When we were interviewing for a new Computer Services manager at school, we liked to see that people had held jobs for long periods of time. 5 weeks is not that incredibly long to be unemployed in the IT field, so if you just left it off, I don't think most employers would care too much. If they ask what you did, tell them about the other stuff you did during that time while you weren't working (you do have hobbies, don't you??).
According to Symantec's site, they have developed a tool to remove this Welchia worm. It appears that it's not about securing PCs and is all about selling more copies of Norton and protecting the bottom line...
This is just a guess, but doesn't Comcast use much larger, more powerful dishes than the ones you stick on your house? These are probably capable of making it through storm clouds and maintaining cable's signal quality while a storm might knock out your satellite feed. Also a guess, but I imagine Comcast has redundancy in that if one satellite feed goes down, another one outside the storm takes over. That's not possible with your own dish.
Women like to see things physically before they buy them. It's been a big thing with online shopping the past few years. Women have just recently started to outnumber men in ecommerce sales. I don't know about the stuff you buy, but I can normally find a better deal online from places like NewEgg than at the friendly, local Best Buy.
A lot more comfortable than I am letting a Microsoft distro write all over it.;-)
Re:Yes, but measuring webserver market share is ha
on
2003: Year of Apache
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· Score: 1
Does that mean that there are now more administrators (likely), or that the only ones adding servers use Apache (unlikely)? If IIS isn't gaining installations, then maybe we can conclude that at least some IIS administrators are moving to Apache for their new servers and going with the "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" approach for their IIS servers.
If that's the case, IIS is in trouble in a few years when all of those IIS servers are retired.
I have an iPod and the USB cable. What would it take to use the iPod instead of a keychain?
Re:Yes, but measuring webserver market share is ha
on
2003: Year of Apache
·
· Score: 1
No, that's an indicator of server quality for that purpose. If the majority of server operators didn't want virtual hosting, for example, IIS not playing well in that environment won't make a shred of a difference.
That's the thing, though. The majority of server operators DO want virtual hosting, so they're all moving to Apache; that's the whole thing these stats are showing.
AMD has every right to give their processors whatever model number they want, as long as it's not something like "Athlon XP 2200MHz" running at 1.8GHz. ATI gives the RADEONs arbitrary model numbers like 9000 and 9200, so I don't see a problem here.
The problem here is that you can't look up the technical specs because they aren't available. All you have to go on is the "marketing BS" that says it's a 9200, when, in fact, it is not. Even though they operate exactly the same, another manufacturer that tells the truth and writes "9000" would seem lesser. Seems to me like it should be Dell who sues.
Even if there are no little green men or other humanoids to talk to, it would be a monumentally important opportunity to be able to look back 300 million years and get a clue as to how life formed on our own planet.
Kelvin is the same scale as Celsius, except that it starts from absolute zero instead of the freezing point of water. A 12 degree Kelvin difference is only about 53.6 degrees Fahrenheit.
If that's the case, then why did the Beagle crash? Seems to me like it would help future missions to know what strange thing Beagle landed in/on, since we obviously didn't predict it.
Spirit is definitely too far away, but I wonder if they could alter Opportunity's course and put it down somewhere nearby. I'm sure NASA could even learn something about how to build better landing equipment looking at the (supposed) Beagle wreckage, to make it worth their while.
Looking at the benchmarks about web servers (pg 6):
"The IBM z900 two-processor LPAR achieved 14 percent less performance than an Intel-based server with two 900 MHz Intel Xeon processors running Windows Server 2003."
If you were to have a true comparison, shouldn't both OSes be compared on the same machine? AFAIK, Linux runs fine on Xeons...
At least get it right if you're going to make that joke...
All your patents are belong to us!
When we were interviewing for a new Computer Services manager at school, we liked to see that people had held jobs for long periods of time. 5 weeks is not that incredibly long to be unemployed in the IT field, so if you just left it off, I don't think most employers would care too much. If they ask what you did, tell them about the other stuff you did during that time while you weren't working (you do have hobbies, don't you??).
