** Private ** wrote:
> Summarized: Israel cannot let uncontrolled freight be delivered to the Gaza
> Strip since it might contain material that could be used to commit
> atrocities against Israel.
That point is quite clear. The problem is that Israel is abusing their rights
to control what goes
http://www.freewisdom.org/photos/2008/09/17/backup_with_rsync
~|
Want to reach the ColdFusion community with something they want? Let them know
on the House of Fusion mailing lists
Archive:
http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/
** Private ** wrote:
> Is the online backup system something that you're running or a service
> that you're utilizing?
A Linux server we are running with Bacula and many harddisks.
> So far I've come up with two ideas. One is to increase the number of
> USB drives from 3 to 7 - rotate every da
** Private ** wrote:
> I know that the hardware needs to be replaced; the server is 5 years
> old! I'm wondering if there is a service not unlike Carbonite that
> can provide historical backup services for upwards of a week or two of
> either the BAK or MDF files.
We configure all our database s
** Private ** wrote:
> I have been trying for about an hour now to download drivers for my
> smart card reader, and it seems that all the download sites point to
> http://www.scmmicro.com/support/pcs_product_drivers.html. I keep getting
> an error though. Can someone try the URL and let me know
** Private ** wrote:
> AOl browser:
> http://smithwebdesign.net/monstertrophywhitetails_com/aol/aol.jpg
> Everyone else:
> http://smithwebdesign.net/monstertrophywhitetails_com/aol/notaol.jpg
> Whitetail Magic
>src="#request.img#whitetailmagic.jpg" align="l
**Private** wrote:
> Because I can have my own disconnected repo where I can try all kinds
> of crazy stuff and make all kinds of branches but still not cloud the
> team repo with all of it.
But I want to see what crazy stuff my team does. And I want them to see what I
do and tell me when I
** Private ** wrote:
> I know I've said this before, but if you haven't checked out using git
> instead of subversion, you owe it to yourself to try it out. I store
> my origin repo's on my drop box account, other people store their
> repos on a usb key. Try that with subversion!
Actually
** Private ** wrote:
> We do have the technology.It is GPS.
Let me quote the original post:
"there SHOULD be a cool radar system"
GPS is not radar. GPS is a system for finding its own position. When coupled
with a system to report back that position it may provide for some tracking
features, b
** Private ** wrote:
> How come, when I flew to Scotland last year I could see where we were
> on the screen in front of me.
I flew back from India today in an Air France A330. It did have the in flight
information system showing where we were (even better, they had forward or down
facing camer
** Private ** wrote:
> And there SHOULD be a cool radar system that shows these planes in
> flight over the oceans.
> ...We Have The Technology! (to rebuild him ^_^).
We don't have the technology. It is a simple matter of the earth being a sphere
that a radar can only detect items on an altitude
** Private ** wrote:
> Sooo, how exactly would you go about getting information from a
> terrorist?
I consider not being able to extract certain information a better outcome then
torture.
Jochem
~|
Want to reach the ColdFusi
** Private ** wrote:
> We are finding a need to have non-developers modify their hosts file to view
> development versions of our sites using the main domain url.
Are you seriously saying you allow users without the common sense to edit a
hosts file based on a step by step instruction to log in
** Private ** wrote:
> The FBI and federal prosecutors are reportedly closing in on the AIG
> executive whose suspect investments cost the insurance giant hundreds
> of billions of dollars. The government is investigating whether or not
> 54-year old Brooklyn-native Joseph Cassano committed crimin
** Private ** wrote:
> Shifting costs to the government isn't going to fix the problem, it will
> only make it worse.
Shifting cost and government efficiency or the lack thereof are irrelevant.
Compared to a yoy increase of 4.5 percent it doesn't matter if one or the other
is going to be X perc
> Take a look at this study. This guy believes that over-consumption is more
> responsible for personal bankruptcies than anything else. He acknowledges
> that medical costs play a significant role, but he argues that
> over-consumption on durable goods such as homes and automobiles leaves
> peopl
** Private ** wrote:
> Finally I decide to bite the bullet and suck up the $150 (with exchange
> rate). Now I can't even download the fecking software because the Download
> Manager returns an error and I got to call the same frigging place that
> couldn't help me the first time.
>
> Is there an
** Private ** wrote:
> H = homeowner that has $300k mortgage, is here illegally and claims to
> earns $15k a year if it doesn't rain a lot.
