Actually, it depends what the bacteria feed on. The bacteria don't just magically appear in the baby's intestines. They are already there, but the only thing in the baby's digestive system is whatever amniotic fluid the baby has swallowed while in the womb. No real decay products to deal with there. Once they start consuming mother's milk or formula, it starts to stink quite a bit, but the real killer comes when they start to eat baby food and you they get their first meat-based food.
Most BitTorrent clients allow you to control the upload and download bandwidth consumed by the torrent(s). Limit the total of your torrents to about 1/3 of your measured (as opposed to advertised) available bandwidth in each direction. I had the same issue with VPN connections to remote desktops and found that this was enough to restore performance.
If the torrents are saturating your bandwidth, there isn't a lot a router can do with QoS to avoid choppiness. And if you keep your torrents to less than half your bandwidth QoS isn't necessary. QoS could possibly help you run at the maximum possible torrent speed without losing VOIP clarity, but you'd still have to fiddle around with the bandwidth limits on the Torrents.
This brings up one situation where I would trust a "self-signed" certificate against one issued by a public certificate authority. This would be for internal use within the company itself. The company can establish its own certificate authority for internal use in authenticating/encrypting internal communications and avoid a lot of the risks of MITM.
A minor party candidate for president doesn't have the snowball's chance, as you would expect. But apart from the president (simply because I think McCain is Bush part 3 in ways that are even more important than the Iraq occupation), I plan to vote Libertarian in every possible contest.
Getting 3 senators and/or a dozen representatives into Washington who are truly SERIOUS about shrinking the scope and power of the federal government is easier than getting a president elected. And as a swing-vote caucus, they would have some real power, despite their small size. But this will take some real commitment from people like/.ers that talk Libertarian but walk Republican or Democrat.
...but could you provide at least one pair of links in the past year from major media outlets (CNN, NYT, and so on), that backs this up. In other words, an article about a national democratic figure that fails to include party affiliation, while an article about a republican figure that includes the party affiliation. The primary topic of the article must be the act of which the official is accused, and the offense of the democratic figure must be at least as great as the that of the republican. Ideally the pair of links should come from the same media outlet.
Seriously, you might get this kind of crap from local newspapers with axes to grind, but the national media? They at least put (D-NY) or (R-MT) after the official's name, showing both party affiliation and state.
While their production process may be carbon negative, I wonder how the numbers come out if you account for the CO2 released as the crude is refined into gas/diesel etc. and as the fuel is consumed. The production cost sounds nice, but this sounds like a net contributor to global warming.
Odds are, it's probably more enviro-friendly to do solar/wind->electric grid->battery vehicle, than solar->plant matter->bio-crude->refinery->gas/diesel vehicle.
Any drive under 80-100GB probably isn't worth your time anymore, even as a donation or for eBay. But for the larger drives, either of those options is viable.
If you want a use for them in-house: instead of putting them on the network, why not put them in USB enclosures for local external storage. They wouldn't really be good for traveling due to their 3.5" form factor, but lots of laptops that are a couple of years old have only 80 GB drives, so these could be good for external backup drives. If they are too small for your video folks, your support teams (marketing, accounting, HR and the like) might still get some use out of them.
That sounds about right to me. Apart from the moral bankruptcy, I think there also was an itch among the defense wonks (Rumsfeld) to do a live test of the the "lean, intelligent" strategy using their newest toys.
As far as an inept president that got led around (or was used as a front) by corrupt insiders, let's see: Warren Harding (Teapot Dome) and Ronald Reagan (Iran-Contra) are good examples. The Clintons seem to fall more in the Nixon camp of actually being involved in the "fun" of Whitewater.
OTOH, as you state: The president is Commander-in-Chief, and with the authority comes the responsibility.
WTF? Does this mean if I disable uPNP on my router for security reasons, Windows is going to ignore the router? And what do they mean by "ignore"? Will it refuse to recognize the network connection at all?
If you go to the RepRap Website, you can see some of the items it has made and how long they took. It seems to lay down about 1 cc of plastic per hour, which isn't going to put it in any factories anytime soon. Definitely a hobbyist/do-it-yourselfer type of tool.
