And oil isn't. We don't fight wars over it right? It doesn't have any environmental issues right? We don't have a supply constrained system right?
Ethanol is easy to bash on paper...harder to do in reality. WE USE LOTS OF IT TODAY. This isn't some future thing. It's use will not go down with lack of subsidies it will just be more expensive...but less money paid in taxes or taxes going to something else. This is just cost shifting.
Sugar cane is also starting to come online in the states. It really only grows in certain southern states...corn is grown in more places with more expertise.
I'm going to guess that everyone that hates on it will love wind and solar. What do turbines and panels make themselves? We use lots of fossil fuels to make both.
The point is we are in transition. Until we have a robust non oil eco system we will be using oil to make the new energy sources. Hopefully some day Iowa will require their farmers to use ethanol in the tractors that being used to harvest the material.
At the end of the day it is just solar energy anyways. The corn doesn't grow itself. Sun for the chemical reactions in the plant, sun for the wind that drives the water cycle....maybe a little gravitational energy thrown in there.
Electric cars are going to be expensive and take a long time to materialize and have the range we need. In the meantime and probably even after we need a liquid fuel that works in existing designs. Yeah maybe a gas like hydrogen will be used, but that is probably way way off.
A lot of IT and programming is not about something you learned in math class. Yes there are times when having a good understanding of math, etc can help, but I don't think there is much math in understanding the HTTP protocol, or TCP for that matter. Most languages are high enough level where you don't deal with the low level stuff all that often.
I've seen kids come out that are super smart, but couldn't get a project from start to finish to save their souls. Each team will need one or more of those super nerd types to help when we need a complex algorithm etc. Although I often want more and better open source libraries where you can just get this stuff..most of the time you do a google search and find some dudes work.
Does installing anything from a mysql server to an Exchange server really require anything that college would require.
For my money we need to start turning our world into more like a construction union. Certainly we still need engineers and other computer scientists, but we also need the project managers, carpenters, plumbers, etc.
I don't want unions and all their baggage, but it would feel cool to have various guilds like a HTML/JS/CSS guild, a DBA guild, a server admin guild, etc.
And why isn't high school enough anymore? Maybe we should stop teaching stupid history and English course and help kids understand computers earlier. Maybe the problem lies earlier than college.
Finally this sounds like some very arrogant crap. Like academia, scientists, economists, etc are never wrong about anything? College professors are always right right?
Although P2P is pretty cool, I do feel like having a server in the middle generally helps things.
Sure there is uPNP, but I don't even like using it with bittorrent.
Skype does open a port on your machine, but I think in general don't you use a middle server that connects the two sides ( likely behind firewalls ) together?
What I'd rather see is a more general purpose API that connects to networks, sound, and video. We are definitely getting there, but we can essentially replace Flash with a few more APIs and further Javascript performance improvements.
From a security standpoint we have to find a way to let Javascript do network connections that are not the same as the main URL. I think the easiest way it to use something like SPF where a dns entry can be plopped on the main sites URL marking the IP address of the server as safe.
This won't really replace Skype as they still have native apps and other access points ( POT lines ), but it could even be used by skype while you are on the road versus some Flash app.
And can't we get an open web cam API before a P2P api? This is why Google needs better product teams, engineers just decide to do cool things, not always useful ones.
I'll continue this because powershell cmdlets have a general standard.
The whole verb-objectype syntax is pretty cool...but not really needed in the linux community, but what is cool is that they all behave the same way.
Every linux command works a little differently. Wouldn't it be nice if ever command had a --getCMDLineOptionsJSON that returned JSON that bash could use to auto complete...powershell's "tab" will autocomplete --arguments.... At the very least it would nice if they all implemented --version
It wouldn't be hard to port either. We could have objls which would be "object" ls. I've always considered the human readable -> binary -> human readable ->binary of Unix to be old school. The computer should be able to pipe information around in a binary format versus a giant chunk of ascii\unicode.
Kudos for MS for doing something cool....but of course then they went and screwed it up. The security around powershell is very very stupid. Issuing powershell commands remotely is equally stupid. Powershell over SSH...come on MS...get SSH standard for christ sake.
Air and Flex are really where these are useful. Certainly video sites, but most will just have native apps...so yes for the average consumer flash isn't much a bonus over native apps that will of course perform better.
Remote desktop sharing may or may not use native apps, but there could be some usefulness for some of the "share my desktop" sites out there.
