ISPs are licking their chops for this. They want to roll out NAT for all default consumer grade ISP connections. It solves problems with scarcity, they profit from scarcity (want public IP? You pay extra for it), and it will jack with routing of P2P data and thus cut down on the leeches. It's a WIN-WIN-WIN for the Telco and cable companies.
If you guys think IP6 will be adopted, just wait till they find huge money in artificial scarcity of IP4 blocks. There will be no where to run and escape it! Unless you pay that premium...
See, that's why I could never be a doctor. I don't have the heart to tell someone their doomed fate. I have no problem cussing a file server to keel over and die, but never human being on a path to death.
I guess that's why you guys get paid the big bucks. You couldn't pay me enough to be a part of that reality.;)
Life is about living. The #1 thing that all living things fear is death. It's one thing to talk about letting go (unless you're in that much pain or suicidal) . But when faced to face death head on, it's only natural that we claw and cling on to every last moment of life until we are physical unable to.
If someone told me that I could live an extra few hours by having this procedure, I can't say I wouldn't take the opportunity. Imagine how he must feel. He's only 15.
Granting student access to the internet is risky period. We've been granted the job of being absolute Nazi's with regards to internet access. Whitelisting is the preferred method, but is a major PITA to manage. If content filtering doesn't work out, or not as effective as they'd like, we may have to go that route as a last resort.
Oh, and Bittorrent is risky from a legal standpoint. When I worked at Time Warner, we would get stack of papers (sopenas) demanding which customer where provisioned what IP addresses at the following times by the MPAA and RIAA. By law, TWC was forced to rat-out their own customers.
The school doesn't want to get sued because some student in the classroom left Bearshare, Limewire, or some shit turned on.
Gosh, I hope they block HTTP too or there's gonna be hell to pay.
We block certain websites depending on who you're logged in as on the network. It's called SSO (Single Sign On) and is used in conjunction with Content Filtering.
How it works is rather neat. You setup different filtering groups that contain either blocked or allowed domains (and their IPs). You then place the users AD login account into a security group and assign that group to a filter policy. When an HTTP request is made from a computer, the SonicWall will check to see who's logged into that PC and cross reference back to a server running an SSO agent via LDAP. Once identified, it will process the request depending on what content rights they have access to. If for any reason your login account can't be identified, you're placed in the default "guest" access list. Guest access is the most restricted.
Basically, all students are blocked from Myspace, Facebook, and Youtube access among other websites that belong to certain categories. Teachers do have access to these sites however. Youtube access is helpful for educational reasons when presenting a lesson with a projector.
For many companies and schools that we manage, we have to block all BT traffic at the firewall level. It's simple to do in a SonicWall. If we don't, their Internet connection will get saturated to hell leaving high latency and dropped connections. People seem to forget about what BT does to a network. Even if you have an OC3 connection, the rest of the world will load-balance traffic over to it. It's the damned upload (serving) that kills it.
So yes, BT gets blocked. If we could just block BT upload traffic, we would prefer that method the best at the corporate level. For schools, it's always blocked for liability reasons. Period.
Well actually, yes. That would be correct. While we understand magnetism as a force and how it can be generated, we still don't know WHY or HOW it even existed since the creation of the Universe. Pretty much like gravity and the strong force too.
So while we are very good at understanding our Universe compared to 100 years ago, fundamentally the laws are still "magic or some shit".
Socialists (Marxism) and Fascists are two sides of the same coin. They're both of the Statist mindset which is nothing more than tyranny. So yes, I understand why people equate the two as interchangeable. Their philosophical ideologies lead to the loss of liberty and human suffering.
If I'm reading the parent post correctly, he's basically saying that rather than go out for another moon landing today, we can instead sit back and reminisce over glory days of the past. It's nothing to do with the video itself, but rather the attitude behind showing the video to the public.
Well screw that. Lets make history by looking toward the future rather then looking back which accomplishes little to nothing in the process.
Who here wouldn't love to see this technology implemented on your next cell phone? With binocular sensors, you can now take (and display) 3D photos =) 3D Google Earth and Maps would be kinda cool too.