> B = is the bank that loaned him the money
> Ia, Ib and Ic = the companies insuring the loan or AKA credit swap
> Ga, Gb, Gc = gamblers buying insurance, bet
** Private ** wrote:
> 1.) You're just restating the problem over and over: falling asset
> prices. We agree
I do not consider falling asset prices the problem. Prices go up, prices go
down. C'est la vie.
> but what about the solution?
Convert all the money that has been inserted into the fi
** Private ** wrote:
> He's making the same point, though, that has already been made isn't
> he? That more US debt will mean default, inflation, or high taxes 3
> years from now.
Yes. But unlike some he is considering what that means in an international,
macro-economic perspective. Consider wh
** Private ** wrote:
> wow.
> that looks like fun!
> id try it
I might try it, after putting on diapers.
Jochem
~|
Adobe® ColdFusion® 8 software 8 is the most important and dramatic release to
date
Get the Free Trial
http://a
** Private ** wrote:
> http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/feb/04/cbo-obama-stimulus-harmful-over-long-haul/
> CBO, the official scorekeepers for legislation, said the House and Senate
> bills will help in the short term but result in so much government debt that
> within a few years they wo
** Private ** wrote:
>> How many POW that were released after WWI fought again in WWII?
>
> um, none. it was after WWII. ;-)
Prisoners from WWI were not released until after WWII? Next you're saying WWII
was a legitimate attempt to get them released.
Jochem
** Private ** wrote:
> And how many have ended up back on the battlefield? It's a war, it isn't
> going to be pretty.
How many POW that were released after WWI fought again in WWII?
Or to bring it a little closer to home: why release anybody at all from prison?
http://www.ojp.gov/bjs/reentry/rec
** Private ** wrote:
> Apparently they are going to take back 94 Yemenis who are in Guantanamo.
> Last time I checked, Al Qaeda members have a habit of breaking out of jail
> in Yemen. So are we just putting these guys back on the street? Is that the
> end game?
Yes, that is the end game. And the
** Private ** wrote:
> hmm, and that's really what it comes down to, is that it? if they refuse to
> take dollars we're screwed.
Isn't that just a fact of life? Just like you are out of a job if you have
skills nobody wants to buy.
Jochem
~~~
** Private ** wrote:
> Now - that said - I'm libertarian enough to believe that anybody should be
> able to refuse service to anybody they want - for any asshole reason they
> want.
Only a natural person should have that privilege, not a legal person. But then,
the whole concept of a legal person
** Private ** wrote:
> thats insane jochem. i cannot imagine that. at 3.99, as it never
> broke the 4 mark here, it was unbearable
It is all relative and a matter of priorities. If the recent drop in oil prices
keeps up the US public could collectively save about 250 billion annually on
their e
** Private ** wrote:
> Jochem wrote:
> > Where would they have learned that lesson? What country tried the
> 'European model' and couldn't sustain it?
> >
>
> Robert, along with many Americans, has fallen victim to boogey men and
> cartoonish demagogic bastardization of some really good concepts.
** Private ** wrote:
>> That DOESN'T MEAN communism. It means that the European social
>> democrat tradition is probably the right mix.
>
> Their model, in case you hadn't noticed, is not doing any better than ours,
By which measure?
If you want to argue GDP per capita or number of unemployed yo
** Private ** wrote:
> Our low here is now $1.25
>
> I see typical pricing of $1.40 - $1.60
$6.46
Jochem
~|
Adobe® ColdFusion® 8 software 8 is the most important and dramatic release to
date
Get the Free Trial
http://ad.doubl
> This blog entry is about the riots in Greece and the underlying issues with
> the EU and monetary union, but the most interesting thing are the comments,
> mostly from Brits.
That is really unexpected from a Britisch newspaper.
> Is there really that much unrest in the EU right now, or
> are t
** Private ** wrote:
> Interesting. How vulnerable is CF? I've read somewhere that Adobe isn't
> really thrilled with having to support CF because it doesn't really fit
> into their product offerings but are forced to because of the large user
> base. Is there a chance that Adobe will a) sell CF
I don't understand why any religious group should have tax exempt status in the
first place.