Gaming has some bonus. Most of the facebook games are Flash based. So all those Facebook games that this guy probably doesn't play will work....many of them of course will port to natives...I guess it just gives Android a bigger app number.
Some would say they are the same thing, but I think that is a bit of stretch. We all say crap about our families behind their backs, that isn't censorship.
China is blocking the names of the kids that died in the earthquake and then jailing those who put them out. That is a huge difference then not releasing private conversations concerning foreign relations.
Why does this have to be some us versus them again.
How many people upgraded to Chrome 10?...who cares because the version don't really mean as much.
Firefox probably popped up and said 4 is available and people clicked okay.
IE won't do that for various reasons. Most windows client admins want this behavior because they want to control the rollout. That is part of the diversity...in some sense IE is a better option in large corporate environments and a worse one for individuals at home...aside from the standards stuff...from the purse install\app standpoint. If you don't work as a client admin for a firm of 10,000+ you might not get this and even if you do you won't want to admit it:).
Most admins just don't want to support the browsers. And all browsers when installed on 10,000s of machine whether they be Linux or Windows will sub-come to some sort of issue..broken profile blah blah.
As a web developer and a web surfer Firefox gives me nothing new. Chrome's built in developer tools are as good and in some cases better than Firebug. My extension survive between major versions. Chrome is so much faster it is sort of silly. Now IE 9 doesn't give me anything either except for some older sites working...but we are trying our best to get away from it...although I don't have some religious type of idealogy against...most people forget just how bad Navigator 4 was...and lets face it IE 4 thru 6 was IE 4. IE 7 and 8 was a patch. IE 9 at least is the first major re-write and they are taking standards seriously. Get on the W3C mailing lists...a lot of the froms are @microsoft.com asking thoughtful questions moving the standards forward. Like it or not MS has funded these standards.
I wonder if Firefox put Chrome and IE links on their home page. And said hey download these others and compare you'll come back. I wonder how many people would stay with Firefox? I suppose it will live on with the open source crowd who want no corporate sponsorship behind the browser and that is fine and dandy with me...but now that Android 3 is going to have native Chrome and Chrome netbooks come out I don't see a path were Firefox usage goes up....but it doesn't have to die and it doesn't have to be the IE killer.
Write the app for android and distribute it via your site. I'm guessing this wouldn't get removed from marketplace.
Apple has the right to remove anything. If you don't like it don't support them by buying their products, otherwise deal with it. The app store is like a cable channel. If comedy central doesn't want to run your ad no matter how you pay them they don't have to.
Keep writing letters saying you want to be able to install your own apps via websites, but other than that Apple can do what they want. I just buy Android even if it isn't quite as nice, because lets be honest...of the 100,000s of app only about 1,000 are worth anything. ie. like my banks native app...and although I had to wait 6 months I got it on the Android. Angry brids has been on the android for a long time now...what are these magical apps that you can't get on Android or at least some kind of a clone.
It seems like we already have this in FPGAs. We don't really have good clusters of them though..at least that I know.
I'm a software developer that has dabbed in VHDL and created some basic programs that got ran directly on a chip.
It was a major pain as someone just trying to write something. A higher level language designed for parallel computation on a large FPGA array might be more in line with what he wants...without trying to design hardware specifically to the problem. Although maybe after a while common patterns would arise.
Cassandra like many of the "no sql" type databases doesn't have classic indexes.
So instead of having an index you typically have a separate table that acts as the index.
Image you have a users table. One of the field is country. Now you want to know all the users for a particular country.
In standard RDMS type systems you just scan each row or have a index that has done that "ahead of time" or as rows are inserted.
In Cassandra the rows of users are distributed possibly among 100s of servers. So scanning for all users that have a particular country would require scanning all rows which could a long time.
Unlike RDMS like system rows don't have a 2d structure and don't have real limitation on the number of columns they can have. And columns can essentially be arrays\rows of objects.
So as you design/bang out your application you typically realize you need to know "users by country" for some stupid report. So you create a new table to hold these values. This has one row per country. As users are entered you append to this row. This essentially creates an array like structure. You then lookup the row for a particular country and you now know all the users for that particular country.
Sounds like Cassandra is getting rid of a limitation that could have caused very large index to require multiple rows.
Did you try to plugin this printer into Windows? My guess is that old of a printer in a modern version of Windows (7 or Vista) would find it just the same.
