I felt a great disturbance in the Force, as if millions of voices suddenly cried out in terror and were suddenly silenced. I fear something terrible has happened.
While I'm paying for BBC news in London via the TV license, I won't miss the Murdoch machine that much.
I do read the NYT once a day, but if they put up a paywall then I won't bother - there is simply enough news to go around.
Murdoch put a paywall up on the London Times last year, which I stopped reading daily. Their readership plummeted.
Obviously the London Times was a test bed with a large audience, you from what I've read, NYT will do everything they do not to make that same mistake.
Time will tell if they have struck a fair enough balance between free and paid-for material.
a great deal of these 'vulnerabilities' in OS X are from open source software projects which release the advisories.
i guess you haven't seen any security updates from Ubuntu/Redhat or any other UNIX, before have you?
when you release a UNIX distro with a ton of software using many different packages, frameworks and programmers with varying levels of appetite for security completeness, you are going to run into a myriad of issues.
MS also have their issues, but you can't compare apples with oranges.
Our politicians have just blown a cool $43 billion (in some sources over $58 billion depending which paper you read) of our money on a network that will most likely be obsolete in years to come.
Not only that, but it benefits for city folk are heavily debated, while the country folk will reap much of the rewards. I don't have a problem with country folk, but I do have a problem with us subsidizing their life choices by living remote from services offered in heavily populated cities. Hell, I'd love to move out to the countryside, and have all the services offered in a city location.
I lived in Sydney for 35 years before recently moving to London for contract work, and the last 6 years of that I had a 20 MB pipe, without the need for Telstra - the peddlers of an over the top expensive product.
The govt all the long wanted Telstra to stump up for NBN and when the pollies rubbished their proposal, it seemed like the smaller operators had a chance to collectively provide services at an equal rate.
Anyway guys, the NBN may come to your door, but in order to use it you'll have to shell out up to $450 and $750, and up to $3,000 to get a connection. Good luck with that.
These public-private consortiums are ruining our country, hiding our debt and placing the burden on the citizens to stump up extra for services that should spearheaded by govt - if they deem them so important.
Invest in yourself that money to start hearing.
It wil help you get a job easier and may improve your relationship your wife due to clearer comunication although it's not clear if that's a problem:)
Back in 1982 I spent about $US5,000 on at the time a top of the line non PC computer for the work I was involved in.
To put that into perspective my house which I bought around the time cost about $US28,000.
Cisco / VMware has done some work in this space, abeit it is a Cisco / VMware solution....
The Nexus 1000V basically provides an overlay to the virtual networking stack from VMware and places it into an appliance with a Cisco CLI. It can then be hooked into the usual Cisco management suspects.
The solution makes sense because it also gives back control of the network aspects back to netops, instead of the server ops/virtual ops...
http://www.vmware.com/products/cisco-nexus-1000V/
We use SharePoint in a large enterprise although its pretty good at mashing together websites - unfortunately its really poor at search.
I think Search 4.0 may improve the situation, but its nowhere near Yahoo, Google or other search technology.
Technology doesn't solve all problems, I'd say this said company needs to focus on strengthening business process and implementing some user awareness programs.
If USA were truly pro-free speech they would of permitted the implementation of.sex and.xxx namespaces.
Its nothing to do with what I think about porn, it has a practical use that allows people to quickly identify with the subject matter and to allow software to classify it as so.
The conservative government simply did not want this to happen, and they have successfully lobbied hard to stop these practical namespaces to be implemented.
Creating an Internet wasteland of "filth" may have some merit, but I highly doubt it will lead to an increase in people watching it. Most large, modern cities have "saucy" areas, but just because they are there doesn't mean every citizen visits everyday.
I still believe this process needs to be apolitical as noted, without government intervention - its the only way. I do not accept that the US has a higher ground than other forward thinking countries in this matter.
Care to share the name of such add-on? Many thanks.
I hope that the ATO is getting their fair of the GST on these ransomware demands.... The lack of tax on overseas purchases are taking our jeeerbs!
I don't write Linux code, but even I know what Wayland is.
I felt a great disturbance in the Force, as if millions of voices suddenly cried out in terror and were suddenly silenced. I fear something terrible has happened.
Dead Man Walking.
