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Comment Re:Groping Rand Paul (Score 1) 1051

Assault rifles need to be aimed or at least actively pointed in the direction of firing. The perp trying to kill a lot of people will not be looking behind him to see if a citizen is pulling his own gun. He'll be concentrating on where he is shooting. I may be ducking, but when the perp is looking the other way, I can easily put my laser sight on him and stop his rampage.

Comment Re:Prevent Death-By-Powerpoint (Score 1) 291

This is one of the better suggestions posted. I tend to keep slides to a minimum. Graphics are good when appropriate. I agree with "don't put up the slide and read it." What a turn-off not to mention an insult to anyone's intelligence. I do prefer color. Black and white is easy. Color holds attention. When making points, try presenting them in a way local people understand--pulling examples from day-to-day work that people can relate to. Humorous anecdotes work well. I really hate boring presentations. Don't tell jokes if you can't deliver them well. I once attended a presentation where the speaker was absolutely no good at joke-telling. He admitted that, but instead read us a poem--"Them Moose Goosers" by Mason Williams. It was unexpected and funny. Got us all in a good mood. Good luck!
Networking

Linux Foundation Says All Major Distros Are IPv6 Compliant 241

ruphus13 points out news from the Linux Foundation, which announced that all major Linux distributions meet certification requirements for the US Department of Defense's IPv6 mandates. The announcement credits work done by the IPv6 Workgroup, whose members include IBM, HP, Nokia-Siemens, Novell and Red Hat. Quoting: "Linux has had relatively robust IPv6 support since 2005, but further work was needed for the open source platform to achieve full compliance with DoD standards. The Linux Foundation's IPv6 workgroup analyzed the DoD certification requirements and identified key areas where Linux's IPv6 stack needed adjustments in order to guarantee compliance. They collaboratively filled in the gaps and have succeeded in bringing the shared technology into alignment with the DoD's standards."

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