I thought Microsoft got sued for bundling to much software? Was iPhoto just installed? I might need to call the DOJ.
I don't hate Apple or anything, but I don't see how this comment has anything to do with Apple's market capitalization? Sounds like some sort of Steve Balmer ad for Apple. Why is it "insightful".
This was likely someone doing a classic "select*fromusers" query. Hopefully this doesn't trip the sql injection filters:)
If the hash had been in another table and that table had very restrictive permissions on it then this probably could have been avoided.
The same problem is likely going to occur with databases that are being hit by Ajax calls or through some kind of proxy. If you don't want a column to make it's way out put it in a seperate table/db and restrict everyone but the key DBAs and web servers from it.
Why does this become some conservative v liberal thing. Us v them.
For short trips I don't see why I can't leverage the natural gas, nuclear, coal, wind, solar, geothermal, hydroelectric grid that we have.
For long trips I can use gas(natural or synthetic), natural gas, hydrogen, or whatever makes sense for my region.
I think the battery is largely for energy recapture (braking,idling,etc) and for a quick charge.
As for gas as a fuel source it seems silly to me to keep going to exotic places(mile under water, middle of the wilderness) to get it when we could be placing that human capital into more sustainable fuels\power sources made in our back yard. Decentralized sources also seem more scalable as population and energy consumption increase.
Also, engines are incredibly complicated analog things. We have gotten very good at their manufacture, but batteries can be turned out a much higher rate. Each engines block is usually crafted with robots, but it can takes hours if not days to assemble a fully functional engine. An electric motor is far simpler, easier to replace\upgrade, and ultimately less prone to failure. Think of all the parts it takes to make a simple 4 stroke engine let alone when you start putting turbos and other things to increase their efficiency. Our mechanics are going to need Doctorates.
Certainly auto run is an issue here, but the bigger issue that typically these drives may have installation files and write access.
Unlike program files or the various write protected folders on Linux these guys will be wide open.
If I've already gotten malware on your box and I see a nice little fully writeable USB key or external drive I'm going to look for an.exe or other executable to infect. Hell maybe even write a.JPEG,.PDF,.SWF, or any other non exe that could have an attack depending on what box it gets plugged into and loaded up.
If I find it I can just write into her like back in the day. Unlike floppies there isn't some kind of boot sector generally.
Floppies where about either getting your snippet of code into a.exe or onto the boot sector. Then praying the user left the disk in ( or forcing a restart while it was still in ). If you got into an.exe hoping the user gave it to a friend who used it.
Also, are these worms? Sounds more like your traditional STD type virus versus air born.
So even with Macs you could write out an HTML file with a known attack for Safari and see if they give it to a friend. Ultimately OSs need some sort of virus software to at least detect weird behavior like this.
I'm not sure about Norton, but Symantec AV has gone beyond simple virus stuff for a while now.
Using Symantec we didn't block USB entirely, but it is possible. It did block the standard USB type attacks though. When USB drives where plugged in the system logged all activity including files and sent them up to the central server.
Better than a drawer would have been a nice server rack...of course physical security is important. Someone could steal the drive and modify it and then put it back in. But I would think if the machine auto locked and users didn't have root/administrator access it would harder for these types of attacks.
Also, if your USB cable is coming out the back couldn't someone hijack that?
The new firewalls block incoming worms versus just blocking ips and ports like a traditional firewall.
But at the end of the day most of these attacks happen because of lack of a firewall and not patching the machines. For devices like the article it should be tested regularly, monitored, and even rebuilt from time to time for good measure...lifes are at stake.
I wish MS's firewall would be smart enough to block all traffic unless from servers. Does Joe and Janes machines at work really ever need to talk to one another. In fact I'd block traffic from the same subnet most of the time in a business setting.
Is a tough problem. Humans have only solved it in really one way....the meeting.
Sure we love to hate them, but more collaboration can happen in 15 minutes of face to face then in hours of email or some app like this.
Nothing gets done in a meeting, but I've always found that things get done after them. We all pray for the day when we can pop in and out of some app like this and come to conclusions, blah blah. Not going to happen.
I'd rather google make the best damn screen sharing app that every was. Meetings can be remote with a good speakerphone/mic+speakers and a good screen sharer. Any other tool is probably going to fall short. A shared desktop can do just about anything.