1) intend to launch a social network based on academia but do hardly anything
2) ???
3) profit!
While I'm paying for BBC news in London via the TV license, I won't miss the Murdoch machine that much. I do read the NYT once a day, but if they put up a paywall then I won't bother - there is simply enough news to go around. Murdoch put a paywall up on the London Times last year, which I stopped reading daily. Their readership plummeted. Obviously the London Times was a test bed with a large audience, you from what I've read, NYT will do everything they do not to make that same mistake. Time will tell if they have struck a fair enough balance between free and paid-for material.
a great deal of these 'vulnerabilities' in OS X are from open source software projects which release the advisories.
i guess you haven't seen any security updates from Ubuntu/Redhat or any other UNIX, before have you?
when you release a UNIX distro with a ton of software using many different packages, frameworks and programmers with varying levels of appetite for security completeness, you are going to run into a myriad of issues.
MS also have their issues, but you can't compare apples with oranges.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hkx1mDcvk6E
both links point to youtube.
http://www.dukenukemforever.com/#?trailer
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1-b78TKZIyw
couldn't agree more with your analogy...
Spare me, a network utility.... Must be a slow news day.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/opinion/billions-to-be-spent-on-dubious-benefits/story-e6frg6zo-1225961705602
Not only that, but it benefits for city folk are heavily debated, while the country folk will reap much of the rewards. I don't have a problem with country folk, but I do have a problem with us subsidizing their life choices by living remote from services offered in heavily populated cities. Hell, I'd love to move out to the countryside, and have all the services offered in a city location.
I lived in Sydney for 35 years before recently moving to London for contract work, and the last 6 years of that I had a 20 MB pipe, without the need for Telstra - the peddlers of an over the top expensive product.
The govt all the long wanted Telstra to stump up for NBN and when the pollies rubbished their proposal, it seemed like the smaller operators had a chance to collectively provide services at an equal rate.
Anyway guys, the NBN may come to your door, but in order to use it you'll have to shell out up to $450 and $750, and up to $3,000 to get a connection. Good luck with that.
These public-private consortiums are ruining our country, hiding our debt and placing the burden on the citizens to stump up extra for services that should spearheaded by govt - if they deem them so important.
better yet, double-penetrate them both at the same time
Mod this up.
Invest in yourself that money to start hearing. It wil help you get a job easier and may improve your relationship your wife due to clearer comunication although it's not clear if that's a problem :)
Back in 1982 I spent about $US5,000 on at the time a top of the line non PC computer for the work I was involved in.
To put that into perspective my house which I bought around the time cost about $US28,000.
A great working example to answer the question and to provide a good sample of ideas. Thanks for sharing.
Cisco / VMware has done some work in this space, abeit it is a Cisco / VMware solution.... The Nexus 1000V basically provides an overlay to the virtual networking stack from VMware and places it into an appliance with a Cisco CLI. It can then be hooked into the usual Cisco management suspects. The solution makes sense because it also gives back control of the network aspects back to netops, instead of the server ops/virtual ops... http://www.vmware.com/products/cisco-nexus-1000V/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cavalese_cable-car_disaster
You mean, it doesn't involve chair throwing!?
Go++
No.
We use SharePoint in a large enterprise although its pretty good at mashing together websites - unfortunately its really poor at search. I think Search 4.0 may improve the situation, but its nowhere near Yahoo, Google or other search technology. Technology doesn't solve all problems, I'd say this said company needs to focus on strengthening business process and implementing some user awareness programs.
Did Apple mention which respective countries and carriers will support tethering?
If USA were truly pro-free speech they would of permitted the implementation of .sex and .xxx namespaces.
Its nothing to do with what I think about porn, it has a practical use that allows people to quickly identify with the subject matter and to allow software to classify it as so.
The conservative government simply did not want this to happen, and they have successfully lobbied hard to stop these practical namespaces to be implemented.
Creating an Internet wasteland of "filth" may have some merit, but I highly doubt it will lead to an increase in people watching it. Most large, modern cities have "saucy" areas, but just because they are there doesn't mean every citizen visits everyday.
I still believe this process needs to be apolitical as noted, without government intervention - its the only way. I do not accept that the US has a higher ground than other forward thinking countries in this matter.