Honestly, Citrix and MS RDP protocols are the most responsive in GUI and image quality. That said, remote access may lead in frustration if you're doing anything graphic related and require fine mouse control. Running an accounting program (because the DB is on a local drive or server in office) via RDP is perfectly acceptable however. YMMV in user experience based on bandwidth and latency.
Assuming the OS only caches the program from last use and not the opened file as well. Otherwise yes, a RAM drive (with temporary data stored there) will act as massive disk read cache.
A single large multi-stage rocket would be more efficient and less complicated. What you propose introduces more complexity and additional physical resources to ensure mission success. For Apollo, the astronauts were there to improvise. You can't really do that with robots and a planet where communication isn't in real-time.
The day they fuck with the Chinese either in Africa or the mainland, Islam is toast. You think the PLC and CCP are very tolerant of Christianity or any other religion for that matter? No, not really. But if you use religion to fuck around with the Chinese officials, wha, look out! Those guys wouldn't hesitate to push forth a great "global purge" of radical Islamic pockets. ISIS for example would no doubt be marked dead all while giving diplomatic reason to ramp up their military industrial complex to flex power in the Pacific region.
I've personally seen a workstation get hit with a 0 day exploit drive-by-download in Firefox. It's these 3rd party ad server farms that get hacked and start serving out this shit. Doesn't matter if it's Yahoo, CNN, Drudge, MSNBC, Fox News...etc. If they have a contact with one of these ad agencies (and they all do), all it takes is for one of the infected servers to rotate into view for the end user. Really nasty stuff.
Workstation patch management (Windows Security update, app updates etc) helps, but I've blocked TOR traffic from inside corporate firewalls. So far it seems to help keep the command and control from trying to root further into an infected machine. Regardless, if it got infected, it gets nuked and paved with a fresh image.
My approach at dealing with Cryptowall evolves as it does.
It's madness in the pursuit of perfection. The whole point is to minimize any disturbance of the audio from source directly to your ears; with the idea that anything in-between cumulatively adds up. Hypothetically, there is a harmonic difference between MP3 and FLAC. In reality however, original source material or a head-cold will be the biggest impact on audio listening experience. Fact is, the human ear is horrible. The real panacea in audiophile technology would be to transmit the sound as electrical impulses directly to the brain itself.
Well, at least you can jump the bastard if needed.
I owned a 99 Miata in which changing the oil filter involved using a cut water bottle to capture the oil along with a baby diaper directly underneath it. And that's after turning the steering wheel completely in one direction to expose access to it. Otherwise, oil drips down the support member and dribbles two black lines of oil down the driveway. Fuck that shit! In fact, there are plenty of oil filter relocater kits because of that design flaw.
And yes, the first thing it does it does is purge all VSS (shadow copies) and encrypt data from local and mapped drives PRIOR to notifying you've been had. That malware is the only thing that stands between you and your now encrypted data. Purge the malware or slave the drive to another host, and you won't get your data base.
Let me put it to you this way. Crytowall is very well engineered ransomware. It doesn't fuck around.
Be sure to keep a set of backups not connected to your PC/Network using the Grandfather-father-son backup scheme. Rotate media according (weekly, monthly, and yearly).
The actual reason for the invasion was revenge. And that's where you lose 100% credibility. Any asshat that concludes the Iraq war to be some sort of daddy revenge is not worthy to be taken seriously. Because none of it's based on anything but pure hatred of the left.
Ok, so that out of the way. Honestly, the Iraq war was many things; competency entirely questionable. For one, the final straw was Saddam breaking UN resolution 1441 (from countless preceding resolutions). Second, Rafid Ahmed Alwan al-Janabi was an informant known as "Curveball" that stated he had direct knowledge of a bio-weapons program as part of the WDM operation in Iraq. Turns out to be bogus intel cause the guy just wanted a green card. Bush fed into it without proper vetting. Meaning, he heard what he wanted to hear. Lastly, it gave us a foothold in the region for logistical reasons. Bush knew this would be a decade+ long theater of war in the ME, hence the reasoning. Though it came a political cost as most American's became fetigued at giving a damn what the hell goes on over there. Given the cost, can't blame them.
Long after the main Iraq war, caches of WMD (bombs specially) buried underground were found. Though without an active military force, at best they would be used in the creation of IEDs. That's assuming many knew where to find them, let alone take the time to dig them back out.
As for the UN? Well, member states were corrupted in the Oil for Food program. Effectively, the entire endeavor was one giant clusterfuck. Still in in fact. It still remains to whether or not killing Saddam was the right thing to do in terms of upsetting this applecart.
No. Bulging capacitors were either the direct result of components that used shoddy electrolyte formulas in their creation, or quality components that were under specced for the job they're tasked to do.
In other word, I have yet to find the switch to RHOS being directly responsible for bulging capacitors.
