Yeah, that's the RHELkin stuff. I think it's a bit absurd to have all that extra nonsense. localhost4 and localhost6 might be okay. As for the rest, why?
So... Debian has a bad habit of auto-enabling and auto-starting services. Except for services you actually want, like SNMP, which is stopped and disabled by default...
@MichaelHampton Well, he told me that he manages models. I had no idea what he meant by that so i assumed it was an industry term, I hear a lot of them and don't always know what they mean
He didn't care at all about the work flow part of the system, only work order distribution, which was odd. Now I understand.
Anyway googled his phone number and BAM up comes a stripper website
Database : PostgreSQL 9.2
Current Server OS : windows server 2003/2008/2012
Client Machine OS : Windows XP/7
The application that access PostgreSQL is windows based
We planning to change the server machine's OS to linux(can be any flavour, no idea about linux).So i would like to know i...
@MarkHenderson We burned eachother out with our uncontrollable, overt, and shameless sexual harassment of eachother. Wow, we really are like family to eachother.
I went riding yesterday. My little horse is behaving like a real adult reliable riding horse. I still am amazed that the tiny little foal from just the other year is now big and ridable.
Of course, he's also the only animal that I have raised from birth. All the cats I've had have been at least six weeks old when I got them, most of them twelve weeks.
We're in an interesting position here - our machine are being upgraded to 8.1 which doesn't include a DVD decoder. K-Lite Media Pack/Media Player Classic and VLC are both out due to the way they remove the copyright protection, so are there any decent, cheap or free DVD players. and NOT quicktime, that does not meet the defenition of "decent".
@RobM yes - the network manage has said now we're running like a business (as an academy, rather than under the LEA) we need to be legally covered for everything we do, and the way VLC removes copy protection on DVDs isn't quite legal.
Now I hate more stuff: OHS (oracle HTTP Server), the Frankenstein of HTTP servers.
@JourneymanGeek I'm sure I'll be quite more productive working from a GNU/Linux box, and not having to jump through two nested Citrix desktops just to open a putty session...
The web is a funny place. Someone creates a disposable e-mail service so that you don't get spammed after signing up somewhere. And this service then gets used to create spam profiles at our sites. sigh
I had a nice little installer that uses Program Files, ProgramData and AppData all correctly... "why don't we put it in C:\OurProgram instead, it's much easier!"
SharpTLSScan has been upgraded to version 1.2. You can download the executable from this post, or you can find the source on Github. Version 1.2 adds some visual enhancements, such as having the protocol versions grouped together instead of interleaved in the output. This is because each separate protocol scan (SSLv3, TLS1.0, TLSv1.1, TLS1.2,) executes on a separate thread…
Gawd. If I came across a 5.1 server, I would consider that a security incident requiring immediate response. I don't know how some places manage to ignore things like that for so long.
A naive time server would simply send the current time to a client in response to a request. However, by the time the client received the response the time would be inaccurate. How does NTP avoid this?
It's the Latinized version (dæmon) of the Greek word (δαίμων - which sounds a bit like "THAY-mon"). Nobody speaks Latin anymore, and nobody wrote down how Latin was pronounced back in the day, so our best guesses on how æ was pronounced are based on modern words that still use it (all the English words that use æ have been simplified to just "e", like medieval, which was mediæval). So it was probably pronounced something like "DEH-mon" in Latin.
Regardless - dispute at the office over it's pronunciation... Wikipedia says either "DEE-mon" or "DAY-mon". The Jargon file says both those, in reverse order; and notes that the first place to use it pronounced it "DEE-mon", but the place that popularized it pronounced it "DAY-mon". So the only fair way to settle this is by chat room opinion poll.
Generally speaking the pronunciations in a dictionary are given in preference order.
Dictionary.com, under the OS definition, gives "DAY-mon" as the preferred with "DEE-mon" being acceptable. I don't have an account on OED to look up the authoritative source.
@84104 True that. What does an upside down e sound like, anyway? I tried an "e" sounds standing on my head, but it sounded the same... and I'm getting a lot of weird looks now.
Throughout Wikipedia, the pronunciation of words is indicated by means of the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). The following tables list the IPA symbols used for English words and pronunciations.
If the IPA symbols are not displayed properly by your browser, see the links below.
== Key ==
If the words illustrating two symbols sound the same to you (say, if you pronounce cot and caught the same, or do and dew, or marry and merry), you can ignore the difference between those symbols. Footnotes explain some of these mergers. (See also #Dialect variation below.)
Notes
The IPA stress mark (ˈ)...
@ChrisS Oh, it's pronounced DAY-mon. DEE-mons are the things mentally ill people hear. DAY-mons are computer programs. Though, I suppose there may be some overlap... computer software mad eby Oracle comes to mind.
:p
I was obviously referencing the fact that I have a 30 inch penis, not some plastic necklace.
We use Office 365 for hosted exchange, and I have an on premises SharePoint 2013 farm, and I'm trying to find a way to sync tasks with Outlook.
I have been researching for the past couple days and all I've been able to find was "It's not possible yet, find a third party tool." from over a year ...
@HopelessN00b jesus...there's a guy on twitter called Hung Like Mr. Ed - Mr_Ed1393 - with a 15. I'm not gonna link it 'cause EVERYTHING about it is NSFW but daaaaaaaaaymn