The atlernative would be trying to remember hundreds of passwords and most people would end up re-using passwords or using much lower quality passwords. I also can protect that single, complex password using 2FA which means now all my passwords are insanely complex (I let my password manager generarate them, 20+ characters, every character I'm allowed, etc) and getting that one password is very difficult.
If it's moving packets between networks it's a router. If it does NAT as well it's doing more than a router is required to do to be called a router. Running a dynamic routing protocol isn't a requirement for being a router, that's why static routes exist.
It's not really three hundred, and it's based on what host I need to access or what ACL I'm writing or what address I'm grepping in a log, etc. I just work with a lot of IP addresses. Nothing you can automate.
That said, isn't it strange how 10G USB is already shipping on mid-priced desktops, but consumer Ethernet is still stuck at turn-of-the-century. What is the path forward, 10 Gige USB dongles?
Not really. People don't need 10GbE because they don't need to transfer anything locally at those speeds in most cases and their broadband isn't anywhere near that. Not to mention 10GbE switching is still very expensive compared to 1GbE. So 10GbE locally isn't of much use in the vast majority of uses cases. USB offers an option for transferring files universally inside your network, outside, etc. The average consumer is far more likely to need to copy to their external USB hard drive than to their NAS.
Of course high end consumer motherboards are already starting to ship with 10GbE LoM. It just hasn't trickled down into the mid-range and lower consumer products due to lack of demand.
Do we really need numeric keypad? I haven't touched it in the past 20 years.
As someone who types about three hundred IP addresses per day - dear god yes, please keep the numeric keypad. Now with that said, there are plenty of options that do not include a number pad, and I don't think having options is a bad thing. And for what it's worth at home I use an 87U tenkeyless with external 23U tenkeypad.
I know several Mac users in the same situation. My advice to use is to start using Linux on your Mac via Parallels, VMWare Fusion or even better (free) Virtualbox. I'm typing this from an Arch VM on my HP 840 work laptop. Works great, battery life is more than adequate.
This will allow you to start building your linux workflow tools, applications, processes, etc while still being able to instantly switch back to OS X if you get stuck on something, without any serious interruption. So you can decide on a per-task basis how much time to spend right now to migrate it to a new workflow on linux.
After a few weeks you should have a pretty good idea of how viable it is for you to switch to linux, and already start fine tuning things.
I've been doing a lot of research on linux latpops lately, and I think my personal preference would be Thinkpad Carbon X1 or Dell XPS 13 (Developer Edition). Although the announcement of Linux apps on ChromeOS has me very excited.
Side note: Why can't I get it with no O/S? I don't want Pop_OS or Ubuntu.
I assume because it's cheaper to just have them all imaged. Might be a supply chain thing? They can get them imaged at/near manufactur, then shipped in bulk to for distribution. So by time they're ready to be ordered and delivered, they've all already got an OS on them.
Because, realistically, most of the applications he's using (e-mail, video, social media, etc) are being run in a browser written in megabytes of javascript.
Thus, Gmail is so bad in the false positive department that I don't think it's usable. Even worse, when it discards a mail this way, it doesn't notify the sender the way any sane server is supposed to!
I've been using gmail since beta, I don't think I've ever had a false positive. Just thought I'd add another anecdotal datapoint.
People should be accepted into communities based on skill.
They are. I'm involved in several projects and no one knows my race or gender. The internet was better when was used nicknames, it was supposed to be that glorious place where no one made fun of anyone based on their appearance and we were all judged based on the quality of our work. It's still possible today.
Came here to post this. Security, security, security. It is an absolute gold rush right now and the problem is getting worse not better. I don't know how many people outside of the Bay Area or NYC are making $200k-$1M in security, but $100-$200k with only a couple years experience and a CISSP can probably get you 100-200k in pretty much any tier 1 or tier 2 city. Alternatively you can get into government contract work, get a TS(/SCI) and bounce around contractors with insanely good insurance and pretty much guaranteed work.
This honestly looks like a hit piece. The fact that 20% of the content viewed on Netflix is Netflix original content is amazing, and growing very fast. I'd love to know what percentage of content Netflix's content represents out of the entire library. Probably a fraction of one percent.
