Hmm, dunno, I would imagine an 'avoidance of cities' trait might not do so well, as there are probably more avalable sex partners & better chances of reproduction where more people congregate. I would imagine there's a few trade-offs either way.
The Apple ][ platform had tons of clones - there were a bunch of unofficial Taiwanese Apple ][ compatibles that ran all the Apple ][ applications (mostly) without any problems. I had one myself during that time. However, all these little clone manufacturers were pretty small shops and never really got their act together as Compaq did.
Interesting is, what's the failure mode on these cables. Say it does break, do we have to deal with some massive super-strong whip circling the globe and smashing everything in it's path?
Here is a working link.
This application seems pretty suspect - it wants to install ActiveX components in IE browsers, and in Firefox it's asking for permission to install something that looks very suspicious. Beware!
Interesting point regarding plausible deniability - say if someone *does* grab your WEP key and downloads child porn or hacks into the pentagon from your IP, you might have a harder time denying that it was actually you that was doing this stuff than if your WLAN was wide open without any protection at all.
Similar to what you've got, but with regular expressions, controllable nicely from the browser. You could also use Squid as a proxy, and block things there.
I heard this was relatively simple, since the standards for this kind of stuff are generally pretty old. Had a boss once who in his spare time figured out the encryption key for the 'Interac'-based PINs in the 1970s-ish around when Interac was becoming widespread, he said it was no big deal & could be done pretty simply with pen and paper & free time.
Why not just base64 encode what you need to? Jeez, talk about a solution looking for a problem. Who in the world is encoding huge binary stuff in their XML anyway?
SP2 doesn't react well if there is spyware installed (sounds like it might have been the cause of your friend's IE problems)- I have heard that spybot search & destroy and ad-aware should be run before you start the installation process.
Hey, most likely if you're a 'hands-on' type of daddy, you'll want to spend the miniscule amounts of spare time that you'll have on your digital baby videos, rather than worrying about baby monitoring. After a couple of months, it's a full time job.
The earth is not a 'closed system'. The sun provides us with energy from outside. However, in the context of industrial waste, makes more sense, but still is not a closed system in the scientific sense.
Maybe the poster didn't realize that the phrase used in the article 'panned for its performance' means that in the article writer's opinion, performance was bad.
Or else, maybe they live in some kind of Bizarro world.
It's pretty well known that if you make decisions as a manager, being (or appearing) to be fair, employee motivation improves. There was an article about this in Harvard Business Review (dead tree version), 2 months ago or so, very interesting. Sorry don't have a link.
Re:depends on what you call perfect
on
Awari Solved
·
· Score: 1
It's spelled the same, but pronounced differently - kicking the nuts version - ROH-SHAM-BUH rock-paper-scissors - ROH-SHAM-BO
Be very careful, but at the same time, be prepared to exploit to your advantage, if necessary:)
Being in the same room with your project team is a must for us. And everyone not in the project team should be in a different room. This works not too bad with a project team size of up to seven people or so.
I always like some not too loud noise in the background, usually some dumb pop-music station that has some news.
Not allowing music (even without headphones) in the office is really weird for me - one of our employees brought a soundcard along with him to install in secret at the office just in case we didn't allow them.
Strong coffee is a must - also, we work over a supermarket so there's always time to run down for Cokes and whatever.
Working with a view to the outside world is nice as well, I always try to arrange myself so I have something to look at outside if I look away from my monitor. Natural light, especially non-direct lighting is great.
Perl works ok with Visibroker using COPE, but you've got the downside of pushing the envelope. Documentation is pretty sketchy, and took a while of trial and error to get everything set up.
It's good enough for what I use it for (Perl triggering off Java processes using CORBA with Visibroker for Java as the ORB) but wouldn't want to use it for anything much more advanced or critical than that.
The netomat browser does this - packages the JRE 1.2.1 with it, I think. You can see how it works at http://www.netomat.net. Course, if everyone starts doing it like this there'll be a million different JVMs running all over the place on your PC. Brave new world, huh?
Modded as funny? This is actually true, guys. Wikipedia
Hmm, dunno, I would imagine an 'avoidance of cities' trait might not do so well, as there are probably more avalable sex partners & better chances of reproduction where more people congregate. I would imagine there's a few trade-offs either way.