Jochem
~|
Adobe® ColdFusion® 8 software 8 is the most important and dramatic release to
date
Get the Free Trial
http://ad.doubleclick
** Private ** wrote:
> Moreover, the legacy cost that is killing GM and F is benefits being paid
> out to ppl who no longer work for the company. Look, these ppl earned
> those pension rights and they deserve it. But at the same time, that was
> a decision between F/GM and its workers.
>
> The
** Private ** wrote:
> http://apnews.myway.com/article/20081106/D949BEOG0.html
One ounce is quite a lot. In the Netherlands the no-prosecution limit is 5 gram
for personal use or any amount for trade.
Jochem
~|
Adobe® ColdFusi
** Private ** wrote:
> Ok.looks like we may have a dieing firewall.
> i know nothing about hardware firewalls
> what do you guys use?
At home an OpenBSD box, at the office a GNatBox (customized FreeBSD
distribution) and the datacenter is protected by a pair of Linux machines in a
heartbeat / VRR
** Private ** wrote:
> Judah wrote:
>> Its going to be some smart people going to work hard trying to get us
>> out of a mess.
>
> And, if they are smart, they'll conclude we need immediate emergency
> government spending on the level of the WWII. Probably $1-3 Trillion
> right away.
You are focu
** Private ** wrote:
> JvD wrote:
>> The difference between US health care and Western European health
>> care is not in the number of people paying their share out of private
>> income. The difference is in total spending as a percentage of the
>> GDP
>
> But there's also big expectations diff
** Private ** wrote:
> Failure to put it on the balance sheet is certainly an issue. But that
> is separate from the issue I was discussing which was the impact of
> national policy on private economics. In particular, countries which
> have a nationalized health care setup (direct or insurance bas
** Private ** wrote:
> http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2005/06/16/gms_healthcare_dilemma/
I think http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A64599-2005Apr18.html
provides a much better description of the economics. I think it is fair to say
that GMs OPED heal
** Private ** wrote:
> Or we could be the government of good and make sure that everyone has
> health care and a stable retirement system in place so that GM doesn't
> have to add $1500 onto every car because of idiotic health care policy
> in our country.
So let me get this straight. GM, a 266 th
** Private ** wrote:
> This is a reason why I support heavy tariffs on the foreign car
> manufacturers. Their governments routinely inject money into these
> companies.
I thought that that didn't happen anymore in the EU at least. Any documentation
for this statement?
Jochem
~~~
** Private ** wrote:
> you know ... you are right. I was once assigned to rught a pper onw
> whethre Karl Marx or Sigmund Freud would have done Virginia Woolf more
> good. This mean (gasp) that I have read Das Kapital.
I have a copy on the book shelf next to my other 'books to kill for': the
bibl
** Private ** wrote:
> India has 14 reactors in commercial operation and nine under construction
> Nuclear power supplies about 3% of India's electricity
> By 2050, nuclear power is expected to provide 25% of the country's electricity
> India has limited coal and uranium reserves
> Its huge thorium
** Private ** wrote:
> I've been trying to figure out an xcopy or copy command that will take all
> the files from a given folder structure and copy them all to a new folder.
>
> Tried xcopy e:*.* d:\thumbs\*.* /s
>
> But it creates all the subdirectories on the CD. Can anyone think of a
> comman
** Private ** wrote:
> I truly believe in small, non intrusive, decentralized government. I
> believe in what we are doing in Iraq and Afghanistan. I believe that
> the 2nd amendment is an individual right. I want to see politicians
> that can cut spending and make our federal government sm
** Private ** wrote:
> Oddly, the ssh realm seems to be mostly "for pay" in the Windows
> world... go figure :-)
SSH used to be "for pay" in the whole world:
http://www.openssh.com/usage/graphs/internet-type-small.png
Jochem
~|
** Private ** wrote:
> Would you prefer "F- the MIddle East" by Stormtroopers of Death?
>
> http://www.amazon.com/Speak-English-S-O-D-Stormtroopers-Death/dp/B4NRW9
I would prefer "Dear Mr. President" by Pink:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9eDJ3cuXKV4
Jochem
~~~
** Private ** wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 5, 2008 at 8:44 AM, Jochem van Dieten wrote:
>>
>> She did her time.
>
> 12 days? For killing someone who was sleeping?
There are plenty of cases where I personally do not agree with the length of a
sentence. But as a society we have decid
** Private ** wrote:
> nope, still dont get it.