If you are all physically together with a desktop and a whiteboard even better.
What would be really cool is a real physical white board that could replicate over the wire. SmartBoards are getting there, but they typically use projectors and pressure sensors. I want to draw on a board with a real marker...and have the other side show it as pixels. Please someone put a bunch of big old LEDs side by side and make them drawable on...if they can magically erase the pen ink that would be great:) Where is all the damn nanotech.
Lately the security bugs I've seen are making me feel good.
Sounds weird I know, but it just seems like they are getting more and more bizarre.
Even the flash and PDF stuff makes me feel that we are starting to go into left field for vectors. The security industry is putting itself out of work...
Where will be in 5 years...probably in a relatively safe world.
I mean heck this things says "If you can upload an ASPX file you can take over the system". That means we are worrying about how to protect against inside jobs not general problems.
I don't know about you, but I go to sites with lots of flash and it doesn't bog me down...maybe your on dialup or something....
You can be annoyed with Flash ads sure...but on a free content site like this one STFU...it's free...just ignore them. Bunch of cry babies out there.
And like it our not Flash has brought me and millions countless hours of enjoyment thru YouTube, Hulu, etc. Even strongbad was cool in it's day. In the words of John Kimble....stop whining!
Btw, I don't see the webcam tag in HTML 5...or microphone tag....so Flash isn't going anywhere at least for a few years. Heck HTML is barely out.
if ( story.contains('Moore\'s') and story.contains('die','dead','end in'):
story.comment('Moore\'s Law is an observation not a law! and.... IT WILL NEVER DIE!!!')
And oil isn't. We don't fight wars over it right? It doesn't have any environmental issues right? We don't have a supply constrained system right?
Ethanol is easy to bash on paper...harder to do in reality. WE USE LOTS OF IT TODAY. This isn't some future thing. It's use will not go down with lack of subsidies it will just be more expensive...but less money paid in taxes or taxes going to something else. This is just cost shifting.
http://www.foe.org/usda-approves-use-genetically-engineered-corn-ethanol
Corn based ethanol is improving. We can grow it here. We know how to put it on trains. We know how to make it. We have the system to transfer it around. Newer cars are tested with it.
Sugar cane is also starting to come online in the states. It really only grows in certain southern states...corn is grown in more places with more expertise.
I'm going to guess that everyone that hates on it will love wind and solar. What do turbines and panels make themselves? We use lots of fossil fuels to make both.
The point is we are in transition. Until we have a robust non oil eco system we will be using oil to make the new energy sources. Hopefully some day Iowa will require their farmers to use ethanol in the tractors that being used to harvest the material.
At the end of the day it is just solar energy anyways. The corn doesn't grow itself. Sun for the chemical reactions in the plant, sun for the wind that drives the water cycle....maybe a little gravitational energy thrown in there.
Electric cars are going to be expensive and take a long time to materialize and have the range we need. In the meantime and probably even after we need a liquid fuel that works in existing designs. Yeah maybe a gas like hydrogen will be used, but that is probably way way off.
A lot of IT and programming is not about something you learned in math class. Yes there are times when having a good understanding of math, etc can help, but I don't think there is much math in understanding the HTTP protocol, or TCP for that matter. Most languages are high enough level where you don't deal with the low level stuff all that often.
I've seen kids come out that are super smart, but couldn't get a project from start to finish to save their souls. Each team will need one or more of those super nerd types to help when we need a complex algorithm etc. Although I often want more and better open source libraries where you can just get this stuff..most of the time you do a google search and find some dudes work.
Does installing anything from a mysql server to an Exchange server really require anything that college would require.
For my money we need to start turning our world into more like a construction union. Certainly we still need engineers and other computer scientists, but we also need the project managers, carpenters, plumbers, etc.
I don't want unions and all their baggage, but it would feel cool to have various guilds like a HTML/JS/CSS guild, a DBA guild, a server admin guild, etc.
And why isn't high school enough anymore? Maybe we should stop teaching stupid history and English course and help kids understand computers earlier. Maybe the problem lies earlier than college.
Finally this sounds like some very arrogant crap. Like academia, scientists, economists, etc are never wrong about anything? College professors are always right right?
This isn't a south park script that got leaked? Seriously this is the kind of crap Kenny would do.
Although P2P is pretty cool, I do feel like having a server in the middle generally helps things.