As I understand it, ROHS compliment solder introduces stress cracks (thus a broken circuit) from the constant thermal expansion and contraction from everyday use. With laptops, the delta changes from heating and cooling are huge. From the solder joint POV, it would be like bending a paperclip back and forth. Eventually the stress will create metal-fatigue and thus crack apart.
Apple doesn't sell you on the software/hardware as elements; they sell you on the platform that said elements support. Microsoft knows the PC/mobile market is converging and thus heading it off at the pass with Windows 8. Nevermind of it's poor initial implementation, but that is the idea; to sell an abstract platform from the constituent elements that make it happen.
Specialized and vertical market companies often thrive before they fail. Often because they're too locked into a business process that can't change by its very nature, or the industry changes with the rug pulled out from underneath them (SGI).
Tucows at least adapted to survive; however small the company is in comparison.
Duh!!! Does Apple really want shakeup an already tenuous "blessing" by the Chinese government? Never mind the fact the Chinese App store is mucked up and certain featured not available. That's a BILLION consumer potential market they don't want to miss out on.
In my personal experience of "benchmark queens" in general; be it automotive performance or computing, are all about the synthetic numbers and zero basis on practicality (let alone value in cost). If a gamer is doesn't give a toss about a particular core subset of general computing (Video, CPU, RAM, and Storage), they're not benchmark queens. I've met plenty online who are. And when queens start debating online over numbers, the flamewars begin.
Ouch! Seriously bad. Worse than the Pentium FPU bug (and that's bad). What good is a computer if you can't rely on the data being committed back to disk because of corruption mid-flight in RAM?! At least with the FPU bug, it was only FPU. But here we're talking about an industry wide issue where any operation cannot guaranty data doesn't become corrupted back to disk. By the time bit-rot sets in, you may have to dive into your grandfather-father-son backup archive. And that's assuming such a backup scheme is being used by those who are effected. Shit, that's assuming people are even backing up their data in the first place!!
Honestly, Citrix and MS RDP protocols are the most responsive in GUI and image quality. That said, remote access may lead in frustration if you're doing anything graphic related and require fine mouse control. Running an accounting program (because the DB is on a local drive or server in office) via RDP is perfectly acceptable however. YMMV in user experience based on bandwidth and latency.
Until you drop your MBP from 1 meter and it deform the corner of the screen by the hinge. Happens all the fucking time like a cat landing feet first.
Assuming the OS only caches the program from last use and not the opened file as well. Otherwise yes, a RAM drive (with temporary data stored there) will act as massive disk read cache.
A single large multi-stage rocket would be more efficient and less complicated. What you propose introduces more complexity and additional physical resources to ensure mission success. For Apollo, the astronauts were there to improvise. You can't really do that with robots and a planet where communication isn't in real-time.
The day they fuck with the Chinese either in Africa or the mainland, Islam is toast. You think the PLC and CCP are very tolerant of Christianity or any other religion for that matter? No, not really. But if you use religion to fuck around with the Chinese officials, wha, look out! Those guys wouldn't hesitate to push forth a great "global purge" of radical Islamic pockets. ISIS for example would no doubt be marked dead all while giving diplomatic reason to ramp up their military industrial complex to flex power in the Pacific region.
At least the nukes wouldn't be used on the West.
I've personally seen a workstation get hit with a 0 day exploit drive-by-download in Firefox. It's these 3rd party ad server farms that get hacked and start serving out this shit. Doesn't matter if it's Yahoo, CNN, Drudge, MSNBC, Fox News...etc. If they have a contact with one of these ad agencies (and they all do), all it takes is for one of the infected servers to rotate into view for the end user. Really nasty stuff.
Workstation patch management (Windows Security update, app updates etc) helps, but I've blocked TOR traffic from inside corporate firewalls. So far it seems to help keep the command and control from trying to root further into an infected machine. Regardless, if it got infected, it gets nuked and paved with a fresh image.
My approach at dealing with Cryptowall evolves as it does.
Don't tell me. Tell the assholes on the hill that. Not that they care.
It's madness in the pursuit of perfection. The whole point is to minimize any disturbance of the audio from source directly to your ears; with the idea that anything in-between cumulatively adds up. Hypothetically, there is a harmonic difference between MP3 and FLAC. In reality however, original source material or a head-cold will be the biggest impact on audio listening experience. Fact is, the human ear is horrible. The real panacea in audiophile technology would be to transmit the sound as electrical impulses directly to the brain itself.
Illegal paraphernalia. Anything related to the industry not licensed and/or allowed for private possession; just like drugs.
War on creation.
So while the printing press was a revolution, the 3D printer will cause one.
Googling confirms it!. Yes, stuffed animals of a "Yeticorn" do exist.
Ok, enough Internet for me today.
