Comment Re:Nice, however.. (Score 1) 294
Windows Media Center does what you want.
Windows Media Center does what you want.
I don't know if this applies to commercial pilots, but here goes.
Military pilots are required to write, word for word, the emergency procedures for their aircraft. Yes, the manuals and checklists are still there, but it's nice knowing that you already have it committed to memory.
Look, I'm not into the whole "political" thing.
But it isn't "Mr." Obama; it's Mr. President or President Obama.
You could also use The President or POTUS.
Saying "Mr." Obama isn't just disrespecting him, it's disrespecting The Office of the President. It's tacky.
Agreed. Just throw a dart at a map, lay down a fixed-sized hex, and call that a district. Set all the other districts as the same-sized hex built off the first hex.
Once the population density of a hex falls below a specific density, i.e. rural areas, start letting the computers take over and carve it up.
Maybe then, disenfranchised inner-city voters would think they have a voice.
The vast majority of the time, I use my bookmarks to hit the sites I love.
Sometimes, I click on a link from a forum (including
Sometimes, I search for something in Google and click the links there.
I *almost* never type in a URL.
Still, not sure that an extra 150~200 pixels is really going to make or break my browsing experience.
If you build software on top of locked hardware, then you should *never* update the systems until you test what the updated will break.
Now, there may be a group out there that is concerned about not being able to replace failed units. But I doubt any *really* good programmers were bothered by a PS3 firmware update.
You can order that, but it'll take 9 years to deliver...
We use VTP extensively. I couldn't imagine trying to manage our domain without it.
We have a policy that before we shelve a switch, we blank the config. We also have standard configs on the laptops in our equipment cage. Take a switch off of the shelf, boot into ROMMON, upload the latest IOS, then apply the standard config.
I could see a smaller shop with no real policies or procedures in-place making a mistake like that. I've heard of it happening. And I think that's why we are so paranoid about it.
We take an additional step of whitelist pruning vice blacklist pruning. The CCNA level stuff talks about removing VLANs from trunks. Our default is to prune all VLANs from every trunk and then we allow the VLANs that are in-use downstream.
5a. Why do you avoid VTP?
Everything else is pretty solid. I really like the idea of connecting the access to the core stack using dual links. I'm guessing you mean via EtherChanel?
You could go with HSRP if you *really* need uptime. But HSRP can be a beast to get working properly...
I can second this.
I'm a Sr. network engineer for a *huge* network. For 100 machines, I would probably have a Cisco 3750s for the core and, depending on the distribution of users, something like Cisco 2940s for access. If all the users are in one location, just stack the 3750s.
3750s run about $7K each. 2940s are around $1200.
Get a CCNA book or CCNA videos and start reading/watching.
I haven't used any of the HP kit. I have used Juniper and Marconi for WAN stuff. As a general rule, just buy Cisco until you know you need something else.
I disagree about the database thing.
1. Create a spreadsheet with your networks. It should have headings like this: IP, mask, DNS name, use, user, phone number.
2. Separate those into subnets.
3. Print that out and put it into a binder.
4. Use something like Solarwinds to map your subnets.
5. Use a *pencil* and fill all the information into the binder.
6. Photocopy the binder and leave one copy at home, one with your boss. Carry the original with you at *all* times.
7. Update often.
I have used databases, spreadsheets, specialized tools like SolarWinds, Orion, HP OpenView, etc. Nothing beats a printed binder that is always with you. Using a pencil will ensure that future updates, additions, or deletions will not mean printing a brand new sheet.
Doesn't being a stock-holder also mean some control over the company?
You could claim that you suffered a loss by having to check your CC statement daily for a month, then weekly for a year.
Claim the time spent on the phone with the CC company to get a new card issued.
Claim the time you spent between when the old card was axed and the new card arrived.
Claim the increase in SPAM via email and snail mail.
It *needs* to happen. And happen big. Maybe after Sony files for bankruptcy, investors in other companies will start asking the CIO to ensure security at any cost.
Definitely. I'd love to see Sony deal with 77M suits in small-claims court.
At $500 per suit, that would be something like $38B.
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