>
> didnt she shoot him in his sleep?
>
> yep, that is the kind of value system it is important to teach our youth.
She did her time.
Do you think there is a significant chance she will do it again? Do you think
the children are better off with t
** Private ** wrote:
> That's because it's a fucking scam, it's pissing me off, and it's time we DO
> something about it.
I'm open to suggestions.
Jochem
~|
Adobe® ColdFusion® 8 software 8 is the most important and dramatic rel
** Private ** wrote:
> It's my word. I made it up.
Claim your fame:
http://add.urbandictionary.com/definition.php?word=flatterslapped
Jochem
~|
Adobe® ColdFusion® 8 software 8 is the most important and dramatic release to
da
** Private ** wrote:
> I'm not sure... but the concept of "we'll slow you down to make it fair if
> we need too" seems inherently a better plan than "we'll track you
> (regardless of how you affect other users) and start quietly charging you if
> you head over a limit".
Quietly is never a good ide
** Private ** wrote:
> 87 Octane... $4.59
> Diesel... $5.69
95 Octane $9.92
Diesel $8.53
But the far more interesting question is: by what percentage have you reduced
your fuel consumption (just direct use, not indirect somewhere up the chain)
due to high prices? As long as that percentage
** Private ** wrote:
> Comcast's "throttling" approach (currently being tested in one city) seems
> to be more reasonable: make sure the heavy users aren't affecting others,
> but don't actually enforce any transfer limits.
I wouldn't be so sure it is more reasonable without knowing exactly how it
** Private ** wrote:
> Just a heads up for those who want to do more than just talk about Iraq.
> There's a ColdFusion position open there on CF-Jobs:
> http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/cf-jobs/thread.cfm/threadid:5261
I recently got asked by my boss to go to Iraq for a consultancy job for a fe
** Private ** wrote:
> I'd love to be going, unfortunately there's no funding for conferences this
> year :(
Sometimes you just have to invest in yourself. Last week Adobe Commmunity
Summit, this week Webmaniacs. Sure, as a speaker I have perks, but that doesn't
mean it doesn't cost me.
Jochem
** Private ** wrote:
>Insane Clown Posse - The Wraith - It Rains Diamonds
Duffy - Rockferry - Distant Dreamer
Jochem\
~|
Adobe® ColdFusion® 8 software 8 is the most important and dramatic release to
date
Get the Free Trial
htt
** Private ** wrote:
> One of the features I absoluetly love about Oracle is the over() function..
> If you have a recordset and are trying to get multiple sums of columns
> grouped by different columns..
> in MSSQL you'd have to create multiple queries right?
MS SQL Server has the standard SQL Wi
** Private ** wrote:
> What is the difference between CF + MSSQL and CF + Oracle?
>
> Is the query structure for Oracle that much different?
If all you do is "SELECT field FROM table WHERE field = value" then the
difference is that Oracle is harder to set up but will run on more platforms.
http
** Private ** wrote:
>I'm guessing this isn't a picture of Crookshanks? ;)
The forbidden forest?
Jochem
~|
Adobe® ColdFusion® 8 software 8 is the most important and dramatic release to
date
Get the Free Trial
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** Private ** wrote:
> This movie takes direct quotes from the Qu'ran, from imams, from the
> media. Images from real life.
I could take quotes from the bible, from David Koresh and some leaders of the
Army of God, from the media. I could take some images from real life in Iraq
and edit them t
** Private ** wrote:
> It's horrible what is occuring in the Netherlands, and it has to be stopped.
What exactly has to be stopped, free speach?
> No prime minister should fear expression of free speech to such an
> extent that he thinks it would endanger his country, especially not
> one that t
** Private ** wrote:
> the US claims it has nothing to do with the Venezuela-Colombia dispute.
> :(
> They've started the PR-speak.
> They could be stationed at Aruba...or Curacao or something. Those
> places are close to the Venezuelan coastline as well. :-\
We don't want the US military there be
I've been using it for 2 days now and it looks like a gradual improvement over
IE7. The only site that really broke for me so far was
http://partner.microsoft.com/, but even there the IE7 compatibility mode got me
in.
