Assuming your using a standard switch as you gateway device it would be much easier to simply setup the DNS servers to listen on an alternate port. VPN (which I'm assuming you use for other things too) in most cases would be over-kill. In fact a simple iptables rule could handle the port redirect on the listening dns server.
Lol. I'd do it too, but aside from needlessly offending some readers I prefer to keep some distance between projects like that in hope I avoid taint.
Besides, if you think about it it was kind of like open-sourcing my own internal process, which is pretty geeky anyway. So it's probable best I leave it to peoples imagination to resolve the geek/sex dichotomy (I joke).
The thing I like about blogs is I always looked at them as a semi-anonymous public diary. I don't read them, but I did a project for about a year where I posted my thoughts, uncertainty and insecurity on my own sexuality. Some of the things I'm less proud of and a lot of the kinds of things I might not have shared with anyone. I tried to keep it as honest as I could and avoided being titillating or self-serving as well as I could.
The responses I got were mostly positive and intelligent and the whole thing surprised me a little bit. The internet provides an interesting abstraction for the intellect.
If I'd hit your link on accident I'd have assumed it was just another domineer squatting a high value (?) name. Who ever designed the page layout probably doesn't know the first thing about composition, my eyes can't seem to decide where to focus because all the blocks seem to be competing. Like an uglier version of google with over 1/3 of the top of the page (all you see before scrolling) dedicated to advertisements with not one, but TWO search boxes (the second simply to search within microsoft.com) which will probably frustrate and confuse as many users as it might help.
A laptop? No, that doesn't count unless you run your production system on another laptop of the same build and make. At least where I work production is business critical systems on real kit, then we have our development environment, testing environment, and after that (in terms of importance) we have the business/office network and individual workstations (and your laptop would be somewhere after that).
Nothing a developer did on a home system would be considered production ready without, you know, doing lots of actual testing.
closing the Kindle makes business sense in the same kind of way opening the service infrastructure might. I work for a company that might more seriously consider using their services if we knew we wouldn't loose our portability. Remember, cloud computing vendors tout themselves as a utility, this would be required before they could truly make that happen. And of course, this is my speculation on a rumor, grain meet salt.
an infected computer "goes slow". That's about the most you should expect out of a reasonably alert user. The more noticeable the slowing the more likely they'll bring it somewhere to get looked at. Once they do bring it somewhere the results will be fairly uneven with a lot of shops attempting upsells, recommending unnecessary upgrades or replacements (better swap out that hard drive..) with no particularly good way for the user to gauge the quality of the technician (which will frequently be alarmingly low).
Talk to a gearhead and have him refer you to a equally banal article and see if you read it. Security is presumably YOUR field of interest but never expect that means it should take equal footing for every other person, and thank god it doesn't because we need specialists in so many other fields. I find it arrogant to the point of stupidity when technical people are surprised or outraged by this.
When was the last time you read an article on the proper maintenance and use of airbags? Most of us just want the airbag to work. Some don't know and don't care. It's the same with anything. And when we do our jobs properly users don't have to become specialists in our chosen field(s).
the news industry was always simply a distribution channel for information. Some papers may have done a better job then other papers but the reality all news papers must face today is the distribution channel is now the internet which is global, nearly instantaneous and more or less free. If every employed journalist disappeared today, journalism would continue. Sharing information would continue and I have no doubt that even quality journalism would continue. News papers are to the internet the same thing peer reviewed journals might be to the internet, theoretically a source of available information which has been professionally reviewed. But quality varies.
...am I the only one who feels that the improved performance issues of Windows 7 may actually work? I installed a copy of the RC on my laptop, and it worked beyond what I expected. The Laptop was "powerful" enough for Vista, and it couldn't even compare to the performance my laptop was giving me currently.
I don't know if I should laugh or cry. It certainly is a glowing review.;-)
most of these companies are trying to sell a product that is essentially infinite (digitally replicable). It's value as a product is 0, it's only the experience that contains value. So the real question isn't if copyright will succeed, it's already failed, the real question is how to exchange value for experience, which to my mind would involve live performances or the possibility of mixing theater and music again (what did we used to call that? Opera? Musical?) and/or enhanced delivery or increasingly hi-res or immersive technology.
OEM's would be able to preinstall this limited version (thereby bringing down the price) and allowing the consumer to decide if they want/need the upgrade or not.
Try again. Two of my favorites are LogicMail (POP/IMAP from anywhere) and MidpSSH (in a pinch, server management) but you can also find more at places like Sourceforge.
things. They get addicted to things that fill a need. So the question might be what's the game covering up? Endorphins can be used to self-medicate in a bottle or with a game. When we get stuck using substitutes for too long is when we start making obviously negative/detrimental decisions because we've lost the ability to see beyond our own pain/reward-cycle. But say it funnier then that when you tell him.;-)
Thanks, great project.
Assuming your using a standard switch as you gateway device it would be much easier to simply setup the DNS servers to listen on an alternate port. VPN (which I'm assuming you use for other things too) in most cases would be over-kill. In fact a simple iptables rule could handle the port redirect on the listening dns server.
Lol. I'd do it too, but aside from needlessly offending some readers I prefer to keep some distance between projects like that in hope I avoid taint.
