|
|
Up |
|
|
  |
Author: Tech GEekTech GEek
Date: Apr 6, 2008 23:53
Now find maximum vulnerabilities in Windows, Oracle, Cisco and MSSQL
with the help of Secure Auditor, a unified digital risk management
solution. Download the link and fix all vulnerabilities with
continuous updates.
http://www.download.com/Secure-Auditor/3000-2653-10826743.html?part=dl-SecureAud&subj...
Secure Auditor provides single console for audit, compliance,
penetration test and forensics. It is not just a tool instead it is a
complete digital risk management solution.
|
| |
|
| |
no comments
|
|
  |
Author: wxs0009wxs0009
Date: Apr 6, 2008 23:42
Patek Philippe Gondolo 18kt White Gold Mens Watch 5111G
Patek Philippe Gondolo 18kt White Gold Mens Watch 5111G Link :
http://www.aaa-replica-watch.com/Patek_5111G.html
Buy the cheapest Patek Philippe Gondolo 18kt White Gold Mens Watch
5111G in toppest Replica . www.aaa-replica-watch.com helps you to save
money! Patek-5111G , Patek Philippe Gondolo 18kt White Gold Mens Watch
5111G , Replia , Cheap , Fake , imitation , Patek Philippe Watches
Patek Philippe Gondolo 18kt White Gold Mens Watch 5111G Information :
|
| Show full article (4.01Kb) |
|
| |
no comments
|
|
  |
|
|
  |
|
|
  |
|
|
  |
Author: sales020sales020
Date: Apr 6, 2008 19:50
Patek Philippe Complicated Perpetual Calendar 18kt Rose Gold Mens
Watch 5039R
Patek Philippe Complicated Perpetual Calendar 18kt Rose Gold Mens
Watch 5039R Link : http://www.aaa-replica-watch.com/Patek_5039R.html
Buy the cheapest Patek Philippe Complicated Perpetual Calendar 18kt
Rose Gold Mens Watch 5039R in toppest Replica . www.aaa-replica-watch.com
helps you to save money! Patek-5039R , Patek Philippe Complicated
Perpetual Calendar 18kt Rose Gold Mens Watch 5039R , Replia , Cheap ,
Fake , imitation , Patek Philippe Watches
Patek Philippe Complicated Perpetual Calendar 18kt Rose Gold Mens
Watch 5039R Information :
|
| Show full article (4.29Kb) |
|
no comments
|
|
  |
|
|
  |
Author: rbernardorbernardo
Date: Apr 6, 2008 14:35
At the BlockParty 2008 held on April 4-6
in Cleveland, Ohio, the CommodoreOne demo,
"Flame" a.k.a. "Lame", won first place in the
Wild Compo. The demo programmed by Jeri
Ellsworth, Ken Summeral (sp?), and George
"Fatman" Sanger, was first shown at Jeri's
talk on Friday evening. Actual competition
voting was on Saturday midnight with "Flame"
going up against various competitors,
including a Linux demo showing ASCII
characters on a revolving 3-D polygon and a
demo utilizing the first music tracker for
an 8086 computer.
The C1 board itself was modded to run
MIDI files straight from the FPGA, no CPU
required. Winners were announced at noon on
Sunday. Jeri and George accepted the first
place prize of various items, including a
trophy that lights up.
More exact details on the Wild Compo to ...
|
| Show full article (1.22Kb) |
|
no comments
|
|
  |
|
|
  |
|
|
  |
Author:
Date: Apr 6, 2008 11:53
Historically, how did third-party software companies deal with parts
of the platform being removed from the base install of the OS?
Unbundling has been common on mainframes and minis for a long time and
while it is wonderful economically (q.v. price discrimination;
shareholders, demands of) it tends to erode the concept of a
'platform' many companies strive to create in their OS
offerings. (Passing lightly over what it makes the customers think of
you...)
It would seem that unbundling would inevitably lead to massive
re-implementation of services once part of the OS install, and
concomitant incompatibilities between applications, and between
specific applications and the OS (when the unbundled features are
installed). Did any application developers handle this gracefully?
Context: Microsoft seems to be considering unbundling for Windows 7. I
*know* how their third-party (application and driver) devs will handle
it: Badly. Lucky for me I moved most of my stuff to Linux a decade
ago. It's always amazed me that MS seems incapable of making any of
its third-party devs hew to any reasonable standard of quality.
|
| |
|
1 Comment |
|
|
|
|