Eh, I seriously doubt it was from dust storms. There was no residue left around from them. The kind you would see in Beijing. At least from what I could tell. I'm fairly certain that was pure smog in early July.
OMG, and I though Houston got hot and humid. That's my home town, and it has *nothing* on Shanghai when it comes to hot, humid, stagnate air (no wind). At night, you can feel the IR radiating heat through the windows at night. Curtains are not just for the daytime anymore.
My first time to visit Shanghai was back in 2004. My flight approached Pudong Airport (PVG) from the north (came from Chicago), I could see what looked like hundreds of spires sticking out of the clouds in the clear blue sky. It was so beautiful......until we landed that is. The sky quickly turned orange/brown as we descended through the clouds and landed. The moment I walked outside the airport, but lungs felt itchy. What little did I know about those "clouds". Nasty!
Oh, the N. Koreans are fucked. No question about it! And while I understand your frustration, let's at least put things into perspective.
That said however, if we don't remain ever-vigilant, our current path will lead to absolute tyranny. Not today, not tomorrow. But someday it will happen if we collectively keep our heads in the sand by not holding our elected officials accountable.
Sensors that detect for life signs are available...if your looking for Earth based life forms. Unless there's some universal signs with all life in the universe, how do you know what to look for when by its very definition, life is alien?
It's worth noting that the equipment used in mining relies on oil to run them. Unless you can build portable on-site nuclear reactors, the cost of ANYTHING mined will scale laterally with the price of oil.
Oil is the bottom of our economic food chain. Without cheap oil, civilization as we know it (both in material possession and culture) will cease to exist as we know it. Western nations are built and optimized to run off this great hydrocarbon. But the party is about to be over, and we better get used to a -forced- exit policy. Some say technology will replace oil. Other say we will have to change our way of living entirely. The truth is somewhere in between.
If China was smart, they would be building nuclear reactors like crazy. They're just now building a 1st world infrastructure. They might as well do this while there's still cheap oil left to build the reactors. America and Europe are already built up. We have a much longer way to go with regards to retrofitting our infrastructure as opposed to building one from the ground up like they are now.
Facebook? What's this Facebook you speak of. Most of us that are left employed are being worked to death and/or overloaded with projects. How the hell are you still employed and yet have free time on your hands?!
I say we drop the treaty and let Japan have a full military again. They should be footing the bill for this, not us. Besides, they can help keep the pressure on China too.
I think it has little to do with trickle-down (or trickle-up) and more to do with globalism. America is hemorrhaging wealth to other nations at a rate that's unsustainable. We've reached a point now that we can't even afford products and service now being rendered by those same nations we funded through development and manufacturing years ago. Economic harmonics are out of tune. It will correct itself, and in fact is happening as we speak. That's really what this recession is all about. A correction. A recalibration of what's really of value in the market place if you will.
Also, in theory, the government could spearhead projects to kick start a national economy. In reality, it rarely if ever happens. Too much power and corruption from our elected politicians is to blame. We need Vulcans, not poo-flinging monkeys in office.
This year, purchased a ticket at the Shanghai World Financial Center for a ride to the top. The top floor is that bridge area. Part of the floor has transparent (thick) tiles about two feet wide running lengthwise in the center.
I'll never forget when I first stepped on one. I scooted to the side ASAP! For a moment, I had visions of it cracking and me falling right through. After ten minutes or so, I sheepishly started walking on it like any normal tile. Reason being, I wanted to take some nice photos.
I don't mind Slashvertisements, and in fact enjoy them on occasion. Unfortunately, they're passed off as a genuine grass-roots posting to the casual non-slashdot member. AKA astroturfing.
If Slashdot would actually flag the story as a "Slashvertisement", I think we as a community would have far an away much MUCH more respect for the story and wouldn't think so much of it. That's the point really. Keep it honest and the intention transparent.
ISPs are licking their chops for this. They want to roll out NAT for all default consumer grade ISP connections. It solves problems with scarcity, they profit from scarcity (want public IP? You pay extra for it), and it will jack with routing of P2P data and thus cut down on the leeches. It's a WIN-WIN-WIN for the Telco and cable companies.
If you guys think IP6 will be adopted, just wait till they find huge money in artificial scarcity of IP4 blocks. There will be no where to run and escape it! Unless you pay that premium...
