Comment Aye, pirates be the reason IE6 just won’t di (Score 2) 158
...and StatCounter also reports that Windows XP - the most frequently pirated OS in existence - is still powering along at 81% Coincidence? Nay, I think not: http://www.troyhunt.com/2010/08/aye-pirates-be-reason-ie6-just-wont-die.html
Submission + - The science of password selection (troyhunt.com)
Submission + - A brief Sony password analysis (troyhunt.com)
With all this customer data now unfortunately out there for public viewing, I thought it would be interesting to do some analysis on password practices. There are some rather alarming (although not entirely surprising) findings including:
36% of passwords appear in a common password dictionary.
50% of passwords are 7 characters or less.
67% of accounts on both Sony and Gawker use the same password.
82% of passwords are lowercase alphanumeric of 9 characters or less.
99% of passwords don’t contain a single non-alphanumeric character."
Comment Re:Automate your backups offsite (Score 1) 680
I don't believe it will partially backup the changed component of a file if that's where you're coming from.
Comment Is Chinese piracy behind IE6's longevity? (Score 1) 313
Worst thing about piracy in China? I reckon it's a significant factor behind *@#%#$ IE6 just not dying: http://troy.hn/cOySCO
Comment Automate your backups offsite (Score 1) 680
There are plenty of easy ways to find the additional local capacity, but in terms of backups, IMHO any practice that requires you to manually perform tasks is setting you up for failure. You'll forget to put that backup disk at your mother in laws or you'll carry a few weeks of extra risk because you've been busy or any number of other reasons. And as for keeping backups at home, there's the risk of burglary, fire, flood, four horses of the apocalypse etc, etc.
There are some great online backup services these days that take care of the whole thing for you. Point it at your data, define a backup schedule and let it run. SugarSync gets some good feedback. Personally, I've found Mozy very good and for the sake of $5 per month for unlimited storage, I reckon it's a bargain. Here's my setup: http://troy.hn/bhP4F9
In terms of network and speed, even from Australia (typically slower connection to US based services), I pushed up over 100GB in about 4 days recently. A combination of fast, cheap bandwidth, unlimited storage and a reasonable rate of data collection makes this perfect for the scenario you describe.