http://www.shariqsheikh.com/blog/index.php/200905/the-only-valid-review-of-active-directory-design/
Information about joeware mixed with wild and crazy opinions...
Brilliant…
The price for American astronauts to hitch a ride on a Russian spaceship is going sky high.
The Russian-built Soyuz TMA-16 spacecraft, as photographed from the inside of the space station by Japanese astronaut Soichi Noguchi, after the ship undocked March 18, 2010.
The price for American astronauts to hitch a ride on a Russian spaceship is going sky high.NASA on Tuesday signed a contract to pay $55.8 million per astronaut for six Americans to fly into space on Russian Soyuz capsules in 2013 and 2014. NASA needs rides on Russian rockets to the International Space Station because it plans to retire the space shuttle fleet later this year.
NASA now pays half as much, about $26.3 million per astronaut, when it uses Russian ships. NASA spokesman John Yembrick said the cost is going up because Russia has to build more capsules for the extra flights. NASA had already agreed to pay as much as $51 million a seat for flights in 2011 and 2012, before the latest increase.
http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2010/04/07/cost-russian-soyuz-rockets-soaring/
After more than 4 years C is back at position number 1 in the TIOBE index. The scores for C have been pretty constant through the years, varying between the 15% and 20% market share for almost 10 years. So the main reason for C’s number 1 position is not C’s uprise, but the decline of its competitor Java. Java has a long-term downward trend.
http://www.tiobe.com/index.php/content/paperinfo/tpci/index.html
According to a letter published today by NosoftwarePatents founder Florian Mueller, Big Blue has abandoned its commitment to the open source community by attacking the Hercules project, which was founded by Roger Bowler more than a decade ago.
The mainframe emulator code was written to enable users to run IBM’s z/OS on x64 or Itanium iron instead of System z hardware from Big Blue.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/04/06/ibm_hercules_project_patents/
I was informed by Brian that my new highlighter addon for the blog was tossing extra gunk into the RSS feed… So I had to turn it off, I will ping the author about it.
I just had to perform the yearly renew my Cert on my Smart Card for my MVP Source Code Access to the Windows OS. I also have a Smart Card Cert for work I have to renew yearly for authentication as well.
Something that annoys me is that everyone likes to use a one year period for Certs. I.E. You have to renew them once a year. Now this makes sense in the nice clean, we have Certs that last one year viewpoint. Security likes it, as I said, it is nice and clean and fits one of our major time marks… It is also a default in at least the Microsoft Certificate Authority systems.
What annoys me about it is that you need to renew PRIOR to its expiration. In general, you want to do this a bit in advance so you don’t have an issue that could cause you some sort of outage while it gets sorted out. No one wants a smart card that isn’t working as it is usually a pain to sort it out, possibly having to mail it somewhere, possibly having to drive somewhere. Being treated like an outcast the whole while…
So what do you do? You get your notification that you are going to expire maybe 45-60 days out from the actual expiration. At the one month mark you get another message and likely you think, well I better take care of this before I can’t or before I forget and so you do.
So now the problem or at least my annoyance… Say your initial Cert is issued end of August. So the next year you get your warnings in July time frame and you likely renew at the beginning of August. The next year you get your warnings in June and you likely renew at the beginning of July, etc etc etc…
Seems like using say 13 or 14 months for the expiration period would be nice, then you know, every year in the month of XXX you have to renew your Cert. Not get earlier and earlier every year.
Just saying…
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