Comment Re:Where.. (Score 1) 1140
It's the manufacturers of the LCD panels. One form factor, one product line for HDTV's and computers. Cheaper.
It's the manufacturers of the LCD panels. One form factor, one product line for HDTV's and computers. Cheaper.
No. You have a DOCTOR cut it out. The question here is whether or not most ISP's are competent in determining what really is bot activity. A bunch of false positives will be miserable -- as will having to prove to some first-tier customer support person that your system is not infected (as in never was) or that it is actually cleaned and should be allowed back online.
And pity the person that has their ISP connection blocked that uses voice over IP to call customer support. If the ISP blocks the MODEM life is going to be interesting.
Oh, and you won't need to look up that phone number, will you?
Overall, getting infected systems of the net is a wonderful idea, but one that could be a complete mess if done poorly.
In your example the towing company partners with AAA (so AAA directs customers to them) and the towing company guarantees quick service.
Up to now on the net the idea has been that all packets are delivered by your ISP to you as quickly as possible. The new model will be about throttling/delaying packets from companies that don't pay up.
It's as if AAA partnered with the towing company to get normal service for their customers, and in return the towing company would agree to show up late for everyone else.
Note also that Google already pays for all it's bandwidth to the net. You also pay for your bandwidth. Verizon is just acting to extract an extra tariff. Google is partnering with them to keep potential startups (without money to pay for normal service) in the slow lane so that they are unable to ever compete with Google's services.
This is evil through-and-through.
"Whooosh" is a good summary of the whole article... does anyone actual read the articles that get submitted?
HP is NOT going to spam printers.
HP is planning to partner with Yahoo so that you can subscribe to content that would automatically be printed out for you. In other words, the idea is that you can wake up, grab your morning paper off the printer, and sit down to read it with your cup of coffee. The ads IN THE PAPER would be targeted using geolocation from the IP address of your printer so that you would get locally appropriate ads. No ads for department stores that don't exist within a hundred miles of you. Those are the ads they're talking about. Not spam!
On the other hand... the idea of printing off your morning paper may have made sense in the science fiction of the 1950's, but HP is crazy if they think people actually want to print out content that they are going to read once and recycle.
Wow... I'm going to disagree with you in a big way. The current issue (Make 22) has an in-depth article on converting your lawnmower to RC control. Circuit boards, wiring, assembly... it's a big project but with LOTS of good info to get you there. NOT an overview or a news article. The same is true for the article on hacking wireless power outlets. Then there is the Arduino-powered tweeting cat toy. The physics and construction of double pendulums. How about a sun tracker for solar projects?
There's a ridiculous amount of great material in that single issue! Not news articles but full, in-depth how-to's. There are some light mods (to borrow your phrase) as well, but many of the projects require a significant investment of time and energy.
I think Make is a great source for projects. No dumbing down that I see, at least not in the latest issue!
I'm a member at TechShop RDU as well. It's going through some growing pains, but I'm hoping the model works. The laser is definitely the most popular tool, with the ShopBot probably being second. I was able to knock out a retro-styled cocktail table for my living room in short order on it.
I'm also one of the folks building 3D printers. The group of us are building about 10 printers -- some of us to keep, some to sell to defray our costs, and maybe one or two to stay at TechShop. The original (purchased) 3D printer is a monster -- a Dimension dual-extrusion system.
TS RDU is currently closed for a move to a new location. Looks like it will be open again for anyone interested in the Triangle area sometime in May.
No, Ubuntu ships with AppArmor rather than SELinux:
It depends on the IT "consultant".
As an IT consultant, I go in and actually build systems. Then again, I've seen the kind of consultant you mention: all "recommendations" and buzzwords for someone else to implement.
If the latter is all you have encountered, I'd suggest you take a different approach to hiring consultants.
HELP!!!! I'm being held prisoner in /usr/games/lib!