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User: binaryspiral

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  1. Thanks Apple on Fighting the iCrime Wave · · Score: 0

    Really Apple is the only major manufacturer who has provided me no-cost full disk encryption, location tracking, remote lock, and remote wipe capabilities out of the box for my phone, tablet, and laptop. Others have the option but it's purchased with a time limited service like LoJack or Computrace... and even then, the device support is limited.

    It's unfortunate that they don't take a hardline with thieves and serial numbers of devices reported stolen. You remove the ability for an iPhone to activate and the device is useless to the thief.

  2. Re:Buried within the article on 6 IT Projects, $8 Billion Over Budget At Dept. of Defense · · Score: 1

    But the other thing - it's all the big boys doing the work, IBM, CA, etc. So they have NO motivation to do it right. Instead they are milking the system for all it's worth.

    Just outsource the labor to a third world contractor and reap the profits for your shareholders. Thanks tax payers - you rock!

    Oh wait... they're getting wind of this - let's start a gay marriage protest or whitehouse scandal, Fox news will blast that shit all over the place!

  3. Exchange 2010 SP1 on Best Way To Archive Emails For Later Searching? · · Score: 1

    I recently updated our exchange environment to SP1 which allows me to create a new database on different storage and assign an Archive mailbox for users. So now I got a terabyte volume on tier 2 Sata storage for folks to use as archive - now I can get those damn pst files finally off my file servers.

  4. Re:Nothing to do with it ... on Dubai's Police Chief Calls BlackBerry a Spy Tool · · Score: 1

    RIM would do well to pull out of UAE and show the world they give a shit about their customers' privacy and won't be bullied like a third rate carrier into handing over the keys to the castle.

  5. Re:One single mistake and BB/RIM will be doomed on Dubai's Police Chief Calls BlackBerry a Spy Tool · · Score: 1

    Open standards or ActiveSync with exchange. Gives you the same basic features as BES (encrypted traffic, remote wipe, and policy enforcement) without a central network.

    Each exchange server uses it's own ssl certain

  6. Re:Is there anything special about RIM security? on Dubai's Police Chief Calls BlackBerry a Spy Tool · · Score: 1

    Get an iPhone or windows mobile and get yourself a hosted exchange account in anoter country. Same deal only not centralized like rim.

    If I were to travel to UAE with my iPhone would they block the encrypted link to my Exchange server?

  7. Dear Apple: on Spammers Attack Apple's Ping Social Network · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Please remove the current iTunes codebase from the life-support you insist on keeping it on. Let the craplication die already, its brain is already dead.

    Rewrite it, buy another developer, or open the damn platform so someone else can do it.

  8. 14.5M if everyone settles on Hurt Locker File-Sharing Subpoenas Begin · · Score: 1

    The Oscar was guilt award provided by the academy to show their support for the troops. The movie, even if it never hit the p2p networks, would have never grossed more.

    The movie wasn't a public hit because it didn't appeal to a broad range of movie goers. If they feel they need to sue for this - then so be it, but 5,000 cases in one DC court? What the fuck was this judge thinking?

  9. IOps first Capacity second on Data Storage Capacity Mostly Wasted In Data Center · · Score: 1

    In the world of storage area networks you must design too support the IO load first and capacity will typically never be an issue - in tier one and two storage.

    With cache cards and ssd becoming cheaper this rule is changing but for many SANs they have wasted space only because they needed more spindles to support the load.

  10. Re:Eh? on Internal Costs Per Gigabyte — What Do You Pay? · · Score: 1

    Insane, maybe - but there maybe some other factors in play here.

    Maybe the company's data center is full and additional storage would require additional investment in racks, cooling, power distribution, etc.

    Maybe the company is trying to encourage sane storage practices. How many storage network managers or engineers see TB of storage wasted because one department or another copies everything, twice, to the network... and never touches it again?

    I would *love* to be able to charge back to the other departments that clutter up my servers with multiple copies of their files - but it gets very political very fast. So we now leverage tiered storage and put those file stores on slow SATA disks with weekly only backups. If the file becomes a popular file - it'll eventually get cached in the controller and be available very quickly to many users.

  11. Shareware Alternatives on Forced iAds Coming To OS X? · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I actually like this idea. It's an alternative for small application developers to make money on their hard work.

    Same goes for the iPhone iADs - it's not going to pop up ads in mail or calendar - it simply provides an API for developers to write in ad serving space on their free applications. This is an alternative to actually charging people money for the software.

    Way to incite a flamewar and bring out the fan boys...

  12. Re:Thanks for the clarification Motorola, on Motorola Says eFuse Doesn't Permanently Brick Phones · · Score: 1

    I was waiting for this news... Motorola congrats you just lost another sale. Who's to blame for this? It sounds like shit Verizon would pull but I wouldn't put it past Motorola to do this too. The same company that sold me a razor phone with mini USB port that only worked with their chargers.

