This is definately the route I would choose. If longevity of your platform is a goal (and it is always a goal in my house) any suggestion for a roll-your-own NAS looks preposterous if it isn't using the magic of ZFS storage pools.
Remember when directors were relatively obscure and made great films? That structure didn't work very well for Hollywood; it's easier to sell a name brand ("John Woo") than to convince the public that a new movie from some unknown director is worth seeing. Having John Woo's name on the billboard probably saves the studio loads in marketing costs.
1600 come from search-engine bots
450 come from kids attempting to compromise his apache server with IIS-specific exploits
350 come from a single female grad student who is all aflutter over AST's [micro-kernel] hacking skills.
75 come from accidentally mis-spelling 'whitehouse.gov'
24 come from/. users
1 comes from his mother.
better CAPTCHA
on
Spam Bits
·
· Score: 2, Interesting
Spamarrest seems like it has a better CAPTCHA mechanism: sample image. The loops are pretty ugly; certainly more difficult to subvert than dark characters on a light background (with no dark obfuscators).
For myself, I use bogofilter. After piping a bunch of known good ("ham") and bad ("spam") through the engine. I get almost no spam that isn't caught and quarantined for later inspection.
Ignoring the possibility that these scientists might have to wait for a different set of physical laws before this craft becomes viable, are we to understand that this thingmarine will operate in a constant dive/climb cycle?
The cost to fly it could be cheap, but the cleanup costs after a passenger flight would be astronomical. Anti-emetic anyone?
While it admittedly takes significantly more real legwork, I'd imagine that much of the protection provided by authenticated email could be bypassed by riding on other people's unsecured wifi networks and sending mail via their trusting ISP's mail server.
I'm might just start wardriving in my branded SPAM-van.
Last I heard, T-Mobile was selling N-Gage only with prepaid service (no monthly billing), which targets teens and the credit-impaired. While there may be a subset of the credit-impaired who are interested in the gaming phone, I'd be surprised if there are many parents interested in getting prepaid devices for their kids when there are so many family plans that include low-cost handsets for the childrens.
The gradual degrading of the fourth firewall was nothing compared to the revelation that script kiddies look like enormous sperm when rendered by the NSA's security monitoring systems.
This is another excellent example of why professors of English at small liberal arts colleges should not attempt to write techno-thrillers. "Back away from the keyboard; Neal Stephenson and William Gibson have it under control."
This is definately the route I would choose. If longevity of your platform is a goal (and it is always a goal in my house) any suggestion for a roll-your-own NAS looks preposterous if it isn't using the magic of ZFS storage pools.
No they won't. UMA is implemented in software and hardware. Thus, a firmware update will be insufficient.
Remember when directors were relatively obscure and made great films? That structure didn't work very well for Hollywood; it's easier to sell a name brand ("John Woo") than to convince the public that a new movie from some unknown director is worth seeing. Having John Woo's name on the billboard probably saves the studio loads in marketing costs.
Examining his home-page hit rate:
/. users
1600 come from search-engine bots
450 come from kids attempting to compromise his apache server with IIS-specific exploits
350 come from a single female grad student who is all aflutter over AST's [micro-kernel] hacking skills.
75 come from accidentally mis-spelling 'whitehouse.gov'
24 come from
1 comes from his mother.
Spamarrest seems like it has a better CAPTCHA mechanism: sample image. The loops are pretty ugly; certainly more difficult to subvert than dark characters on a light background (with no dark obfuscators). For myself, I use bogofilter. After piping a bunch of known good ("ham") and bad ("spam") through the engine. I get almost no spam that isn't caught and quarantined for later inspection.
Ignoring the possibility that these scientists might have to wait for a different set of physical laws before this craft becomes viable, are we to understand that this thingmarine will operate in a constant dive/climb cycle? The cost to fly it could be cheap, but the cleanup costs after a passenger flight would be astronomical. Anti-emetic anyone?
Isn't this the same NSA that melted down their 3-million-processor crypto computer by fiddling with a "mutations strings" virus?
While it admittedly takes significantly more real legwork, I'd imagine that much of the protection provided by authenticated email could be bypassed by riding on other people's unsecured wifi networks and sending mail via their trusting ISP's mail server. I'm might just start wardriving in my branded SPAM-van.
Last I heard, T-Mobile was selling N-Gage only with prepaid service (no monthly billing), which targets teens and the credit-impaired. While there may be a subset of the credit-impaired who are interested in the gaming phone, I'd be surprised if there are many parents interested in getting prepaid devices for their kids when there are so many family plans that include low-cost handsets for the childrens.
The gradual degrading of the fourth firewall was nothing compared to the revelation that script kiddies look like enormous sperm when rendered by the NSA's security monitoring systems. This is another excellent example of why professors of English at small liberal arts colleges should not attempt to write techno-thrillers. "Back away from the keyboard; Neal Stephenson and William Gibson have it under control."