Even if the GPLv3 does nothing to compel web sites who hide their sources behind their pages, to open up, it was considered and it is ultimately coming down the pike from the FOSS community. Even if the GPLV3 does nothing to prevent someone from making a closed application on Linux, such activities are at odds with the spirit of the FOSS community and again, such restrictions are coming.
Sources? This is a brand new claim I have yet to see in any other forum. Considering that GPLv3 is barely a year old, color me highly skeptical that anyone is actively planning this right now.
Of course the FSF has no answer to this question. Courts are the final authority when it comes to licenses. The same was true of previous incarnations of the GPL as well. The same is true of every other license. Until there is case law, it's all speculation
While case law is the final arbiter, the FSF should damn well be able to comment on the INTENT of GPL v3 in a situation like this. Their lawyers wrote most of it.
Difficulties: 1) The biggest problem is that you have to reach Mars escape velocity using (primarily) materials brought with the lander. The energy to reach the escape velocity can be provided in several ways, but traditional methods (rockets) are not practical since the amount of fuel required would mass more than the original outbound payload. Your best bet is probably a rail gun constructed from several individual landing craft. The energy for this could be provided from the sun and batteries, and your main mass requirement for a given launch would be for the containers to hold the samples. 2) After the mass/energy conflict of achieving escape velocity, you have to get your payload somewhere around earth. You could just reduce velocity along the circumference of Mars orbit so that the payload slowly decays inward until it reaches earch, but this could be a decades-long process and could also result in the sample being contaminated by solar radiation. So something a bit more extreme is probably required. 3) You need a "catcher's mitt" in orbit on the earth end.
but your company will probably go out of business if you keep human machinists on hand to do painstaking measurements instead of letting robots measure, cut and build the stuff directly from the 3-d models.
Another vote for Baen and Webscriptions. Note that Webscriptions.net also has limited selections of ebooks from other publishers. Tor seems to have expanded their selection here quite a bit, although Baen is by far the largest. Apart from the military SF, there's a good selection of old-school SF authors such as James Schmitz (Telzey Amberdon, the Hub), James P. Hogan (Gentle Giants of Ganymede), Cliff Simak (various) as well as the Keith Laumer that AP mentioned.
This is also the only place where you can get P.C. Hodgell's Kencyrath/Godstalk series in its entirety so far (under Meisha Merlin publisher), barring any special collector's editions that may be out there. Plus, the eBook price is usually about $2 less than comparable paperbacks and downloadable in a variety of formats including HTML and RTF with no DRM.
Once you've decided what you want, there are plenty of used SF bundles on EBay, too. One reason the used bookstores are going out of business is people are selling their old books for themselves on EBay. It isn't a very good browsing experience, but if there's a specific title you want that's no longer in print, it's worth a shot.
Maybe ParisHilton is an abstract interface that has no class?
I'm curious how many developers have actually used variables called foo and bar in live code (apart from cut/paste jobs from programming texts).
If this relates to a legal matter, the only way you should even touch this person's computer is if you can be certified as an expert witness. Otherwise all you are doing is evidence tampering. As usual, talk to a lawyer.
As far as accessing this person's user accounts, you're in a similar situation to the RIAA, except at least you have the real person's name, not just John Doe. If you make any attempt to access their accounts without express permission of the service providing the account, you are at a minimum in violation of their terms of service. You could also be up for charges of identity theft. Once again, talk to a lawyer.
If you do decide to go ahead with this, make sure you have a neutral witness with you that is capable of confirming the chain of custody of anything you find. Once again, talk to a lawyer.
Actually, it depends what the bacteria feed on. The bacteria don't just magically appear in the baby's intestines. They are already there, but the only thing in the baby's digestive system is whatever amniotic fluid the baby has swallowed while in the womb. No real decay products to deal with there. Once they start consuming mother's milk or formula, it starts to stink quite a bit, but the real killer comes when they start to eat baby food and you they get their first meat-based food.
