Depends, I happen to live next to the second most visited national park, the Cuyahoga Valley National Park. It's a great resource for the people of northern Ohio. A bike trail through the national park is obviously a federal matter since only the federal government can build in the park. That's the difference between a national forest and a national park, the government does things to make the park accessible and useful for the citizens.
Yes, or at least we should. Both zfs and ANSI T10-DIF (hardware) assume that there will be silent errors at the storage level and make changes to accommodate them. The funny thing to me is that ANSI T10-DIF takes the same approach the mainframe made 28+ years ago and use 520B blocks instead of 512B blocks.
All decent servers use multibit ECC and the better ones are using IBM's chipkill technology which is basically RAID for ram, it uses an extra memory chip to do parity calculations.
Actually for incidental exposure in public you don't need a model release. Otherwise you would be royally screwed anytime you took a shot in a stadium, at the beach, etc.
Yeah I've turned a couple ribbon cables into flaming husks too, but that has nothing to do with the motherboard manufacturer and everything to do with the poor design of the PC AT.
Actually with all the patent trolls big money is starting to realize that software patents are doing way more harm than good, even if you have a large warchest of patents a patent-troll can still cause you a large amount of cash and time. It's a bad situation for big money since they have no leverage against the patents trolls as the trolls only goal is to extort a jackpot out of big money.
Brazil has no extradition treaty with the US, however for high profile targets they have been known to negotiate with the state department and turned people over for certain considerations.
DNSSEC is still undeployed because it's had three mutually exclusive RFC's and to be really useful requires most of the internet to upgrade. It's similar to why IPv6 hasn't taken off. In both cases I expect that it will take a crisis to really force the switch. In the case of IPv6 it will be IP exhaustion and in the case of DNSSEC it will be when connections are fast enough that a brute force attack works in 10 seconds even with randomized ports, or once another critical flaw is found which can't be worked around.
It's not unless it's behind a PAT firewall, you'll need to put it in the DMZ for most firewalls. IPTables is Masquerade mode and PF can both be made to behave in a manner that doesn't remove the randomization of ports that DJBDNS and patch BIND and MS servers perform.
Yeah, they're probably behind a firewall with PAT since Verizon was one of the ISP's involved in the private patch effort AFAIK. The problem is the DNS client/server patches are broken most firewalls and this was not known till people started testing after the patches were publicly released. You can use OpenDNS or L3's resolvers as I know those are patched and NOT behind a PAT firewall and are publicly available.
Nuclear is not a sustainable fuel so try again. Even with reprocessing it's only a couple hundred year solution even with the most optimistic estimates.
Most large ISP systems are already patched as they were part of the insider group that got the patches before they were publicly announced. As of yesterday Comcast had some unpatched DNS servers and so did AT&T wireless, but those were the only ones I had seen reported as being unpatched.
Heck, MOST of the corporate firewalls don't do the right thing, so even if your clients and DNS server are patched you may STILL be vulnerable! Unless your firewall does transparent port passthrough (IE NAT but not PAT) you are vulnerable. For most firewalls this means you have to put a caching resolver in the DMZ and point internal servers and/or clients to it to be fully protected. Oh and don't forget things like anti-spam appliances, most are pointed directly out to the internet for DNS but not all are out in the DMZ.
The reason they pulled a gun on you is a traffic stop is about the most dangerous situation an officer can encounter. As sadly a local cop reminded us last week. He was shot four times so fast that he didn't have time to unlatch his holster or press his canine release switch.
Eh, almost all manufacturers and professional groups in the US now refer to them as less-lethal not non-lethal. This is in acknowledgment that anything propelled by a non-trivial amount of powder has the power to kill, even bean bags and rubber bullets or tasers. You still don't point them at someone who is complying with the law and you only use them after other tactics have proven in-effective and there is a significant risk of injury to the officer or others. I don't think the VAST majority of officers are any more likely to pull their gun just because it has some half-assed stun setting, though I guess they might pull it in the same type of situation where they would pull a taser today, one less piece of equipment to carry.