Empires rise and fall. At least America will be known for these accomplishments long after we're gone.
Well, at least you can jump the bastard if needed.
I owned a 99 Miata in which changing the oil filter involved using a cut water bottle to capture the oil along with a baby diaper directly underneath it. And that's after turning the steering wheel completely in one direction to expose access to it. Otherwise, oil drips down the support member and dribbles two black lines of oil down the driveway. Fuck that shit! In fact, there are plenty of oil filter relocater kits because of that design flaw.
It takes a village...
And yes, the first thing it does it does is purge all VSS (shadow copies) and encrypt data from local and mapped drives PRIOR to notifying you've been had. That malware is the only thing that stands between you and your now encrypted data. Purge the malware or slave the drive to another host, and you won't get your data base.
Let me put it to you this way. Crytowall is very well engineered ransomware. It doesn't fuck around.
Be sure to keep a set of backups not connected to your PC/Network using the Grandfather-father-son backup scheme. Rotate media according (weekly, monthly, and yearly).
The actual reason for the invasion was revenge.
And that's where you lose 100% credibility. Any asshat that concludes the Iraq war to be some sort of daddy revenge is not worthy to be taken seriously. Because none of it's based on anything but pure hatred of the left.
Ok, so that out of the way. Honestly, the Iraq war was many things; competency entirely questionable. For one, the final straw was Saddam breaking UN resolution 1441 (from countless preceding resolutions). Second, Rafid Ahmed Alwan al-Janabi was an informant known as "Curveball" that stated he had direct knowledge of a bio-weapons program as part of the WDM operation in Iraq. Turns out to be bogus intel cause the guy just wanted a green card. Bush fed into it without proper vetting. Meaning, he heard what he wanted to hear. Lastly, it gave us a foothold in the region for logistical reasons. Bush knew this would be a decade+ long theater of war in the ME, hence the reasoning. Though it came a political cost as most American's became fetigued at giving a damn what the hell goes on over there. Given the cost, can't blame them.
Long after the main Iraq war, caches of WMD (bombs specially) buried underground were found. Though without an active military force, at best they would be used in the creation of IEDs. That's assuming many knew where to find them, let alone take the time to dig them back out.
As for the UN? Well, member states were corrupted in the Oil for Food program. Effectively, the entire endeavor was one giant clusterfuck. Still in in fact. It still remains to whether or not killing Saddam was the right thing to do in terms of upsetting this applecart.
No. Bulging capacitors were either the direct result of components that used shoddy electrolyte formulas in their creation, or quality components that were under specced for the job they're tasked to do.
In other word, I have yet to find the switch to RHOS being directly responsible for bulging capacitors.
Laptops, with the exception of gaming consoles. A high wattage XBox 360 with a RROD is a perfect example.
Jet engine ingestion test. How is it the flame doesn't burn out still eludes me. Brilliant engineering!
As I understand it, ROHS compliment solder introduces stress cracks (thus a broken circuit) from the constant thermal expansion and contraction from everyday use. With laptops, the delta changes from heating and cooling are huge. From the solder joint POV, it would be like bending a paperclip back and forth. Eventually the stress will create metal-fatigue and thus crack apart.
Apple doesn't sell you on the software/hardware as elements; they sell you on the platform that said elements support. Microsoft knows the PC/mobile market is converging and thus heading it off at the pass with Windows 8. Nevermind of it's poor initial implementation, but that is the idea; to sell an abstract platform from the constituent elements that make it happen.
Specialized and vertical market companies often thrive before they fail. Often because they're too locked into a business process that can't change by its very nature, or the industry changes with the rug pulled out from underneath them (SGI).
Tucows at least adapted to survive; however small the company is in comparison.
Duh!!! Does Apple really want shakeup an already tenuous "blessing" by the Chinese government? Never mind the fact the Chinese App store is mucked up and certain featured not available. That's a BILLION consumer potential market they don't want to miss out on.
In my personal experience of "benchmark queens" in general; be it automotive performance or computing, are all about the synthetic numbers and zero basis on practicality (let alone value in cost). If a gamer is doesn't give a toss about a particular core subset of general computing (Video, CPU, RAM, and Storage), they're not benchmark queens. I've met plenty online who are. And when queens start debating online over numbers, the flamewars begin.
Ouch! Seriously bad. Worse than the Pentium FPU bug (and that's bad). What good is a computer if you can't rely on the data being committed back to disk because of corruption mid-flight in RAM?! At least with the FPU bug, it was only FPU. But here we're talking about an industry wide issue where any operation cannot guaranty data doesn't become corrupted back to disk. By the time bit-rot sets in, you may have to dive into your grandfather-father-son backup archive. And that's assuming such a backup scheme is being used by those who are effected. Shit, that's assuming people are even backing up their data in the first place!!