Re:And I'd learn to use it
on
Dart 1.0 Released
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· Score: 1, Insightful
Chrome is the new IE6. A site I maintain has dropped IE6, but has recently been required to make CSS tweaks to fix box and other layout issues with Chrome.
Some one with knowledge of the code discovered a bug in the code. That happens for closed source as well. Most people who use open source don't look at the code so it's essentially closed source.
Gas companies would happily back this against the power companies. Probably will not be cost effective for the average person for a very long time. I'm curious about whether this would follow the same buy back requirements offered to solar panel power generation.
The universities and other entities involved with funding the research are not shafted when these startups happen. Spinoff companies are great for universities. They get paid for their ownership on the patent(s).
Which is to say that GoDaddy hosts a lot of *parked* domains on IIS.
...which were previously served using Apache. None of these stats will ever be able to convey the usefulness of site content based upon web server software.
Ran out of mod points, but your post adds some more insight in to the situation. Firing someone for doing what they normally do is a dick move, unless the camera guy was previously told not to do that.
Nothing wrong with a company turning over information after receiving a warrant. The issue with the NSA is that they collect everything they can without a warrant, but (fingers crossed) promise not to look at it without one.
Rolling your own server is great, but email's fundamental purpose to to send and receive. Unless you are certain both end points and all hops in between are secure, it's pointless.
Sounds like a good attempt to bait others in to leaking information. Having your job security and trust put in to doubt will encourage those inclined to pilfer information.
Wrong. The prosecutor's job is to use the facts of the case to ensure guilty parties are prosecuted and innocent parties are not. Everyone charged with a crime is not actually guilty and this mentality is one of the worst corruptions of our legal system.
The contractors at my company are required to use a company provided laptop, which is rented out. Every month the contractors include that expense in the invoice. It's expected and standard practice.
As the summary states, your argument applies equally to any web browser and google search, since those make it easy to find and download pirated material.
If you have buy in from management, then you have a decent chance of improving things. It's hard to give feedback without knowing what workflow stuff you have in place, so here are a few generic things that might help.
- Get approval for time and resources necessary to set up an automated build environment for deployment packaging and also running tests on every commit. The unit tests should report test coverage to give you a metric to track progress over time. - Enforce a policy where an issue cannot be truly resolved without code review and test coverage. - Devote a percentage of team time toward code review and unit test retrofit. - Document whatever policy decisions are made.
Chrome is the new IE6. A site I maintain has dropped IE6, but has recently been required to make CSS tweaks to fix box and other layout issues with Chrome.
I wonder if "smugglers" includes people trying to sneak an extra few ounces of shampoo on to the plane.
When a pilot loses their gauges, the worry is that the aircraft will hit the ground, not something in the air.
I wish I could get CAPTCHAs right 90% of the time.
Some one with knowledge of the code discovered a bug in the code. That happens for closed source as well. Most people who use open source don't look at the code so it's essentially closed source.
I'm guessing you think the space transport should look like this. http://images3.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20111029002561/en.futurama/images/7/75/Lynn.png
Gas companies would happily back this against the power companies. Probably will not be cost effective for the average person for a very long time. I'm curious about whether this would follow the same buy back requirements offered to solar panel power generation.
The universities and other entities involved with funding the research are not shafted when these startups happen. Spinoff companies are great for universities. They get paid for their ownership on the patent(s).
I work at a research management company.
In the US, companies treat people more like interchangeable parts, not as people.
Which is to say that GoDaddy hosts a lot of *parked* domains on IIS.
...which were previously served using Apache. None of these stats will ever be able to convey the usefulness of site content based upon web server software.
Ran out of mod points, but your post adds some more insight in to the situation. Firing someone for doing what they normally do is a dick move, unless the camera guy was previously told not to do that.
Nothing wrong with a company turning over information after receiving a warrant. The issue with the NSA is that they collect everything they can without a warrant, but (fingers crossed) promise not to look at it without one.
Rolling your own server is great, but email's fundamental purpose to to send and receive. Unless you are certain both end points and all hops in between are secure, it's pointless.
Sounds like a good attempt to bait others in to leaking information. Having your job security and trust put in to doubt will encourage those inclined to pilfer information.
On the other hand, if a voice I recognize yells "ping!" in a crowded street, I will turn around and yell "ping!" back.
If I don't recognize the voice, not so much.
The correct reply is "pong!".
The judges would also accept "Fire torpedoes!"
Lets see, gotta have man in the middle AND requires the attacker and victim to be on the same network.
Piece of cake!
If some one manages to wire in to my network, they won't need to bother with this exploit. They'll have a lot more access.
Need to submit a FOIA request for the beer-braised short rib recipe.
Only a security risk if it has internet access. Without the mandatory internet access, it's easy to keep it off the internet.
Wrong. The prosecutor's job is to use the facts of the case to ensure guilty parties are prosecuted and innocent parties are not. Everyone charged with a crime is not actually guilty and this mentality is one of the worst corruptions of our legal system.
The contractors at my company are required to use a company provided laptop, which is rented out. Every month the contractors include that expense in the invoice. It's expected and standard practice.
Yet being an AC is okay when donating money, which the supreme court ruled equates to speech.
As the summary states, your argument applies equally to any web browser and google search, since those make it easy to find and download pirated material.
Obviously not.
How do you explain the shortage of teachers and their below median incomes?
If you have buy in from management, then you have a decent chance of improving things. It's hard to give feedback without knowing what workflow stuff you have in place, so here are a few generic things that might help.
- Get approval for time and resources necessary to set up an automated build environment for deployment packaging and also running tests on every commit. The unit tests should report test coverage to give you a metric to track progress over time.
- Enforce a policy where an issue cannot be truly resolved without code review and test coverage.
- Devote a percentage of team time toward code review and unit test retrofit.
- Document whatever policy decisions are made.