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Comment Games (Score 1) 1215

Basically that's the main one. I'm reasonably OS agnostic these days. Maybe apathetic is a better word. Chrome works about the same on Windows and Linux. Skype works better on Windows than Linux. And foobar2000 is better than any music player that I've used on Linux. But ssh/terminals works better on Linux, and Linux pauses less. Currently my solution is to use Synergy, and have two computers, one Windows, one Linux. Kind of the best of both worlds.

Comment It's complicated (Score 1) 202

Verizon and Cogent are most likely exchange a LOT of bandwidth. And the article says that there are 10 peering points. Cogent are at way more than 10 locations in the US alone. I've got no idea how many Verizon are at, but to me it seems reasonable to connect at more locations rather than push all the capacity at those locations. That then means Cogent needs to do some of the backhaul, or have Netflix boxes at more locations. I think this is a reasonable compromise, but I can't find any detailed summaries of the situation. It would also be advisible for Verizon to add Netflix boxes on-site.

Submission + - Millions At Risk From Critical Vulnerabilities From WordPress Plugins (eweek.com)

dougkfresh writes: Checkmarx’s research lab identified that more than 20% of the 50 most popular WordPress plugins
are vulnerable to common Web attacks, such as SQL Injection. Furthermore, a concentrated
research into e-commerce plugins revealed that 7 out of the 10 most popular e-commerce plugins
contain vulnerabilities. This is the first time that such a comprehensive survey was prepared to test the state of security of the leading plugins. In total, 8 million vulnerable WordPress plugins were downloaded.

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