It does work on common, commodity hardware - but you're right: not very well. I suppose if you turned off all the eye-candy, it would perform reasonably. It just seemed really sluggish to me. This was on a P4 1.8Ghz processor with 768MB RAM and a GeForce 5700 video card (128MB RAM.) Not the top of the line, by any means - but not too slow.
Not even Dig Safe will guarantee safety. My friend's neighbor lost her house in a gas explosion. The contractor called dig safe and was given the go ahead to dig. Turns out, there was a gas line in the "safe" area.
Also drop me a line when we can store the world's music on a small memory cube and download it at the speed of light, virtually killing the RIAA overnight.
As well as killing the incomes of recording musicians.
Sure, but many executives assume that anything an outside "security" company says is scripture. I think he's looking for the best way to get the point across.
I just bought it today. There is a little bit of code, mainly snippets from headers and drivers.
From the little I've read so far (30 pages), it's an excellent book. I liked the previous book (on the 4.4BSD system - I've never read the 4.3BSD book), but this one is a lot more relevant to current operating systems, as the former is about 8 years old.
I'll be dreading the day this happens. Most people talk quite a bit more loudly when they are using a cell phone. I've also noticed that many people like to engage inane phone conversations when they have nothing else to do. I guess we can look forward to three hours of constant chatter. I can also imagine we'll be hearing that loud beep the nextel phones make.
Oh well. Maybe we'll have free WIFI on planes at some point soon, too.
1. password must be at least 64 characters long, with no dictionary words, and at least 8 special characters 2. Passwords expire in 24 hours 3. Account is locked out after two mistakes 4. A given character may be used only once in a particular password (No repeated characters) 5. Account locks out on second attempt
I'd love to see someone implement this policy at some corporation - just so long as I'm not the administrator there.
Yes - they aliased killall with "reinvent." I remember my first solaris experience - coming from FreeBSD and Linux. I tried killall inetd on a QC Oracle database machine. Imagine my joy as every process was killed off, till I lost my terminal.
without representation? I know the merchants always pass it onto the customer, but still.
If states start doing this for internet sales, they'll do it for mail order/catalog sales.
People get too concerned about these things. It's necessary for government agencies to promote better living. We're already seeing improvements - why, last week the government raised the chocolate ration to 80 grams from 70 grams...
I seriously doubt it. While Apple has contributed a lot of code, more code contributions are going the other direction.
It does work on common, commodity hardware - but you're right: not very well. I suppose if you turned off all the eye-candy, it would perform reasonably. It just seemed really sluggish to me. This was on a P4 1.8Ghz processor with 768MB RAM and a GeForce 5700 video card (128MB RAM.) Not the top of the line, by any means - but not too slow.
That's an expensive one to debug!
If this really were about the Oboe, the service would:
1. Never quite work correctly (out of tune)
2. Would have a very small internet pipe (just like the oboe)
3. It would be down for maintenance 4 hours a day (making reeds)
To make matters worse, the music service would send out email each day complaining about how much maintenance they have to do.
Not even Dig Safe will guarantee safety. My friend's neighbor lost her house in a gas explosion. The contractor called dig safe and was given the go ahead to dig. Turns out, there was a gas line in the "safe" area.
I think the phrase is, "far balanced to the right"
Also drop me a line when we can store the world's music on a small memory cube and download it at the speed of light, virtually killing the RIAA overnight.
As well as killing the incomes of recording musicians.
We're moving this weekend, and this will certainly help on moving the washer, dryer, fridge, and couch.
Sure, but many executives assume that anything an outside "security" company says is scripture. I think he's looking for the best way to get the point across.
At least you don't play viola... I hope it clears up for you. My wife's a violinist, and fortunately, she's never had any hand problems.
I used to play violin. It's got to be one of the most awkward positions to hold something in.
I just bought it today. There is a little bit of code, mainly snippets from headers and drivers.
From the little I've read so far (30 pages), it's an excellent book. I liked the previous book (on the 4.4BSD system - I've never read the 4.3BSD book), but this one is a lot more relevant to current operating systems, as the former is about 8 years old.
I'll be dreading the day this happens. Most people talk quite a bit more loudly when they are using a cell phone. I've also noticed that many people like to engage inane phone conversations when they have nothing else to do. I guess we can look forward to three hours of constant chatter. I can also imagine we'll be hearing that loud beep the nextel phones make.
Oh well. Maybe we'll have free WIFI on planes at some point soon, too.
Well, if you want to go that route, what about UltraSparc with solaris, Tru64 with alpha, etc?
Don't forget FreeBSD, OpenBSD, and NetBSD. They all have 64bit versions of their OS, and they are all free.
I'm working on a Java plugin, a Flash plugin, and a google bar - as well as a popup blocker and an anti-spyware plugin.
ASCII codes? We used to DREAM of ASCII codes. 456 of us, living at a corp, using only 128 characters... etc.
1. password must be at least 64 characters long, with no dictionary words, and at least 8 special characters
2. Passwords expire in 24 hours
3. Account is locked out after two mistakes
4. A given character may be used only once in a particular password (No repeated characters)
5. Account locks out on second attempt
I'd love to see someone implement this policy at some corporation - just so long as I'm not the administrator there.
Yes - they aliased killall with "reinvent." I remember my first solaris experience - coming from FreeBSD and Linux. I tried killall inetd on a QC Oracle database machine. Imagine my joy as every process was killed off, till I lost my terminal.
After all, if they can expect people to license Linux from them, they should be providing support.
without representation? I know the merchants always pass it onto the customer, but still.
If states start doing this for internet sales, they'll do it for mail order/catalog sales.
where the huskies go...
but I can't find any unpatented ideas.
I mean, I never get junk mail at home in my mailbox - I'm sure I would if the US post delivered for free.
Are they shutting down hotmail in a couple of years, or what?
People get too concerned about these things. It's necessary for government agencies to promote better living. We're already seeing improvements - why, last week the government raised the chocolate ration to 80 grams from 70 grams...