I hate Exchange, but in fairness it can be made to speak POP3 and IMAP with very little effort. Even secure POP3 and IMAP if you can be bothered to generate certificates.
"No reason," wailed the old woman. "No reason."
"What right did they have?"
"Catch-22. [...] Catch-22 says they have a right to do anything we can't stop them from doing."
"One statistical analysis of the new and previous Utah studies showed cell phone users were 5.36 times more likely to get in an accident than undistracted drivers. Other studies have shown the risk is about the same as for drivers with a 0.08 blood-alcohol level."
Ok, I don't need software support. I've been running Linux since '99 or so and I admin it professionally. What I do want is to be able to get hardware support should bits of my laptop break. The Dell situation seems to offer no benefits over my (unsupported) Compaq laptop, and frankly I prefer Compaq hardware. It's not exactly a compelling reason for me to buy a Dell.
"Certain decentralized forms of peer-to-peer file sharing present a challenge to the unidirectional view of distribution that is implicit in GPLv2 and Draft 1 of GPLv3. It is neither straightforward nor reasonable to identify an upstream/downstream link in BitTorrent distribution; such distribution is multidirectional, cooperative and anonymous. In systems like BitTorrent, participants act both as transmitters and recipients of blocks of a particular file, but they see themselves as users and receivers, and not as distributors in any conventional sense. At any given moment of time, most peers will not have the complete file."
I don't recall hearing *any* politician, regardless of the country they are in, but especially the Congressional ones, apologize, or otherwise admit they were wrong regarding these WMDs.
These British MPs voted against the war, so have nothing to apologise for. Don't go giving the impression that all the politicians everywhere were right behind George Bush.
Diane Abbott, Graham Allen, John Austin, Tony Banks, Harry Barnes, John Battle, Andrew Bennett, Joe Benton, Roger Berry, Harold Best, Bob Blizzard, Keith Bradley, Kevin Brennan, Karen Buck, Richard Burden, Anne Campbell, Ronnie Campbell, Martin Caton, David Chaytor, Michael Clapham, Helen Clark, Tom Clarke, Tony Clarke, Harry Cohen, Iain Coleman, Michael Connarty, Frank Cook, Robin Cook, Jeremy Corbyn, Jim Cousins, Tom Cox, David Crausby, Ann Cryer, John Cryer, Tam Dalyell , Valerie Davey, Ian Davidson, Denzil Davies, Terry Davis, Hilton Dawson, John Denham, Parmjit Dhanda, Jim Dobbin, Frank Dobson, Frank Doran, David Drew, Huw Edwards, Clive Efford, Bill Etherington, Mark Fisher, Paul Flynn, Hywel Francis,George Galloway, Neil Gerrard, Ian Gibson, Roger Godsiff, Win Griffiths, John Grogan , Patrick Hall, David Hamilton, Fabian Hamilton, Dai Havard, Doug Henderson, Stephen Hepburn, David Heyes, David Hinchliffe, Kate Hoey, Jimmy Hood, Kelvin Hopkins, Joan Humble, Brian Iddon, Eric Illsley, Glenda Jackson, Helen Jackson, Jon Owen Jones, Lynne Jones, Martyn Jones, David Kidney, Peter Kilfoyle, Mark Lazarowicz, David Lepper, Terry Lewis, Tony Lloyd, Ian Lucas, Iain Luke, John Lyons, Christine McCafferty, John McDonnell, Ann McKechin, Kevin McNamara, Tony McWalter, Alice Mahon, Jim Marshall, Robert Marshall-Andrews, Eric Martlew, Julie Morgan, Chris Mullin, Denis Murphy, Doug Naysmith, Eddie O'Hara, Diana Organ, Albert Owen, Linda Perham, Peter Pike, Kerry Pollard, Gordon Prentice, Gwyn Prosser, Ken Purchase, John Robertson, Joan Ruddock, Martin Salter, Mohammad Sarwar, Malcolm Savidge, Philip Sawford, Brian Sedgemore, Debra Shipley, Alan Simpson, Marsha Singh, Chris Smith, Llew Smith, George Stevenson, Gavin Strang, Graham Stringer, David Taylor, Jon Trickett, Paul Truswell, Desmond Turner, Bill Tynan, Rudi Vis, Joan Walley, Robert Wareing, Alan Whitehead, Alan Williams, Betty Williams, Mike Wood, Tony Worthington, David Wright, Tony Wright, Derek Wyatt -- http://politics.guardian.co.uk/iraq/story/0,,91738 6,00.html
And which of those agreements was worth the 3,400+ of our troops that have died over there? Or the uncounted number of Iraqi civilians who have died? Please be specific in your answer.
That would be about 650,000 give or take a few hundred thousand. "The British government was advised against publicly criticising a report estimating that 655,000 Iraqis had died due to the war, the BBC has learnt.... the Ministry of Defence's chief scientific adviser said the survey's methods were "close to best practice" and the study design was "robust"." -- http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/649575 3.stm
Fuck you George Bush. And while we're at it, fuck you Tony Blair as well.
