I'm deploying an IPv6 VPN at my company, and I've avoided the use of DHCPv6, as they have avoided DHCPv4 to make it less easy for people to attach to our networks. By using stateless autoconfig and not having DHCPv6, I can still restrict use of company nameservers to systems with our loadsets that have the DNS setup statically defined.
I started a section on my wiki site to help me learn about IPv6. I'm going to be using it to help with some Ubuntu deployment. There is also a signifcant amount of information related to use in Windows, and if you get a DD-WRT-capable router ($45 for a Buffalo on Newegg), you can have IPv6 in your home.
As a recently former resident of the nearby area, based on what I'm seeing in the comments, I offer the following...
1. If you want hills in Florida, you live near Lakeland or Tallahassee. A 30-40 foot high trash mound off of I-95 is quite visible. Furthermore, if I have my geography right, I've found it on Google Maps, and the last time I was on Indrio Rd (3 years ago), it wasn't that populated.
2. In 2004, St. Lucie county voted as purple for Kerry as Orlando did: in an otherwise red region outside the Gold Coast. Furthermore, they have been home for years now to probably the raunchiest radio station in the state: the Orlando stations are tamer than these guys. Here's the question: will the progressives go for this project above senior and parental NIMBYs?
3. St Lucie, Palm Bay, and other former GDC communities in the state are sucking in families for relatively cheap land rates, replacing elderly with youth via introduction and die-off. How that will affect future demographics, politics, etc, is up for debate.
I've seen several different Wikis go down the documentation route, and I'm a member of a few.
A few months back I started up a Wiki to tie in people that use different dating and social networking sites. I also use it to quickly bookmark items I want to share with others, or have them do so likewise: the idea is not so much to be a "dating" site vs. a means of creating a social web.
As a weekend help desk guy, I personally have had 3 calls from people out there: 2 of them were living out of hotels. Any time one of them calls up, my coworkers and I give them priority: we couldn't imagine being in their shoes right now. They're still trying to figure out where everyone's gone. Employees from other states are going there to help out their relatives & bring them back with them. They know the "ET" is important. But right now, many don't even have homes.
Job 1: I wrote an Remote Desktop client in VB.NET to access the work VPN faster over a modem (there's settings for the web/RD component that aren't in the standard client), and a dumb little "evolution meter" as my first C# program.
Job 2: I wrote a pricing system in VB.NET to manage store pricing and system build configurations; a final version before I left allowed you to choose some of the parts from lists based on the datafile.
Job 3: I began using C# exclusively and generated a lot of small tools to help me do clerical & maintenence work. I even have a webpage for those apps: "How I Became a SysAdmin"
Job 4: At my new job (with a global defense contractor), I work at a helpdesk where people use a mix of propietary commerical products & in-house.NET tools to do IT support. I am already looking at writing code for their use as well, in C# of course.
Bottom line: I've seen.NET in a 10 person tech shop, a 75 person warehouse, a 1200 person aviation manufacturer, and a 130000 person defense contractor. Need something quick 'n dirty, but not as obtuse as VB, or as complicated as C?.NET has worked for me.
1. The ads are generated regardless of any chat room. Anyone who uses any chat room will be subject to these ads: its in the code. Their system was not designed to filter out "suspect rooms" from advertising. That said, they were lazy in not policing for something that would be a liability as it is now.
2. The Slashdot article linked to a story on WFTV here in Orlando. They're a Sinclair station: they got squeamish about airing "Saving Private Ryan;" they ran a lot of ads for Bush last election; and when the hurricanes came through, their weatherman got dumped on for freaking out too much ("Scary Terry"). The story doesn't even give the explanation I just gave about the ads: just rants about how Yahoo backs porn.
The BS filtered version: Yahoo is indirectly profiting on porn by being lazy with their ad system.
If you want an idea on how this system would "help" both countries, come to Orlando: Florida Mall has hundreds of British tourists daily, and the shops & inns near Disney bear British flags & "Daily Mail." You can joke about Germans in Speedos at the water parks, but it seems to me like the two biggest tourist groups here in Florida are Canadian & British. An ID card that worked for Brits & Americans would probably be useful in this setting, and since their currency is nearly twice the worth of ours, its a cheap vacation for them to come here.
As for "Oceania" comparisons, that isn't too far off base: what do Britain & America gain from a more powerful EU, or the Chinese cutting in on their deals? Our involvement in the Middle East has been mainly with former British protectorates (Israel, Kuwait, Iran, Iraq). You could argue that America has gone out & made an economic empire the British haven't had in a century: like the offspring taking over the family business; of course Britian would love to be a part of something it helped create.