Jochem
** Private ** wrote:
> * I have IIS 6 configured with a valid SSL certificate and I have used
> the keytool.exe to import a certificate into the certs file into the
> C:\ColdFusion8\runtime\jre\lib\security directory
> * Outlook Web Access is up and running and fully functional both
> internall
** Private ** wrote:
> One of my databases has developed a 32Gb log file (ProductData_Log.LDF) and
> I can't seem to shrink it.
Switch your database to simple logging, run a checkpoint and the
dbcc_shrinkfile. When it has completed, switch your database back to full
logging and then create a mai
** Private ** wrote:
> in sending an email, what does the RFC say is the separator
> of email addresses? ive ALWAYS used, "," commas... however
> outlook seems to want, ";" semi-colons.
comma (RFC 2822, section 3.4)
Jochem
~|
** Private ** wrote:
> The US is moving backward in internet usage. In Europe 15MB/s
> connections seem to be becoming the norm in places such as Belgium,
> and it's filtering quickly throughout developed europe.
Belgium is the wrong example, the internet market there is strangled by the
incumben
** Private ** wrote:
> How do I create rules in outlook express that work with IMAP/GMAIL?
http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/thunderbird/
Jochem
~|
Adobe® ColdFusion® 8 software 8 is the most important and dramatic release to
date
I may be teaching a class in Hyderabad soon and I am thinking of
spending a few days in the area afterwards. Since I seem to recall
somebody (Simon?) visiting India regularly (and there must be others) I
was hoping for some tips on where to go and what to see.
Jochem
~~
** Private ** wrote:
> So is ID impossible or not provable?
ID is not refutable in a way that would convince its proponents. Think about
it: what experiment could refute ID? Any experiment that can be devised to show
that evolution through mutation/selection can produce complexity will just be
** Private ** wrote:
> My favorite, Wired. But at the moment I'm kind of like just out of cave :(
http://tweakers.net/
Jochem
~|
Adobe® ColdFusion® 8 software 8 is the most important and dramatic release to
date
Get the Free
** Private ** wrote:
> Um, I don't think you're looking at real statistics. According to this
> report we have a LOT more than you think:
>
> http://www.rand.org/pubs/monographs/2005/RAND_MG414.pdf
>
> The largest known oil shale deposits in the world are in the Green
> River Formation,
> which
** Private ** wrote:
> This story is over a year old and we have yet to hear about an American
> implementation of the technology. We were talking about advanced solar
> technology last week. What is stopping us from becoming energy
> independent?
You seem to have a skewed perspective. So what if
** Private ** wrote:
> We have just launched a new site at:
> wings-of-life.com
>
> I just got a call from a staff member saying that there are question
> marks appearing in the text when she views the web pages. The pages
> looks fine to me, so I'm not sure what to fix. I assume it might have
** Private ** wrote:
>> It's like naming the Teddy Bear Jesus Christ or Yahweh.
>>
>> There are Christians who would find that offensive.
>
> Not *quite*
Most certainly. For instance, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zc79j3mi2oc was
deemed so offensive to Christians it was pulled from Italian TV ju
http://www.wired.com/cars/coolwheels/magazine/15-11/ff_cannonballrun?currentPage=all
~|
Check out the new features and enhancements in the
latest product release - download the "What's New PDF" now
http://download.macromedia.com
** Private ** wrote:
> So if this is true, where is the intermediate form of species, the
> connecting links if you will?
You mean like the geep, the swoose and the beefalo?
> Nor is there any archeological evidence to back his theory.
> Although there is ample evidence for many complete species
** Private ** wrote:
> MySQL? I use the db as an easy (read cheap) alternative to oracle or
> MSSQL for my smallish web sites, but I would think (here comes that
> 'assuming' thing) that any company that finds themselves in need of a
> MySQL dba, would naturally turn to the concept of upgrading
** Private ** wrote:
> 163 mile round trip driving / day
> about 3 hours / day in car..
Depending on which customer I work and the weather for my longest regular trips
are 15 km /45 minutes by bike and 80 km / 1 hour by train.
Jochem
** Private ** wrote:
> Someone wrote a book that I'm too lazy to look up
Do you live near the equator?
> but basically it
> pointed out that your probability of poverty was directly proportional
> to your distance from the equator.
I would say that at best you could get a normalized covariance
** Private ** wrote:
> is the term meaningful y/n
Meaningful: yes
Applicable: not so much
A product stack is a set of products that build on top of eachother. I would
say that most of Adobe products operate next too eachother and are more a suite
then a stack.
