Gold is just a metal. It has no real intrinsic value. You can't eat it, live under it, and cloth in it. Everything else is just a means of common agreement that allows us to easily acquire the thing we need... and want.
Re:Solution: Use a proper protocol (aka ISO)
on
Got (Buffer) Bloat?
·
· Score: 3, Funny
The difference is that you can write an smtp server by reading in strings line by line and treating them as commands, then watch the logs and kludge it until it seems to interoperate well enough. With the OSI way of doing things you have to wear a blue tie for a start then you have to print out all the interface definition documents and spread them out on your desk and write the software to the interface.
man.. I want your desk if you can spread out all the iso interface definition documents on it and be able to read them
It's about the downside of memory becoming cheap causing latency problems with congestion control mechinisms that rely on the endpoints being able to inform the sender when it's sending too fast.
Nope.. only the fact you sudo su -'d was logged. nothing after that was.
Sudo everything provides an actual audit trail to the actions taken by an admin. which is essential in environments where governance and acountability are required.
So I enjoyed Tron legacy but... there were a couple of problems in my opinion.
It suffered for better technology rather than using the technology to tell a story they got sucked into we can so we should. in particular the whole cityscape inside the computer with neon was a tad cyber punk rather than being a otherworldly reflection of inside the system as the original tron was.
Also the whole thing with the one remaining ISO was very Weird Science ie Inside the computer is a super hot smart chick if you could just get off your ass to go rescue her.
Also When they break out of the grid there's this wasteland with no energy no light nada in the original tron regardless of where they go there's energy around.
The house was also a big problem the idea that Flynn just gives up and goes all zen master is totally whack imho.
Assuming just for a second that this isn't a horrible troll...
Low bitrate have many useful applications. ethernet style bandwidth isn't availible everywhere and where it is availible low bitrate codecs allow you to have more conversations in the same connection
so for example community telco you could use the wifi links to trunk 100's of calls instead of a couple of dozen. more efficient use of bandwidth for meaningful communications is a worthy goal.
As a newly licenced ham in a area where Dstar repeaters are everywhere (VK) and free software advocate I have recently become aware of the issues with Dstar and have been reading about this work so it's quite surreal to have it pop up on/. in the week where I get my licence.
I havn't had a chance to read the Dstar specifications but am wondering if the voice codec is flagged in the dstar digital stream. and if it would be possible to create translating repeaters
so dual output repeaters with differently coded data streams it'd take more spectrum but would also allow for a migration path (at least for repeater users?)
They can be useful if you make it more open ended and in determining someones thought processes for problem solving. ie given a problem you've got little hope of having an established answer for what would you do?
Using google is often the right answer. (unless you're applying at a competing search company)
I've met many many individuals in my life who are not capable of changing a tyre on a car let alone checking fluids on a car (oil, radiator, winscreen)
Or worse yet. Some just write down the password in a place that's easy to find.
Is that so bad a good password that's written down is far better against a network based attack than a poor password that's remembered?
I often tell users to write their password on a postit and put it in their wallet imo that's safer than stored badly encrypted (think password protected excell spreadsheets) on a system thats on and network connected
If it used to work.. but was broken when sendmail was re-installed that can be fixed within an hr or so.
but if it's changing the function of a controled production system that's a major change that requires a CIP to be filled out. two appearances in front of CAB. and 30 days lead time
I spend FAR more of my time doing paperwork than I do doing actual techwork.
Right.. but at some point in asking for some non trivial ammount of resourcing to fix something you're going to need to identify and explain what change needs to be done.. what the risk that is being mitigated is. and what the probability of that risk eventuating is.
IT suffers pretty badly from building Taj Mahals and misconstruing technical risk as business risk.
"We need to fix this and it's going to cost us X if we don't" has to be based on established trust and faith that you've evaluated X correctly. you get there by proving it with data and reports (things IT also sucks at supprisingly hard)
The biggest problem that IT is that people think "This is going to cost us X if we don't fix it."where in reality what's needed for decision making is "We should fix Y because there's a Z chance of costing X if we don't"
In particular RAND allows for per unit licencing costs for implementations which sounds the death knell for any free software implementation of a standard that is patent encumbered even if the patents are availible under a RAND scheme.
The issue is that as free software is by definition redistributable you need to licence the patent for every potential user.
I don't have the tablet I do have a new x230.
The good:
That said:
linus photogenic yeah.. right... https://www.linux.com/news/galleries/1-linus-torvalds-in-pictures/24
Here you go:
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:249
FREE HAT! FREE HAT!
*Cough* They have.
http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20110801/03544615342/judge-waxes-comedic-whether-you-can-trademark-quilted-diamonds-toilet-paper.shtml
Gold is just a metal. It has no real intrinsic value. You can't eat it, live under it, and cloth in it. Everything else is just a means of common agreement that allows us to easily acquire the thing we need... and want.