The funny thing is that the people on both sides like each other just fine & aren't too concerned with becoming a global hegemony.
MemTest86+ helped me solve a memory voltage issue (my mainboard defaults to 2.5V on RAM, but it gets errors until I hit 2.7V). Also, scaling back my RAM (a generic DDR400 Samsung 512MB) to DDR333 lets me have lower memory timings (2.5-3-3-7) & overclock my HT to 220x4. My Athlon 2800+ is running @ 2.16GHZ: a 20% overclock.
Also, if you scoot over & find Israel, you won't find higher-res imagery for any of this region, but you can clearly see where the Egypt-Israel border is. Israel-Egypt Border
Reading the rest of the website, it would seem as though there is a pro-Administration political bent: therefore, in the author's opinion, the government says there's not a problem, and that's fine with him. When you're done reading that, you can go read his attempts to prove an evil college professor (the new "communist-liberal threat") called Bush a war criminal, and a brave soul challenged him.
If the government is willing to share with us such detail, maybe you can explain why some FOIA requests have gone unanswered for
18 years. There's a reason why we have a free press. And these debates lend even more credence to a concern that we are indeed a nationalistic state, complete with loyalists and apologists. We have become everything we were raised to hate.
Here's some food for thought: can anyone name a "good" Paramount film or series in recent years? What happened to syndicated TNG? What happened to the old Trek films, or Beverly Hills Cop, or even Beavis & Butthead (remember, "Picard" liked it too)? Why did Nemesis bomb, when it really wasn't as bad as Trek V? I haven't seen "Deep Impact," but saw "The Core:" did anyone see both?
Basically, there seems to have been a large marketing of failure at Paramount. Tie series to UPN, whose affliates share with Fox or pre-empt for sports events? Put movies out in December to compete with "big events," instead of waiting a month when it'd be #1? When you advertise an episode of Trek, make it about sex most of the time, even when it has nothing to do with the story? Where's the sci-fi in their sci-fi?
What we are seeing is a revamp of Paramount, and they consider Trek a part of the problem, not the solution. It should be the other way around: however, it is the last vestige of an experiment, and probably should be put to rest while they clean house. Let us hope there is more Trek one of these days, and preferably syndicated, if not on Sci-Fi or some other network.
About 2 years ago, I had an interview with a call-in center that wanted help maintaining a VB application: they had a bug they wanted me to fix, so I did some research, found a tidbit online that looked like someone else asking how to fix the exact same problem, cobbled a solution between their notes & mine, and submitted the fix. Never heard from them again until I called a month later stating they "hired someone already."
Putting aside the Microsoft claims, they are referencing the original RFCs on a lot of them, and covering a lot of ground in this list: this would actually be an excellent resource as to finding out about different protocols.
I think they cobbled together pieces to show it was a Colorado manual with directives to immediately challenge votes. Either that, or a very bad printer! I put an analyzed photo on my political page.
1. Work: 10 systems; no problems, save boss thought his PC was a little slower; found newer wireless drivers to load on the wireless systems (they're actually running much better now, probably from the driver/SP2 combination); all systems using Windows firewall. Setup responds to Active Directory policies okay as well.
2. Home: 2 systems; no problems. I did have some issue with GNUcleus, but they've updated it, and it seems to work better with the http://www.lvllord.de/ patch.
Same team wrote an earlier version of this two years ago.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narbacular_Drop
http://www.nuclearmonkeysoftware.com/
I'm deploying an IPv6 VPN at my company, and I've avoided the use of DHCPv6, as they have avoided DHCPv4 to make it less easy for people to attach to our networks. By using stateless autoconfig and not having DHCPv6, I can still restrict use of company nameservers to systems with our loadsets that have the DNS setup statically defined.
So the contractor didn't do it. Who did?
http://www.stmarys-school.org/smsk12linux_howandwh y.htm
http://www.mlinux.org/
Hung out with these guys for a while. They were big on Debian a while back.
I started a section on my wiki site to help me learn about IPv6. I'm going to be using it to help with some Ubuntu deployment. There is also a signifcant amount of information related to use in Windows, and if you get a DD-WRT-capable router ($45 for a Buffalo on Newegg), you can have IPv6 in your home.
