I first read scrum as scum. And I immediately started reflecting on all the poor PHP and Perl I've written! (I'll leave it as an exercise for the reader to make unflattering assumptions about my coding ability or about the languages themselves.) For me, it's time to follow through on last year's New Year Resolution of writing more C.
Remember, bugzilla doesn't take referrals from slashdot.
If you're using the "Tabbrowser Extensions" for Firebird, then you can set the "Block Referrer" option for the tab, and bugzilla's referrer restriction won't matter:) Sorry Moz team... hoist by thy own petard!
SpamAssassin works the way you tell it to work. If you feed it all your mail and don't bother to pre-filter or whitelist known good mail, it's your fault if SA flags things such as newsletters as SPAM.
I use procmail with SpamAssassin in this manner:
add procmail filters to put messages from family members and close friends into my INBOX
add procmail filters to sort out messages from mail lists and newsletters
adjust individual scores for SpamAssassin rules if necessary (usually I adjust them so a matched rule's score is higher than the default score)
whitelist addresses from family members and close friends in SA's user preferences (a redundant mesaure just for the heck of it)
let any mail that isn't sorted by my procmail filters be checked by SpamAssin
messages flagged as spam by SA are put aside into a spam folder
messages not flagged as spam by SA make it to my INBOX
It only takes a little bit of thought and minimal configuration to keep your mail from incorrectly being flagged as SPAM. For me, using this method has led to zero (0) false positives on messages from known sources, for two years. Every once in a while a SPAM message sneaks into my INBOX (a couple a year), but then I submit it to a SPAM database used in SA's checks (like Razor), or adjust any particularly annoying rules' scores, and it doesn't make a repeat appearance for me.
If your find that any particular newsletter is being treated as SPAM by your mail filters, there's probably a very simple way for you to make sure it isn't filtered out. Use the tools you have wisely, and you won't be disappointed.
"
If we die, we want people to accept it. We're in a risky business and we hope if anything happens to us it will not delay the program. The conquest of space is worth the risk of life."
There will be considerably more advertising effort surrounding and throughout the SuperBowl than there will be football. TV ads are just the tip of the iceberg. Of course there will the expensive, eye-catching, watercooler-discussion commercials. There will probably be superimposed ads in strategic shots of the stadium. Everything is "brought to you by" some sponsor, or has the sponsor's name prefixed (The My Nasty Beer Play of the Game).
But, at least from home I don't have to sit on advertisement, wear advertiesement, drink advertisement out of advertisement, walk on, over and through advertisement to use the potty, or be advertisement.
And specifically read section 9.10 about Master Keys. This stuff is pretty old and well circulated. The entire guide makes for a great read if you're bored. If you're interested in mind teasers, puzzles, and such, you'll appreciate what the guide talks about, even if you never attempt to pick a lock.
Driving down costs at the admins' expense ... grrr
on
Linux Is Cheaper
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· Score: 1
Quoth ZDNet:
The standard Windows argument is that a larger pool of Microsoft-certified administrators exists, so a Windows admin should cost less than a Linux admin.
If I were a Windows admin, I'd be a bit worried about that. This says that Microsoft's certification programs are all about driving down customers' costs of Microsoft's OSes, Databases, etc. at the expense of the very people who will be tasked with supporting such software in the wild. Create a bunch of droid admins, and they will be inexpensive. To the working man who has earned Microsoft certification, and especially those w/o certification, that means (s)he should expect to be paid less than similarly-experienced counterparts administrating similar software on platforms from Microsoft's competition.
It's a lesson learned the hard way. Give four weeks of notice! Geez man, you forfeited two weeks of pay.
I first read scrum as scum. And I immediately started reflecting on all the poor PHP and Perl I've written! (I'll leave it as an exercise for the reader to make unflattering assumptions about my coding ability or about the languages themselves.) For me, it's time to follow through on last year's New Year Resolution of writing more C.
That's nothing compared to this LAN Party!
I use procmail with SpamAssassin in this manner:
It only takes a little bit of thought and minimal configuration to keep your mail from incorrectly being flagged as SPAM. For me, using this method has led to zero (0) false positives on messages from known sources, for two years. Every once in a while a SPAM message sneaks into my INBOX (a couple a year), but then I submit it to a SPAM database used in SA's checks (like Razor), or adjust any particularly annoying rules' scores, and it doesn't make a repeat appearance for me.
If your find that any particular newsletter is being treated as SPAM by your mail filters, there's probably a very simple way for you to make sure it isn't filtered out. Use the tools you have wisely, and you won't be disappointed.
There will be considerably more advertising effort surrounding and throughout the SuperBowl than there will be football. TV ads are just the tip of the iceberg. Of course there will the expensive, eye-catching, watercooler-discussion commercials. There will probably be superimposed ads in strategic shots of the stadium. Everything is "brought to you by" some sponsor, or has the sponsor's name prefixed (The My Nasty Beer Play of the Game).
But, at least from home I don't have to sit on advertisement, wear advertiesement, drink advertisement out of advertisement, walk on, over and through advertisement to use the potty, or be advertisement.
And specifically read section 9.10 about Master Keys. This stuff is pretty old and well circulated. The entire guide makes for a great read if you're bored. If you're interested in mind teasers, puzzles, and such, you'll appreciate what the guide talks about, even if you never attempt to pick a lock.