What I'm saying is that your lifetime emissions from the entire solution to provide X BTU's has to be damn low to compete with natural gas. I'm looking at carbon footprint total cost for the solution, if you spend so much energy and raw materials trying to replace natural gas for heating that you've created more carbon than just burning it, then why waste the effort?
people are just going to buy $1000 solar rigs that can recharge their car
Try adding a zero and multiplying times ~2 and you have a better estimate. Which is just not cost competitive with even $4/gallon gas (average miles per year 15,000 average MPG 25 estimates to make the numbers easy) as it takes over 10 years to pay off the system by which time you'd have two and a half doublings of your money if you had invested it which makes the payoff time with interest 15+ years.
That form of electric generation better be DAMN efficient and clean cradle to grave, because natural gas heat with modern equipment in 93-95% efficient. I'm not sure even wind power has a lower carbon footprint when you include manufacture of the plant and distribution network and recycling of said equipment plus the manufacture of heating equipment and wiring for every home heated that way.
Nope, the Air Force and Congress are pretty adamant about not selling the F-22 to anyone. They are willing to sell the F-35 JSF however which in many ways is a detuned F-22.
You might consider using your air handler as a whole house fan instead of running multiple ceiling fans, especially if the air handler is in the basement. I have a modern two stage unit and the fan is so efficient that a single typical ceiling fan moving way less CFM uses significantly more power. I also get the free heat pump effect by blowing cooler air up from the basement.
Are you saying there are STILL ISP's not doing egress filtering?!?!? That was known to be necessary back in the early-mid 90's. The fact that someone stupid enough to not do it today is allowed to peer is mind boggling.
Depends, I happen to live next to the second most visited national park, the Cuyahoga Valley National Park. It's a great resource for the people of northern Ohio. A bike trail through the national park is obviously a federal matter since only the federal government can build in the park. That's the difference between a national forest and a national park, the government does things to make the park accessible and useful for the citizens.
It's easier to just use the Latin since the terms are distinct. In this case the software is gratis but not libre.
Yes, or at least we should. Both zfs and ANSI T10-DIF (hardware) assume that there will be silent errors at the storage level and make changes to accommodate them. The funny thing to me is that ANSI T10-DIF takes the same approach the mainframe made 28+ years ago and use 520B blocks instead of 512B blocks.
All decent servers use multibit ECC and the better ones are using IBM's chipkill technology which is basically RAID for ram, it uses an extra memory chip to do parity calculations.
Actually for incidental exposure in public you don't need a model release. Otherwise you would be royally screwed anytime you took a shot in a stadium, at the beach, etc.
meh, the Stern deal was probably worth it for the publicity alone, think about it, you and millions of others still remember it years later.
Yeah I've turned a couple ribbon cables into flaming husks too, but that has nothing to do with the motherboard manufacturer and everything to do with the poor design of the PC AT.
Actually with all the patent trolls big money is starting to realize that software patents are doing way more harm than good, even if you have a large warchest of patents a patent-troll can still cause you a large amount of cash and time. It's a bad situation for big money since they have no leverage against the patents trolls as the trolls only goal is to extort a jackpot out of big money.
small yield? Aren't you thinking a bit kindly towards the lawyers. I say nuke it from orbit, it's the only way to be sure =)
Brazil has no extradition treaty with the US, however for high profile targets they have been known to negotiate with the state department and turned people over for certain considerations.
This is also great for testing things which don't have a browser like networking gear and spam filters.
DNSSEC is still undeployed because it's had three mutually exclusive RFC's and to be really useful requires most of the internet to upgrade. It's similar to why IPv6 hasn't taken off. In both cases I expect that it will take a crisis to really force the switch. In the case of IPv6 it will be IP exhaustion and in the case of DNSSEC it will be when connections are fast enough that a brute force attack works in 10 seconds even with randomized ports, or once another critical flaw is found which can't be worked around.