Most BitTorrent clients allow you to control the upload and download bandwidth consumed by the torrent(s). Limit the total of your torrents to about 1/3 of your measured (as opposed to advertised) available bandwidth in each direction. I had the same issue with VPN connections to remote desktops and found that this was enough to restore performance.
If the torrents are saturating your bandwidth, there isn't a lot a router can do with QoS to avoid choppiness. And if you keep your torrents to less than half your bandwidth QoS isn't necessary. QoS could possibly help you run at the maximum possible torrent speed without losing VOIP clarity, but you'd still have to fiddle around with the bandwidth limits on the Torrents.
This brings up one situation where I would trust a "self-signed" certificate against one issued by a public certificate authority. This would be for internal use within the company itself. The company can establish its own certificate authority for internal use in authenticating/encrypting internal communications and avoid a lot of the risks of MITM.
Except that the certificate authority also issues the private key at the same time. Otherwise they couldn't validate the signature themselves.
A minor party candidate for president doesn't have the snowball's chance, as you would expect. But apart from the president (simply because I think McCain is Bush part 3 in ways that are even more important than the Iraq occupation), I plan to vote Libertarian in every possible contest. Getting 3 senators and/or a dozen representatives into Washington who are truly SERIOUS about shrinking the scope and power of the federal government is easier than getting a president elected. And as a swing-vote caucus, they would have some real power, despite their small size. But this will take some real commitment from people like /.ers that talk Libertarian but walk Republican or Democrat.
...but could you provide at least one pair of links in the past year from major media outlets (CNN, NYT, and so on), that backs this up. In other words, an article about a national democratic figure that fails to include party affiliation, while an article about a republican figure that includes the party affiliation. The primary topic of the article must be the act of which the official is accused, and the offense of the democratic figure must be at least as great as the that of the republican. Ideally the pair of links should come from the same media outlet.
Seriously, you might get this kind of crap from local newspapers with axes to grind, but the national media? They at least put (D-NY) or (R-MT) after the official's name, showing both party affiliation and state.
While their production process may be carbon negative, I wonder how the numbers come out if you account for the CO2 released as the crude is refined into gas/diesel etc. and as the fuel is consumed. The production cost sounds nice, but this sounds like a net contributor to global warming.
Odds are, it's probably more enviro-friendly to do solar/wind->electric grid->battery vehicle, than solar->plant matter->bio-crude->refinery->gas/diesel vehicle.
Any drive under 80-100GB probably isn't worth your time anymore, even as a donation or for eBay. But for the larger drives, either of those options is viable.
If you want a use for them in-house: instead of putting them on the network, why not put them in USB enclosures for local external storage. They wouldn't really be good for traveling due to their 3.5" form factor, but lots of laptops that are a couple of years old have only 80 GB drives, so these could be good for external backup drives. If they are too small for your video folks, your support teams (marketing, accounting, HR and the like) might still get some use out of them.
That sounds about right to me. Apart from the moral bankruptcy, I think there also was an itch among the defense wonks (Rumsfeld) to do a live test of the the "lean, intelligent" strategy using their newest toys.
As far as an inept president that got led around (or was used as a front) by corrupt insiders, let's see: Warren Harding (Teapot Dome) and Ronald Reagan (Iran-Contra) are good examples. The Clintons seem to fall more in the Nixon camp of actually being involved in the "fun" of Whitewater.
OTOH, as you state: The president is Commander-in-Chief, and with the authority comes the responsibility.
WTF? Does this mean if I disable uPNP on my router for security reasons, Windows is going to ignore the router? And what do they mean by "ignore"? Will it refuse to recognize the network connection at all?
Sounds like the slogan for Capital One Proctologists, Inc.
If you go to the RepRap Website, you can see some of the items it has made and how long they took. It seems to lay down about 1 cc of plastic per hour, which isn't going to put it in any factories anytime soon. Definitely a hobbyist/do-it-yourselfer type of tool.
Even if the GPLv3 does nothing to compel web sites who hide their sources behind their pages, to open up, it was considered and it is ultimately coming down the pike from the FOSS community. Even if the GPLV3 does nothing to prevent someone from making a closed application on Linux, such activities are at odds with the spirit of the FOSS community and again, such restrictions are coming.
