Re:Not Open enough for OpenBSD
on
VRRP
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· Score: -1
Actually, VRRP is the standard (RFC 2338) with HSRP being Cisco's bastardization of it. Nortel's Alteon load balancer (one of the few products worth choosing Nortel over Cisco for) uses VRRP for it's redundancy. It appears to work just as well as HSRP but with Nortel's implementation, you can adjust priorities based on more factors than you can with Cisco's HSRP.
The major problem is that many companies either define "fair use" differently than the law or just don't care. It's back to the school bus seat-belt issue, where it's cheaper to get sued than install seat-belts. In the same way, it's cheaper for these companies to violate your rights/space/equipment and hope that no one notices.
I'll be the first to stand up and calling MP3 trading theft, because it boils to two simple questions:
1) Is it free?
2) Did you pay for it?
No to both? You're a thief. Now that I've defined my beliefs on that matter, I'd like to further state that just because someone may swipe groceries at the local super-market; those stores don't have the right to install cameras in your house or weld your trunk shut to ensure you don't violate any ownership laws.
No one noticed your PDA is a Game Boy Advanced because the screen is too dark for anyone too see (probably including you.)
Re:Apparently crackers already had half a year
on
Security Hole In SNMP
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· Score: -1
In answer to your question, no, it's nothing like that. It's more like keeping the optimal position on your gas tank to put a bomb a secret. Granted, if you knew where that place was, you'd check, but if NO ONE knew about it, except the car manufacturers, then they would have the chance to update their product line and phase out the vulnerability on some of the newer models, while working on patches for all the older stuff.
Instead of rubble he thought you meant ruble? The thought of anyone making my country convert to outdated Russian currency would sure scare the pants off me...
Why should she? Sounds to me like her quitting was that company's loss. She apparently had no trouble finding other employment and decided that the energy that would need to be expelled to clean up her current environment was less than that of finding a new one.
Sounds to me like she made a sound corporate decision.
Ethernet doesn't even touch the application layer. They can modify that all they like, but it won't affect whether or not it's ethernet. Neither would working your way back down the chain.
HTTP vs. SMTP? Still ethernet.
TCP vs. UDP? STILL ethernet.
IP vs. IPX (or NetBEUI, heh) STILL ethernet.
As long as you don't break the 802.3 or Ethernet II spec, it's still... guess what? ETHERNET!!!
I personally have nothing for or against the Katz in question, but he DID state it properly. The character's name should come first and the actor's name should be in the parantheses.
Re:An extension of Training Day movie reviews.
on
Review: Training Day
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· Score: -1
Well, you listed the user rating as a 4. 1/5. Of course one-fifth equals.2, so this would now be written as 4..2. One can only assume that with the superfluous period you are implying a decimal of a decimal, so this would actually be written as 4.02. What ratings system carries out to the hundredths?
Foolish AOL user. Whether TR & Ethernet are the same is irrelevant.
Segmentation potential is still readily available, EVEN IF you're using Token Ring. Go find a copy of "Network for Dummies." You reek of a server admin that doesn't know jack about networking.
Universitys do this all the time. A good portion of Purdue's computer system's have wallpaper that displays the logos of the companies that donated them.
I think it's a great way for colleges to beef up their computer infrastructure while at the same time allowing companies a shot at enticing future grads.
I had the expert builder ones. I used them for my Power Mechanics class in junior high. I used gear ratios to bear the tar out of the other mouse-trap cars.;)
I have all my Construx still at my parents house. We used to build crash-up derby cars, sit across the kitchen from each other and push them as hard as we could at the other person's car. It was great.
Newbies find the GRC website and here scary words like "hidden internet server" and panic. That's when they buy crap like "Black Ice." It would be far more advantagious to simply recommend to people that they remove the "client for microsoft windows" instead of spewing out fear inducing industry jargon.
An even better question, is why were they all on the same VLAN? I can see a faulty TR driver taking out a subnet, but any network administrator in his right mind will at BARE MINIMUM have the servers and workstations on seperate subnets. The L2 translation in the router should be enough to isolate the problem to your particular subnet...
I personally used to shop at onsale.com all the time. It was a great site where you could by some very obscure hardware for great prices. I got some old Packard Bell radio cards for $5 a pop. They're awesome!
At the same time, I had visited egghead.com many a time, since there were several people ranting about it. The site sucked, the prices sucked, and that stupid mascot dude of there's was ugly as sin.
Well, egghead bought onsale and sure enough the "egghead effect" (tm) is contagious. Onsale turned to crap.
On the brighter side, Fry's is at least a reputable vendor, so this may be a good thing. Maybe they, at least, can put some proper security in place to keep our credit card numbers from getting jacked again.
Then you, my friend, have one poorly configured linux box. I was running Redhat 6.0 on a 486-33SX with 8 meg of RAM and was able to get 3Mb throughit. I probably could've gotten more, but again, the Internet is the bottleneck.
I was also doing port-forwarding and had user-defined chains. Your P2/266 should easily be able to do all that and much more.
By your very comments you have proven that "adults" have nothing to worry about. You complain about the unjust class systems and then utilize your own throughout your post. Which part do you find to be unjust? If the lines aren't where they should be, then where are they? If you are going to do so much hardcore complaining about it, at least have the proactiveness to include suggested solutions.
No one tells you you are a criminal for wanting music to be free. When you take music that someone else has created and use it in a way that is inappropriate, based off the rights the creator has granted you, THEN we call you a criminal.
I've seen how the opportunities you spoke of have been utilized by your age group. Most of them can be found on geocities or tripod. Pardon me, if this doesn't make me tremble in fear.
This is EXACTLY like waiting for a service pack. It amazes me to watch you attempt to downplay this bug.
