Yeah... I used to write PHP more often ~5+ years ago. The only time I miss the easiness of is in when doing the simplest things. I still use PHP for such things once in a while. But In every other way I find Python to be better and that verbosity you're talking about winds up insignificant.
I still don't know what you're talking about. It still doesn't have anything to do with implementing the FastCGI. protocol in every script that you write. start_response() is WSGI which can be run completely without FastCGI. If you don't want to say "start_response('200 OK', [('Content-Type', 'text/plain')])" all the time then don't write your web app in WSGI. Use some higher level frame work like django or something.
I don't quite understand why so many USians are so wound up about pat-downs. They are standard practice around the world in any environment where certain items must be excluded from a physical space.
No they aren't. All I ever had to do to get in to a court building or police station was go through a metal detector.
I know I went off on like 6 tangents here, but you seemed curious about the experience itself
Yeah, thanks for the info.
And for God's sake don't start out with more than 1-2 hits or 2-4 friends.
Is that only if you want to do the whole introspection thing and try to get something out of it? You mentioned at first you only used it as a party drug and nothing extraordinary happened the first time. I'm guessing the only place I'd be likely to find it at first would be at a music fest or concert or something like that. Not as controlled of an environment as you're recommending.
It does nothing (yes, nothing) to enhance security
It may enhance your luck. Sometimes exploits are found and there's some time between the discovery of the vulnerability and you fixing your system. In that time it could be that the only attack that will be attempted on your system will be an untargeted one by someone who's just quickly sweeping the whole internet on the standard port for as many machines to root as quickly as possible.
Serious question to all: Do people still use the default port for SSH anymore? I never have, as once we went from telnet to ssh (over a decade ago...) we just always used a non-standard port. Makes my logs a lot easier to read.
Yes, I run it on the default port, as does everyone else I personally know. How does running it on a non-standard port make your logs easier to read?
An IP address isn't necessarily invalid because it ends in.255. If the web interface is simply preventing you from entering any address ending in 255 then that's another broken thing on that router.
Extremely, as soon as your boss/customer/instructor asks you to make some silly change to the document formatting that LaTeX and/or the template wasn't designed to make easy. I gave LaTeX a try and it didn't take long for it to become incredibly hard to use in those cases.
You must not have used Amazon in a while. Over the past year they started requiring the use of their downloader for more and more stuff. I stopped using amazon and started using rhapsody instead.
Don't you have sshd enabled on your mac with an appropriate 50 character password?
Why on earth would anyone have a 50 character password for SSH when SSH supports public key authentication? Don't you have sshd enabled with an appropriate public key?
Why on earth does plugging a flash drive into a USB port necessarily need to cause a security compromise? Just don't execute anything from the drive. It really isn't that hard.
In production for 17 years or not, there is no brand-new car available today that costs $3000. I'd certainly buy a 17 year old design if it were still made new today for $3000.
Yeah... I used to write PHP more often ~5+ years ago. The only time I miss the easiness of is in when doing the simplest things. I still use PHP for such things once in a while. But In every other way I find Python to be better and that verbosity you're talking about winds up insignificant.
I still don't know what you're talking about. It still doesn't have anything to do with implementing the FastCGI. protocol in every script that you write. start_response() is WSGI which can be run completely without FastCGI. If you don't want to say "start_response('200 OK', [('Content-Type', 'text/plain')])" all the time then don't write your web app in WSGI. Use some higher level frame work like django or something.
That has nothing to do with fastcgi
Huh?
http://trac.saddi.com/flup/wiki/FlupServers
No they aren't. All I ever had to do to get in to a court building or police station was go through a metal detector.
Yeah, thanks for the info.
Is that only if you want to do the whole introspection thing and try to get something out of it? You mentioned at first you only used it as a party drug and nothing extraordinary happened the first time. I'm guessing the only place I'd be likely to find it at first would be at a music fest or concert or something like that. Not as controlled of an environment as you're recommending.
Were those positive effects (getting over an ex-girlfriend, partying less) only on the first trip or different ones?
If they can email you the plain text then they are not hashed.
People's names are not usually "acted upon" like command lines are. As far as the program is concerned, they're just arbitrary character strings.
It may enhance your luck. Sometimes exploits are found and there's some time between the discovery of the vulnerability and you fixing your system. In that time it could be that the only attack that will be attempted on your system will be an untargeted one by someone who's just quickly sweeping the whole internet on the standard port for as many machines to root as quickly as possible.
Yes, I run it on the default port, as does everyone else I personally know. How does running it on a non-standard port make your logs easier to read?
I'm thinking about getting one of those, but don't you find the lenses to be on the big side?
An IP address isn't necessarily invalid because it ends in .255. If the web interface is simply preventing you from entering any address ending in 255 then that's another broken thing on that router.
Beat up on them for no good reason? They're a spyware manufacturer. Sounds like a perfectly valid reason to me.
No, we don't.
As "they" love to point out, the thousand people you give those copies to are now less inclined to pay $30 for a copy.
Extremely, as soon as your boss/customer/instructor asks you to make some silly change to the document formatting that LaTeX and/or the template wasn't designed to make easy. I gave LaTeX a try and it didn't take long for it to become incredibly hard to use in those cases.
You must not have used Amazon in a while. Over the past year they started requiring the use of their downloader for more and more stuff. I stopped using amazon and started using rhapsody instead.
No. Preferably without that useless special downloader program you have to use to actually get the MP3 files you bought from amazon.
Why on earth would anyone have a 50 character password for SSH when SSH supports public key authentication? Don't you have sshd enabled with an appropriate public key?
They were being sent in clear text all along anyway. The login isn't done over SSL.
Sounds like you know what the root of the problem is. The solution isn't to physically destroy part of the computer.
Why on earth does plugging a flash drive into a USB port necessarily need to cause a security compromise? Just don't execute anything from the drive. It really isn't that hard.
In production for 17 years or not, there is no brand-new car available today that costs $3000. I'd certainly buy a 17 year old design if it were still made new today for $3000.
I meant better security-wise. Yeah, I agree, the existing remote console things are all kind of flakey.