At least you can put printers on a separate network segment or preferably one printer segment per department if you have a large organization so they only can get the documents you print and don't see any other traffic or access any servers. Most of the attacks through printers are just using them as a springboard to access other services in the net.
Also make sure that the printers don't have any public internet access and do any firmware updates manually and you should have contained the printer issue reasonably well.
Overall segmentation of a network to different sub segments where you have company-internal firewalls between the segments and use VPN to access the segment needed for anyone not physically on "their" segment. Especially for WiFi clients. That way you could worry less about penetrated WiFi and keep non-essential servers like some intranet web servers and internet access open there.
You won't stop everything with that approach, but it may be possible to contain any serious problem.
Strict segmenting also means that outsourcing the IT department to some offshore company would be a lot harder since the IT department has to have segment access through isolated computers - or make a physical visit to the servers themselves - to fix some problems.
Virtual servers would be a big no as well from a security standpoint since they don't offer any ability to physically isolate different segments if needed. This is highlighted by the recent cases of “Spectre” and “Meltdown”. I doubt that these two issues are the only issues out there.
If you look into creating a viable colony that should be able to last then the genetical variation requires about 1600 persons. It's possible to actually solve that with passing frozen embryos and having rules set up enforcing sexual relations for maximum genetic variation.
Any candidate colonists has to pass tests to ensure that they are healthy and don't carry genetic diseases that can pose a problem. They also have to be mentally stable.
Mars will also be a challenge to colonize from the perspective of a very thin atmosphere and shortage of water. I'm not sure that Mars is the best place to colonize, it may actually be as easy or hard to colonize the moon unless we can bring a huge amount of water to Mars.
If you can prove that you can find God with science on the ISS you'd probably get all funding you need and more.
But then - realize that all money used for space science actually drives development down on Earth. But that seems to be totally forgotten by leading politicians and activist groups. Space science is the leading edge of science and what cuts new ground. It may not create direct profit but a lot of the technology that's developed for it will in turn be stepping stones for something that is providing profit.
Or in other words - it's a lot easier to cut a beef with a sharp knife than a dull. And if you don't keep your knife sharp then you get overrun by those that keeps their knives sharp.
With subscription that rate would decrease. Just look at how many SAP customers that now have problems making ends meet due to the horrible rates SAP charges.
Best way to handle that would be to put the mic in a place where you play random statements with injected activation commands. Some crime series or something - then see if the cops shows up or something.
There's also a lot of byproduct waste when you process the crops that can be used for producing fuel, even if it's not high grade it do contain at least fuel value.
The point is that what we today consider waste that's biodegradable can actually be used as a source for fuel. The remains that are left after fuel production would still be rich in minerals that might be possible to use as fertilizer unless it has been contaminated in some way - usually by metals.
My experience is rather that Open Source contributions are done voluntarily and not by force.
And a lot of Open Source out there is more or less working as the glue that ties things together. Without it we would have been stuck in a world filled with proprietary solutions that were unable to communicate with each other without having gateway nodes or even carried on physical media. In some places the tax authorities required that if you were to file taxes electronically the taxes were filed on some obscure IBM format on 8" floppies.
Might still contain the original word combined with a specification of the type, not all tea is from the tea bush, some is instead based on herbs or with flavoring of various types.
To me it seems that even "te" and "cha" are so similar when pronounced that both would have the same word originally.
My suspicion is that it's actually a relatively new word that haven't had the time to divert much and in the modern world with all communication going on the smaller variants disappear. The word is also pretty short and is therefore more resilient compared to "coffee".
Considering that just a few steps down the story Deanonymizing Tor: Your Bitcoin Transactions May Come Back To Haunt You exists this could start to get interesting.
At least you can put printers on a separate network segment or preferably one printer segment per department if you have a large organization so they only can get the documents you print and don't see any other traffic or access any servers. Most of the attacks through printers are just using them as a springboard to access other services in the net.
Also make sure that the printers don't have any public internet access and do any firmware updates manually and you should have contained the printer issue reasonably well.
Overall segmentation of a network to different sub segments where you have company-internal firewalls between the segments and use VPN to access the segment needed for anyone not physically on "their" segment. Especially for WiFi clients. That way you could worry less about penetrated WiFi and keep non-essential servers like some intranet web servers and internet access open there.
