I do this, using a Mikrotik RB750 router - about $40 anywhere online. Even has virtual OS/router support. Using the firewall, block everything & open the ports you want (80, 443, 25, 110, 587, etc.). You could even redirect their DNS to OpenDNS or something else if you don't want them doing naughty things on your connection.
They do this here in the US as well through Digital River. I just purchased a Windows 7 Pro upgrade for $30 from here: http://windows7.digitalriver.com/
You have to use a.edu address to purchase, and they'll send a link around the 22nd to download an ISO.
Am I the only one that found irony in him going to "collage?" and yet misspelled college?
We used some flash + IDE adapter for some wireless routers, and they didn't hold up as we had expected. I believe they were 4GB. Even the with limited Linux logging, they were decommissioned after a year.
Inbound links definitely helps, although I think it's a combination of a dozen others things as well. We changed one of our sites front page to contain more of our "key words" and within a few weeks instantly shot up to the first 1-3 pages on Google for a variety of keywords.
I would expect Nintendo's profits to continue to grow. The Wii is going to be, once again, an ingenious product. Plus Nintendo understands that the game market is already saturated with gamers. So their solution is to simply create new gamers, by inventing new games to interest those that would otherwise not find games enjoyable.
I have to agree with QMail, I've seen it scale nicely - but not on one machine. You would really need a large cluster of machines - Perhaps the following:
- 4-5 core machines all running heartbeat, and DRDBD or NFS
- Then several Machines for POP, IMAP, and Webmail (NFS the maildirs)
- Then several SMTP servers.
so, essentially if i say that you said that i said that joe said that john said that you said something - which you may or may not have said, or may be false - then i am still protected.:-)
I totally agree. I have met many many people at school who have the certs(A+, Cisco, Red Hat, etc.), but they just don't understand the technology and cannot use common sense with the "knowledge" that their certs are supposed to provide in order to do very simple tasks, or solve problems. Generally it's those types of people that talk a lot about what they know and have done, but can't really back it up - the "my friend is a computer guy" person. I personally would like to get certified, mainly just for personal and pride reasons, which are essentially meaningless. My boss feels the same way about certifications, I would not get a raise after getting certified, they're just a piece of paper that says "I learned this at one point in my life." (I do understand that many certifications have to be renewed.) Personally I think it's just like insurance and the medical industry in the sense that it's self-perpetuating, and over-rated.
I do this, using a Mikrotik RB750 router - about $40 anywhere online. Even has virtual OS/router support. Using the firewall, block everything & open the ports you want (80, 443, 25, 110, 587, etc.). You could even redirect their DNS to OpenDNS or something else if you don't want them doing naughty things on your connection.
They do this here in the US as well through Digital River. I just purchased a Windows 7 Pro upgrade for $30 from here: http://windows7.digitalriver.com/ You have to use a .edu address to purchase, and they'll send a link around the 22nd to download an ISO.
Am I the only one that found irony in him going to "collage?" and yet misspelled college? We used some flash + IDE adapter for some wireless routers, and they didn't hold up as we had expected. I believe they were 4GB. Even the with limited Linux logging, they were decommissioned after a year.
"The next century is ours!" - China
Inbound links definitely helps, although I think it's a combination of a dozen others things as well. We changed one of our sites front page to contain more of our "key words" and within a few weeks instantly shot up to the first 1-3 pages on Google for a variety of keywords.
stairs?
The new 36-blade razor. Perfect for everything from shaving your face, to chopping wood. I'll stick to my electric razor.
I would expect Nintendo's profits to continue to grow. The Wii is going to be, once again, an ingenious product. Plus Nintendo understands that the game market is already saturated with gamers. So their solution is to simply create new gamers, by inventing new games to interest those that would otherwise not find games enjoyable.
How long before we can expect a 5-nanometer based CPU?
Obviously we are outside the box if our balls are in the air.
...for every time I heard that...
Beer would have been more appropriate. I'll accept beer for almost any occasion. :-)
'Weed' has no addictive substances in it. Any addiction is mental.
Clippy's crotch catches on fire and something flails around in circles?
- 4-5 core machines all running heartbeat, and DRDBD or NFS
- Then several Machines for POP, IMAP, and Webmail (NFS the maildirs)
- Then several SMTP servers.
Something similar, but greatly scaled, like this: http://shupp.org/maps/ispcluster.html
so, essentially if i say that you said that i said that joe said that john said that you said something - which you may or may not have said, or may be false - then i am still protected. :-)
I totally agree. I have met many many people at school who have the certs(A+, Cisco, Red Hat, etc.), but they just don't understand the technology and cannot use common sense with the "knowledge" that their certs are supposed to provide in order to do very simple tasks, or solve problems. Generally it's those types of people that talk a lot about what they know and have done, but can't really back it up - the "my friend is a computer guy" person. I personally would like to get certified, mainly just for personal and pride reasons, which are essentially meaningless. My boss feels the same way about certifications, I would not get a raise after getting certified, they're just a piece of paper that says "I learned this at one point in my life." (I do understand that many certifications have to be renewed.) Personally I think it's just like insurance and the medical industry in the sense that it's self-perpetuating, and over-rated.
"Enough talk... Let's kill a human."
Windows killed my father... and raped my mother.