Sure there is uPNP, but I don't even like using it with bittorrent.
Skype does open a port on your machine, but I think in general don't you use a middle server that connects the two sides ( likely behind firewalls ) together?
What I'd rather see is a more general purpose API that connects to networks, sound, and video. We are definitely getting there, but we can essentially replace Flash with a few more APIs and further Javascript performance improvements.
From a security standpoint we have to find a way to let Javascript do network connections that are not the same as the main URL. I think the easiest way it to use something like SPF where a dns entry can be plopped on the main sites URL marking the IP address of the server as safe.
This won't really replace Skype as they still have native apps and other access points ( POT lines ), but it could even be used by skype while you are on the road versus some Flash app.
And can't we get an open web cam API before a P2P api? This is why Google needs better product teams, engineers just decide to do cool things, not always useful ones.
I'll continue this because powershell cmdlets have a general standard.
The whole verb-objectype syntax is pretty cool...but not really needed in the linux community, but what is cool is that they all behave the same way.
Every linux command works a little differently. Wouldn't it be nice if ever command had a --getCMDLineOptionsJSON that returned JSON that bash could use to auto complete...powershell's "tab" will autocomplete --arguments.... At the very least it would nice if they all implemented --version
It wouldn't be hard to port either. We could have objls which would be "object" ls. I've always considered the human readable -> binary -> human readable ->binary of Unix to be old school. The computer should be able to pipe information around in a binary format versus a giant chunk of ascii\unicode.
Kudos for MS for doing something cool....but of course then they went and screwed it up. The security around powershell is very very stupid. Issuing powershell commands remotely is equally stupid. Powershell over SSH...come on MS...get SSH standard for christ sake.
Air and Flex are really where these are useful. Certainly video sites, but most will just have native apps...so yes for the average consumer flash isn't much a bonus over native apps that will of course perform better.
Remote desktop sharing may or may not use native apps, but there could be some usefulness for some of the "share my desktop" sites out there.
Gaming has some bonus. Most of the facebook games are Flash based. So all those Facebook games that this guy probably doesn't play will work....many of them of course will port to natives...I guess it just gives Android a bigger app number.
Some would say they are the same thing, but I think that is a bit of stretch. We all say crap about our families behind their backs, that isn't censorship.
China is blocking the names of the kids that died in the earthquake and then jailing those who put them out. That is a huge difference then not releasing private conversations concerning foreign relations.
Why does this have to be some us versus them again.
How many people upgraded to Chrome 10?...who cares because the version don't really mean as much.
Firefox probably popped up and said 4 is available and people clicked okay.
IE won't do that for various reasons. Most windows client admins want this behavior because they want to control the rollout. That is part of the diversity...in some sense IE is a better option in large corporate environments and a worse one for individuals at home...aside from the standards stuff...from the purse install\app standpoint. If you don't work as a client admin for a firm of 10,000+ you might not get this and even if you do you won't want to admit it :).
Most admins just don't want to support the browsers. And all browsers when installed on 10,000s of machine whether they be Linux or Windows will sub-come to some sort of issue..broken profile blah blah.
As a web developer and a web surfer Firefox gives me nothing new. Chrome's built in developer tools are as good and in some cases better than Firebug. My extension survive between major versions. Chrome is so much faster it is sort of silly. Now IE 9 doesn't give me anything either except for some older sites working...but we are trying our best to get away from it...although I don't have some religious type of idealogy against...most people forget just how bad Navigator 4 was...and lets face it IE 4 thru 6 was IE 4. IE 7 and 8 was a patch. IE 9 at least is the first major re-write and they are taking standards seriously. Get on the W3C mailing lists...a lot of the froms are @microsoft.com asking thoughtful questions moving the standards forward. Like it or not MS has funded these standards.
I wonder if Firefox put Chrome and IE links on their home page. And said hey download these others and compare you'll come back. I wonder how many people would stay with Firefox? I suppose it will live on with the open source crowd who want no corporate sponsorship behind the browser and that is fine and dandy with me...but now that Android 3 is going to have native Chrome and Chrome netbooks come out I don't see a path were Firefox usage goes up....but it doesn't have to die and it doesn't have to be the IE killer.
Write the app for android and distribute it via your site. I'm guessing this wouldn't get removed from marketplace.
Apple has the right to remove anything. If you don't like it don't support them by buying their products, otherwise deal with it. The app store is like a cable channel. If comedy central doesn't want to run your ad no matter how you pay them they don't have to.
