I'm really confused. First, I couldn't even ping anything on the VPN, then it worked. Then I get a "NXDOMAIN" response from the DNS with a local request. Then "SRVFAIL" now.
I have this file called "Wesley David.png" in my Skydrive folder, and it makes me feel a little weird every time a file dialog box opens up and I see it, but it's actually just a screenshot of my VoIP phone the last time I talked to him because it displayed his phone number, so I wouldn't forget his number. :P
A few weeks ago, the incomparable Rikki Endsley asked me if I would be interested in doing some kind of media-type thing with USENIX. I thought the concept sounded cool, so she and I talked about it, and I told her that I'd only do it if I could drag Ben Cotton into it. After [...]
So, here's an interesting little problem. I'm limited to 9 LPT ports on a given server, and I need ~20 ports total (remapping network share to an LPT port). What do? :(
@RyanRies ya. If you're doing VDI with thin clients or just RDS with thin clients, and everything in on HV, you dont need to ever touch a product key again
Unfortunately the software we use in the company apparently requires an LPT port ...and I'm trying to replace our old PCs in the factory with thin clients (raspberry Pis in particular). I can print just fine, but I don't have enough LPT ports to go around :/
@wfaulk If they're running PVST, they've got one spanning tree topology per-vlan. Your switches are compatible assuming they support MST, but you'll need to actually configure one instance of MST per vlan.
So the question really is whether your switches can run that many MST instances -- if they can, they can effectively interoperate with the PVST.
@ShaneMadden that's cool. I'm not looking for a step-by-step guide, just a confirmation from someone with a better understanding of the interop how it should work
That's funny. Looking at jobs on DICE and I found one where they're hiring for a "client" ...one who also happens to have a job app out with the same wording.
Upgrading may be the wrong word. I'm talking more like Windows to Linux (for servers I find this is a upgrade) or from one database type to a more efficient one (thinking Oracle to Microsoft but not sure if they'd play along). — Griffin49 mins ago
@ewwhite It's how you make the connection brokers highly available though! Why have multiple RDS servers if your single connection broker can take everything down if it fails?
Kitfo (, ), sometimes spelled ketfo, is a traditional dish found in Ethiopian cuisine.
Overview
Kitfo consists of minced raw beef, marinated in mitmita (a chili powder based spice blend) and niter kibbeh (a clarified butter infused with herbs and spices). The word comes from the Ethio-Semitic root k-t-f, meaning "to chop finely; mince."
Kitfo cooked lightly rare is known as kitfo leb leb. Kitfo is often served alongside—sometimes mixed with—a mild cheese called ayibe or cooked greens known as gomen. In many parts of Ethiopia, kitfo is served with injera, a flatbread made fr...
I live in Southern Canadia Upstate NY, so I was surprised to find we even have an Ethiopian restaurant left in business. Guess I know what I'm doing this weekend. medaethiopianrestaurant.com
This install started as a 3.5 install and has been progressively upgraded over the years, and somewhere along the line an "express" upgrade to SSO happened, and 5.1 explicitly cannot upgrade an "Express" SSO install
The first server's SSO wouldn't import the database dump from the second. Just sat there, never returned. Subsequent import or export attempts, sat there, never returned.