See, that's why I could never be a doctor. I don't have the heart to tell someone their doomed fate. I have no problem cussing a file server to keel over and die, but never human being on a path to death.
I guess that's why you guys get paid the big bucks. You couldn't pay me enough to be a part of that reality. ;)
What kind of radiation, and is it really that bad? Sorry, I'm not all that familiar with the Jovian system.
Life is about living. The #1 thing that all living things fear is death. It's one thing to talk about letting go (unless you're in that much pain or suicidal) . But when faced to face death head on, it's only natural that we claw and cling on to every last moment of life until we are physical unable to.
If someone told me that I could live an extra few hours by having this procedure, I can't say I wouldn't take the opportunity. Imagine how he must feel. He's only 15.
Granting student access to the internet is risky period. We've been granted the job of being absolute Nazi's with regards to internet access. Whitelisting is the preferred method, but is a major PITA to manage. If content filtering doesn't work out, or not as effective as they'd like, we may have to go that route as a last resort.
Oh, and Bittorrent is risky from a legal standpoint. When I worked at Time Warner, we would get stack of papers (sopenas) demanding which customer where provisioned what IP addresses at the following times by the MPAA and RIAA. By law, TWC was forced to rat-out their own customers.
The school doesn't want to get sued because some student in the classroom left Bearshare, Limewire, or some shit turned on.
Gosh, I hope they block HTTP too or there's gonna be hell to pay.
We block certain websites depending on who you're logged in as on the network. It's called SSO (Single Sign On) and is used in conjunction with Content Filtering.
How it works is rather neat. You setup different filtering groups that contain either blocked or allowed domains (and their IPs). You then place the users AD login account into a security group and assign that group to a filter policy. When an HTTP request is made from a computer, the SonicWall will check to see who's logged into that PC and cross reference back to a server running an SSO agent via LDAP. Once identified, it will process the request depending on what content rights they have access to. If for any reason your login account can't be identified, you're placed in the default "guest" access list. Guest access is the most restricted.
Basically, all students are blocked from Myspace, Facebook, and Youtube access among other websites that belong to certain categories. Teachers do have access to these sites however. Youtube access is helpful for educational reasons when presenting a lesson with a projector.
For many companies and schools that we manage, we have to block all BT traffic at the firewall level. It's simple to do in a SonicWall. If we don't, their Internet connection will get saturated to hell leaving high latency and dropped connections. People seem to forget about what BT does to a network. Even if you have an OC3 connection, the rest of the world will load-balance traffic over to it. It's the damned upload (serving) that kills it.
So yes, BT gets blocked. If we could just block BT upload traffic, we would prefer that method the best at the corporate level. For schools, it's always blocked for liability reasons. Period.
Well actually, yes. That would be correct. While we understand magnetism as a force and how it can be generated, we still don't know WHY or HOW it even existed since the creation of the Universe. Pretty much like gravity and the strong force too.
So while we are very good at understanding our Universe compared to 100 years ago, fundamentally the laws are still "magic or some shit".
Clearly, this is proof that humans have invented Time Machines in the form of SUVs. Eventually, that's going to change the climate in the past.
At that scale, you don't bury bodies. You burn them just like they did in 1348. This was done primarily for two reasons.
1. Not enough labor and resources to bury bodies.
2. It was more sanitary to not touch the bodies and foul the water table. Thus, bodies were burned.
Socialists (Marxism) and Fascists are two sides of the same coin. They're both of the Statist mindset which is nothing more than tyranny. So yes, I understand why people equate the two as interchangeable. Their philosophical ideologies lead to the loss of liberty and human suffering.
If I'm reading the parent post correctly, he's basically saying that rather than go out for another moon landing today, we can instead sit back and reminisce over glory days of the past. It's nothing to do with the video itself, but rather the attitude behind showing the video to the public.
Well screw that. Lets make history by looking toward the future rather then looking back which accomplishes little to nothing in the process.
Who here wouldn't love to see this technology implemented on your next cell phone? With binocular sensors, you can now take (and display) 3D photos =) 3D Google Earth and Maps would be kinda cool too.