Keep writing letters saying you want to be able to install your own apps via websites, but other than that Apple can do what they want. I just buy Android even if it isn't quite as nice, because lets be honest...of the 100,000s of app only about 1,000 are worth anything. ie. like my banks native app...and although I had to wait 6 months I got it on the Android. Angry brids has been on the android for a long time now...what are these magical apps that you can't get on Android or at least some kind of a clone.
It seems like we already have this in FPGAs. We don't really have good clusters of them though..at least that I know.
I'm a software developer that has dabbed in VHDL and created some basic programs that got ran directly on a chip.
It was a major pain as someone just trying to write something. A higher level language designed for parallel computation on a large FPGA array might be more in line with what he wants...without trying to design hardware specifically to the problem. Although maybe after a while common patterns would arise.
So is the EU going to require Apple to put all browsers in this store 17+ age or not?
Cassandra like many of the "no sql" type databases doesn't have classic indexes.
So instead of having an index you typically have a separate table that acts as the index.
Image you have a users table. One of the field is country. Now you want to know all the users for a particular country.
In standard RDMS type systems you just scan each row or have a index that has done that "ahead of time" or as rows are inserted.
In Cassandra the rows of users are distributed possibly among 100s of servers. So scanning for all users that have a particular country would require scanning all rows which could a long time.
Unlike RDMS like system rows don't have a 2d structure and don't have real limitation on the number of columns they can have. And columns can essentially be arrays\rows of objects.
So as you design/bang out your application you typically realize you need to know "users by country" for some stupid report. So you create a new table to hold these values. This has one row per country. As users are entered you append to this row. This essentially creates an array like structure. You then lookup the row for a particular country and you now know all the users for that particular country.
Sounds like Cassandra is getting rid of a limitation that could have caused very large index to require multiple rows.
This post is late so it won't float.
Did you try to plugin this printer into Windows? My guess is that old of a printer in a modern version of Windows (7 or Vista) would find it just the same.
I thought Microsoft got sued for bundling to much software? Was iPhoto just installed? I might need to call the DOJ.
I don't hate Apple or anything, but I don't see how this comment has anything to do with Apple's market capitalization? Sounds like some sort of Steve Balmer ad for Apple. Why is it "insightful".
This was likely someone doing a classic "select*fromusers" query. Hopefully this doesn't trip the sql injection filters :)
If the hash had been in another table and that table had very restrictive permissions on it then this probably could have been avoided.
The same problem is likely going to occur with databases that are being hit by Ajax calls or through some kind of proxy. If you don't want a column to make it's way out put it in a seperate table/db and restrict everyone but the key DBAs and web servers from it.
Why does this become some conservative v liberal thing. Us v them.
For short trips I don't see why I can't leverage the natural gas, nuclear, coal, wind, solar, geothermal, hydroelectric grid that we have.
For long trips I can use gas(natural or synthetic), natural gas, hydrogen, or whatever makes sense for my region.
I think the battery is largely for energy recapture (braking,idling,etc) and for a quick charge.
As for gas as a fuel source it seems silly to me to keep going to exotic places(mile under water, middle of the wilderness) to get it when we could be placing that human capital into more sustainable fuels\power sources made in our back yard. Decentralized sources also seem more scalable as population and energy consumption increase.
Also, engines are incredibly complicated analog things. We have gotten very good at their manufacture, but batteries can be turned out a much higher rate. Each engines block is usually crafted with robots, but it can takes hours if not days to assemble a fully functional engine. An electric motor is far simpler, easier to replace\upgrade, and ultimately less prone to failure. Think of all the parts it takes to make a simple 4 stroke engine let alone when you start putting turbos and other things to increase their efficiency. Our mechanics are going to need Doctorates.
Certainly auto run is an issue here, but the bigger issue that typically these drives may have installation files and write access.
Unlike program files or the various write protected folders on Linux these guys will be wide open.
If I've already gotten malware on your box and I see a nice little fully writeable USB key or external drive I'm going to look for an .exe or other executable to infect. Hell maybe even write a .JPEG, .PDF, .SWF, or any other non exe that could have an attack depending on what box it gets plugged into and loaded up.
If I find it I can just write into her like back in the day. Unlike floppies there isn't some kind of boot sector generally.