Open Broadcaster Software (OBS). Free, works great. Supports local file capture and online streaming. Extremely configurable but easy to get up and running.
I am a little curious about the licensing. It looks like OBS was forked into OBS Studio? Or was this a rewrite? And if so, what is the currently supported one and what is the license?
So you're claim is you can be "reasonably efficient" in a language after spending a couple hours with it? Maybe we just have very different ideas of what "reasonably efficient" means.
C is a high level language. A high level language is anything that's not a 1:1 mapping of instructions. Stop trying to redefine terms.
Who's definition are you using? I consider C to be a high level language (albeit at the very bottom of them) because it's machine independent, so it allows abstraction of the underlying system implementation. I'm just curious how we define these things because I can't find a clear definition from anyone I trust.
You don't need to. Nobody knows the whole standard library of any language now.
I don't think he was implying you needed to memorize it all. But you need to be pretty familiar with large portions of it to be even reasonably productive, which can take weeks/months. Of course you won't know 100% of it and you'll learn more as you use it, but spending only a couple hours to learn the language you can't possibly know enough of the standard library to claim you "can program in X". That's more like "I'm still learning X".
I completely agree with you, but every time this comes up people start arguing over the definition or "bricked" and the wikipedia page leaves a lot of room for interpretation including a section regarding "soft brick" and "unbricking".
This feels really similar to me to the evolution of the word "literally". I liked it more when words meant things and we stuck to it.
I'd really like to see a comparison of color reproduction on these TV compared to decent desktop monitors. Are these TVs IPS/PVA or TN panels? Are they full-array LED or just edge lit? QLED? OLED? My understanding is that OLED would be a poor choice because of the burn in issues.
The atlernative would be trying to remember hundreds of passwords and most people would end up re-using passwords or using much lower quality passwords. I also can protect that single, complex password using 2FA which means now all my passwords are insanely complex (I let my password manager generarate them, 20+ characters, every character I'm allowed, etc) and getting that one password is very difficult.
Even Cisco just got dinged today (2018-05-17) for having a fixed-password backdoor in some enterprise-level hardware.
Software. Which Cisco found during it's own internal audit.
I'd recommend an EdgeRouter PoE. That's what I'm using now and my speedtests on my 1Gb fiber are >900Mb/s.
If it's moving packets between networks it's a router. If it does NAT as well it's doing more than a router is required to do to be called a router. Running a dynamic routing protocol isn't a requirement for being a router, that's why static routes exist.
It's not really three hundred, and it's based on what host I need to access or what ACL I'm writing or what address I'm grepping in a log, etc. I just work with a lot of IP addresses. Nothing you can automate.
That said, isn't it strange how 10G USB is already shipping on mid-priced desktops, but consumer Ethernet is still stuck at turn-of-the-century. What is the path forward, 10 Gige USB dongles?
Not really. People don't need 10GbE because they don't need to transfer anything locally at those speeds in most cases and their broadband isn't anywhere near that. Not to mention 10GbE switching is still very expensive compared to 1GbE. So 10GbE locally isn't of much use in the vast majority of uses cases. USB offers an option for transferring files universally inside your network, outside, etc. The average consumer is far more likely to need to copy to their external USB hard drive than to their NAS.
Of course high end consumer motherboards are already starting to ship with 10GbE LoM. It just hasn't trickled down into the mid-range and lower consumer products due to lack of demand.
Do we really need numeric keypad? I haven't touched it in the past 20 years.
As someone who types about three hundred IP addresses per day - dear god yes, please keep the numeric keypad. Now with that said, there are plenty of options that do not include a number pad, and I don't think having options is a bad thing. And for what it's worth at home I use an 87U tenkeyless with external 23U tenkeypad.
I know several Mac users in the same situation. My advice to use is to start using Linux on your Mac via Parallels, VMWare Fusion or even better (free) Virtualbox. I'm typing this from an Arch VM on my HP 840 work laptop. Works great, battery life is more than adequate.
This will allow you to start building your linux workflow tools, applications, processes, etc while still being able to instantly switch back to OS X if you get stuck on something, without any serious interruption. So you can decide on a per-task basis how much time to spend right now to migrate it to a new workflow on linux.
