I can't recall when, but I seemed to remember reading about an idea of converting glucose into electricity. Perhaps a next generation of pace makers will use that for a source of power.
Does it also include a pop-out magnifying glass? With all the latest phones be released with such as a small screen to resolution ratio, there comes a point where it's just too painful to read the text unless sitting absolutely still. Will someone please think of the eyes for once? They do have a limitations.
If you re-read what I said, I've already covered that using DVI as an example. HDMI is pretty much DVI with the exception that it also passes audio too. My point being in an inverted manor would be this. Even if it was possible (which it's not), you could run a direct HDMI link from Zediva to your house and it might constitute as "Streaming". However, run that cable 100 miles between two homes you own, and it would not.
Simple put, I'm making the point about location and ownership that defines whether or not the digital content is constituted as "Streamed".
One could argue that it's streaming if you're transferring data over the wire from a location outside your legal ownership. For example, over a DVI cable would be ok because both the source and destination are usually found in one room. They're found in separate rooms for high-end setups however. Even between two homes that you own might be acceptable (two houses you own on one plot of land). But... the MPAA could argue that if the source is from another building and company rendering services not under your direct ownership, the data is being "Streamed".
Steamed being defined as receiving sourced material from a non-tangable source not in your direct and immediate possession.
Up until the past five years, the quality of Ford has always sucked. From the chassis, engine, to interior. The quality has been lackluster. But for the most part, Ford has done a 180. Their Focus and Edge series are really nice with good engines. Now that they're teaming up with Google and other technologies firms that already have the experience, I'm very optimistic about that company. Especially after they beat out GM in sales without much government assistance.
Someone lit a fire under their ass. It's about time! My next car might be Ford. Never in my life have I thought to say that.
Sounds like one guy I used to know. He insisted on having Domain Admin rights for his AD account. I informed him that I could create a separate account to be used for utilitarian reasons and that it should not be used casually. He insisted his personal AD account have these rights.
He already had local Admin access and could RDP into a Domain Controller with a secondary AD account. But no, he wanted his main AD account to have Domain Admin access just so he could run the local Administrative tools from his workstation. Never mind that I could also grant restricted AD access (reset passwords) with just his current account. He still insisted on what he wanted and proceeded to tell he how to do it, and not deviate from that path. I ended leaving the organization shortly there after.
If and when his workstation gets a virus, it could tunnel up and wipeout his AD forest. I hope to God it doesn't, but that man is dancing on razor blades.
they had conficker on 1500 servers and 20000 workstations.
This. They're fucking worthless. The entire IT staff responsible (and possibly both the CIO and CFO for not providing proper funding) for maintaining security should be FIRED as of yesterday! Look, it's real simple to keep a malware free network. I do this every day as a sysadmin and consultant. Obviously that group needed to be spoon fed. Let's start shall we?
1. Provide both education and a scheduled employee orientation on do's and don'ts of proper computing usage. Also remain on the lookout for signs of social engineering and scams attempting to get the user to install malware (fake AVs and bogus FedEx e-mails come to mind) .
2. Ensure all domain users have only local non-administrative access to the computers. If a local scanner or printer requires admin access, it's a shit product and should be returned ASAP. Do not compromise on this front.
3. Implement a firewall with built-in gateway anti-virus and content filtering. SonicWALL is a good choice, but they're other solutions available too.
4. Implement workstation and server anti-virus agents to all machines.
5. Manage and monitor workstations security updates. WSUS is great for this. If you're stuck in development that requires IE6, virtualize or re-write the application for that fucker. But above all, do **NOT** let an application hold you back from rolling out security updates. If hiring a project manager and migrating away from IE6 costs millions of dollars, so be it, to bad. Take your beatings and lick the financial wounds later. It's for their own good anyways.
And pardon the foul language, but Trump needs to walk in that bank and start yelling "YOU'RE FIRED!!!" to get the message across.
My background is Windows simply because of the need for Active Directory. While the concept sounds dirty, is there a way to manage a Linux file server's permission delegation through an AD domain? I'd imagine I would have to join it to the domain masking it as a Windows box. I'd like to keep security administration centralized as much as possible.
That's a bit harsh, don't you think? That may be true for those savages in the middle east that stone people to death, but hardly that's the case in western culture. Do you know why executions used to be made public in America? Do you know why there's still even a limited audience to view modern executions? One word. Closure. It's a visual confirmation that marks the end of their time, and the beginning of a new chapter in the victim's lives (assuming their still alive).
