Well, Apple fanboys would stand by Apple if Steve Jobs came to their house while they were asleep in the basement and raped their mom
hmmm..... that explains why he is so sick.:)
I'm glad it doesn't have built in wifi. I'll simply attach an Atheros USB dongle with SMA connector and high gain antenna. Instant very high powered access point/storage system.
Funny.... I had that same problem on a Ubuntu box (mythtv ubuntu 7.10) after moving into my new house over the weekend. It complained about EDID... plugged in another monitor it was fine. Then plugged in the original monitor and the problem was gone. Very weird.
You mean like these guys:
http://tier.cs.berkeley.edu/wiki/Wireless ?
In this project, we address the following question: What are the link- and MAC-layer modifications essential to achieve good transport performance in multi-hop WiLD networks? In addressing this problem, an important constraint is that any solution should continue to leverage existing 802.11 hardware to preserve the cost savings.
I didn't say it wasn't legitimate. I was saying it's not required. Many people are under the impression you can't store the credit card numbers. That is not true. You can store them if you have a legitimate business need. One need (that I have personally experienced) is for handling back orders. You store the credit card information until you have the inventory, then you charge the card. You can't charge up front because the FTC requires you to provide the product/service within 24 hours of charging the card.
Um... no. The PCI DSS requires encrypted storage and transit of the card numbers. It doesn't say you can't retain them. You can. It doesn't specify you have to store something that is a replacement of the card number. You just can't retain them unencrypted. You are correct that limiting access to "people with a business reason to see the numbers" is required.
I have done multiple PCI implementations, including for Intuit and The Walt Disney Company, and consulted with various people on PCI compliance. Please don't spread mis information.
Each case / implementation is also highly customized.
It's more of a kernel module thing. The EEE distro might have included that module in it's kernel build. It's not an upstream module, or at least it wasn't last I checked. Barry includes the module and is installed as part of the suite.
May I ask who your carrier is?
T-mobile USA it's 24.99 for unlimited data, and it tethers easily. I wrote a howto on it at http://adjix.com/if6u
It's 9.00 for exchange access.
I'll say it again: T-mobile USA has an unlimited data plan (HSDPA/edge/gprs) for 24.99 a month. 9.00 a month more to get exchange access.
I got it working in linux and blogged on it at http://adjix.com/if6u
It's really not that expensive compared to the other carriers.
Um. No. It's not that simple. You test a real world deployment. You don't deploy systems unprotected on the internet in the real world (all the malware infected windows boxes non withstanding).
What is unprotected? No access control? Publishing the root password (without selinux/grsecurity et al)? Then it's just silly.
I'm very confused. I read several of the posts and they all mention having to declaw/hack the CueCat to make it work as a barcode scanner.
Mine worked out of the box. I just plugged it in, grabbed the nearest barcode, scanned and got output to my terminal window. No hacking required, no drives. This was on Slackware Linux.
I got mine from the local RadioShack.
Am I missing something?
Um. T-mobile has no problem with tethering or file transfer. My BlackBerry pearl does all that just fine. So does the Razr. T-mobile is a pretty friendly company and seems to be the least evil. As for a comment you make later on about nothing comparable to EVDO... um they have an HSDPA network rolled out in the majority of the NFL cities.
Well, Apple fanboys would stand by Apple if Steve Jobs came to their house while they were asleep in the basement and raped their mom hmmm..... that explains why he is so sick. :)
I'm glad it doesn't have built in wifi. I'll simply attach an Atheros USB dongle with SMA connector and high gain antenna. Instant very high powered access point/storage system.
Um. Regressions happen. Report a bug. Seriously. Why do you complain about this? It's part of the process of any software upgrade.
Have you tried any of the admin tools to do this? Say those from Centos Cluster Suite for example?
See http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/epm/table5_3.html for details on that.
Funny.... I had that same problem on a Ubuntu box (mythtv ubuntu 7.10) after moving into my new house over the weekend. It complained about EDID... plugged in another monitor it was fine. Then plugged in the original monitor and the problem was gone. Very weird.
How do you go to a website if you can't go online? What use is a web based setup program if you can't get online? (oblig matrix reference)
It's called dshield: http://isc.sans.org/howto.html
You mean like these guys: http://tier.cs.berkeley.edu/wiki/Wireless ? In this project, we address the following question: What are the link- and MAC-layer modifications essential to achieve good transport performance in multi-hop WiLD networks? In addressing this problem, an important constraint is that any solution should continue to leverage existing 802.11 hardware to preserve the cost savings.
If your in Los Angeles traffic and traffic signals are monitored by http://trafficinfo.lacity.org/html/atsac_1.html
I didn't say it wasn't legitimate. I was saying it's not required. Many people are under the impression you can't store the credit card numbers. That is not true. You can store them if you have a legitimate business need. One need (that I have personally experienced) is for handling back orders. You store the credit card information until you have the inventory, then you charge the card. You can't charge up front because the FTC requires you to provide the product/service within 24 hours of charging the card.
Um... no. The PCI DSS requires encrypted storage and transit of the card numbers. It doesn't say you can't retain them. You can. It doesn't specify you have to store something that is a replacement of the card number. You just can't retain them unencrypted. You are correct that limiting access to "people with a business reason to see the numbers" is required. I have done multiple PCI implementations, including for Intuit and The Walt Disney Company, and consulted with various people on PCI compliance. Please don't spread mis information. Each case / implementation is also highly customized.
It's more of a kernel module thing. The EEE distro might have included that module in it's kernel build. It's not an upstream module, or at least it wasn't last I checked. Barry includes the module and is installed as part of the suite.
May I ask who your carrier is? T-mobile USA it's 24.99 for unlimited data, and it tethers easily. I wrote a howto on it at http://adjix.com/if6u It's 9.00 for exchange access.
15.00 a month from verizon makes it available to tether. This is on a business plan.
I'll say it again: T-mobile USA has an unlimited data plan (HSDPA/edge/gprs) for 24.99 a month. 9.00 a month more to get exchange access. I got it working in linux and blogged on it at http://adjix.com/if6u It's really not that expensive compared to the other carriers.
T-mobile USA has an unlimited data plan (HSDPA/edge/gprs) for 24.99 a month. 9.00 a month more to get exchange access.
I'm guessing it's not a blackberry? If so then the reconcile now option is very useful. I'm on t-mobile with a pearl and personal IMAP server.
Um.... no. My t-mobile phone roams onto AT&T quite frequently. It's a blackberry pearl. This is in an area with t-mobile coverage.
Uh.... Android is a smart phone in every possible imaginable way.
Um. No. It's not that simple. You test a real world deployment. You don't deploy systems unprotected on the internet in the real world (all the malware infected windows boxes non withstanding). What is unprotected? No access control? Publishing the root password (without selinux/grsecurity et al)? Then it's just silly.
Who would pay for the govt to regulate? Where does that many come from?
I'm very confused. I read several of the posts and they all mention having to declaw/hack the CueCat to make it work as a barcode scanner. Mine worked out of the box. I just plugged it in, grabbed the nearest barcode, scanned and got output to my terminal window. No hacking required, no drives. This was on Slackware Linux. I got mine from the local RadioShack. Am I missing something?
Um. T-mobile has no problem with tethering or file transfer. My BlackBerry pearl does all that just fine. So does the Razr. T-mobile is a pretty friendly company and seems to be the least evil. As for a comment you make later on about nothing comparable to EVDO... um they have an HSDPA network rolled out in the majority of the NFL cities.
Hmmmm.... I'm not so worried about my bank hosting on a cheap service. I'm worried about bad business practices. LOL