Personally, I frequently use Red Hat & W2K to do my job, and am quite pleased with both. As I've been watching, I've seen you go hog wild over the Windows 47 day bug, but yet when RH has a 3 week one, it must not be a big deal... Hello, THIS IS A SERVER-CLASS OS. IT IS A BIG DEAL.
Actually, VRRP is the standard (RFC 2338) with HSRP being Cisco's bastardization of it. Nortel's Alteon load balancer (one of the few products worth choosing Nortel over Cisco for) uses VRRP for it's redundancy. It appears to work just as well as HSRP but with Nortel's implementation, you can adjust priorities based on more factors than you can with Cisco's HSRP.
Does NOT lie within Juniper routers.
I'll be the first to stand up and calling MP3 trading theft, because it boils to two simple questions:
1) Is it free?
2) Did you pay for it?
No to both? You're a thief. Now that I've defined my beliefs on that matter, I'd like to further state that just because someone may swipe groceries at the local super-market; those stores don't have the right to install cameras in your house or weld your trunk shut to ensure you don't violate any ownership laws.
Just my two cents on the matter...
No one noticed your PDA is a Game Boy Advanced because the screen is too dark for anyone too see (probably including you.)
In answer to your question, no, it's nothing like that. It's more like keeping the optimal position on your gas tank to put a bomb a secret. Granted, if you knew where that place was, you'd check, but if NO ONE knew about it, except the car manufacturers, then they would have the chance to update their product line and phase out the vulnerability on some of the newer models, while working on patches for all the older stuff.
Long story short, no.
Instead of rubble he thought you meant ruble? The thought of anyone making my country convert to outdated Russian currency would sure scare the pants off me...
Sounds to me like she made a sound corporate decision.
-"WHAT PART OF BACON DON'T YOU UNDERSTAND?!?!?"
What the government is going to spend the money on in no way, shape, or form affects your obligation to pay your taxes.
You can say you don't have a problem with it, but either way, it's still stealing.
- HTTP vs. SMTP? Still ethernet.
- TCP vs. UDP? STILL ethernet.
- IP vs. IPX (or NetBEUI, heh) STILL ethernet.
As long as you don't break the 802.3 or Ethernet II spec, it's still... guess what? ETHERNET!!!Go Boilers.
I personally have nothing for or against the Katz in question, but he DID state it properly. The character's name should come first and the actor's name should be in the parantheses.
Well, you listed the user rating as a 4. 1/5. Of course one-fifth equals .2, so this would now be written as 4..2. One can only assume that with the superfluous period you are implying a decimal of a decimal, so this would actually be written as 4.02. What ratings system carries out to the hundredths?
Foolish AOL user. Whether TR & Ethernet are the same is irrelevant.
Segmentation potential is still readily available, EVEN IF you're using Token Ring. Go find a copy of "Network for Dummies." You reek of a server admin that doesn't know jack about networking.
Universitys do this all the time. A good portion of Purdue's computer system's have wallpaper that displays the logos of the companies that donated them.
I think it's a great way for colleges to beef up their computer infrastructure while at the same time allowing companies a shot at enticing future grads.
Incidentally, the Russians actually DID have a computer that had three-way bits. There was positive, negative, and neutral.
Funky.
I had the expert builder ones. I used them for my Power Mechanics class in junior high. I used gear ratios to bear the tar out of the other mouse-trap cars. ;)
I have all my Construx still at my parents house. We used to build crash-up derby cars, sit across the kitchen from each other and push them as hard as we could at the other person's car. It was great.
:)
They also made kick-butt G.I. Joe forts.
Newbies find the GRC website and here scary words like "hidden internet server" and panic. That's when they buy crap like "Black Ice." It would be far more advantagious to simply recommend to people that they remove the "client for microsoft windows" instead of spewing out fear inducing industry jargon.
Color me not impressed.
An even better question, is why were they all on the same VLAN? I can see a faulty TR driver taking out a subnet, but any network administrator in his right mind will at BARE MINIMUM have the servers and workstations on seperate subnets. The L2 translation in the router should be enough to isolate the problem to your particular subnet...
At the same time, I had visited egghead.com many a time, since there were several people ranting about it. The site sucked, the prices sucked, and that stupid mascot dude of there's was ugly as sin.
Well, egghead bought onsale and sure enough the "egghead effect" (tm) is contagious. Onsale turned to crap.
On the brighter side, Fry's is at least a reputable vendor, so this may be a good thing. Maybe they, at least, can put some proper security in place to keep our credit card numbers from getting jacked again.
chmod a+x
NOW!
Then you, my friend, have one poorly configured linux box. I was running Redhat 6.0 on a 486-33SX with 8 meg of RAM and was able to get 3Mb throughit. I probably could've gotten more, but again, the Internet is the bottleneck.
I was also doing port-forwarding and had user-defined chains. Your P2/266 should easily be able to do all that and much more.
No one tells you you are a criminal for wanting music to be free. When you take music that someone else has created and use it in a way that is inappropriate, based off the rights the creator has granted you, THEN we call you a criminal.
I've seen how the opportunities you spoke of have been utilized by your age group. Most of them can be found on geocities or tripod. Pardon me, if this doesn't make me tremble in fear.
Personally, I frequently use Red Hat & W2K to do my job, and am quite pleased with both. As I've been watching, I've seen you go hog wild over the Windows 47 day bug, but yet when RH has a 3 week one, it must not be a big deal... Hello, THIS IS A SERVER-CLASS OS. IT IS A BIG DEAL.
hahahahah SWEET! And to think I used to believe that 14.4 actually referred to kbps!
Impressive.
I'd like to see an affordable Linux box whose power consumption and heat output were incredibly low. Maybe a solar-power Linux refrigerator?