Nope. Can you elaborate? Node runs on the server just like Java. Same ability to secure it. JS in the client talks to the node backed server app like any other. Node and Mongo talk the same way Java and DB2 talk. Client JS never talks to Mongo, only to the webserver which passes GET or POST to a controller that talks to a model that queries the DB and returns data. The controller loads a view and merges the model data and returns a buffer to the web server along with headers and status info. Web server serves the buffer as the content type provided to the client. Rinse and repeat.
Where are the security holes that are unique to this architecture?
This. The security isn't good and benefits may be sketchy but it'll be fun while it lasts and you'll learn more about business than you would at a big corp. Then you will have experience to start your own.
iPad and iPhone print fine with a wifi printer that's less than a year old. There are good apps for cheap that help support nearly all doc types from images to PDF, word, excel and ppt formats.
Add Dropbox to save things from email or the web and you're good to go.
Not sure about printer support on Android. Have a Nexus 7 but haven't tried to print.
No. No they don't. You buy one because it is a viable and cost effective means of transport. Don't count subsidies in your calculations. Don't buy one to "save the planet" unless you can afford to lose financially.
It's like people who thought the payroll tax holiday was going to go on forever, then bought a house they could barely afford and now are going to have to get a second job.
Boo hoo. Make sensible choices and you won't have this conflict.
How about hybrid or EV SUVs (only a few years down the road, ahem). They'll weigh as much or more than the ICE equivalent due to batteries which can be quite heavy.
Seems like the power train of a vehicle has no correlation with road wear. Weight and miles traveled are the only close metrics.
Here's the rub. You stop paying to keep people above poverty levels and they start to get sick. Sick from poor infrastructure, sick from poor nutrition, sick from lack of preventative healthcare, sick from poor working conditions, sick from poor housing conditions, sick from poor education.
Soon you have a sick impoverished population that can't work, can't produce and requires increasing levels of emergency care. Soon the sickness begins to spread up from poverty into every class. Unemployable populace leads to a lack of demand leads to unemployment in all sectors leads to lack of demand and so on into full blown depression. The job makers can't make jobs if there's no demand, so they just keep their money which leads to a lack of liquidity and no money market which then prevents anyone who can find demand from borrowing. No demand, no liquidity, no productivity, no economy.
So go ahead and stop providing a basic level of prosperity. See what happens.
The cities are crowded but there is still a lot of open land in between. There are still small towns and villages all over the place. Look at a population map of the place up close.
This is a publicly held corporation. They are contractually obligated to do what is in the best interests of their shareholders (within the legal limits). If a series of lawsuits were in line with that charter then that is what they should be doing. What's more likely is that Dell does not hold any relevant patents to the smartphone and tablet domain.
Think of it this way. You send an email, it gets forwarded, then forwarded again, then posted on a forum, then tweeted.
You then tell the person you sent the email to to delete it and every copy that may have been made of it.
Is that reasonable? How could you do that and who gives you the right, especially when there are whole conversations tangentially related to that email that would become orphaned.
The same happens on Facebook. People post an image, it gets reposted elsewhere, comments are added to the reposted info. If the original poster wants it removed what happens to everyone else? Are their conversations about the image to be removed as well or do they just lose their subject matter or???
If MS can accommodate your needs at base pricing (read off the shelf software) you are coasting. Your business will get out competed by someone using a custom tool chain in the near future.
Actually a person can become faster at reading faces through training. Expressions and micro-expressions are all there.
It's knowing what to do with them eg sympathizing and anticipating, that is hard. This too can be learned though it may never seem "normal" as it may appear too calculated and come off as sneaky, sly, disingenuous or even arrogant (just because you know exactly what someone is thinking before they say a word does not mean you should tell them or even acknowledge it, sometimes they want to say it first and don't want a response).
If its not a disease then you can't prescribe for it and insurance won't pay for it. Whenever in doubt of the hidden agenda, follow the money. These guides are essentially accounting code manuals, not medical in any way. It's very much the same as going to a mechanic for service and having them look up which procedures are covered under warranty.
"Waiting for more than half an hour in the November cold to get in, one conferencegoer wondered aloud whether the surprise queue was what it seemed. "Maybe it just goes on and on and at 5pm they'll let us out the other side?" he mused. "That would be really boring." "
I believe magnets are the biggest issue or more specifically rare earth magnets. Batteries are great but we'll need efficient motors to go with them and that requires rare earth minerals which are in heavy demand and tightly controlled.
Could buy one (two would be better to allow for disassembly), use it as a reference and a benchmark for his own creation. Then return them (if not destroyed in the process).
Do how do you explain that 3rd world countries (and China) are being used as waste dumps still by companies that know better? How about companies that float their waste into international waters and dump in the ocean to avoid the cost of properly disposing of it?
No, the reality is that most companies will choose immediate short term savings through polluting than the massive investments required to exploit secondary markets.
Face the facts. Regulation and standards not only prevent polluting behavior, they also increase efficient use of raw materials by making waste disposal less expensive than waste cleanup and secondary markets even less expensive than proper disposal.
Nope. Can you elaborate? Node runs on the server just like Java. Same ability to secure it. JS in the client talks to the node backed server app like any other. Node and Mongo talk the same way Java and DB2 talk. Client JS never talks to Mongo, only to the webserver which passes GET or POST to a controller that talks to a model that queries the DB and returns data. The controller loads a view and merges the model data and returns a buffer to the web server along with headers and status info. Web server serves the buffer as the content type provided to the client. Rinse and repeat.
Where are the security holes that are unique to this architecture?