Eh, I seriously doubt it was from dust storms. There was no residue left around from them. The kind you would see in Beijing. At least from what I could tell. I'm fairly certain that was pure smog in early July.
OMG, and I though Houston got hot and humid. That's my home town, and it has *nothing* on Shanghai when it comes to hot, humid, stagnate air (no wind). At night, you can feel the IR radiating heat through the windows at night. Curtains are not just for the daytime anymore.
My first time to visit Shanghai was back in 2004. My flight approached Pudong Airport (PVG) from the north (came from Chicago), I could see what looked like hundreds of spires sticking out of the clouds in the clear blue sky. It was so beautiful... ...until we landed that is. The sky quickly turned orange/brown as we descended through the clouds and landed. The moment I walked outside the airport, but lungs felt itchy. What little did I know about those "clouds". Nasty!
Oh, the N. Koreans are fucked. No question about it! And while I understand your frustration, let's at least put things into perspective.
That said however, if we don't remain ever-vigilant, our current path will lead to absolute tyranny. Not today, not tomorrow. But someday it will happen if we collectively keep our heads in the sand by not holding our elected officials accountable.
Sensors that detect for life signs are available...if your looking for Earth based life forms. Unless there's some universal signs with all life in the universe, how do you know what to look for when by its very definition, life is alien?
It's worth noting that the equipment used in mining relies on oil to run them. Unless you can build portable on-site nuclear reactors, the cost of ANYTHING mined will scale laterally with the price of oil.
Oil is the bottom of our economic food chain. Without cheap oil, civilization as we know it (both in material possession and culture) will cease to exist as we know it. Western nations are built and optimized to run off this great hydrocarbon. But the party is about to be over, and we better get used to a -forced- exit policy. Some say technology will replace oil. Other say we will have to change our way of living entirely. The truth is somewhere in between.
If China was smart, they would be building nuclear reactors like crazy. They're just now building a 1st world infrastructure. They might as well do this while there's still cheap oil left to build the reactors. America and Europe are already built up. We have a much longer way to go with regards to retrofitting our infrastructure as opposed to building one from the ground up like they are now.
Facebook? What's this Facebook you speak of. Most of us that are left employed are being worked to death and/or overloaded with projects. How the hell are you still employed and yet have free time on your hands?!
You must be self employed. Right?
I say we drop the treaty and let Japan have a full military again. They should be footing the bill for this, not us. Besides, they can help keep the pressure on China too.
I think it has little to do with trickle-down (or trickle-up) and more to do with globalism. America is hemorrhaging wealth to other nations at a rate that's unsustainable. We've reached a point now that we can't even afford products and service now being rendered by those same nations we funded through development and manufacturing years ago. Economic harmonics are out of tune. It will correct itself, and in fact is happening as we speak. That's really what this recession is all about. A correction. A recalibration of what's really of value in the market place if you will.
Also, in theory, the government could spearhead projects to kick start a national economy. In reality, it rarely if ever happens. Too much power and corruption from our elected politicians is to blame. We need Vulcans, not poo-flinging monkeys in office.
Sure, why not? Here in Texas, we've got em bigger than most cats. Nasty things. They smell like they're decomposing. And that's when they're alive!
Of course, it could be all the trash they rummage through. They seem to smell through the plastic bags (even the potpourri scented ones).
Just use rounds loaded with rock salt.
This year, purchased a ticket at the Shanghai World Financial Center for a ride to the top. The top floor is that bridge area. Part of the floor has transparent (thick) tiles about two feet wide running lengthwise in the center.
I'll never forget when I first stepped on one. I scooted to the side ASAP! For a moment, I had visions of it cracking and me falling right through. After ten minutes or so, I sheepishly started walking on it like any normal tile. Reason being, I wanted to take some nice photos.
I don't mind Slashvertisements, and in fact enjoy them on occasion. Unfortunately, they're passed off as a genuine grass-roots posting to the casual non-slashdot member. AKA astroturfing.
If Slashdot would actually flag the story as a "Slashvertisement", I think we as a community would have far an away much MUCH more respect for the story and wouldn't think so much of it. That's the point really. Keep it honest and the intention transparent.