The Apple ][ platform had tons of clones - there were a bunch of unofficial Taiwanese Apple ][ compatibles that ran all the Apple ][ applications (mostly) without any problems. I had one myself during that time. However, all these little clone manufacturers were pretty small shops and never really got their act together as Compaq did.
Interesting is, what's the failure mode on these cables. Say it does break, do we have to deal with some massive super-strong whip circling the globe and smashing everything in it's path?
Here is a working link. This application seems pretty suspect - it wants to install ActiveX components in IE browsers, and in Firefox it's asking for permission to install something that looks very suspicious. Beware!
Interesting point regarding plausible deniability - say if someone *does* grab your WEP key and downloads child porn or hacks into the pentagon from your IP, you might have a harder time denying that it was actually you that was doing this stuff than if your WLAN was wide open without any protection at all.
Here is a wired article, with some comments from the owner of the tactics of the diamond cartel: Wired Link
Adblock for Firefox/Mozilla?
http://adblock.mozdev.org/
Similar to what you've got, but with regular expressions, controllable nicely from the browser. You could also use Squid as a proxy, and block things there.
That's why I guess the article mentions that the system is RAIDed, (sounds like RAID 0), to help a little bit with these kind of I/O issues.
I heard this was relatively simple, since the standards for this kind of stuff are generally pretty old. Had a boss once who in his spare time figured out the encryption key for the 'Interac'-based PINs in the 1970s-ish around when Interac was becoming widespread, he said it was no big deal & could be done pretty simply with pen and paper & free time.
Why not just base64 encode what you need to? Jeez, talk about a solution looking for a problem. Who in the world is encoding huge binary stuff in their XML anyway?
SP2 doesn't react well if there is spyware installed (sounds like it might have been the cause of your friend's IE problems)- I have heard that spybot search & destroy and ad-aware should be run before you start the installation process.
Also great is the derivation of this equation - one on the classic 'pulling a rabbit out of the hat' lecturer performances back in Uni.
Hey, most likely if you're a 'hands-on' type of daddy, you'll want to spend the miniscule amounts of spare time that you'll have on your digital baby videos, rather than worrying about baby monitoring. After a couple of months, it's a full time job.
Have fun!
The earth is not a 'closed system'. The sun provides us with energy from outside. However, in the context of industrial waste, makes more sense, but still is not a closed system in the scientific sense.
Maybe the poster didn't realize that the phrase used in the article 'panned for its performance' means that in the article writer's opinion, performance was bad.
Or else, maybe they live in some kind of Bizarro world.
What about 'Architecting' in the title line - that's not even a word! The virus must be spreading.
Sssh! No good advice here!
It's pretty well known that if you make decisions as a manager, being (or appearing) to be fair, employee motivation improves. There was an article about this in Harvard Business Review (dead tree version), 2 months ago or so, very interesting. Sorry don't have a link.
It's spelled the same, but pronounced differently -
:)
kicking the nuts version - ROH-SHAM-BUH
rock-paper-scissors - ROH-SHAM-BO
Be very careful, but at the same time, be prepared to exploit to your advantage, if necessary
Just reading the subject made my teeth hurt.
Being in the same room with your project team is a must for us. And everyone not in the project team should be in a different room. This works not too bad with a project team size of up to seven people or so.
I always like some not too loud noise in the background, usually some dumb pop-music station that has some news.
Not allowing music (even without headphones) in the office is really weird for me - one of our employees brought a soundcard along with him to install in secret at the office just in case we didn't allow them.
Strong coffee is a must - also, we work over a supermarket so there's always time to run down for Cokes and whatever.
Working with a view to the outside world is nice as well, I always try to arrange myself so I have something to look at outside if I look away from my monitor. Natural light, especially non-direct lighting is great.
Perl works ok with Visibroker using COPE, but you've got the downside of pushing the envelope. Documentation is pretty sketchy, and took a while of trial and error to get everything set up.
It's good enough for what I use it for (Perl triggering off Java processes using CORBA with Visibroker for Java as the ORB) but wouldn't want to use it for anything much more advanced or critical than that.
The netomat browser does this - packages the JRE 1.2.1 with it, I think. You can see how it works at http://www.netomat.net. Course, if everyone starts doing it like this there'll be a million different JVMs running all over the place on your PC. Brave new world, huh?