IcedTea's plugin is worthless. It doesn't deal with signed applets.
The only two things I use java for with a web browser are two different types of network kvm. One uses a java applet, and the other uses a java webstart application. I had to use 32bit sun java to get support for both at once.
Now the only thing left 32bit is mplayer for win32 codecs. I will have to do much testing and see if I can now live without them and use mplayer.x86_64. If so I can pretty much go pure 64bit. I do run into x86_64 applications every so often that don't behave properly. The last example I can think of is rtorrent.
It includes a plugin and javaws support. The two major things sun java 64bit has been lacking for years. It is still lacking the rim.cgi, but I have never had a need for it.
The plugin needs some polish. It doesn't properly declare it's version. Which makes a kvm application I use fail, because it tries to check the version.
indeed. you can ignore what you want. You can only create your own "secure entry point" that override a parental DNSKEY if you would want to (Think China removing
The root key is not Sauron's Ring
you want a 3-way handshake per dns lookup? Are you crazy? Do you even know how many dns lookups your browser creates on average.
You'd be looking at 10 seconds delay for a webpage like slashdot easilly
Stupid sensationalism.
You can right now use draft-vixie-dnsex-dns0x20 to protect against the kaminsky bug. This option is already available in the unbound nameserver.
Talking about totally talking out of context. Fools!
If IETF does something to mitigate, the unbelievers scream "see we dont need dnssec"
If IETF does not do something, the unbelievers scream "you're blackmailing us into dnssec"
Stop whining and put your foot where your mouth is.
I have had the same issue with my iPhone. It is especially bad with the original iPhone in that the speaker is much weaker.
Sadly, I was using number@mobile.mycingular.com and switched to number@txt.att.net, after number@mobile.mycingular.com stopped working for a few days. Oddly sometimes number@txt.att.net doesn't come in the single message way.
The reason number@txt.att.net does it the way it does is that it allows the sms server to track individual messages, hence allowing replies.
I program, therefore I am.