Comment Local prof says "desperate move" (Score 1) 120
A local business prof says this is a "desperate" move.
A local business prof says this is a "desperate" move.
In my area, there is $50 a month for 30Mbps download, 5Mbps upload, unlimited cap.
See this plan
I had similar issues, though on a machine hosted outside my home network.
The solution was to implement SPF, pointing to the PTR of machine (i.e. what a reverse IP lookup will resolve to), and DKIM.
In your case, doing a PTR will be hard, since dynamic DHCP may change what the PTR is, but the rest does apply.
I wrote the following detailing what I did: Setting up SPF and DKIM on Postfix.
I had lots of mails bounce after Yahoo implemented DMARC.
However, with a bit of patience, I was able to implement DKIM and SPF for my domain, and now all the mails get delivered to Yahoo addresses.
I wrote about how ot configure SPF and DKIM in this article: Setting up SPF and DKIM for Postfix.
Things were easy until the mid to late 19th century. Anything could be produced in a carpenter, blacksmith or watchmaker's workshop. Lenses were ground, metals were machined,
Then in the early 20th century things started to get far more specialized. By the mid 20th century, we had the transistor then the integrated circuit.
Now, everthing from ubiquitous phones to home appliances to street lights have complicated integrated circuits, CPUs, RAM,
I wrote about it here : Information readability and longevity in the digital age.
The Quest for an explanation must continue.
Contrary to all the speculative guesses in the comments, the researchers do have a hypothesis for this.
From the linked PLOS article:
Unique among the senses, the olfactory system depends on stem cell turnover, and thus may serve as an indicator of deterioration in age-related regenerative capacity more broadly or as a marker of physiologic repair function
/bin/sh is linked to
/bin/bash and vulnerable
Not on Debian/Ubuntu. On those,
To test this, I created a small PHP script, as follows:
$ cat > x.php
<?php
system('echo hello there');
I run the php script, and do an strace following children:
$ strace -f -o output php x.php
In the output I find this:
28302 execve("/bin/sh", ["sh", "-c", "echo hello there"], [/* 24 vars */]) = 0
And here is what
$ ls -l
/bin/sh
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 4 Mar 29 2012/bin/sh -> dash
In August 2009, a boy was hit by lightning and later died in hospital. Witnesses said the sky was blue above them, and there was no thunder or rain.
Look, there is a bug, obviously, but to say that it is "remotely exploitable" is a half-truth, and that it is "on level with or worse than heartbleed" is nonsense.
There are a lot of things that need to "line up" in order for this to be remotely exploitable.
It is 2014 and anonymity is a crime, what country are we thinking of ?
Why is systemd bad?
The issues posed by adopting systemd to various distros are listed on the site: Boycott systemd.
Spread it around so people know
Mod this up!
I had to deal with a remote customer whose person on site does not speak English, by getting him to enter UNIX shell commands. His native language (and mine) was Arabic.
What I did was to tell him what Arabic key to press so that the English equivalent would be the one sent to the shell.
We were lucky that his Arabic keyboard layout was the same as mine. That was not a given in those days (Late 80s, early 90s), but we lucked out.
He was describing to me the output in English (vertical bar, vertical bar with a circle at the bottom,
It worked out and we solved the problem in less than an hour.
Home Depot stores credit cards with the transactions.
I know this because when you go to return something I bought, they don't ask you for the credit card, and sort of highlight that this is a convenience that is unique to Home Depot.
I complained more than once to the cashiers about storing credit card numbers (it is not their fault, it is management and IT). The cashiers would say: "Don't worry, we don't have access to it!"
My response was: it is not you whom I am worried about.
Now we know that storing credit cards is a bad idea, and why
Factorials were someone's attempt to make math LOOK exciting.