You're not trying. Where I work there is NO guest-wifi (the wifi that exists requires you to VPN from the wifi to the actual network and the VPN requires an RSA SecurID).
I listen to Pandora when at work, in order to drown out the conversations all around me + the noisy (she has to be the noisiest [sober] drinker I've ever heard) Russian woman who sits behind me.
I hit 2GB easily... I had ~3900MB last month. And the 5260MB the month before. 2000 MB in september. 1200 in August. Ever since I started working here.
First,.net had a very particular meaning once upon a time. It meant you were an ISP or other network service provider (Google might even qualify). This is to be separate from IBM which sells stuff, but does not provide network services (that I can think of. and if you want to be a PITA, try Pepsi or Coca-Cola).
Meanwhile, I think that perhaps we should have per-country DNS search paths, such that if you try to do www.google.com, and you're in the UK, you go to www.google.com.uk. (this would break with.co, due to Colombia).
Just this [calendar] month, my flatmate and I have the following stats:
- Roku: # me, Netflix & Amazon VoD
in: 46.67GB 46667040679
out: 373.73MB 373734958
- skuld: # flatmate. anime, Netflix & iTunes
in: 43.16GB 43164082021
out: 1.61GB 1613538080
- mimir: # both, mostly me this month. Linux ISOs & anime
in: 29.17GB 29172312574
out: 549.06MB 549057857
- total: # other stuff is included in this, I wanted to only highlight the biggest numbers.
in: 131.38GB 131377255738
out: 10.67GB 10672545785
And we've done more, mostly a lot more Netflix. the Roku can only download legal content, and 100GB isn't _hard_. I could put on another 30G this weekend (3 day weekend).
It would eliminate some of the price advantage, but certainly not the logistics advantage. I still shop at Newegg, despite the fact that I pay sales-tax, vs say other vendors like Provantage. Why? because newegg can get it here in ~2 days, while other places like Provantage or GearXS will take a week.
For 300USD or so you can get a repeater, assuming that you can stick the antenna out your window or on the roof. It's not really very cheap, but it's not requiring you to rebuild your building either.
Dead simple, but typically no merge support. At least in my experience with mediawiki and twiki. No merge support means that if they both edit the page at the same time and one tries a commit after the other has committed (but starting from an older version) they're boned. Wasted time and effort. Not conducive to a healthy learning relationship.
I can't remember where I read this (probably on/.), but there was some speculation that Jan Rutkowska used to be Johann Rutkowska or something similar.
Of course, I guess if they really are a girl, there's not much reason to care.
a) AES is not based on prime numbers, nor is it a public-key cipher. you're thinking RSA or some other public-key cipher. Hence why RSA has to be at least 1024 (and now 2048 and up is recommended) bits long.
b) There's a lot more bull going around here. AES256 was believed to require 2^128 operations to bruteforce, not 2^256. Thus any question of 256 -> 119 is bull. It's 128 -> 119.
c) Brute-forcing a 64bit RC5 key took distributed.net years (and note that that was with the benefit of Moore's [so called] Law). Mind you, that actually required searching a 64bit keyspace.
Yes. It provides, according to the old semantics, that the file change will appear atomic. It is in effect a slightly modified Read-Modify-Write.
Looks like this (crappy C pseudocode, so don't get all pedantic): fh = open(oldfile); olddata = parsefile(fh); close(fh); newdata = modify_file(olddata); fh = open(tmpfile); write(fh, newdata); close(fh); unlink(originalfile); rename(tmpfilepath, originalpath);
Note that this provides atomicity for the data. Either the file is existent and contains consistent data, or it doesn't exist.
it looks like ext4 broke this by reordering some of the operations. It made the metadata commit before it actually wrote data to tmpfile, thus leaving us with a zero-sized file if the system crashes before the data-commit.
I don't care it it could be done in 0.1 seconds, it isn't done that way (by Comcast). Everytime I unplug my cable box & TV b/c I go on vacation, it takes a while (I never did clock it) for the TV guide to be populated, and it doesn't happen all at once... it happens in drips and drabs.
You're not trying. Where I work there is NO guest-wifi (the wifi that exists requires you to VPN from the wifi to the actual network and the VPN requires an RSA SecurID).
I listen to Pandora when at work, in order to drown out the conversations all around me + the noisy (she has to be the noisiest [sober] drinker I've ever heard) Russian woman who sits behind me.
I hit 2GB easily... I had ~3900MB last month. And the 5260MB the month before. 2000 MB in september. 1200 in August. Ever since I started working here.
Keeping steam and condensation out of your computers is always a good idea.
First, .net had a very particular meaning once upon a time. It meant you were an ISP or other network service provider (Google might even qualify). This is to be separate from IBM which sells stuff, but does not provide network services (that I can think of. and if you want to be a PITA, try Pepsi or Coca-Cola).
Meanwhile, I think that perhaps we should have per-country DNS search paths, such that if you try to do www.google.com, and you're in the UK, you go to www.google.com.uk. (this would break with .co, due to Colombia).