After a few weeks you should have a pretty good idea of how viable it is for you to switch to linux, and already start fine tuning things.
I've been doing a lot of research on linux latpops lately, and I think my personal preference would be Thinkpad Carbon X1 or Dell XPS 13 (Developer Edition). Although the announcement of Linux apps on ChromeOS has me very excited.
Side note: Why can't I get it with no O/S? I don't want Pop_OS or Ubuntu.
I assume because it's cheaper to just have them all imaged. Might be a supply chain thing? They can get them imaged at/near manufactur, then shipped in bulk to for distribution. So by time they're ready to be ordered and delivered, they've all already got an OS on them.
Because, realistically, most of the applications he's using (e-mail, video, social media, etc) are being run in a browser written in megabytes of javascript.
An officer can hold your phone up to your face to unlock it that way, and they already have your fingerprints after an arrest
Pro Tip: For the iPhone X to unlock you have to have both eyes opened.
Thus, Gmail is so bad in the false positive department that I don't think it's usable. Even worse, when it discards a mail this way, it doesn't notify the sender the way any sane server is supposed to!
I've been using gmail since beta, I don't think I've ever had a false positive. Just thought I'd add another anecdotal datapoint.
People should be accepted into communities based on skill.
They are. I'm involved in several projects and no one knows my race or gender. The internet was better when was used nicknames, it was supposed to be that glorious place where no one made fun of anyone based on their appearance and we were all judged based on the quality of our work. It's still possible today.
Came here to post this. Security, security, security. It is an absolute gold rush right now and the problem is getting worse not better. I don't know how many people outside of the Bay Area or NYC are making $200k-$1M in security, but $100-$200k with only a couple years experience and a CISSP can probably get you 100-200k in pretty much any tier 1 or tier 2 city. Alternatively you can get into government contract work, get a TS(/SCI) and bounce around contractors with insanely good insurance and pretty much guaranteed work.
https://appleinsider.com/artic...
This honestly looks like a hit piece. The fact that 20% of the content viewed on Netflix is Netflix original content is amazing, and growing very fast. I'd love to know what percentage of content Netflix's content represents out of the entire library. Probably a fraction of one percent.
What do you mean by "full access"? You can access the filesystem via cygwin too (e.g. - "/cygdrive/c")
Open Broadcaster Software (OBS). Free, works great. Supports local file capture and online streaming. Extremely configurable but easy to get up and running.
I am a little curious about the licensing. It looks like OBS was forked into OBS Studio? Or was this a rewrite? And if so, what is the currently supported one and what is the license?
but when you needed that DPDT locking rocker switch at 4PM on a Saturday, you had a place to get it.
I honestly don't know where I'd even go (locally) to do this today.
So you're claim is you can be "reasonably efficient" in a language after spending a couple hours with it? Maybe we just have very different ideas of what "reasonably efficient" means.
C is a high level language. A high level language is anything that's not a 1:1 mapping of instructions. Stop trying to redefine terms.
Who's definition are you using? I consider C to be a high level language (albeit at the very bottom of them) because it's machine independent, so it allows abstraction of the underlying system implementation. I'm just curious how we define these things because I can't find a clear definition from anyone I trust.
You don't need to. Nobody knows the whole standard library of any language now.
I don't think he was implying you needed to memorize it all. But you need to be pretty familiar with large portions of it to be even reasonably productive, which can take weeks/months. Of course you won't know 100% of it and you'll learn more as you use it, but spending only a couple hours to learn the language you can't possibly know enough of the standard library to claim you "can program in X". That's more like "I'm still learning X".
That's interesting I just ran into Lupin today as well, haven't watched it yet. Is Lupin III really the best place to start?
I completely agree with you, but every time this comes up people start arguing over the definition or "bricked" and the wikipedia page leaves a lot of room for interpretation including a section regarding "soft brick" and "unbricking".
This feels really similar to me to the evolution of the word "literally". I liked it more when words meant things and we stuck to it.
I'd really like to see a comparison of color reproduction on these TV compared to decent desktop monitors. Are these TVs IPS/PVA or TN panels? Are they full-array LED or just edge lit? QLED? OLED? My understanding is that OLED would be a poor choice because of the burn in issues.