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Comment Something to check on (Score 2, Insightful) 312

You should check to make sure that any encryption software you use or bring is legal in the areas you will be traveling in. I know that the legal standards are different between, for example, the US and France (or it was last time I read about it). I have no idea about specifics of different countries, but it is something that you should know before you set out. And not just the laws, but also look into what to expect when you go through checkpoints - I have no idea if I am actually required to reveal an encrypted volume on my laptop when going through customs coming into the US. And what do I do if the person checking says that they require all of my passwords? (My only thought here would be to make a set of temporary passwords while going through, and then to change them all back after) Sorry I do not have any helpful links. I figure that the time I could spend looking would be a good bit more than the time spent by the person who knows what country to actually look at. Hope it helps.

Comment Re:IT Guy ? (Score 1) 736

hahahha oh I know that feeling. Specially when I call Radio Shack for a customer and ask if they have any NICs. The sales girl replies - 'we have something called an Ethernet card, but no Nics.'

Or they day I show up to fix an adsl line and the customer tells me there has been a mistake. He wants a tech, not sales.

Comment Re:Wow... (Score 1) 193

I can certainly appreciate that they want to do better, but it still amazes me that we send people into F'ING SPACE with less than 1% failure rate.

Unless you want to send people into space with a greater than 1% failure rate, sending them into space with LESS than a 1% failure rate seems more sensible. I don't know about you, but I would want the failure rate to be smaller, not larger.

Comment Re:They probably should be scared (Score 2, Insightful) 560

I must admit I myself have done the same thing. I realised my reliance on Google a few years ago and tried to use alternatives more most of my search needs, and then in a fix compare against Google results. The problem I found was that Google presents a single view of the web that while it may seem accurate isn't the whole picture. People would say to me "If Google can't find it then it dosn't exist", and then be surprised when I said I found it using Yahoo, Gigablast or Live.

Bring on more competitive search engines. If nothing else it will force Google to innovate because I don't see their current interface being the best view into the web.

Comment Having just done this (Score 2, Informative) 272

I just did this myself. I ended up just shooting for cheap hardware on the theory that if it breaks in 2 years I can just replace it. I have a Quad Core Phernom with 8 gig of RAM and two 750gig drives. Chucked VMWare on it and havent had any issues running about 8 or so VM's on it. It also serves up media using TVersity and is a network share dump as well.

The biggest issue I have had so far, is Disk Driver perfomance. If you are planning on running multiple concurrent VM's then go for as many HDD's as you can. Stick the most load intensive ones on seperate drives and you will really see the benefits.

Comment Re:Invest in the pandora (Score 1) 616

The PS3 is the most open console on the market right now. Not only can you install alternate OS's you can develop for it without having to buy a license or even run Windows (looking at you Xbox + Visual Studio). Yes the video is locked down, but you can somewhat understand their point of view there (although personally I disagree with it). But anyway saying Sony dosnt let you use the hardware as you want is asinine.

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