It's not unless it's behind a PAT firewall, you'll need to put it in the DMZ for most firewalls. IPTables is Masquerade mode and PF can both be made to behave in a manner that doesn't remove the randomization of ports that DJBDNS and patch BIND and MS servers perform.
Yeah, they're probably behind a firewall with PAT since Verizon was one of the ISP's involved in the private patch effort AFAIK. The problem is the DNS client/server patches are broken most firewalls and this was not known till people started testing after the patches were publicly released. You can use OpenDNS or L3's resolvers as I know those are patched and NOT behind a PAT firewall and are publicly available.
Nuclear is not a sustainable fuel so try again. Even with reprocessing it's only a couple hundred year solution even with the most optimistic estimates.
Most large ISP systems are already patched as they were part of the insider group that got the patches before they were publicly announced. As of yesterday Comcast had some unpatched DNS servers and so did AT&T wireless, but those were the only ones I had seen reported as being unpatched.
Heck, MOST of the corporate firewalls don't do the right thing, so even if your clients and DNS server are patched you may STILL be vulnerable! Unless your firewall does transparent port passthrough (IE NAT but not PAT) you are vulnerable. For most firewalls this means you have to put a caching resolver in the DMZ and point internal servers and/or clients to it to be fully protected. Oh and don't forget things like anti-spam appliances, most are pointed directly out to the internet for DNS but not all are out in the DMZ.
The reason they pulled a gun on you is a traffic stop is about the most dangerous situation an officer can encounter. As sadly a local cop reminded us last week. He was shot four times so fast that he didn't have time to unlatch his holster or press his canine release switch.
Eh, almost all manufacturers and professional groups in the US now refer to them as less-lethal not non-lethal. This is in acknowledgment that anything propelled by a non-trivial amount of powder has the power to kill, even bean bags and rubber bullets or tasers. You still don't point them at someone who is complying with the law and you only use them after other tactics have proven in-effective and there is a significant risk of injury to the officer or others. I don't think the VAST majority of officers are any more likely to pull their gun just because it has some half-assed stun setting, though I guess they might pull it in the same type of situation where they would pull a taser today, one less piece of equipment to carry.
What I'm saying is that your lifetime emissions from the entire solution to provide X BTU's has to be damn low to compete with natural gas. I'm looking at carbon footprint total cost for the solution, if you spend so much energy and raw materials trying to replace natural gas for heating that you've created more carbon than just burning it, then why waste the effort?
people are just going to buy $1000 solar rigs that can recharge their car
Try adding a zero and multiplying times ~2 and you have a better estimate. Which is just not cost competitive with even $4/gallon gas (average miles per year 15,000 average MPG 25 estimates to make the numbers easy) as it takes over 10 years to pay off the system by which time you'd have two and a half doublings of your money if you had invested it which makes the payoff time with interest 15+ years.
That form of electric generation better be DAMN efficient and clean cradle to grave, because natural gas heat with modern equipment in 93-95% efficient. I'm not sure even wind power has a lower carbon footprint when you include manufacture of the plant and distribution network and recycling of said equipment plus the manufacture of heating equipment and wiring for every home heated that way.
Nope, the Air Force and Congress are pretty adamant about not selling the F-22 to anyone. They are willing to sell the F-35 JSF however which in many ways is a detuned F-22.
You might consider using your air handler as a whole house fan instead of running multiple ceiling fans, especially if the air handler is in the basement. I have a modern two stage unit and the fan is so efficient that a single typical ceiling fan moving way less CFM uses significantly more power. I also get the free heat pump effect by blowing cooler air up from the basement.
Are you saying there are STILL ISP's not doing egress filtering?!?!? That was known to be necessary back in the early-mid 90's. The fact that someone stupid enough to not do it today is allowed to peer is mind boggling.