Dont forget the entire UN agreed with what was going on,
Bollocks. Leave out the revisionism already.
"Blix's statements about the Iraq WMD program came to contradict the claims of the Bush administration, [7] and attracted a great deal of criticism from supporters of the invasion of Iraq. In an interview on BBC TV on 8 February 2004, Dr. Blix accused the U.S. and British governments of dramatising the threat of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, in order to strengthen the case for the 2003 war against the regime of Saddam Hussein." -- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hans_Blix
I know this is wikipedia, but any source other than perhaps Fox and the Republican party will say the same.
Lots of others have set them to 'these are our mailservers' but with softfail. Thus you can score mail up if the SPF passes AND the sending domain is on your whitelist. If it fails, you don't reject outright.
(It's no good using just an SPF pass to mean OK - that's like checking that someone has a passport, but not looking at their name and photo.)
Another informal poll of Linux system administrators - which had me as the sole respondent - concluded that Microsoft will say anything if they think it reflects negatively upon open source. This poll has a margin of error of +inf.
3DES is usually Encrypt-Decrypt-Encrypt with two different keys, hence the 112 bit (56 * 2) strength. I forget why exactly, but you should be using AES now anyway.
AES goes up to 256-bit but 256-bit symmetric encryption is not directly comparable to 1024-bit RSA encryption. You need to calculate the work factor - how long it would take to break - for each. If your AES takes a million billion years to brute force, then choose an RSA key length which also takes a million billion years. Of course, even AES-128 or RSA 1024-bit is strong enough that it's easier to attack other parts of the system. If you're using AES-256 then I think you should pick SHA-512 for your HMAC (?).
Tom St. Denis can probably explain it better than I can - as with anything I'm not doing right now, it gets swapped out. Or try "Practical Cryptography" by Schneier and Ferguson.
For one, because your security admin is used to looking at a record of dodgy website visited - in terms of drive-by downloads, I'm not talking about porn here. Now s/he needs to check whether BITS downloads are going to real MS servers or not.
US patent #8324251 : From time to time the currently operating application shall cease working for no apparent reason. The typical means of exit shall be a crash; at this time nothing useful is to be written to the event log. A crash dump may be offered as if to taunt the user 'if you had the source you could fix this yourself, nyaah'.
Yep; I used IMAP with Emacs/Gnus and I did tend to miss meetings, but I consider that a feature ;)
I hate Exchange, but in fairness it can be made to speak POP3 and IMAP with very little effort. Even secure POP3 and IMAP if you can be bothered to generate certificates.
"No reason," wailed the old woman. "No reason."
"What right did they have?"
"Catch-22. [...] Catch-22 says they have a right to do anything we can't stop them from doing."
No worries mate, you can park it inside the mall.
"One statistical analysis of the new and previous Utah studies showed cell phone users were 5.36 times more likely to get in an accident than undistracted drivers. Other studies have shown the risk is about the same as for drivers with a 0.08 blood-alcohol level."
White phosphorus was used in Falluja - http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4440664.stm and http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/artic le327094.ece
Ok, I don't need software support. I've been running Linux since '99 or so and I admin it professionally. What I do want is to be able to get hardware support should bits of my laptop break. The Dell situation seems to offer no benefits over my (unsupported) Compaq laptop, and frankly I prefer Compaq hardware. It's not exactly a compelling reason for me to buy a Dell.
"Certain decentralized forms of peer-to-peer file sharing present a challenge to the unidirectional view of distribution that is implicit in GPLv2 and Draft 1 of GPLv3. It is neither straightforward nor reasonable to identify an upstream/downstream link in BitTorrent distribution; such distribution is multidirectional, cooperative and anonymous. In systems like BitTorrent, participants act both as transmitters and recipients of blocks of a particular file, but they see themselves as users and receivers, and not as distributors in any conventional sense. At any given moment of time, most peers will not have the complete file."
Problem is that you could then in theory ask any BT user to provide the source code for that binary. More here: http://gplv3.fsf.org/bittorrent-dd2.html
These British MPs voted against the war, so have nothing to apologise for. Don't go giving the impression that all the politicians everywhere were right behind George Bush.
