On 6/6/07, Jochem Maas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Daniel Brown wrote:
> On 6/6/07, Jochem Maas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
...
>
> Yeah, my truck, too. I do computer forensics primarily, so I'm on
> the road all the time. I have a laptop in the front between the
> driver and passenger seats with a system in the back hardwired through
> an inverter, which is packed with an Everio video camera, RF monitors,
> et cetera.
the mind boggles - your geek level way surpasses mine :-) - in fact I
had to look up 'inverter' :-/
can't figure how exactly the camera and rf monitors tie into the forensics,
sounds cool though! besides who am I to question a man with a truck packed
with more custom electronics that I have in my house :-)
> Manually doing the APC module may not be ideal, but if it's an
> immediate requirement, you could do it like that for now just to get
> it up and going, then work on creating your test environment so that
> you'll be ready to go when the need to update or modify the
> installation arises.
a, seems like the way to go - I can live with that.
>
The camera is just for audiovisual recording of evidence on the
scene, while the RF monitors, WLAN (A/B/G) scanners, et cetera, are
for bug detection, AP/Ad Hoc/WiFi hijacking and sniffing, and so on.
It's a lot of fun, if you're into that kind of geek stuff like I am.
Going back to your original point, however, I do have to agree
that Plesk upgrades are a nightmare, and I've been doing Linux server
administration for well over a decade now. It's so non-standard and
yet still intertwined that it makes even the simplest system
modifications (PHP recompilations, for example) turn into a day-long
project sometimes.... and sometimes longer, with downtime and loss of
hair thrown in for good measure!
--
Daniel P. Brown
[office] (570-) 587-7080 Ext. 272
[mobile] (570-) 766-8107
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