Sources? This is a brand new claim I have yet to see in any other forum. Considering that GPLv3 is barely a year old, color me highly skeptical that anyone is actively planning this right now.Of course the FSF has no answer to this question. Courts are the final authority when it comes to licenses. The same was true of previous incarnations of the GPL as well. The same is true of every other license. Until there is case law, it's all speculation
While case law is the final arbiter, the FSF should damn well be able to comment on the INTENT of GPL v3 in a situation like this. Their lawyers wrote most of it.
Maintaining mass transit fares as constant while fuel costs for gas/petrol/diesel go up, up and away should be sufficient.
on a great new internet toy.
Incidentally, the shortest path from Mortification to Gratification is through Sufism.
http://www.netsoc.tcd.ie/~mu/cgi-bin/shortpath.cgi?from=Mortification&to=Gratification
Difficulties:
1) The biggest problem is that you have to reach Mars escape velocity using (primarily) materials brought with the lander. The energy to reach the escape velocity can be provided in several ways, but traditional methods (rockets) are not practical since the amount of fuel required would mass more than the original outbound payload. Your best bet is probably a rail gun constructed from several individual landing craft. The energy for this could be provided from the sun and batteries, and your main mass requirement for a given launch would be for the containers to hold the samples.
2) After the mass/energy conflict of achieving escape velocity, you have to get your payload somewhere around earth. You could just reduce velocity along the circumference of Mars orbit so that the payload slowly decays inward until it reaches earch, but this could be a decades-long process and could also result in the sample being contaminated by solar radiation. So something a bit more extreme is probably required.
3) You need a "catcher's mitt" in orbit on the earth end.
but your company will probably go out of business if you keep human machinists on hand to do painstaking measurements instead of letting robots measure, cut and build the stuff directly from the 3-d models.
Another vote for Baen and Webscriptions. Note that Webscriptions.net also has limited selections of ebooks from other publishers. Tor seems to have expanded their selection here quite a bit, although Baen is by far the largest. Apart from the military SF, there's a good selection of old-school SF authors such as James Schmitz (Telzey Amberdon, the Hub), James P. Hogan (Gentle Giants of Ganymede), Cliff Simak (various) as well as the Keith Laumer that AP mentioned.
This is also the only place where you can get P.C. Hodgell's Kencyrath/Godstalk series in its entirety so far (under Meisha Merlin publisher), barring any special collector's editions that may be out there. Plus, the eBook price is usually about $2 less than comparable paperbacks and downloadable in a variety of formats including HTML and RTF with no DRM.
Once you've decided what you want, there are plenty of used SF bundles on EBay, too. One reason the used bookstores are going out of business is people are selling their old books for themselves on EBay. It isn't a very good browsing experience, but if there's a specific title you want that's no longer in print, it's worth a shot.
Doesn't work on Vista. The direct source for Rootkit revealer is Microsoft since they bought up Sysinternals.
28,140 years old then, eh?
Maybe ParisHilton is an abstract interface that has no class? I'm curious how many developers have actually used variables called foo and bar in live code (apart from cut/paste jobs from programming texts).
Well Novell is still around...They've done deals with Microsoft (and gone to court over them) off and on ever since the DOS/Netware days.
Maybe his parents got conned into buying something like the "Gerber Life Grow-up plan"...
If this relates to a legal matter, the only way you should even touch this person's computer is if you can be certified as an expert witness. Otherwise all you are doing is evidence tampering. As usual, talk to a lawyer.
As far as accessing this person's user accounts, you're in a similar situation to the RIAA, except at least you have the real person's name, not just John Doe. If you make any attempt to access their accounts without express permission of the service providing the account, you are at a minimum in violation of their terms of service. You could also be up for charges of identity theft. Once again, talk to a lawyer.
If you do decide to go ahead with this, make sure you have a neutral witness with you that is capable of confirming the chain of custody of anything you find. Once again, talk to a lawyer.