Non abusive editorializing is harmless and is ignored. In the case of abusive editorializing the purpose of the abuse desk (and the abuse@ address) is to process abuse reports, they are not there to be abused.
At least 80% of the time the report was sent it to the wrong ISP (usually due to forged headers). When it appears that the report was sent to the wrong ISP, a reply is sent asking the sender why they believe that they sent it to the correct ISP (the sender could be right). In many cases the person reporting the spam has provided a bogus return address and the reply bounces.
I found that the 'warm white' CFLs sold at Home Depot produce light that is pleasing to me. For grins I bought a CFL at a dollar store, that one makes a nasty color of light -- I put it in my utility room as it is seldom used. The interesting thing to me is that the warm white CFLs take a while to warm up, while the nasty white light seems to be at nearly full output when it is first turned on.
Does IBM charge large customers with support contracts for the AIX OS? Sun does not charge large customers with support contracts for Solaris; Sun does, however, charge quite a lot of the hardware and support contract.
"Isn't IBM AIX really old, not really developed any longer and largely obsolete?
How can moving from linux to that be a good idea?"
AIX is mature, it is stable, it is well maintained, and it is not obsolete. AIX hardware and software are more much more reliable and stable than Linux and the hardware that it runs on. AIX will be supported for a very long time.
Linux is very good in smaller, less demanding environments; AIX, HPUX, and Solaris are the gold standard of large enterprise level systems.
Your quote is taken out of context. Actually, no; it has to do with the fact that broadband has taken over the former dialup market. BTW, the ISP DOES take spam reports very seriously, as long as the sender isn't abusive in the reporting.
PROPERLY reporting spam to the PROPER ISP is not a problem and is productive. The problems are when idiots report spam to the wrong ISP and when abusive comments are added to spam reports. For spam email it is only necessary to forward the spam email with FULL headers, and with a SHORT explanation (such as "abc.com" is on your network") if the headers do not indicate why the report is being sent to a particular ISP.
I provided tier 3 abuse support to a large ISP and set up the abuse desk for the now defunct dialup offering of the ISP, my advice to the abuse desk people was to shitcan any abuse report that contained contained abusive comments added by the person reporting the spam. Adding abusive comments is not reporting abuse, it IS abuse.
Except for the fact that the company who built the machines seems to have an agenda that was better served by having properly corrupted data.
In a Republican fund raiding letter, the president of Diebold indicates his bias by saying that he is "committed to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes to the president next year."
I needed a duplicate file finder for Windows; I googled for it and found a huge selection, I tried several and found that almost all of them were crap and the one that wasn't crap wanted money to use it. I googled for a F/OSS duplicate file finder and found that many people said good things about FSLint. I installed FSLint and it works fine for me. As a bonus, FSLint has no nag screens and it installed much easier than the dupe finders for Windows.
I don't know where you did program development, where I did program development it was done by a number of committees that required MANY conference calls. There were even project managers who did nothing but conduct weekly conference calls and send out MS Project files before and after each weekly meeting. There were committees that did database design, committees that did GUI or web design, committees that did middle ware design, there were sys admin committees; and all too frequently there were committees that the main groups of committees, including the project managers, didn't even know existed.
According to Colorado State University Cooperative Extension, the saturated fat in chocolate is in the form of stearic acid; which does not raise cholesterol levels.
Get warning from GPS/FM, confirm with XM
on
Is Your GPS Naive?
·
· Score: 1
My GPS has an FM traffic receiver, but I don't detour because of information provided by it. I get confirmation and further information from XM traffic, then I decide whether to detour or not.
According to the Department of the Treasury, "The motto IN GOD WE TRUST was placed on United States coins largely because of the increased religious sentiment existing during the Civil War."
"In God We Trust" was added to US currency in 1957 as an act of religious and political propaganda, McCarthyism was at its peak at that time.
When I was in the Air Force I worked on radio transmitters that were cooled with silicone oil -- what a mess. Silicone oil as a coolant is NASTY, it leaks and doesn't clean up very easily with detergent. The solvents that we used to clean up silicone oil have been banned (first trichloroethane and then Freon 11).
Giving the copyrighted work to a third party that retains the work goes far beyond "fair access and use of that material so that the school can do their job."
The crap that would be in that junk yard would be way out of date and likely to have been poorly stored. Good enough for movies, and some of the parts may still be usable for their intended purpose, but they would be no more of a security or military threat than the stuff you can buy new at Grainger's and Fry's.
"you can breathe oxygen at 100% concentration and not feel a whole lot different, whereas wood and plastic burn like gunpowder at that concentration."
I used to work on B52's that had liquid oxygen (LOX) systems and LOX was available from servicing carts. A few drops of LOX dripped into a cigarette pack caused the cigarettes to burn quite quickly.
Does this mean that things don't burn above 6,000 altitude? I guess that I just imagined having camp fires above 8,000 feet in the Rockies. I saw the remains of a wooden building at over 14,000 feet that had burned to the ground. Something doesn't smell right with this article.
Nobody except sco is saying that anything was copied. It has finally boiled down to sco pointing to these few hundred specific lines as being the infringing code, rather than the millions of lines as had been claimed. Now, IBM knows what the entire turkey fuck has been over. Personally, I believe that sco has been grasping at straws and that it will be shown that there was no infringement at all. Time will tell.
Non abusive editorializing is harmless and is ignored. In the case of abusive editorializing the purpose of the abuse desk (and the abuse@ address) is to process abuse reports, they are not there to be abused.