If he has ever had a real English "prof", he should know better...
Perhaps available source code will make it easier to reverse-engineer/work around the DRM....
According to Symantec's site, they have developed a tool to remove this Welchia worm. It appears that it's not about securing PCs and is all about selling more copies of Norton and protecting the bottom line...
This is just a guess, but doesn't Comcast use much larger, more powerful dishes than the ones you stick on your house? These are probably capable of making it through storm clouds and maintaining cable's signal quality while a storm might knock out your satellite feed. Also a guess, but I imagine Comcast has redundancy in that if one satellite feed goes down, another one outside the storm takes over. That's not possible with your own dish.
Anyone consider that J and K are right next to each other on (most people's) keyboards? Cut the guy some slack....
Of all the people they could invite, why would they invite Al Gore and Arnold Swlkjasdhhnegger? I can hear Al Gore now: "I invented NASA."
Not anymore... he used her as a mold for Han!
Women like to see things physically before they buy them. It's been a big thing with online shopping the past few years. Women have just recently started to outnumber men in ecommerce sales. I don't know about the stuff you buy, but I can normally find a better deal online from places like NewEgg than at the friendly, local Best Buy.
but who buys more sex toys?
The *real* question how soon will it take for some enterprising individual to be able to play the songs they bought on iTunes Music Store under Linux?
Jon of DeCSS fame has already done this.
All the iPod is is a portable firewire drive...so as long as your distro supports firewire, you can use it.
Or, you can buy the $20 USB cable and use it on any computer with USB or USB2. That's just about all of them from the past 5+ years...
A lot more comfortable than I am letting a Microsoft distro write all over it. ;-)
Does that mean that there are now more administrators (likely), or that the only ones adding servers use Apache (unlikely)? If IIS isn't gaining installations, then maybe we can conclude that at least some IIS administrators are moving to Apache for their new servers and going with the "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" approach for their IIS servers.
If that's the case, IIS is in trouble in a few years when all of those IIS servers are retired.
I have an iPod and the USB cable. What would it take to use the iPod instead of a keychain?
No, that's an indicator of server quality for that purpose. If the majority of server operators didn't want virtual hosting, for example, IIS not playing well in that environment won't make a shred of a difference.
That's the thing, though. The majority of server operators DO want virtual hosting, so they're all moving to Apache; that's the whole thing these stats are showing.
AMD has every right to give their processors whatever model number they want, as long as it's not something like "Athlon XP 2200MHz" running at 1.8GHz. ATI gives the RADEONs arbitrary model numbers like 9000 and 9200, so I don't see a problem here. The problem here is that you can't look up the technical specs because they aren't available. All you have to go on is the "marketing BS" that says it's a 9200, when, in fact, it is not. Even though they operate exactly the same, another manufacturer that tells the truth and writes "9000" would seem lesser. Seems to me like it should be Dell who sues.
No, it'll have to be at bar camp
http://www.google.com/search?q=47.5+light-years+to +miles
Even if there are no little green men or other humanoids to talk to, it would be a monumentally important opportunity to be able to look back 300 million years and get a clue as to how life formed on our own planet.
Kelvin is the same scale as Celsius, except that it starts from absolute zero instead of the freezing point of water. A 12 degree Kelvin difference is only about 53.6 degrees Fahrenheit.
If that's the case, then why did the Beagle crash? Seems to me like it would help future missions to know what strange thing Beagle landed in/on, since we obviously didn't predict it.
Spirit is definitely too far away, but I wonder if they could alter Opportunity's course and put it down somewhere nearby. I'm sure NASA could even learn something about how to build better landing equipment looking at the (supposed) Beagle wreckage, to make it worth their while.
Looking at the benchmarks about web servers (pg 6): "The IBM z900 two-processor LPAR achieved 14 percent less performance than an Intel-based server with two 900 MHz Intel Xeon processors running Windows Server 2003." If you were to have a true comparison, shouldn't both OSes be compared on the same machine? AFAIK, Linux runs fine on Xeons...