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User: wysiwig3

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  1. Re:Otterbox! on Ask Slashdot: How Do I Reduce Information Leakage From My Personal Devices? · · Score: 1

    Yes! The Otterbox Faraday Edition.

  2. Re:Ingredients Include... on Kim Jong Un Claims To Have Cured AIDS, Ebola and Cancer · · Score: 1

    Read the small print... There must be pieces of red flannel in there too!

  3. Re:A SIM only plan? on Ask Slashdot: Best Pay-as-You-Go Plan For Text and Voice Only? · · Score: 1

    When I was in London last year, even my hotel had a vending machine with pay as you go SIMs. They were preloaded with 10 or 15 GBPs. The lack of openness in the US is mind boggling when you look outside!

  4. Re:Isostick on Ask Slashdot: Server Room Toolbox? · · Score: 1

    + freaking 100!! isostick.com; I think I read that the next production batch was due mid December.

  5. Re:Police comments don't make sense. on How To Catch a Laptop Thief? · · Score: 1

    Living in Seattle, I assume he did mean Vancouver, BC, Canada. However, I did have to stop for a moment and wonder about Vancouver, WA, USA (on the Oregon border). Though... I don't know who the hell goes to play tourist there ;)

  6. rdns is not a good solution on Ask Slashdot: Is Reverse DNS a Worthy Standard For Fighting Spam? · · Score: 1

    I've had this same fight with multiple vendors and organizations over the years. Like many others, rDNS should be implement properly. It's just the way to keep a clean house. However, the RFC doesn't require rDNS validation checking, and do to so break mail delivery for many, many legitimate services. Spammers will (actually, have--this idea is old) found new avenues of attack. Reputation scoring, token analysis, and other statistical measures are a far better set of solutions to work with. You can go on the cheap with some sendmail RBL and dspam type solutions all the way up to what I consider best in class right now--Ironport. A Microsoft shop would probably like FOPE--it integrates well and does a damn nice job of proper spam filtering too. The larger MS shops with EA agreements can roll than into the package for decent pricing.

  7. Eaton is excellent on UPS Setup For a Small/Mid-Size Company? · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I moved away from monster APC & Leibert units a bit over a year ago, and I'm so glad. I encourage you to look at the Powerware BladeUPS units. Each provides 12kW capacity, with internal batteries and the ability to string two additional external battery modules (EBMs) for increased time. In addition, the unit is stackable up to 6 high in a cabinet yielding 60kW (in an N+1) configuration. You can grow it as you need it. Nice Web/SNMP card that can be added for all the info you could want. With the N+1 config, you can shut down any single unit for removal, repair, or battery swaps. These things are so much less hassle than my old equipment that I won't be looking elsewhere for a while.

  8. In 20 years... on Russia Weighs Going Cyrillic For DNS · · Score: 1

    "Mr. Putin, tear down your digital wall!"

  9. Microsoft dumbed down the gene pool on Is It Wrong to Love Microsoft? · · Score: 1

    All I can say is that Microsoft's products--in doing what they thought was needed to help more people use computes--did nothing but dumb down the general population until they were total morons. They don't even need Apple's one-button mouse. The new MS users need the zero-button mouse!

    I was on a the phone with a guy in Dell's support group yesterday, trying to diagnose a D600 laptop's refusal to identify the AC adapter type. The laptop would noticably get power when plugged in b/c the screen got a bit brighter. However, right there on one of their BIOS pages it says "AC adapter: not detected" and the batteries are in a "discharging" or "idle" state. While plugged in, the laptop doesn't use battery power, but doesn't charge either.

    Dell's response was for me to boot into Windows and check the power options tab to see if it said it was charging there. I even unpluged the adapter and re-inserted it and Dell's own Windows tools popped up a dialog saying "adapater not detected...laptop will not charge." This support tech then said that the only thing left to try was re-installing the OS.

    After laughing a bit, I had to ask him if he seriously thought the operating system had a damn thing to do with a hardware failure that was noted by the BIOS before the OS was even booted? Jeez....

  10. Re:How big was this book? on The Practice of System and Network Administration · · Score: 1

    776 pgs according to Amazon