Diane Abbott, Graham Allen, John Austin, Tony Banks, Harry Barnes, John Battle, Andrew Bennett, Joe Benton, Roger Berry, Harold Best, Bob Blizzard, Keith Bradley, Kevin Brennan, Karen Buck, Richard Burden, Anne Campbell, Ronnie Campbell, Martin Caton, David Chaytor, Michael Clapham, Helen Clark, Tom Clarke, Tony Clarke, Harry Cohen, Iain Coleman, Michael Connarty, Frank Cook, Robin Cook, Jeremy Corbyn, Jim Cousins, Tom Cox, David Crausby, Ann Cryer, John Cryer, Tam Dalyell , Valerie Davey, Ian Davidson, Denzil Davies, Terry Davis, Hilton Dawson, John Denham, Parmjit Dhanda, Jim Dobbin, Frank Dobson, Frank Doran, David Drew, Huw Edwards, Clive Efford, Bill Etherington, Mark Fisher, Paul Flynn, Hywel Francis,George Galloway, Neil Gerrard, Ian Gibson, Roger Godsiff, Win Griffiths, John Grogan , Patrick Hall, David Hamilton, Fabian Hamilton, Dai Havard, Doug Henderson, Stephen Hepburn, David Heyes, David Hinchliffe, Kate Hoey, Jimmy Hood, Kelvin Hopkins, Joan Humble, Brian Iddon, Eric Illsley, Glenda Jackson, Helen Jackson, Jon Owen Jones, Lynne Jones, Martyn Jones, David Kidney, Peter Kilfoyle, Mark Lazarowicz, David Lepper, Terry Lewis, Tony Lloyd, Ian Lucas, Iain Luke, John Lyons, Christine McCafferty, John McDonnell, Ann McKechin, Kevin McNamara, Tony McWalter, Alice Mahon, Jim Marshall, Robert Marshall-Andrews, Eric Martlew, Julie Morgan, Chris Mullin, Denis Murphy, Doug Naysmith, Eddie O'Hara, Diana Organ, Albert Owen, Linda Perham, Peter Pike, Kerry Pollard, Gordon Prentice, Gwyn Prosser, Ken Purchase, John Robertson, Joan Ruddock, Martin Salter, Mohammad Sarwar, Malcolm Savidge, Philip Sawford, Brian Sedgemore, Debra Shipley, Alan Simpson, Marsha Singh, Chris Smith, Llew Smith, George Stevenson, Gavin Strang, Graham Stringer, David Taylor, Jon Trickett, Paul Truswell, Desmond Turner, Bill Tynan, Rudi Vis, Joan Walley, Robert Wareing, Alan Whitehead, Alan Williams, Betty Williams, Mike Wood, Tony Worthington, David Wright, Tony Wright, Derek Wyatt -- http://politics.guardian.co.uk/iraq/story/0,,91738 6,00.html
That would be about 650,000 give or take a few hundred thousand. "The British government was advised against publicly criticising a report estimating that 655,000 Iraqis had died due to the war, the BBC has learnt. ... the Ministry of Defence's chief scientific adviser said the survey's methods were "close to best practice" and the study design was "robust"." -- http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/649575 3.stm
Fuck you George Bush. And while we're at it, fuck you Tony Blair as well.
Bollocks. Leave out the revisionism already.
"Blix's statements about the Iraq WMD program came to contradict the claims of the Bush administration, [7] and attracted a great deal of criticism from supporters of the invasion of Iraq. In an interview on BBC TV on 8 February 2004, Dr. Blix accused the U.S. and British governments of dramatising the threat of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, in order to strengthen the case for the 2003 war against the regime of Saddam Hussein." -- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hans_Blix
I know this is wikipedia, but any source other than perhaps Fox and the Republican party will say the same.
In other news, the CIA's licence to operate in Venezuela will not be renewed either.
"One 175mb TV show is a lot of web pages." ... or one myspace page.
Because neither country has signed up to the Kyoto protocol? :p
(It's no good using just an SPF pass to mean OK - that's like checking that someone has a passport, but not looking at their name and photo.)
Shirely you mean "transistor - $0.01 part protecting $3 fuse" ?
I use GBDMail, and I find it strikes a chord with a lot of my friends too.
When the Met are able to shoot someone in the head in broad daylight, in front of witnesses and get away with it, lack of video footage seems to be a moot point.
Another informal poll of Linux system administrators - which had me as the sole respondent - concluded that Microsoft will say anything if they think it reflects negatively upon open source. This poll has a margin of error of +inf.
3DES is usually Encrypt-Decrypt-Encrypt with two different keys, hence the 112 bit (56 * 2) strength. I forget why exactly, but you should be using AES now anyway.
AES goes up to 256-bit but 256-bit symmetric encryption is not directly comparable to 1024-bit RSA encryption. You need to calculate the work factor - how long it would take to break - for each. If your AES takes a million billion years to brute force, then choose an RSA key length which also takes a million billion years. Of course, even AES-128 or RSA 1024-bit is strong enough that it's easier to attack other parts of the system. If you're using AES-256 then I think you should pick SHA-512 for your HMAC (?).
Tom St. Denis can probably explain it better than I can - as with anything I'm not doing right now, it gets swapped out. Or try "Practical Cryptography" by Schneier and Ferguson.
I think it's a teaser ad campaign by paper manufacturers.
Soon to be mandated for all federal employees. "US ASCII not good enough for you? Perhaps you prefer the godless, communist ISO-8859-1 ?"
For one, because your security admin is used to looking at a record of dodgy website visited - in terms of drive-by downloads, I'm not talking about porn here. Now s/he needs to check whether BITS downloads are going to real MS servers or not.
I mean, some of us decided to go for Ubuntu.
PS. Ubuntu beats XP in Total Cost of Ownership studies - providing TCO includes my sanity.
US patent #8324251 : From time to time the currently operating application shall cease working for no apparent reason. The typical means of exit shall be a crash; at this time nothing useful is to be written to the event log. A crash dump may be offered as if to taunt the user 'if you had the source you could fix this yourself, nyaah'.