so pick a password that will even take you a week or so to remember. write it down on a small piece of paper and carry it with you till you remember the password.
using this simp technique, every one of my account passwords looks like complete random garble, yet i remember everyone.
I have a 10G WD and a 25G IBM and would recommend both to anyone. The WD is 5400rpm and the IBM is 7200rpm, so there is a bit of a speed difference, but I've had the WD much longer (a rather reliable drive, it is) than the IBM, but I've had good luck with IBM drives before, so I figure I'll have it a while too. Stay away from Seagate unless its SCSI and dont even bother with Quantum or Maxtor. The WD or IBM drives might cost you $20 or $30 more than the same size Quantum or Maxor, but that small difference is well made up by the speed and reliability of both of these drives.
wow.. this is definitely nice to see. i pity those that don't live in a right-to-work state.. states where non-competes are illegal period. guess livin in vegas has perks other than hookers and gambling, eh?
I have to give a great big congrats to Macmillan. They took, IMHO, the best of the Linux distros and have obviously been successful at marketing it. On top of that, their success has translated into development support for the Linux Mandrake team. Furthermore, because they play such a laid back role, the Linux Mandrake team is presumably more in control of the direction of the distro than say, the development team at Red Hat. Sounds to me like there's something positive for all parties on this one...
Personally, I've been developing Cold Fusion applications for about 2 1/2 years now, and I think Cold Fusion is one of the greatest products the Win32 server arena has ever seen. Crashes from IIS are not too uncommon, but I don't ever recall Cold Fusion crashing or even hiccupping in the least. If you are having problems with Cold Fusion stability on your server, you should probably take a closer look at the installation.
Also, if you are looking to implement some kind of fail-safe, I would highly recommend Zope over PHP3. I've used Zope as well, and I think it far outperforms PHP3 in just about every aspect I can imagine. You can check out Zope at its website.
Also, as someone else said, keep on Allaire's heels-- they are supposed to have Cold Fusion for Linux out by the end of the year.
I can't believe something like this is even an issue. If you were talking about private E-mail accounts that people access at home, that would be different. However, you are talking about company E-mail that is intended only for conducting business. People that use it for other than business, particularly when there are specific policies prohibiting such activity, are playing with fire. And we all know what happens when you play with fire...
As far as the privacy issue, I don't think that really applies here. Because it is a company email account, it should only be used for company business. Doing so means there is nothing private to be concerned with. Your concern for privacy is certainly admirable, but I obviously don't think its very applicable in this situation.
So grab a beer and that Perl book and get crackin.
Re:What's the uptime of WordPerfect and Afterstep?
on
911 Calls Linux
·
· Score: 1
I don't know what planet you're coming from, but here on Earth, your statements are pretty absurd. I have been using Linux _and_ WinNT on daily basis for the last 3 1/2 years. WindowMaker is up and running on the Linux machine 24/7 with StarOffice being used (rather than WordPerfect). On the average, the NT machine (or an application running on such machine) crashes to the point of reboot or data loss at least _3 times_ more than the Linux machine. And I know I'm not the only person with experiences like this, so it looks like maybe your house hasnt been built on Earth yet, eh?
confuse yourself and you've confused others.
so pick a password that will even take you a week or so to remember. write it down on a small piece of paper and carry it with you till you remember the password.
using this simp technique, every one of my account passwords looks like complete random garble, yet i remember everyone.
I have a 10G WD and a 25G IBM and would recommend both to anyone. The WD is 5400rpm and the IBM is 7200rpm, so there is a bit of a speed difference, but I've had the WD much longer (a rather reliable drive, it is) than the IBM, but I've had good luck with IBM drives before, so I figure I'll have it a while too. Stay away from Seagate unless its SCSI and dont even bother with Quantum or Maxtor. The WD or IBM drives might cost you $20 or $30 more than the same size Quantum or Maxor, but that small difference is well made up by the speed and reliability of both of these drives.
wow.. this is definitely nice to see. i pity those that don't live in a right-to-work state.. states where non-competes are illegal period. guess livin in vegas has perks other than hookers and gambling, eh?
I have to give a great big congrats to Macmillan. They took, IMHO, the best of the Linux distros and have obviously been successful at marketing it. On top of that, their success has translated into development support for the Linux Mandrake team. Furthermore, because they play such a laid back role, the Linux Mandrake team is presumably more in control of the direction of the distro than say, the development team at Red Hat. Sounds to me like there's something positive for all parties on this one...
Personally, I've been developing Cold Fusion applications for about 2 1/2 years now, and I think Cold Fusion is one of the greatest products the Win32 server arena has ever seen. Crashes from IIS are not too uncommon, but I don't ever recall Cold Fusion crashing or even hiccupping in the least. If you are having problems with Cold Fusion stability on your server, you should probably take a closer look at the installation.
Also, if you are looking to implement some kind of fail-safe, I would highly recommend Zope over PHP3. I've used Zope as well, and I think it far outperforms PHP3 in just about every aspect I can imagine. You can check out Zope at its website.
Also, as someone else said, keep on Allaire's heels-- they are supposed to have Cold Fusion for Linux out by the end of the year.
Good Luck..
clicking the link gives a 404. anyone know what happened to it?
leave it to those crazy brits to put such an interesting twist on good ol /.
I can't believe something like this is even an issue. If you were talking about private E-mail accounts that people access at home, that would be different. However, you are talking about company E-mail that is intended only for conducting business. People that use it for other than business, particularly when there are specific policies prohibiting such activity, are playing with fire. And we all know what happens when you play with fire...
As far as the privacy issue, I don't think that really applies here. Because it is a company email account, it should only be used for company business. Doing so means there is nothing private to be concerned with. Your concern for privacy is certainly admirable, but I obviously don't think its very applicable in this situation.
So grab a beer and that Perl book and get crackin.
I don't know what planet you're coming from, but here on Earth, your statements are pretty absurd. I have been using Linux _and_ WinNT on daily basis for the last 3 1/2 years. WindowMaker is up and running on the Linux machine 24/7 with StarOffice being used (rather than WordPerfect). On the average, the NT machine (or an application running on such machine) crashes to the point of reboot or data loss at least _3 times_ more than the Linux machine. And I know I'm not the only person with experiences like this, so it looks like maybe your house hasnt been built on Earth yet, eh?