At least 80% of the time the report was sent it to the wrong ISP (usually due to forged headers). When it appears that the report was sent to the wrong ISP, a reply is sent asking the sender why they believe that they sent it to the correct ISP (the sender could be right). In many cases the person reporting the spam has provided a bogus return address and the reply bounces.
I found that the 'warm white' CFLs sold at Home Depot produce light that is pleasing to me. For grins I bought a CFL at a dollar store, that one makes a nasty color of light -- I put it in my utility room as it is seldom used. The interesting thing to me is that the warm white CFLs take a while to warm up, while the nasty white light seems to be at nearly full output when it is first turned on.
Qantas was an acronym for "Queensland and Northern Territory Aerial Services" -- that is why there is no need for a 'u'.
Does IBM charge large customers with support contracts for the AIX OS? Sun does not charge large customers with support contracts for Solaris; Sun does, however, charge quite a lot of the hardware and support contract.
"Isn't IBM AIX really old, not really developed any longer and largely obsolete? How can moving from linux to that be a good idea?"
AIX is mature, it is stable, it is well maintained, and it is not obsolete. AIX hardware and software are more much more reliable and stable than Linux and the hardware that it runs on. AIX will be supported for a very long time. Linux is very good in smaller, less demanding environments; AIX, HPUX, and Solaris are the gold standard of large enterprise level systems.
Your quote is taken out of context. Actually, no; it has to do with the fact that broadband has taken over the former dialup market. BTW, the ISP DOES take spam reports very seriously, as long as the sender isn't abusive in the reporting.
PROPERLY reporting spam to the PROPER ISP is not a problem and is productive. The problems are when idiots report spam to the wrong ISP and when abusive comments are added to spam reports. For spam email it is only necessary to forward the spam email with FULL headers, and with a SHORT explanation (such as "abc.com" is on your network") if the headers do not indicate why the report is being sent to a particular ISP.
I provided tier 3 abuse support to a large ISP and set up the abuse desk for the now defunct dialup offering of the ISP, my advice to the abuse desk people was to shitcan any abuse report that contained contained abusive comments added by the person reporting the spam. Adding abusive comments is not reporting abuse, it IS abuse.
Except for the fact that the company who built the machines seems to have an agenda that was better served by having properly corrupted data.
In a Republican fund raiding letter, the president of Diebold indicates his bias by saying that he is "committed to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes to the president next year."
What is your source indicating the upgrade rate for Feisty Fawn?
Two things;
I needed a duplicate file finder for Windows; I googled for it and found a huge selection, I tried several and found that almost all of them were crap and the one that wasn't crap wanted money to use it. I googled for a F/OSS duplicate file finder and found that many people said good things about FSLint. I installed FSLint and it works fine for me. As a bonus, FSLint has no nag screens and it installed much easier than the dupe finders for Windows.
I don't know where you did program development, where I did program development it was done by a number of committees that required MANY conference calls. There were even project managers who did nothing but conduct weekly conference calls and send out MS Project files before and after each weekly meeting. There were committees that did database design, committees that did GUI or web design, committees that did middle ware design, there were sys admin committees; and all too frequently there were committees that the main groups of committees, including the project managers, didn't even know existed.
According to Colorado State University Cooperative Extension, the saturated fat in chocolate is in the form of stearic acid; which does not raise cholesterol levels.
0 1-02c.html
http://www.ext.colostate.edu/Pubs/HealthyHeart/04
My GPS has an FM traffic receiver, but I don't detour because of information provided by it. I get confirmation and further information from XM traffic, then I decide whether to detour or not.
There are no domestic US manufacturers that build consumer optical drives.
My post said currency, it did not include coins.
According to the Department of the Treasury, "The motto IN GOD WE TRUST was placed on United States coins largely because of the increased religious sentiment existing during the Civil War."
"In God We Trust" was added to US currency in 1957 as an act of religious and political propaganda, McCarthyism was at its peak at that time.
"In God We trust" was added to American currency in 1956, coincident with McCarthyism.
When I was in the Air Force I worked on radio transmitters that were cooled with silicone oil -- what a mess. Silicone oil as a coolant is NASTY, it leaks and doesn't clean up very easily with detergent. The solvents that we used to clean up silicone oil have been banned (first trichloroethane and then Freon 11).
Giving the copyrighted work to a third party that retains the work goes far beyond "fair access and use of that material so that the school can do their job."
The crap that would be in that junk yard would be way out of date and likely to have been poorly stored. Good enough for movies, and some of the parts may still be usable for their intended purpose, but they would be no more of a security or military threat than the stuff you can buy new at Grainger's and Fry's.
ISPs do NOT not have Common Carrier status -- and don't want it.
"you can breathe oxygen at 100% concentration and not feel a whole lot different, whereas wood and plastic burn like gunpowder at that concentration."
I used to work on B52's that had liquid oxygen (LOX) systems and LOX was available from servicing carts. A few drops of LOX dripped into a cigarette pack caused the cigarettes to burn quite quickly.
Does this mean that things don't burn above 6,000 altitude? I guess that I just imagined having camp fires above 8,000 feet in the Rockies. I saw the remains of a wooden building at over 14,000 feet that had burned to the ground. Something doesn't smell right with this article.
It would be NASDAQ that would delist them, not the SEC.
The page has an ad for a Dish TV from freespeachstore, are they still spamming and suing antispammers?
It's been under a dollar a share for the past week. How long before it gets delisted?
Nobody except sco is saying that anything was copied. It has finally boiled down to sco pointing to these few hundred specific lines as being the infringing code, rather than the millions of lines as had been claimed. Now, IBM knows what the entire turkey fuck has been over. Personally, I believe that sco has been grasping at straws and that it will be shown that there was no infringement at all. Time will tell.