As a recently former resident of the nearby area, based on what I'm seeing in the comments, I offer the following...
u cie,+Fl&ie=UTF8&z=16&ll=27.57646,-80.484982&spn=0. 012458,0.027122&t=h&om=1
P urpleAmericaPosterAll50.gif
1. If you want hills in Florida, you live near Lakeland or Tallahassee. A 30-40 foot high trash mound off of I-95 is quite visible. Furthermore, if I have my geography right, I've found it on Google Maps, and the last time I was on Indrio Rd (3 years ago), it wasn't that populated.
http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&q=Port+St+L
2. In 2004, St. Lucie county voted as purple for Kerry as Orlando did: in an otherwise red region outside the Gold Coast. Furthermore, they have been home for years now to probably the raunchiest radio station in the state: the Orlando stations are tamer than these guys. Here's the question: will the progressives go for this project above senior and parental NIMBYs?
http://www.princeton.edu/~rvdb/JAVA/election2004/
http://www.wzzr.com/main.html
3. St Lucie, Palm Bay, and other former GDC communities in the state are sucking in families for relatively cheap land rates, replacing elderly with youth via introduction and die-off. How that will affect future demographics, politics, etc, is up for debate.
I wondered if someone on here had more information on how this came to pass. Good info!
I've seen several different Wikis go down the documentation route, and I'm a member of a few.
A few months back I started up a Wiki to tie in people that use different dating and social networking sites. I also use it to quickly bookmark items I want to share with others, or have them do so likewise: the idea is not so much to be a "dating" site vs. a means of creating a social web.
http://www.wikidating.net
Unfortunately, the most activity I get currently, are the spambots. (history -> save -> comment "restore"): you know that routine.
Bob Barr: very conservative Republican
Voting Record on Issues 2000
Pat Schroeder: Democrat; pro-copyright, but also pro-access to information
http://www.iastate.edu/~cccatt/p%20schroeder.html
Wikipedia
Lockheed Martin Katrina Response
As a weekend help desk guy, I personally have had 3 calls from people out there: 2 of them were living out of hotels. Any time one of them calls up, my coworkers and I give them priority: we couldn't imagine being in their shoes right now. They're still trying to figure out where everyone's gone. Employees from other states are going there to help out their relatives & bring them back with them. They know the "ET" is important. But right now, many don't even have homes.
American Red Cross
You may even want to find out if anyone in your area is matching donations. I heard Albertsons was.
I've used .NET in my last 4 jobs...
.NET tools to do IT support. I am already looking at writing code for their use as well, in C# of course.
.NET in a 10 person tech shop, a 75 person warehouse, a 1200 person aviation manufacturer, and a 130000 person defense contractor. Need something quick 'n dirty, but not as obtuse as VB, or as complicated as C? .NET has worked for me.
Job 1: I wrote an Remote Desktop client in VB.NET to access the work VPN faster over a modem (there's settings for the web/RD component that aren't in the standard client), and a dumb little "evolution meter" as my first C# program.
Job 2: I wrote a pricing system in VB.NET to manage store pricing and system build configurations; a final version before I left allowed you to choose some of the parts from lists based on the datafile.
Job 3: I began using C# exclusively and generated a lot of small tools to help me do clerical & maintenence work. I even have a webpage for those apps: "How I Became a SysAdmin"
Job 4: At my new job (with a global defense contractor), I work at a helpdesk where people use a mix of propietary commerical products & in-house
Bottom line: I've seen
1. The ads are generated regardless of any chat room. Anyone who uses any chat room will be subject to these ads: its in the code. Their system was not designed to filter out "suspect rooms" from advertising. That said, they were lazy in not policing for something that would be a liability as it is now.
2. The Slashdot article linked to a story on WFTV here in Orlando. They're a Sinclair station: they got squeamish about airing "Saving Private Ryan;" they ran a lot of ads for Bush last election; and when the hurricanes came through, their weatherman got dumped on for freaking out too much ("Scary Terry"). The story doesn't even give the explanation I just gave about the ads: just rants about how Yahoo backs porn.
The BS filtered version: Yahoo is indirectly profiting on porn by being lazy with their ad system.
"Hands across the water,"
"Hands across the sky."
If you want an idea on how this system would "help" both countries, come to Orlando: Florida Mall has hundreds of British tourists daily, and the shops & inns near Disney bear British flags & "Daily Mail." You can joke about Germans in Speedos at the water parks, but it seems to me like the two biggest tourist groups here in Florida are Canadian & British. An ID card that worked for Brits & Americans would probably be useful in this setting, and since their currency is nearly twice the worth of ours, its a cheap vacation for them to come here.