You won't stop everything with that approach, but it may be possible to contain any serious problem.
Strict segmenting also means that outsourcing the IT department to some offshore company would be a lot harder since the IT department has to have segment access through isolated computers - or make a physical visit to the servers themselves - to fix some problems.
Virtual servers would be a big no as well from a security standpoint since they don't offer any ability to physically isolate different segments if needed. This is highlighted by the recent cases of “Spectre” and “Meltdown”. I doubt that these two issues are the only issues out there.
If you look into creating a viable colony that should be able to last then the genetical variation requires about 1600 persons. It's possible to actually solve that with passing frozen embryos and having rules set up enforcing sexual relations for maximum genetic variation.
Any candidate colonists has to pass tests to ensure that they are healthy and don't carry genetic diseases that can pose a problem. They also have to be mentally stable.
Mars will also be a challenge to colonize from the perspective of a very thin atmosphere and shortage of water. I'm not sure that Mars is the best place to colonize, it may actually be as easy or hard to colonize the moon unless we can bring a huge amount of water to Mars.
Garmin used to have waterproof GPSes with replaceable batteries like the Legend. OK, the batteries themselves would get wet, but that's a minor issue.
On older the battery could be swapped by the user in seconds. Come back to that please!
If you can prove that you can find God with science on the ISS you'd probably get all funding you need and more.
But then - realize that all money used for space science actually drives development down on Earth. But that seems to be totally forgotten by leading politicians and activist groups. Space science is the leading edge of science and what cuts new ground. It may not create direct profit but a lot of the technology that's developed for it will in turn be stepping stones for something that is providing profit.
Or in other words - it's a lot easier to cut a beef with a sharp knife than a dull. And if you don't keep your knife sharp then you get overrun by those that keeps their knives sharp.
Not if you have a management that's already stuck in the SAP swamp. It's worse than any addictive drug you can find.
With subscription that rate would decrease. Just look at how many SAP customers that now have problems making ends meet due to the horrible rates SAP charges.
It's systemd you'd have to subscribe to then.
You missed the NATO TP120B connector that's also common in professional equipment. Real headphones also limits noise, like the Peltor headphones.
So no XLR connectors for you then.
1/4" headphone jack! :)
I have a CAT S60 and it satisfies my needs.
The headphones I want are US$345 and they have Bluetooth and a built-in FM radio.
And get more latency and slowdown either due to the VPN software itself or the limits at the VPN provider.
Best way to handle that would be to put the mic in a place where you play random statements with injected activation commands. Some crime series or something - then see if the cops shows up or something.
There's also a lot of byproduct waste when you process the crops that can be used for producing fuel, even if it's not high grade it do contain at least fuel value.
The point is that what we today consider waste that's biodegradable can actually be used as a source for fuel. The remains that are left after fuel production would still be rich in minerals that might be possible to use as fertilizer unless it has been contaminated in some way - usually by metals.
How about biodiesel from rape seed oil? There are a lot of sources for fuel that can be used in diesel engines in addition to soy.
Do you have any proof of that connection?
My experience is rather that Open Source contributions are done voluntarily and not by force.
And a lot of Open Source out there is more or less working as the glue that ties things together. Without it we would have been stuck in a world filled with proprietary solutions that were unable to communicate with each other without having gateway nodes or even carried on physical media. In some places the tax authorities required that if you were to file taxes electronically the taxes were filed on some obscure IBM format on 8" floppies.
Maximum penalty for that one - classify swatting as attempted homicide or homicide depending on the outcome.
That would cut down the numbers quite fast. And no repeat offenders.
Which in Finnish is "puhelin". So if you see the word "Puh" and a number written somewhere it's most likely Finnish. In Icelandic it's "Sími".
Might still contain the original word combined with a specification of the type, not all tea is from the tea bush, some is instead based on herbs or with flavoring of various types.
To me it seems that even "te" and "cha" are so similar when pronounced that both would have the same word originally.
My suspicion is that it's actually a relatively new word that haven't had the time to divert much and in the modern world with all communication going on the smaller variants disappear. The word is also pretty short and is therefore more resilient compared to "coffee".
I was more considering shutting down the phone network for anything but emergency traffic.
I include the phone system as a factor in "no internet access".