We use Oracle Calendar http://www.oracle.com/technology/products/ocal/ind ex.html. There are clients for Linux, OS X, Windows and a web client. It can sync to Palms and other PDA / phones. You can choose how much of your schedule is visible / writable by others, manage resources (like rooms) as well as personal schedules, manage to-do lists, contacts, etc.
Downsides are the clients are a bit ugly. And I doubt it's cheap...
No one seems to have posted what I think is the most obvious use of this: setting the VCR remotely. Has no one else ever wanted to be able to do this when at the office and someone has just told you the best TV program ever made is going to be on before you get home?
My understanding is that even the great TIVO can't always do this.
And as for the security questions, come on... Most of the posts here sound like the old anti-Internet luddites of the 90's.
Ah, but the problem with Echelon (and other spying tools) is that you can't just blurt out results from it to prove a point. With the ISP data the government has something to use to show they got their man "legally", even if the actual proof came from an Echelon type thingy.
Stop me if I get too technical...
While I'm not denying that your points are important, they are discussed in the article.
They irradiate the flask with neutrons with and without the cavitation, and only observe tritium with cavitation. They do also consider the possibility that the observed neutrons are from their own neutron source. Their claim is that they observe a peak of emitted neutrons at the same time as the luminescence of the collapsing bubbles (and therefore at the same time as the supposed fusion event.
Apparently it's a known problem with the Vx. I installed this: http://www.freeware-palm.com/download-recal-v2-8.html and it fixed it completely.
Err... http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/11/02/highfield_bbc_linux_website_users_bafflement/...?
Downsides are the clients are a bit ugly. And I doubt it's cheap...
http://mac.the-underdogs.org/...?
No one seems to have posted what I think is the most obvious use of this: setting the VCR remotely. Has no one else ever wanted to be able to do this when at the office and someone has just told you the best TV program ever made is going to be on before you get home? My understanding is that even the great TIVO can't always do this.
And as for the security questions, come on... Most of the posts here sound like the old anti-Internet luddites of the 90's.
Ah, but the problem with Echelon (and other spying tools) is that you can't just blurt out results from it to prove a point. With the ISP data the government has something to use to show they got their man "legally", even if the actual proof came from an Echelon type thingy. Stop me if I get too technical...
While I'm not denying that your points are important, they are discussed in the article. They irradiate the flask with neutrons with and without the cavitation, and only observe tritium with cavitation. They do also consider the possibility that the observed neutrons are from their own neutron source. Their claim is that they observe a peak of emitted neutrons at the same time as the luminescence of the collapsing bubbles (and therefore at the same time as the supposed fusion event.
PDF copies can be downloaded from here.