You and me both. Who knows. Maybe what we call corruption is just another social abstract layer. I say that because the Monkey Sphere outlines our individual social limitations very well.
As a network admin, trying to get every OS to work together in one heterogeneous environment is a huge PITA with regards to both security and functionality. I say that because all devices end up meeting ends at the lowest common denominator to maintain cross-compatibility. A few example include, but not limited to...
1. MS Windows domain with file server. 2. Linux webserver and file server. 3. Plethora of droids needing Exchange e-mail access. 4. Blackberry's needing to tie back to Exchange for e-mail access. 5. Macbooks needing access to MS file server and Exchange. Problems occur depending on Mac OS and MS Office version.
Immediate issues are resolved by falling back to SMB by weakening security on MS file servers. But truth be told, a homogenous network would be far and away more secure and easier to manage. I would settle for a pure Linux, Microsoft, or Apple network. But getting all three platforms to work together can be an administrative nightmare. Regardless, heterogeneous are starting to become more popular by force. It's the future. Unfortunately, standardizations of the "Standards" are not enforced within the industry nor do they work well in place in the real world.
TWC and Comcast are just conduit providers connecting their subscribers to the rest of the world. I'm sure they don't like having to rat out their own customers. But the law is the law, and subpoena's can't be ignored.
3rd party advertisement sites are getting hacked through SQL injection exploits. It turns them into FakeAV servers hosting out that drive-by malware to any website that's a member of these advertisement agencies.
Whatever it is, we need it ASAP! Countries like China and India are hungry for oil. And they have every right to compete for it in the market place too. But we better stop dicking around and look to upgrade our electrical grid as well. It's currently not within spec to handle the kind of energy oil generates. That is to say, if we're going electric for future transportation, we're going need additional lines to handle the load.
Alright Sony. Time for you to stop what you're doing and execute plan B. Nuke n' pave your servers and rebuild from the ground up. Then, import user data and purchases from backups. Screw trying to reverse engineer the security damage. You can do that on your own time and a separate test network. Just get those customers up an running ASAP!
I know I'm stating the obvious for many readers. But that's because post WW2, oil was cheap, and driving equated to the ultimate form of personal freedom. So much freedom in fact that the suburbs were created in that time period too. Of course, cheap energy wont last forever. I can't predict what will happen in the future with regards to transportation, but I can predict that the current status quo will not last.
The problem wasn't our desire for freedom and independence with how we lived our lives. The problem was the instruments of energy we chose to achieve that without a clear vision or plan in mind to maintain it.
Evolutionary speaking, having ADD would be a fantastic asset to have. It would allow to be more in-tuned with your environment for survival. The acute ability to become the hunter rather than the hunted. Now, having ADD in the office is a disability. It sucks:(
In production, it also doesn't plain work. Even in a small business comprised of about 8 employees and three WiFi APs, packet loss will incur in an area with crowded airspace. Try a shared office complex or anything above the 3rd floor of a tall building for example. File based databases aslo hate it (use SQL bla bla bla, ya I know. Tell it to the devs). After about a month of bitching each day, and constant tweaking and tuning WiFi settings, analyzing with WiSpy, etc, we finally resolved the issue. We hired a contractor to run CAT5e cable. Problem solved, and haven't heard so much as a peep within the last several months thereafter.
Well, if and when we have automated AI at that level, it would be a true form of Communism in the way Carl Marx would approve of. It would, in the history of mankind be the first successful implementation of it once the human element is removed from the vacuum of power. Assuming that's even possible. But a couple of questions still nag me.
1. How will the AI judge supply and demand when it's in complete control of resource allocation? How will it enough what's too little and too much?
2. With such a system in place, won't that eliminate incentive based human goals that leads to innovation? Are we sure that we want to hand over that role/power to a machine? That's an awful amount of trust to place in what amounts to a demigod. In effect, we are trusting it to decide our future and shape of civilization. Could be a good thing, could be bad.
I can't recall when, but I seemed to remember reading about an idea of converting glucose into electricity. Perhaps a next generation of pace makers will use that for a source of power.
Does it also include a pop-out magnifying glass? With all the latest phones be released with such as a small screen to resolution ratio, there comes a point where it's just too painful to read the text unless sitting absolutely still. Will someone please think of the eyes for once? They do have a limitations.
