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Comment Re:Last night's flood at DFW airport proves him wr (Score 1) 241

Which goes to show that no one is applying discretion when enforcing these rules. Providing exceptions when the situation calls for it is required in many situations. Things like allowing people to use an emergency staircase while an escalator is under repair, or allowing drivers to cross the double yellow when there's a fallen tree blocking the lane for your direction of travel. In the case of DFW airport case they should have simply allowed people to re-enter security (provided they comply with all the rules, obviously you can't bring your checked baggage through if it contains things that cannot enter the secure area) would have been immensely helpful.

And they certainly could have. For years the only currency exchange in town was located in the secure area of the airport. Customers would go to a TSA office outside the secure area, provide ID, sign a log and be given a photo ID pass to enter the secure area for a short amount of time (I believe the default was an hour). The pass was to be handed to the TSA agent guarding the exit, and they would reconcile the returned passes with the sign in log. Not sure what happened to you if you forgot to return the pass, and wasn't particularly interested in finding out.

Comment Re:How many minutes until this is mandatory? (Score 1) 287

Part of this problem is unrealistically slow speed limits. In the NYC area all highways have a maximum speed limit of 50, including the interstates. So you have the "local" speeders and the out of towners who are used to the faster speeds all travelling happily at speed, and then some douche is going the speed limit in lane 3 of a 4 lane road, causing people to split around him like Moses parting the sea and re-enter that lane. Countless unnecessary merges.

Comment Re:dare to hope (Score 1) 210

The RootKit fiasco was their media division, not the division that handles laptops. They were caught and punished and ceased the activity.

The Coca Cola corporation in Columbia murdered a few union leaders, and essentially got away with it. Does your place of employment have Coke vending machines? After all, if one part of a company does something bad the entire company is bad, right?

Comment Re:Not unambiguously bad (Score 2) 318

The defense force is currently defending South Korea and Japan, with the permission of those countries. I'm with you in spirit, but you should include allowing them to defend countries which ask for the help. Also since Japan isn't allowed an army (an arrangement both Japanese citizens and most of South East Asia seems to be happy with), it would be a special level of messed up to pull out of there, not to mention in violation of a treaty.

Comment Re:Dansguardian (Score 1) 260

I came here to mention exactly this. Getting the initial blocklist was somewhat of a challenge, the connection kept timing out.

My purpose was not for children so much as restricting the free wifi I provided to guests and neighbors. To "encourage" the use of the dansguardian proxy I used a wireless router that did not have a connection to the internet, and the dansguardian box was a client on both that network and the real network. Worked well enough.

Comment Re:Red Hat Network (Score 1) 755

Of course you can reconfigure yum - provided that you have an easy way to do it (try without wget or make or even unzip).

Eh, presuming you have some form of text editor (or for that matter, cat), the mount command, and the RedHat ISO, you can trivially reconfigure yum to use the DVD image. No subscription required. Just make a file in /etc/repos.d/ that looks like:
[somename]
name=some name
baseurl=file:///path/to/mounted/dvd
enabled=1
gpgcheck=1 #(or 0 if you're too lazy to import the redhat GPG key)

We do something like this on our servers that are not allowed to connect to the internet, we sync the official redhat repo to one box and the others get their updates from it.

Comment Re:I'll take the wine instead (Score 2) 480

How about lottery pools. A few years ago a group of 6 or so IT staff (all on the same team) won the mega millions, ~$200 million. What happened to the seventh guy who didn't put his cash in with the rest of the group? After a few weeks of staring at 6 empty chairs knowing why those chairs were empty, he quit and took a mall job. I'd hate to have been the manager of that team...

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