Jochem
** Private ** wrote:
> Ahhh Jochem chimes in. *hugs*
*hugs back*
> I'd say the US is starting to turn less inhibited. I wouldn't call it
> pre-occupied.
I think they are equally preoccupied as we were. Only we talked about it and
didn't do it, and they do it and don't talk about it.
Jochem
** Private ** wrote:
> So I have been watching the news lately and there is a middle school in
> Maine (http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,303058,00.html) that is
> starting to dispense birth control to pre-teens. When did pre-teens
> start having sex?
When oral sex stopped being sex :)
Are
** Private ** wrote:
> Truly, the search and detention of the captain
What about it? The ship was clearly in Spains territorial waters (do the math,
territorial waters extend for 12 nautical mile, they were 4 (land) mile out of
Gibraltar and Gibraltar simply isn't 8 mile long). The ship was susp
** Private ** wrote:
> I am way less concerned about Iran and Syria than I am about the
> complete lack of backbone and diplomacy shown by the current US
> government.
> http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/europe/10/17/spain.ship/index.html
So let me get this straight. Spain seizes a ship in its territo
** Private ** wrote:
> I didn't say it was a dev tool, Jochem. I said that it is the
> foundation for these dev tools, architectually. This per the press
> briefing at MAX.
I'm sure you misunderstood something there. LC is not the architectural
foundation for any (development) tool but LC Workben
** Private ** wrote:
> ok for example, my notes from the press briefing show there was a
> chart in which Live Cycle was the foundation for dev tools such as
> Flexbuilder, Acrobat and CS3
Acrobat is not a development tool. The LC development tool is LC Workbench (or
perhaps LC Designer). CS3 is
** Private ** wrote:
> I'm taking it as the means to manage PDF's in all their splenda.
LC is really much more then that. It is a suite of more then a dozen server
applications that can be used to create workflows. Those workflows can interact
with pretty much anything. Some of the more interest
** Private ** wrote:
>
> Not a developer. Needs to travel with it.
> He also hates huge resolution. He's a 1024 or 1280 at best type person. So
> it's a waste for the high stuff.
15.4 inch with 1440 * 900 resolution.
Jochem
~|
** Private ** wrote:
> Who is going?
I am.
Jochem
~|
Check out the new features and enhancements in the
latest product release - download the "What's New PDF" now
http://download.macromedia.com/pub/labs/coldfusion/cf8_beta_what
** Private ** wrote:
> I'm not really fond of Bruce's choice of words, but I understand his point.
> How are we supposed to compete, with someone who will work for half, or less
> of what we do.
If you are competing with them based on price, you are in the wrong business.
Most of these guys would
** Private ** wrote:
> We have a CF app that uses NT authentication. We have the username stored in
> mysql 5.0.17 enterprise. the username we have domain\username. For some
> reason when our cfc runs to get what information that user has access to see
> mysql is omitting the \.
Use cfqueryparam o
** Private ** wrote:
> Ok, I have not had a lot of luck in googling this. I need to know how
> to relate ATM capacity to ... anything.
If the label says it carries 155 Mbit/s (STM-1) it relates to 15.5 % of a 1
Gbit/s ethernet connection :)
> We have 6 megs going out. Is
> this good, bad or ind
** Private ** wrote:
> Also, I'd add a bit of color and a short blurb about what you want
> (objectives kind of thing) at the top that you change from application
> to application.
In the Netherlands that would go in the cover letter.
Jochem
~~~
** Private ** wrote:
>> ACLs and DNS are unrelated, don't put them under one bullet.
>
> hehe. You don't like my stupid router tricks category?
I wouldn't even consider ACLs a router trick, e.g. if you configure the IPSec
Policy Agent in Windows you are applying ACLs too. And DNS most definitely
** Private ** wrote:
>
> http://docs.google.com/Doc?docid=dggr3b75_373hqpnz8&hl=en
"Cisco routers" sounds like you are familiar with certain equipment. If that is
the point you want to get across it is good. But if you are proficient in BGP,
OSPF, RSTP etc. you should mention that (I rate prot
** Private ** wrote:
> they are now providing their list to the general public. it says so right on
> their site.
You're right. They used to provide their list only to mirrors and you had to
get to a mirror to find out what was on it, but apparently you now get the list
directly from them.
> t
1 - 100 of 1891 matches
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