What about people who rent? They don't have the option of installing solar on the roof.
Geothermal isn't practical (or legal) in all places. Water pollution laws or lack of sufficient groundwater. Clay or other non-sand soils.
Wind has restrictions, in particular from HOAs and other zoning restrictions.
Margins, alignment, footnotes, etc. That's it. He was very strict about following APA.
Just this [calendar] month, my flatmate and I have the following stats:
- Roku: # me, Netflix & Amazon VoD
in: 46.67GB 46667040679
out: 373.73MB 373734958
- skuld: # flatmate. anime, Netflix & iTunes
in: 43.16GB 43164082021
out: 1.61GB 1613538080
- mimir: # both, mostly me this month. Linux ISOs & anime
in: 29.17GB 29172312574
out: 549.06MB 549057857
- total: # other stuff is included in this, I wanted to only highlight the biggest numbers.
in: 131.38GB 131377255738
out: 10.67GB 10672545785
And we've done more, mostly a lot more Netflix. the Roku can only download legal content, and 100GB isn't _hard_. I could put on another 30G this weekend (3 day weekend).
I'm calling bullshit on your calling bullshit.
Davenport University, 2005 (spring session), English. Online course, prof uses MS Word on Mac, I use OpenOffice.org (1.x, on WinXP).
Things showed up different on his screen vs mine, and thus I got marked down.
Same problem now with submitting my CV to various companies that refuse to accept it in PDF.
Citation needed. That they were all delivered already.
It would eliminate some of the price advantage, but certainly not the logistics advantage. I still shop at Newegg, despite the fact that I pay sales-tax, vs say other vendors like Provantage. Why? because newegg can get it here in ~2 days, while other places like Provantage or GearXS will take a week.
By any account, no one read it, including Feynman. He couldn't read a book w/ no pages, could he? Or is this a new kind of Chuck Norris joke?
Define 'cheap'.
For 300USD or so you can get a repeater, assuming that you can stick the antenna out your window or on the roof. It's not really very cheap, but it's not requiring you to rebuild your building either.
Good tasting lawyers?
Yes, TWiki notifies you too, but it still has no merge support. The merging has to be done by hand.
Dead simple, but typically no merge support. At least in my experience with mediawiki and twiki.
No merge support means that if they both edit the page at the same time and one tries a commit after the other has committed (but starting from an older version) they're boned. Wasted time and effort. Not conducive to a healthy learning relationship.
I can't remember where I read this (probably on /.), but there was some speculation that Jan Rutkowska used to be Johann Rutkowska or something similar.
Of course, I guess if they really are a girl, there's not much reason to care.
Bull.
a) AES is not based on prime numbers, nor is it a public-key cipher. you're thinking RSA or some other public-key cipher. Hence why RSA has to be at least 1024 (and now 2048 and up is recommended) bits long.
b) There's a lot more bull going around here. AES256 was believed to require 2^128 operations to bruteforce, not 2^256. Thus any question of 256 -> 119 is bull. It's 128 -> 119.
c) Brute-forcing a 64bit RC5 key took distributed.net years (and note that that was with the benefit of Moore's [so called] Law). Mind you, that actually required searching a 64bit keyspace.
Yes. It provides, according to the old semantics, that the file change will appear atomic. It is in effect a slightly modified Read-Modify-Write.
Looks like this (crappy C pseudocode, so don't get all pedantic):
fh = open(oldfile);
olddata = parsefile(fh);
close(fh);
newdata = modify_file(olddata);
fh = open(tmpfile);
write(fh, newdata);
close(fh);
unlink(originalfile); rename(tmpfilepath, originalpath);
Note that this provides atomicity for the data. Either the file is existent and contains consistent data, or it doesn't exist.
it looks like ext4 broke this by reordering some of the operations. It made the metadata commit before it actually wrote data to tmpfile, thus leaving us with a zero-sized file if the system crashes before the data-commit.
Unfortunately for you, although the first part of the movie was in Italy, that part of the movie was in Los Angeles.
OSS is part of a healthy diet and all, but JFFS{,2} is for raw flash, not for flash with an IDE front-end.
True, otoh why was it HUAC then? House Unamerican Activities Committee. Maybe he wasn't on that committee, but I know it was HUAC and not SUAC.
I don't care it it could be done in 0.1 seconds, it isn't done that way (by Comcast). Everytime I unplug my cable box & TV b/c I go on vacation, it takes a while (I never did clock it) for the TV guide to be populated, and it doesn't happen all at once... it happens in drips and drabs.
TightVNC's vncviewer doesn't. So try krdc instead.
They are "trying to appeal", not that they "have appealed". Your concept of what divides possible from impossible is flawed.
Great. Has echoes of Ender's Game.
I think you misread, it's not (900mA/unit)*(6*unit), but (150mA/unit)*(6*unit). USB 2.0 had 100mA/unit and a maximum of 5*unit.