Gold has an ammount of intrisic value it's got some very nice electrical and mechanical properties, additionally people have clothed themselves in gold throughout history ref: http://info.goldavenue.com/Info_site/in_arts/in_civ/in_fash_overview.html
Inquiring minds want to know.
The difference is that you can write an smtp server by reading in strings line by line and treating them as commands, then watch the logs and kludge it until it seems to interoperate well enough. With the OSI way of doing things you have to wear a blue tie for a start then you have to print out all the interface definition documents and spread them out on your desk and write the software to the interface.
man.. I want your desk if you can spread out all the iso interface definition documents on it and be able to read them
It's about the downside of memory becoming cheap causing latency problems with congestion control mechinisms that rely on the endpoints being able to inform the sender when it's sending too fast.
Jim Getty's research blog entry explains the problem in detail.
That works fine until you have 30 sysadmins... because you have 1500 systems in your environment.
Really.. sudo su - is not appropriate in serious environments at scale that need to meet strong AAA and governance requirements.
Nope.. only the fact you sudo su -'d was logged. nothing after that was.
Sudo everything provides an actual audit trail to the actions taken by an admin. which is essential in environments where governance and acountability are required.
So I enjoyed Tron legacy but... there were a couple of problems in my opinion.
It suffered for better technology rather than using the technology to tell a story they got sucked into we can so we should. in particular the whole cityscape inside the computer with neon was a tad cyber punk rather than being a otherworldly reflection of inside the system as the original tron was.
Also the whole thing with the one remaining ISO was very Weird Science ie Inside the computer is a super hot smart chick if you could just get off your ass to go rescue her.
Also When they break out of the grid there's this wasteland with no energy no light nada in the original tron regardless of where they go there's energy around.
The house was also a big problem the idea that Flynn just gives up and goes all zen master is totally whack imho.
Assuming just for a second that this isn't a horrible troll...
Low bitrate have many useful applications. ethernet style bandwidth isn't availible everywhere and where it is availible low bitrate codecs allow you to have more conversations in the same connection
so for example community telco you could use the wifi links to trunk 100's of calls instead of a couple of dozen. more efficient use of bandwidth for meaningful communications is a worthy goal.
As a newly licenced ham in a area where Dstar repeaters are everywhere (VK) and free software advocate I have recently become aware of the issues with Dstar and have been reading about this work so it's quite surreal to have it pop up on /. in the week where I get my licence.
I havn't had a chance to read the Dstar specifications but am wondering if the voice codec is flagged in the dstar digital stream. and if it would be possible to create translating repeaters
so dual output repeaters with differently coded data streams it'd take more spectrum but would also allow for a migration path (at least for repeater users?)
That's a facinating correlation. when I think about the team I'm in. the really good people do musical theatre or choirs. (including me ;) )
They can be useful if you make it more open ended and in determining someones thought processes for problem solving. ie given a problem you've got little hope of having an established answer for what would you do? Using google is often the right answer. (unless you're applying at a competing search company)
I've met many many individuals in my life who are not capable of changing a tyre on a car let alone checking fluids on a car (oil, radiator, winscreen)
http://www.threadingbuildingblocks.org/ seems sane afaict.
You clearly havn't been around here very long...
With puppet of course.
Or worse yet. Some just write down the password in a place that's easy to find.
Is that so bad a good password that's written down is far better against a network based attack than a poor password that's remembered?
I often tell users to write their password on a postit and put it in their wallet imo that's safer than stored badly encrypted (think password protected excell spreadsheets) on a system thats on and network connected
It depends what you mean by fixup.
If it used to work.. but was broken when sendmail was re-installed that can be fixed within an hr or so.
but if it's changing the function of a controled production system that's a major change that requires a CIP to be filled out. two appearances in front of CAB. and 30 days lead time
I spend FAR more of my time doing paperwork than I do doing actual techwork.
Right.. but at some point in asking for some non trivial ammount of resourcing to fix something you're going to need to identify and explain what change needs to be done.. what the risk that is being mitigated is. and what the probability of that risk eventuating is.
IT suffers pretty badly from building Taj Mahals and misconstruing technical risk as business risk.
"We need to fix this and it's going to cost us X if we don't" has to be based on established trust and faith that you've evaluated X correctly. you get there by proving it with data and reports (things IT also sucks at supprisingly hard)
The biggest problem that IT is that people think "This is going to cost us X if we don't fix it."where in reality what's needed for decision making is "We should fix Y because there's a Z chance of costing X if we don't"
RAND isn't as reasonable or as non-discriminatory as most people seem to think
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reasonable_and_Non_Discriminatory_Licensing
In particular RAND allows for per unit licencing costs for implementations which sounds the death knell for any free software implementation of a standard that is patent encumbered even if the patents are availible under a RAND scheme.
The issue is that as free software is by definition redistributable you need to licence the patent for every potential user.
The c64 has had ethernet support for a number of years now.. see http://www.dunkels.com/adam/tfe/
Additionally siginficant 3d work is done on c64 sytems including 3d dot plots and polygon rotation including shading.