    I'm So sick of being treated like a theif or criminal by my consumer electronics.

  13. Recycle Nukes? on NASA's Plutonium Supply Dwindling; ESA To Help · · Score: 1

    Pardon my ignorance and possible first post - but couldn't NASA just recycle some retiring nuke warheads for plutonium?

  14. Re:Ummm it's their technology on NetApp Threatens Sellers of Appliances Running ZFS · · Score: 1

    I'm a happy NetApp customer and do not agree with you. ZFS has been on the opensource market long enough and documented well enough to be far out of the realm of patent-tolling.

    I had an interesting candid discussion with a NetApp engineer and he also thought their legal stance on this was "dickish" and causing a lot of bad feelings overall. He's in the mindset that if they're selling a box with opensource software - fucking great! We'll sell you the support and give back to the code base with features, bug fixes, and the like. But it was nice to hear a fellow grunt in the trench speak a bit of sanity from what seems to be an insane lawsuit.

  15. Re:btrfs successor on NetApp Threatens Sellers of Appliances Running ZFS · · Score: 1

    Too right. Take those deduplicated blocks of your 8000 images, then place them on SATA storage... dirt cheap vast sata disks. When you go to pull those images - even a few hundred or thousand at a time - your SATA disks will populate the cache cards in your filer with most of the duplicate blocks - and your disks will never be your bottleneck when you're pulling them back down.

    NAS tech has gotten real interesting with the introduction of good and large cache, deduplication, and giant cheap SATA disks.

  16. Sophos Proxies on Schools, Filtering Companies Blocking Google SSL · · Score: 1

    We use Sophos web proxies that can decrypt ssl traffic using their own ssl cert we install in the browsers on our school's pc's. It automatically skips any banking sites, and doesn't cache data it only scans for threats over ssl which are becoming more common.

  17. Re:LOL DAVID CLARKS FTW on Best Telephone For Datacenters? · · Score: 1

    Cisco wireless ip phone + plantronics stereo headset with tube mic. Good wifi coverage in the datacenter saves you from AT&T dropped calls.

  18. Re:Stop having control on University Networks Block Student Project · · Score: 2, Funny

    If you are old enough to attend college/university you are old enough to do whatever you want.

    Wrong on so many levels.

    If you attend a college or university, chances are you are held to a standard of behaviour that prevents you from making the learning institution look like a fool.

    Admissions papers are full of "Sign here on the X", one of them was your agreement to not be a jackass and accept the college's rulings on your behavior.

    Don't like it? There's the door.

  19. It's Steve's party... on Gizmodo Not Welcome at 2010 WWDC · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If Gizmodo pissed in my Cherios - I wouldn't invite them to my party either.

  20. Re:Is this how they can do wifi location detection on Germany Finds Kismet, Custom Code In Google Car · · Score: 1

    It's all based on your AP's mac address. You can change your ssid and you ip will change (DHCP) but the one thing that will remain is the MAC address of your wifi access point.

    As the googmobile drives through your hood it knows where it is by GPS. It's listening for wifi data to capture the mac and tag it with the gps. Then as it picks up more data, it's able to provide a more accurate location based on wifi traffic.

    Quite ingeneious, labor intensive, and completely legal.

    As people upgrade their gear or move - this data will get stale. I wonder if google plans on maintaining this?

  21. Re:Yawn on Intel Targets AMD With Affordable Unlocked CPUs · · Score: 1

    It's a good price for CPUs compared to the H5550 Xeons we just ponyied up a grand a piece for. Rockstar performance comes at rockstar prices.

    These are a steal.

  22. 300 feet, people! on Google's Streetview Privacy Snafu Prompts Lawsuit · · Score: 1

    Your wifi is sending everything you do 300' (more or less) in all directions. Encrypt it or STFU.
    and if it bothers you that one of Google's cars drove by and snagged your wifi access point's name then stop broadcasting your SSID too.
    Just because you don't understand how to configure your wireless network correctly gives you know rights to sue someone. Or at least win in court.

  23. Bot net! on Microsoft's New Attempt To Dominate Robotics · · Score: 1

    Hacked robot controllers gives a whole new meaning to "botnet".

  24. Re:So... on Armstrong, Cernan Testify Against Obama Space Plan · · Score: 1

    I'd like Nasa to setup a program to provide all the people who would like to participate in that one-way trip a free ticket.

    Then just line them up and shoot them.

    End result is the same just less noisy.

  25. Re:Cores vs performance on AMD Undercuts Intel With Six-Core Phenom IIs · · Score: 1

    Virtualization, son! And when your single threaded game is using all the cycles, the chip increases its clock speed.