Yes it would, sort of. At least in the case of Hulu, Boxee encapsulates Hulu's flash player instead of directly grabbing the video file. This is added overhead that is not there when playing iTunes video.
The article says "top speed" but in the interview he actually says speed at the end of the quarter mile. So, given more room to accelerate he can probably go faster.
Finally on page 26 I find this - "In this comparison test, Tom's Hardware Guide finds itself unable to recommend any of the products it tested." WTF? That much work to learn they are all crap and I should stay with my cheap $50 Coolermaster case?
I have to say I like my dual monitor setup, however having dual 21" monitors is a little overkill. I frequently run my IDE full screen on one, and run the project I am working on on the other. This works great as I can be debugging and stepping through the code and see where the app is at the same time. I do have to admit that these monitors are a little oversized, and I usually find myself with the left monitor more in front of me and only using the left 1/2 to 2/3 of the right monitor, since I have to actually move my head sideways to read anything that is on the far right side.
FWIW, I have been using the Targus Matrix bag for the last several semesters and it's great. It's pretty much all black and doesn't scream "Laptop" like some of them do, and has tons of room and compartments sized perfectly for wireless cards, cables, and other stuff. Another option if you want to be sly is to buy a laptop sleave from Spire or someone else to protect the laptop and use a standard bag that blends in even better. The only problem with a standard bag is that you wont have as much room for other stuff when the sleaved laptop is in it.
You are thinking of Airsnort. Netstumbler is wardriving software that does nothing but log access points it detects, and Airsnort is the wep cracking software.
And for what it's worth, Airsnort has the ability to save its place so you can stop and restart at a later point, so it doesn't have to be a continuous month long cracking session, and if it's a neighbor I don't doubt that they could leave it running in the background enough to crack a wep key. It's in his house, so it's not like anyone is going to notice a van sitting in front of their house all the time.
Apple used to have a pretty good sense of humor, back in the day. I still have my users guide for the Apple][+ and the glossery defines "bug" as "see feature" and "window" as "something to throw your computer out of"
The article doesn't say the DOE was stealing the material. Instead it "amounted to improper government-funded competition with commercial information services. ". This sounds to me more like if I started charging people for information that they could get for free, and then claimed that the people providing the free versions were infringing on my rights to profit from it.
If someone hacks your sql database it will likely be after they root your web server and get the sql server/database/id/password info from the source of your webapp. If you use your own reversible encryption they will have your source to see how you do it.
Yes it would, sort of. At least in the case of Hulu, Boxee encapsulates Hulu's flash player instead of directly grabbing the video file. This is added overhead that is not there when playing iTunes video.
The article says "top speed" but in the interview he actually says speed at the end of the quarter mile. So, given more room to accelerate he can probably go faster.
Finally on page 26 I find this - "In this comparison test, Tom's Hardware Guide finds itself unable to recommend any of the products it tested." WTF? That much work to learn they are all crap and I should stay with my cheap $50 Coolermaster case?
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/ch ronicle/archive/2004/11/08/BUG1J9N3C61.DTL
Notice that at the bottom of the monster.com page is a link "For patrons of Monster Cable"
That is too funny. I'm glad you caught that!
I have to say I like my dual monitor setup, however having dual 21" monitors is a little overkill. I frequently run my IDE full screen on one, and run the project I am working on on the other. This works great as I can be debugging and stepping through the code and see where the app is at the same time. I do have to admit that these monitors are a little oversized, and I usually find myself with the left monitor more in front of me and only using the left 1/2 to 2/3 of the right monitor, since I have to actually move my head sideways to read anything that is on the far right side.
FWIW, I have been using the Targus Matrix bag for the last several semesters and it's great. It's pretty much all black and doesn't scream "Laptop" like some of them do, and has tons of room and compartments sized perfectly for wireless cards, cables, and other stuff. Another option if you want to be sly is to buy a laptop sleave from Spire or someone else to protect the laptop and use a standard bag that blends in even better. The only problem with a standard bag is that you wont have as much room for other stuff when the sleaved laptop is in it.
You are thinking of Airsnort. Netstumbler is wardriving software that does nothing but log access points it detects, and Airsnort is the wep cracking software.
And for what it's worth, Airsnort has the ability to save its place so you can stop and restart at a later point, so it doesn't have to be a continuous month long cracking session, and if it's a neighbor I don't doubt that they could leave it running in the background enough to crack a wep key. It's in his house, so it's not like anyone is going to notice a van sitting in front of their house all the time.
To be a multi-millionare, assuming the 20x return on investment, you would have needed a minumum $100,000 investment.
Apple used to have a pretty good sense of humor, back in the day. I still have my users guide for the Apple][+ and the glossery defines "bug" as "see feature" and "window" as "something to throw your computer out of"
The article doesn't say the DOE was stealing the material. Instead it "amounted to improper government-funded competition with commercial information services. ". This sounds to me more like if I started charging people for information that they could get for free, and then claimed that the people providing the free versions were infringing on my rights to profit from it.
If someone hacks your sql database it will likely be after they root your web server and get the sql server/database/id/password info from the source of your webapp. If you use your own reversible encryption they will have your source to see how you do it.