Wouldn't you have to be very careful when using water for cooling? Would there be a chance of damaging the ecosystem if they were to warm the river to much?
Im sure they would google such a problem before they did anything but it makes me curious to see what safety measures they have in place if that is in fact what they are doing.
how about doing the best job we can with what we are presented. Security can't happen over night and with firms just now starting to hire security professionals we have to go into their business and first geta grasp on their current practises. from there you have to work at changing years of insecure procedures while at the same time working on the security of the tech side with the very little funding you are allocated.
I guess what im asking is are we actually failing at our job? or are we just taking longer to do it then we would like.
being a student and talking to many employers quite often to find out what they want they all seem to say the same thing. "Get as many certs under your belt as possible". maybe im crazy but that seems to go against tfa
being a network admin for school districts can be pretty interesting. your biggest jobs include cleaning spyware and staying up to date on the latest sites for online instant messaging and flash games.
some of my fav memories would have to be watching conversations about myself and being called a "f*&^n immigrant" due to blocking a popular site.
one of the more interesting aspects of schools is that with all the sensitive information they hold on students, parents, teachers, adminitration, etc etc security seems to never be a huge issue. and by never a huge issue i actually mean nobody cares.
as for the busiest time that is summer roleouts (if you are looking for a summer job where you will learn a lot contact your it department and see if they need summer students), christmas rollouts can also be busy but generally not as tiring as the summer versions. the worst time is more then likely jsut after a big rollout when school starts back up. nobody knows their passwords or usernames, can't figure out the new system, don't understand why their version of software is gone... you name it people will complain about it.
why are they giving out their operating system designed for use in clusters with mass amounts of transfer and storage of data to the public?
Maybe they are low on money and this is their way making a distributed network of computers accross north america! THAT'S what all that dark fiber is for... it all makes sense now...
really though... thats a horribly put together rumor. good try though.
being in the field of information security i would have to say.... what did you expect? if iw as consulting a company that didn't due what yours did it would be an immediate red flag.
as many others have said.. you got paid, the world moves on.
The quake 4 sdk was released recently as well... the q4 engine also has a lot more stability and common.. its quake... quake is much more important to the nerd culture.
I did a survey around the campus for a paper on the topic of 'mobile computing' (the colleges name for forced laptop rentals and wireless everywhere ). My survey found that the people who had the best gpa were the ones who wouldn't use their laptop during class, closely followed by those who did to talk to fellow class mates during the lecture. Those with the worst gpa said they spent most of their time on solitare.
To me it seemed like the best idea would be to put the laptops away, keep the ineternet there if its needed and keep the class open to discussion.
"Although only replacing the processor would be much more convenient."
Interesting that you mentioned that as its more then likely a business that will be using this socket.I can't help but wonder what would be cheaper for them. a quick swap of a processesor or completely stripping the machine down to replace the motherboard. With the price of man hours for both the tech fixing it and also everyone who may need that box to be productive the thousand dollar chip may not actually be that big of an expense
Reading this article it looks like its actually quite powerful just not so much as an administrative tool. It looks like it would be best suited as a tool for debugging C# classes.
Wouldn't you have to be very careful when using water for cooling? Would there be a chance of damaging the ecosystem if they were to warm the river to much?
Im sure they would google such a problem before they did anything but it makes me curious to see what safety measures they have in place if that is in fact what they are doing.
I thought they went for the chest so that their hit could be properly identified and thus they would get paid.
so you can have a real gun... just not a virtual one.. at least they have their constitutional priorities in line.
mod me down Im use to it.
i did google it :(
Those who desire to give up freedom in order to gain security will not have, nor do they deserve, either one.
-Thomas Jefferson
how about doing the best job we can with what we are presented. Security can't happen over night and with firms just now starting to hire security professionals we have to go into their business and first geta grasp on their current practises. from there you have to work at changing years of insecure procedures while at the same time working on the security of the tech side with the very little funding you are allocated.
I guess what im asking is are we actually failing at our job? or are we just taking longer to do it then we would like.
being a student and talking to many employers quite often to find out what they want they all seem to say the same thing. "Get as many certs under your belt as possible". maybe im crazy but that seems to go against tfa
anything that doesn't rhyme with "ibm" and "tivoli"... that about covers it..
Unless im mistaken it only works in browsers that support XUL... and for good reason... because its written using XUL. Seems to make sense to me.
100 similar services have sprung up in the last ten minutes...
being a network admin for school districts can be pretty interesting. your biggest jobs include cleaning spyware and staying up to date on the latest sites for online instant messaging and flash games.
some of my fav memories would have to be watching conversations about myself and being called a "f*&^n immigrant" due to blocking a popular site.
one of the more interesting aspects of schools is that with all the sensitive information they hold on students, parents, teachers, adminitration, etc etc security seems to never be a huge issue. and by never a huge issue i actually mean nobody cares.
as for the busiest time that is summer roleouts (if you are looking for a summer job where you will learn a lot contact your it department and see if they need summer students), christmas rollouts can also be busy but generally not as tiring as the summer versions. the worst time is more then likely jsut after a big rollout when school starts back up. nobody knows their passwords or usernames, can't figure out the new system, don't understand why their version of software is gone... you name it people will complain about it.
And they even used teh BSD license.... im speachless...
"What would you say, ya do here?"
we haven't slashdotted the google server... but it would appear that the firefox download site for extensions is.
This doesn't just take harddrive space though, it also takes cpu cycles which for a lot of companies are maxed out on their database systems.
why are they giving out their operating system designed for use in clusters with mass amounts of transfer and storage of data to the public?
Maybe they are low on money and this is their way making a distributed network of computers accross north america! THAT'S what all that dark fiber is for... it all makes sense now...
really though... thats a horribly put together rumor. good try though.
being in the field of information security i would have to say.... what did you expect? if iw as consulting a company that didn't due what yours did it would be an immediate red flag.
as many others have said.. you got paid, the world moves on.
no problem :) glad I could be of assistance.
The quake 4 sdk was released recently as well... the q4 engine also has a lot more stability and common.. its quake... quake is much more important to the nerd culture.
I did a survey around the campus for a paper on the topic of 'mobile computing' (the colleges name for forced laptop rentals and wireless everywhere ). My survey found that the people who had the best gpa were the ones who wouldn't use their laptop during class, closely followed by those who did to talk to fellow class mates during the lecture. Those with the worst gpa said they spent most of their time on solitare.
To me it seemed like the best idea would be to put the laptops away, keep the ineternet there if its needed and keep the class open to discussion.
i know i will get modded down for this but somebody has to ask the question...
How long until they patent this technology?
"Although only replacing the processor would be much more convenient."
Interesting that you mentioned that as its more then likely a business that will be using this socket.I can't help but wonder what would be cheaper for them. a quick swap of a processesor or completely stripping the machine down to replace the motherboard. With the price of man hours for both the tech fixing it and also everyone who may need that box to be productive the thousand dollar chip may not actually be that big of an expense
Reading this article it looks like its actually quite powerful just not so much as an administrative tool. It looks like it would be best suited as a tool for debugging C# classes.
just my two sense.
Abstract says....
ya the new os x msn client is great
Abstract says....
it looks so good and [CONNECTION LOST]
Abstract says....
the new msn client is aw[CONNECTION LOST]
Abstract says....
NEW VERSION SUCKS!
Abstract says...
ha.. that one went through
WARNING: the following messages may not have been delivered
Abstract says....
NEW VERSION SUCKS!
Abstract says...
ha.. that one went through
so it only lacks in the java and xml portions? thats great... its not like java and xml are two of the fav buzz words in business or antyhing...