Besides, if you think about it it was kind of like open-sourcing my own internal process, which is pretty geeky anyway. So it's probable best I leave it to peoples imagination to resolve the geek/sex dichotomy (I joke).
The thing I like about blogs is I always looked at them as a semi-anonymous public diary. I don't read them, but I did a project for about a year where I posted my thoughts, uncertainty and insecurity on my own sexuality. Some of the things I'm less proud of and a lot of the kinds of things I might not have shared with anyone. I tried to keep it as honest as I could and avoided being titillating or self-serving as well as I could.
The responses I got were mostly positive and intelligent and the whole thing surprised me a little bit. The internet provides an interesting abstraction for the intellect.
Proof that women really do exist in the interwebs.
Nobody has registered bingsucksballs.com yet.
If I'd hit your link on accident I'd have assumed it was just another domineer squatting a high value (?) name. Who ever designed the page layout probably doesn't know the first thing about composition, my eyes can't seem to decide where to focus because all the blocks seem to be competing. Like an uglier version of google with over 1/3 of the top of the page (all you see before scrolling) dedicated to advertisements with not one, but TWO search boxes (the second simply to search within microsoft.com) which will probably frustrate and confuse as many users as it might help.
A laptop? No, that doesn't count unless you run your production system on another laptop of the same build and make. At least where I work production is business critical systems on real kit, then we have our development environment, testing environment, and after that (in terms of importance) we have the business/office network and individual workstations (and your laptop would be somewhere after that).
Nothing a developer did on a home system would be considered production ready without, you know, doing lots of actual testing.
You joking right? You know they have a little advertising wing right? Platform-A, advertising.com? Ring any bells?
closing the Kindle makes business sense in the same kind of way opening the service infrastructure might. I work for a company that might more seriously consider using their services if we knew we wouldn't loose our portability. Remember, cloud computing vendors tout themselves as a utility, this would be required before they could truly make that happen. And of course, this is my speculation on a rumor, grain meet salt.
an infected computer "goes slow". That's about the most you should expect out of a reasonably alert user. The more noticeable the slowing the more likely they'll bring it somewhere to get looked at. Once they do bring it somewhere the results will be fairly uneven with a lot of shops attempting upsells, recommending unnecessary upgrades or replacements (better swap out that hard drive..) with no particularly good way for the user to gauge the quality of the technician (which will frequently be alarmingly low).
Talk to a gearhead and have him refer you to a equally banal article and see if you read it. Security is presumably YOUR field of interest but never expect that means it should take equal footing for every other person, and thank god it doesn't because we need specialists in so many other fields. I find it arrogant to the point of stupidity when technical people are surprised or outraged by this.
When was the last time you read an article on the proper maintenance and use of airbags? Most of us just want the airbag to work. Some don't know and don't care. It's the same with anything. And when we do our jobs properly users don't have to become specialists in our chosen field(s).
the news industry was always simply a distribution channel for information. Some papers may have done a better job then other papers but the reality all news papers must face today is the distribution channel is now the internet which is global, nearly instantaneous and more or less free. If every employed journalist disappeared today, journalism would continue. Sharing information would continue and I have no doubt that even quality journalism would continue. News papers are to the internet the same thing peer reviewed journals might be to the internet, theoretically a source of available information which has been professionally reviewed. But quality varies.
...am I the only one who feels that the improved performance issues of Windows 7 may actually work? I installed a copy of the RC on my laptop, and it worked beyond what I expected. The Laptop was "powerful" enough for Vista, and it couldn't even compare to the performance my laptop was giving me currently.
;-)
I don't know if I should laugh or cry. It certainly is a glowing review.
I can't wait until we can view ads from sponsors during the scanning. Hope you enjoyed your visit! And Drink Pepsi!
No. They'll probably strip/cavity search you, detain you and eventually after making a big show, contact your embassy and let you go.
we hated the USSR out of jealously. And now look at how swiftly we race to embrace statism.
marked your post Informative.
most of these companies are trying to sell a product that is essentially infinite (digitally replicable). It's value as a product is 0, it's only the experience that contains value. So the real question isn't if copyright will succeed, it's already failed, the real question is how to exchange value for experience, which to my mind would involve live performances or the possibility of mixing theater and music again (what did we used to call that? Opera? Musical?) and/or enhanced delivery or increasingly hi-res or immersive technology.
It's just distributing the cost more intelligently among those who need it. So you see, we still get what we pay for. :-)
Just clone the meat! Delicious dinosaur meat.
OEM's would be able to preinstall this limited version (thereby bringing down the price) and allowing the consumer to decide if they want/need the upgrade or not.
One wouldn't be the first post if the first post was zero - zero would.
Try again. Two of my favorites are LogicMail (POP/IMAP from anywhere) and MidpSSH (in a pinch, server management) but you can also find more at places like Sourceforge.
things. They get addicted to things that fill a need. So the question might be what's the game covering up? Endorphins can be used to self-medicate in a bottle or with a game. When we get stuck using substitutes for too long is when we start making obviously negative/detrimental decisions because we've lost the ability to see beyond our own pain/reward-cycle. But say it funnier then that when you tell him. ;-)