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Comment Re:so much for being open (Score 1) 415

Or, develop a good relationship with your children

This part you got right.

instead of once again relying on technology to babysit for you.

Being aware of signs of trouble is a necessary part of what a good parent does. This particular technology is not a babysitting technology, such as TV (or invisible fencing?), that implies parental neglect or shirking of responsibility. This is probably worse, in that it involves clandestine monitoring, implying that you are suspicious of people you love. Neither provides a solid foundation for a relationship, but there is a distinction.

Talk to your kids about behaving responsibly, and openly talk with them about their concerns, and yours.

Sounds like a cheesy anti-smoking commercial, but I completely agree with the statement. Resorting to spying, snooping, or any type of deception will just damage your relationship because it means you mistrust your children. You should trust your children, but that does not mean you let them do anything they want without oversight or supervision. You trust them to make good decisions, but you keep an eye on them to help them when they don't.

Submission + - The Machine SID Duplication Myth (technet.com) 1

toppings writes: Microsoft Technical fellow Mark Russinovich explains why he is now retiring NewSID, which has been used by IT departments for years when deploying Windows to new systems from customized clone images. Writes Russinovich: 'The reason that I began considering NewSID for retirement is that, although people generally reported success with it on Windows Vista, I hadn't fully tested it myself and I got occasional reports that some Windows component would fail after NewSID was used. When I set out to look into the reports I took a step back to understand how duplicate SIDs could cause problems, a belief that I had taken on faith like everyone else. The more I thought about it, the more I became convinced that machine SID duplication — having multiple computers with the same machine SID — doesn't pose any problem, security or otherwise. I took my conclusion to the Windows security and deployment teams and no one could come up with a scenario where two systems with the same machine SID, whether in a Workgroup or a Domain, would cause an issue. At that point the decision to retire NewSID became obvious.' He concludes: 'It's a little surprising that the SID duplication issue has gone unquestioned for so long, but everyone has assumed that someone else knew exactly why it was a problem. To my chagrin, NewSID has never really done anything useful and there's no reason to miss it now that it's retired. Microsoft's official policy on SID duplication will also now change and look for Sysprep to be updated in the future to skip SID generation.'

Comment Re:Tritium Mines (Score 1) 251

You evidently don't know how big the Moon is, or how much momentum is in its orbit around the Earth. Indeed, the Moon doesn't quite orbit the Earth, but rather the Moon and the Earth orbit one another around a center quite a ways away from the Earth's center. Or you just don't know how much energy can be produced by a nuke plant - a very tiny amount compared to what's needed to push the Moon out of orbit into the Earth in any appreciable amount of time.

But if you want to keep carrying on about some fact free paranoia, that's your business. Lunacy, but your business.

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