I am also considering this. Has anyone used Terminal Services Manager or SSH over this, and is it something that you could do day-in/day-out without throwing your keyboard out the window?
Think about it... If your grandmother (assuming she is like mine and knows nothing about computers) wants to have a computer and be ABSOLUTELY certain that she is never infected with a virus, or hacked what would you tell her?
If you didn't want to be over house ALL the time, or set her up with a firwall and CONSTANTLY have to update it, I think that 99% of us would say:
"Don't connect it to the internet"
Judging from the posts, I think everyone will agree, that the government probably has just as little capability of keeping all of their employees [insert government worker joke here] from corrupting the network.
A separate network won't fix everything, but it just makes GREAT sense. (especially since I've heard reports that there is a lot of fiber layed accross the us that isn't connected).
The first thing you should do is send them a cease and desist letter. Send it registered,
and let them know of your copyright. Let it be
clear that they could be liable for up to $100,000
in damages.
Here is an example: http://www.ejacking.com/letters.cfm
It helps to find out if they have any other names
hijacked.
This works for most US citizen's who have an ounce
of intelligence.
If this doesn't work you need to start the process
at icann. http://www.icann.org/udrp/udrp.htm
I wish that lisp was focussed on more in CS curriculum. It has far more potential in the future for doing useful things, as opposed to just doing things fast (java).
I am also considering this. Has anyone used Terminal Services Manager or SSH over this, and is it something that you could do day-in/day-out without throwing your keyboard out the window?
How much of this budget is for our favorite boy-band star?
This book is far better than the lesser known "Einstien Undressed", although there's more words, fewer pictures.
I wonder which OS gets slashdotted more as a percentage of being linked to? That would be a really interesting measure.
Think about it... If your grandmother (assuming she is like mine and knows nothing about computers) wants to have a computer and be ABSOLUTELY certain that she is never infected with a virus, or hacked what would you tell her? If you didn't want to be over house ALL the time, or set her up with a firwall and CONSTANTLY have to update it, I think that 99% of us would say: "Don't connect it to the internet" Judging from the posts, I think everyone will agree, that the government probably has just as little capability of keeping all of their employees [insert government worker joke here] from corrupting the network. A separate network won't fix everything, but it just makes GREAT sense. (especially since I've heard reports that there is a lot of fiber layed accross the us that isn't connected).
The first thing you should do is send them a cease and desist letter. Send it registered, and let them know of your copyright. Let it be clear that they could be liable for up to $100,000 in damages. Here is an example: http://www.ejacking.com/letters.cfm It helps to find out if they have any other names hijacked. This works for most US citizen's who have an ounce of intelligence. If this doesn't work you need to start the process at icann. http://www.icann.org/udrp/udrp.htm
These people will all go back.
I wish that lisp was focussed on more in CS curriculum. It has far more potential in the future for doing useful things, as opposed to just doing things fast (java).
This is a pretty week display of our tax dollars at work. Staring at the sun.
That's it, get the kids into Voyeurism early.