Floppies where about either getting your snippet of code into a .exe or onto the boot sector. Then praying the user left the disk in ( or forcing a restart while it was still in ). If you got into an .exe hoping the user gave it to a friend who used it.
Also, are these worms? Sounds more like your traditional STD type virus versus air born.
So even with Macs you could write out an HTML file with a known attack for Safari and see if they give it to a friend. Ultimately OSs need some sort of virus software to at least detect weird behavior like this.
Girls can't keep their traps shut.
I'm not sure about Norton, but Symantec AV has gone beyond simple virus stuff for a while now.
Using Symantec we didn't block USB entirely, but it is possible. It did block the standard USB type attacks though. When USB drives where plugged in the system logged all activity including files and sent them up to the central server.
Better than a drawer would have been a nice server rack...of course physical security is important. Someone could steal the drive and modify it and then put it back in. But I would think if the machine auto locked and users didn't have root/administrator access it would harder for these types of attacks.
Also, if your USB cable is coming out the back couldn't someone hijack that?
The new firewalls block incoming worms versus just blocking ips and ports like a traditional firewall.
But at the end of the day most of these attacks happen because of lack of a firewall and not patching the machines. For devices like the article it should be tested regularly, monitored, and even rebuilt from time to time for good measure...lifes are at stake.
I wish MS's firewall would be smart enough to block all traffic unless from servers. Does Joe and Janes machines at work really ever need to talk to one another. In fact I'd block traffic from the same subnet most of the time in a business setting.
I've never taken accounting, but when money is involved generally saying 10-15% is not a good idea.
( Number of bugs people who refused/Number of bugs submitted ) * 100
So if 1 person refused out of 4.
( 1 / 4 ) * 100 .25 * 100
25
25%
How can they only estimate 10-15%? Seems like a feeling more than a concrete report.
Is a tough problem. Humans have only solved it in really one way....the meeting.
Sure we love to hate them, but more collaboration can happen in 15 minutes of face to face then in hours of email or some app like this.
Nothing gets done in a meeting, but I've always found that things get done after them. We all pray for the day when we can pop in and out of some app like this and come to conclusions, blah blah. Not going to happen.
I'd rather google make the best damn screen sharing app that every was. Meetings can be remote with a good speakerphone/mic+speakers and a good screen sharer. Any other tool is probably going to fall short. A shared desktop can do just about anything.
If you are all physically together with a desktop and a whiteboard even better.
What would be really cool is a real physical white board that could replicate over the wire. SmartBoards are getting there, but they typically use projectors and pressure sensors. I want to draw on a board with a real marker...and have the other side show it as pixels. Please someone put a bunch of big old LEDs side by side and make them drawable on...if they can magically erase the pen ink that would be great :) Where is all the damn nanotech.
Okay I've rambled enough.
Maybe I'm getting old, but I just can't get used to hearing things like Oracle Java and Oracle's Solaris.
Can they please just keep the old Sun name for me and just keep the revenue.
Lately the security bugs I've seen are making me feel good.
Sounds weird I know, but it just seems like they are getting more and more bizarre.
Even the flash and PDF stuff makes me feel that we are starting to go into left field for vectors. The security industry is putting itself out of work...
Where will be in 5 years...probably in a relatively safe world.
I mean heck this things says "If you can upload an ASPX file you can take over the system". That means we are worrying about how to protect against inside jobs not general problems.
When was the last major worm anyways?
This is obviously just some funny tech mistake, but I think in reality it would be good for the govt to sell some buildings.
Could we not make some govt staff site a little closer to one another.
Bog down? And an 8000 line JS program isn't?
Are you running a lappy 386 like in the video?
I don't know about you, but I go to sites with lots of flash and it doesn't bog me down...maybe your on dialup or something....
You can be annoyed with Flash ads sure...but on a free content site like this one STFU...it's free...just ignore them. Bunch of cry babies out there.
And like it our not Flash has brought me and millions countless hours of enjoyment thru YouTube, Hulu, etc. Even strongbad was cool in it's day. In the words of John Kimble....stop whining!
Btw, I don't see the webcam tag in HTML 5...or microphone tag....so Flash isn't going anywhere at least for a few years. Heck HTML is barely out.
if ( story.contains('Moore\'s') and story.contains('die','dead','end in'):
story.comment('Moore\'s Law is an observation not a law! and.... IT WILL NEVER DIE!!!')