Comment The subtitle (Score 1) 80
The subtitle should be: From the Devil You Know Department.
The subtitle should be: From the Devil You Know Department.
Okay, this seems like what I'm looking for, runs with named and has a Windows client. Much thanks!
Because us lower 4 digits don't like to re-invent the wheel:)
Nice setup though, I'll keep those tips in mind if I need to roll my own. I'm looking for a client and server package that can be installed quickly on a client computer/router. A client end that could run on OpenWRT would be really sweet.
I've looked a bit but never really found a package to do this, although it's been a few years. I've got a BSD box, a static IP and some domain names. How would I set it up so that other hosts could use this in a dynamic way to set forward DNS records if they were on an ISP's ever changing DHCP addresses?
In other words, how can I roll my own no-ip.com system without being a Vixie level hacker?
Does not seem legal.
It's legal if the law says it is. And when the lawmakers are in bed with Big Business, like they are in the US, anything goes.
The best money could buy.
Nanobots.
Yes, pocket change in a national election. But as Larry said, they're only trying to influence a few Congressional races this year, and more of them in 2016.
For those who don't know: At the bottom of every page there's a link from "Beta" to the real Slashdot site.
4 GByte are not enough for everyone
And 8 registers aren't enough for anyone. x64-64 is a better architecture for reasons beyond its larger memory addressing.
With RSS feeds, user can unsubscribe, suspend and resume viewing updates at their convenience.
With email subscriptions, users can unsubscribe, suspend, and resume viewing updates at their convenience. Email is also vastly more bandwidth and power friendly than continually polling to ask "have anything for me yet? have anything for me yet? have anything for me yet?".
An email newsletter that a user can subscribe to and which honors the "unsubscribe" link it at the bottom is identically as spammy as RSS.
Also, no matter how many sendmail servers you have you can't get around the fact that egress still takes bandwitdth.
I just got a large, image-filled email from a vendor, and it came out to 20KB (including headers). Let's assume Microsoft's announcement emails are that huge, and that Microsoft sends out 100,000,000 of them. Let's further assume that Outlook is smart enough to batch recipients to the same domain with a conservative 10-to-1 reduction in number of unique messages sent (probably closer to 500-1, given the number of Gmail users you can collapse). That math works out to about 1000 gigabit ethernet seconds, or about about 1 second of AWS's estimated bandwidth-time, or about 3 seconds of Azure's estimated bandwidth-time, or about a second of traffic at a major porn site. And that's with hugely conservative worst-case estimates for all the numbers involved.
Egress doesn't take nearly the bandwidth you might think it does.
The transcript for this video was a little late, but it's up now.
A list is only as strong as its weakest link. -- Don Knuth