As for "Oceania" comparisons, that isn't too far off base: what do Britain & America gain from a more powerful EU, or the Chinese cutting in on their deals? Our involvement in the Middle East has been mainly with former British protectorates (Israel, Kuwait, Iran, Iraq). You could argue that America has gone out & made an economic empire the British haven't had in a century: like the offspring taking over the family business; of course Britian would love to be a part of something it helped create.
The funny thing is that the people on both sides like each other just fine & aren't too concerned with becoming a global hegemony.
Correction: 240x4. I remember trying 245 & 250, but it'd lockup in BIOS.
MemTest86+ helped me solve a memory voltage issue (my mainboard defaults to 2.5V on RAM, but it gets errors until I hit 2.7V). Also, scaling back my RAM (a generic DDR400 Samsung 512MB) to DDR333 lets me have lower memory timings (2.5-3-3-7) & overclock my HT to 220x4. My Athlon 2800+ is running @ 2.16GHZ: a 20% overclock.
http://www.wolfsheep.com/technical/rocko.html
Gitmo!
If you surf around on Cuba, actually has a higher-res set than most other global places. Lots of farms it seems. Yucatan has a similar level as well.
Arabian Sand Dunes
Also, if you scoot over & find Israel, you won't find higher-res imagery for any of this region, but you can clearly see where the Egypt-Israel border is.
Israel-Egypt Border
Castillo de San Marco @ St. Augustine
Ft. Matanzas, with boat wake
Magic Kingdom entrance & Disney World Speedway
Universal Studios Florida
Cape Canaveral / Kennedy Space Center
Palm Bay signs on I-95
Lake Eola, Orlando, FL
Reading the rest of the website, it would seem as though there is a pro-Administration political bent: therefore, in the author's opinion, the government says there's not a problem, and that's fine with him. When you're done reading that, you can go read his attempts to prove an evil college professor (the new "communist-liberal threat") called Bush a war criminal, and a brave soul challenged him.
If the government is willing to share with us such detail, maybe you can explain why some FOIA requests have gone unanswered for 18 years. There's a reason why we have a free press. And these debates lend even more credence to a concern that we are indeed a nationalistic state, complete with loyalists and apologists. We have become everything we were raised to hate.
Here's some food for thought: can anyone name a "good" Paramount film or series in recent years? What happened to syndicated TNG? What happened to the old Trek films, or Beverly Hills Cop, or even Beavis & Butthead (remember, "Picard" liked it too)? Why did Nemesis bomb, when it really wasn't as bad as Trek V? I haven't seen "Deep Impact," but saw "The Core:" did anyone see both?
Basically, there seems to have been a large marketing of failure at Paramount. Tie series to UPN, whose affliates share with Fox or pre-empt for sports events? Put movies out in December to compete with "big events," instead of waiting a month when it'd be #1? When you advertise an episode of Trek, make it about sex most of the time, even when it has nothing to do with the story? Where's the sci-fi in their sci-fi?
What we are seeing is a revamp of Paramount, and they consider Trek a part of the problem, not the solution. It should be the other way around: however, it is the last vestige of an experiment, and probably should be put to rest while they clean house. Let us hope there is more Trek one of these days, and preferably syndicated, if not on Sci-Fi or some other network.
About 2 years ago, I had an interview with a call-in center that wanted help maintaining a VB application: they had a bug they wanted me to fix, so I did some research, found a tidbit online that looked like someone else asking how to fix the exact same problem, cobbled a solution between their notes & mine, and submitted the fix. Never heard from them again until I called a month later stating they "hired someone already."
Putting aside the Microsoft claims, they are referencing the original RFCs on a lot of them, and covering a lot of ground in this list: this would actually be an excellent resource as to finding out about different protocols.
Did anyone notice the offsets of the text?
Wolfsheep: Political
I think they cobbled together pieces to show it was a Colorado manual with directives to immediately challenge votes. Either that, or a very bad printer! I put an analyzed photo on my political page.
1. Work: 10 systems; no problems, save boss thought his PC was a little slower; found newer wireless drivers to load on the wireless systems (they're actually running much better now, probably from the driver/SP2 combination); all systems using Windows firewall. Setup responds to Active Directory policies okay as well.
2. Home: 2 systems; no problems. I did have some issue with GNUcleus, but they've updated it, and it seems to work better with the http://www.lvllord.de/ patch.