NodeJS has npm. Installing goes like this.
npm install [library]
It then goes and gets it, makes it available to node through a require call
var myVar = require("[library]")
myVar.method(arg1,arg2)
very much like CPAN excepting syntax
There are several hundred npm packaged libraries of high quality with full test coverage available.
This. The security isn't good and benefits may be sketchy but it'll be fun while it lasts and you'll learn more about business than you would at a big corp. Then you will have experience to start your own.
iPad and iPhone print fine with a wifi printer that's less than a year old. There are good apps for cheap that help support nearly all doc types from images to PDF, word, excel and ppt formats.
Add Dropbox to save things from email or the web and you're good to go.
Not sure about printer support on Android. Have a Nexus 7 but haven't tried to print.
No. No they don't. You buy one because it is a viable and cost effective means of transport. Don't count subsidies in your calculations. Don't buy one to "save the planet" unless you can afford to lose financially.
It's like people who thought the payroll tax holiday was going to go on forever, then bought a house they could barely afford and now are going to have to get a second job.
Boo hoo. Make sensible choices and you won't have this conflict.
How about hybrid or EV SUVs (only a few years down the road, ahem). They'll weigh as much or more than the ICE equivalent due to batteries which can be quite heavy.
Seems like the power train of a vehicle has no correlation with road wear. Weight and miles traveled are the only close metrics.
Here's the rub. You stop paying to keep people above poverty levels and they start to get sick. Sick from poor infrastructure, sick from poor nutrition, sick from lack of preventative healthcare, sick from poor working conditions, sick from poor housing conditions, sick from poor education.
Soon you have a sick impoverished population that can't work, can't produce and requires increasing levels of emergency care. Soon the sickness begins to spread up from poverty into every class. Unemployable populace leads to a lack of demand leads to unemployment in all sectors leads to lack of demand and so on into full blown depression. The job makers can't make jobs if there's no demand, so they just keep their money which leads to a lack of liquidity and no money market which then prevents anyone who can find demand from borrowing. No demand, no liquidity, no productivity, no economy.
So go ahead and stop providing a basic level of prosperity. See what happens.
The cities are crowded but there is still a lot of open land in between. There are still small towns and villages all over the place. Look at a population map of the place up close.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/69/Japan_Population_density_map.svg
http://www.firstpr.com.au/jncrisis/Japan-population-density-833x846.png
Despite the foul odor the folks around here mostly just expel hot air.
This is a publicly held corporation. They are contractually obligated to do what is in the best interests of their shareholders (within the legal limits). If a series of lawsuits were in line with that charter then that is what they should be doing. What's more likely is that Dell does not hold any relevant patents to the smartphone and tablet domain.
Ah but you potentially gain 600 million auto logged in users, no barrier, one click access.
Decisions decisions.
Who is going to pay for the goods and services at the burger flipping place?
Think of it this way. You send an email, it gets forwarded, then forwarded again, then posted on a forum, then tweeted.
You then tell the person you sent the email to to delete it and every copy that may have been made of it.
Is that reasonable? How could you do that and who gives you the right, especially when there are whole conversations tangentially related to that email that would become orphaned.
The same happens on Facebook. People post an image, it gets reposted elsewhere, comments are added to the reposted info. If the original poster wants it removed what happens to everyone else? Are their conversations about the image to be removed as well or do they just lose their subject matter or???
Long haul truckers start at 80k and go up to 120k. Not a great example.
If MS can accommodate your needs at base pricing (read off the shelf software) you are coasting. Your business will get out competed by someone using a custom tool chain in the near future.
Actually a person can become faster at reading faces through training. Expressions and micro-expressions are all there.
It's knowing what to do with them eg sympathizing and anticipating, that is hard. This too can be learned though it may never seem "normal" as it may appear too calculated and come off as sneaky, sly, disingenuous or even arrogant (just because you know exactly what someone is thinking before they say a word does not mean you should tell them or even acknowledge it, sometimes they want to say it first and don't want a response).
If its not a disease then you can't prescribe for it and insurance won't pay for it. Whenever in doubt of the hidden agenda, follow the money. These guides are essentially accounting code manuals, not medical in any way. It's very much the same as going to a mechanic for service and having them look up which procedures are covered under warranty.
Bread and milk are not food in the US, they're ingredients. One is part of a sandwich, the other is something you pour over cereal or into a cake mix.
"Waiting for more than half an hour in the November cold to get in, one conferencegoer wondered aloud whether the surprise queue was what it seemed. "Maybe it just goes on and on and at 5pm they'll let us out the other side?" he mused. "That would be really boring." "
Lol
While true, it's also true that the same wipes you use to clean their grubby hands are remarkably good at cleaning touch screens too. Coincidence?
I believe magnets are the biggest issue or more specifically rare earth magnets. Batteries are great but we'll need efficient motors to go with them and that requires rare earth minerals which are in heavy demand and tightly controlled.
Could buy one (two would be better to allow for disassembly), use it as a reference and a benchmark for his own creation. Then return them (if not destroyed in the process).
Do how do you explain that 3rd world countries (and China) are being used as waste dumps still by companies that know better? How about companies that float their waste into international waters and dump in the ocean to avoid the cost of properly disposing of it?
No, the reality is that most companies will choose immediate short term savings through polluting than the massive investments required to exploit secondary markets.
Face the facts. Regulation and standards not only prevent polluting behavior, they also increase efficient use of raw materials by making waste disposal less expensive than waste cleanup and secondary markets even less expensive than proper disposal.
Dolls and action figures are wonderful tool for imagination and exploration of relationships, aka soft skills.
Analytics data will pull out the numbers anyways.