of this before" ideas
Indeed. The public quests and open parties, for example (at least they are new to me) make *very* easy to jump onto a group and start playing (not that you can't play solo, mind you).
Of course it also has a couple of "who the heck came up with this crap?" ideas. The cultivation profession, for example. Whoever thought of that one needs to be taken out back and flogged. In fact, the whole crafting system seems underdone. They could have left it out and brought in when complete in a future patch or expansion.
Ah, so we're supposed to care because he had money and we've lost someone better than the rest of us.
I get it now.
Actually, you are not supposed to care of experience any other feeling/emotion towards the man.
Lots of people do (did) care about him, tho. That's why it's news. It doesn't mean that he was better/worthier than many of the other people that dissappear on a daily basis, so please don't take the reporting of this finding as a personal matter (I don't mean you directly, Goldberg's Pants, but all those who somehow seem affronted that this event got reported when so many others didn't)
"Mousturbation"? Ok, I'll shut up now.
This might not be an Exchange issue (tho I've never used Exchange so I can't be 100% sure). But I've experienced similar symptoms with thunderbird with IMAP on other servers. The thing is, I can't pin down a single circumstance. Sometimes it happens when I access a folder with a huge amount of messages (200000 +), sometimes when I navigate away from a "search folder" (with a small number of messages on the source folder), etc.
POP3 works flawlessly, tho.
Now where was that brochure for the Psychonauts training camp...
I believe that would fall into the third category. Matter of opinion, of course.