What fig leaf? http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2407/2275553503_b82d6e4a22_m.jpg
Paying for porn??! If you're doing that, you don't have just a simple curiosity and shallow desire, you have an addiction.
Pay for porn..., It's given away for free on the Internet. No need to pay for shit.
If you re-read what I said, I've already covered that using DVI as an example. HDMI is pretty much DVI with the exception that it also passes audio too. My point being in an inverted manor would be this. Even if it was possible (which it's not), you could run a direct HDMI link from Zediva to your house and it might constitute as "Streaming". However, run that cable 100 miles between two homes you own, and it would not.
Simple put, I'm making the point about location and ownership that defines whether or not the digital content is constituted as "Streamed".
I'm not taking the MPAA side here. However...
One could argue that it's streaming if you're transferring data over the wire from a location outside your legal ownership. For example, over a DVI cable would be ok because both the source and destination are usually found in one room. They're found in separate rooms for high-end setups however. Even between two homes that you own might be acceptable (two houses you own on one plot of land). But... the MPAA could argue that if the source is from another building and company rendering services not under your direct ownership, the data is being "Streamed".
Steamed being defined as receiving sourced material from a non-tangable source not in your direct and immediate possession.
Up until the past five years, the quality of Ford has always sucked. From the chassis, engine, to interior. The quality has been lackluster. But for the most part, Ford has done a 180. Their Focus and Edge series are really nice with good engines. Now that they're teaming up with Google and other technologies firms that already have the experience, I'm very optimistic about that company. Especially after they beat out GM in sales without much government assistance.
Someone lit a fire under their ass. It's about time! My next car might be Ford. Never in my life have I thought to say that.
Sounds like one guy I used to know. He insisted on having Domain Admin rights for his AD account. I informed him that I could create a separate account to be used for utilitarian reasons and that it should not be used casually. He insisted his personal AD account have these rights.
He already had local Admin access and could RDP into a Domain Controller with a secondary AD account. But no, he wanted his main AD account to have Domain Admin access just so he could run the local Administrative tools from his workstation. Never mind that I could also grant restricted AD access (reset passwords) with just his current account. He still insisted on what he wanted and proceeded to tell he how to do it, and not deviate from that path. I ended leaving the organization shortly there after.
If and when his workstation gets a virus, it could tunnel up and wipeout his AD forest. I hope to God it doesn't, but that man is dancing on razor blades.
This. They're fucking worthless. The entire IT staff responsible (and possibly both the CIO and CFO for not providing proper funding) for maintaining security should be FIRED as of yesterday! Look, it's real simple to keep a malware free network. I do this every day as a sysadmin and consultant. Obviously that group needed to be spoon fed. Let's start shall we?
1. Provide both education and a scheduled employee orientation on do's and don'ts of proper computing usage. Also remain on the lookout for signs of social engineering and scams attempting to get the user to install malware (fake AVs and bogus FedEx e-mails come to mind) .
2. Ensure all domain users have only local non-administrative access to the computers. If a local scanner or printer requires admin access, it's a shit product and should be returned ASAP. Do not compromise on this front.
3. Implement a firewall with built-in gateway anti-virus and content filtering. SonicWALL is a good choice, but they're other solutions available too.
4. Implement workstation and server anti-virus agents to all machines.
5. Manage and monitor workstations security updates. WSUS is great for this. If you're stuck in development that requires IE6, virtualize or re-write the application for that fucker. But above all, do **NOT** let an application hold you back from rolling out security updates. If hiring a project manager and migrating away from IE6 costs millions of dollars, so be it, to bad. Take your beatings and lick the financial wounds later. It's for their own good anyways.
And pardon the foul language, but Trump needs to walk in that bank and start yelling "YOU'RE FIRED!!!" to get the message across.
Thanks for the suggestions.
My background is Windows simply because of the need for Active Directory. While the concept sounds dirty, is there a way to manage a Linux file server's permission delegation through an AD domain? I'd imagine I would have to join it to the domain masking it as a Windows box. I'd like to keep security administration centralized as much as possible.
That's a bit harsh, don't you think? That may be true for those savages in the middle east that stone people to death, but hardly that's the case in western culture. Do you know why executions used to be made public in America? Do you know why there's still even a limited audience to view modern executions? One word. Closure. It's a visual confirmation that marks the end of their time, and the beginning of a new chapter in the victim's lives (assuming their still alive).
You and me both. Who knows. Maybe what we call corruption is just another social abstract layer. I say that because the Monkey Sphere outlines our individual social limitations very well.
Those were called sentinels.
As a network admin, trying to get every OS to work together in one heterogeneous environment is a huge PITA with regards to both security and functionality. I say that because all devices end up meeting ends at the lowest common denominator to maintain cross-compatibility. A few example include, but not limited to...
1. MS Windows domain with file server.
2. Linux webserver and file server.
3. Plethora of droids needing Exchange e-mail access.
4. Blackberry's needing to tie back to Exchange for e-mail access.
5. Macbooks needing access to MS file server and Exchange. Problems occur depending on Mac OS and MS Office version.
Immediate issues are resolved by falling back to SMB by weakening security on MS file servers. But truth be told, a homogenous network would be far and away more secure and easier to manage. I would settle for a pure Linux, Microsoft, or Apple network. But getting all three platforms to work together can be an administrative nightmare. Regardless, heterogeneous are starting to become more popular by force. It's the future. Unfortunately, standardizations of the "Standards" are not enforced within the industry nor do they work well in place in the real world.
TWC and Comcast are just conduit providers connecting their subscribers to the rest of the world. I'm sure they don't like having to rat out their own customers. But the law is the law, and subpoena's can't be ignored.
3rd party advertisement sites are getting hacked through SQL injection exploits. It turns them into FakeAV servers hosting out that drive-by malware to any website that's a member of these advertisement agencies.
Whatever it is, we need it ASAP! Countries like China and India are hungry for oil. And they have every right to compete for it in the market place too. But we better stop dicking around and look to upgrade our electrical grid as well. It's currently not within spec to handle the kind of energy oil generates. That is to say, if we're going electric for future transportation, we're going need additional lines to handle the load.
Alright Sony. Time for you to stop what you're doing and execute plan B. Nuke n' pave your servers and rebuild from the ground up. Then, import user data and purchases from backups. Screw trying to reverse engineer the security damage. You can do that on your own time and a separate test network. Just get those customers up an running ASAP!
I know I'm stating the obvious for many readers. But that's because post WW2, oil was cheap, and driving equated to the ultimate form of personal freedom. So much freedom in fact that the suburbs were created in that time period too. Of course, cheap energy wont last forever. I can't predict what will happen in the future with regards to transportation, but I can predict that the current status quo will not last.
The problem wasn't our desire for freedom and independence with how we lived our lives. The problem was the instruments of energy we chose to achieve that without a clear vision or plan in mind to maintain it.
Two shots and a splash of water. Yup, drinking is the cure-all for everything.
Evolutionary speaking, having ADD would be a fantastic asset to have. It would allow to be more in-tuned with your environment for survival. The acute ability to become the hunter rather than the hunted. Now, having ADD in the office is a disability. It sucks :(
In production, it also doesn't plain work. Even in a small business comprised of about 8 employees and three WiFi APs, packet loss will incur in an area with crowded airspace. Try a shared office complex or anything above the 3rd floor of a tall building for example. File based databases aslo hate it (use SQL bla bla bla, ya I know. Tell it to the devs). After about a month of bitching each day, and constant tweaking and tuning WiFi settings, analyzing with WiSpy, etc, we finally resolved the issue. We hired a contractor to run CAT5e cable. Problem solved, and haven't heard so much as a peep within the last several months thereafter.
FUCK WIRELESS!!!
Well, if and when we have automated AI at that level, it would be a true form of Communism in the way Carl Marx would approve of. It would, in the history of mankind be the first successful implementation of it once the human element is removed from the vacuum of power. Assuming that's even possible. But a couple of questions still nag me.
1. How will the AI judge supply and demand when it's in complete control of resource allocation? How will it enough what's too little and too much?
2. With such a system in place, won't that eliminate incentive based human goals that leads to innovation? Are we sure that we want to hand over that role/power to a machine? That's an awful amount of trust to place in what amounts to a demigod. In effect, we are trusting it to decide our future and shape of civilization. Could be a good thing, could be bad.
The combo you want is SonicWALLs with HP ProCurve switches.
I would say to recharge the automatic flusher, but the flow of in-comming water already does that.