On Oct 21, 2010, at 8:25 PM, Mark Andrews wrote:
>
> In message <4bc01459-b53a-4b2c-b75b-47d89550d...@delong.com>, Owen DeLong
> write
> s:
>>
>> On Oct 21, 2010, at 3:15 PM, Mark Andrews wrote:
>>
>>> =20
>>> In message , Owen =
>> DeLong write
>>> s:
>>> =20
>> Which is part one of
On Oct 25, 2010, at 9:06 PM, Ted Hatfield wrote:
> Whatever instructional plan you put together make certain it includes
> instructions on applying security patches and keeping your system up to date.
> Probably the best thing most users can do to keep their systems clean.
That, and ... NEVER
On Mon, 25 Oct 2010, Alex Thurlow wrote:
I'm trying to find out if there are currently any resources available for
teaching people how to be safe online. As in, how to not get a virus, how to
pick out phishing emails, how to recognize scams. I'm sure everyone on this
list knows these thing
On Sun, Oct 24, 2010 at 09:49:31AM -0700, Seth Mattinen wrote:
> On 10/24/2010 09:26, Brandon Kim wrote:
> >
> > Wow that is amazing and quite impressive that you even run the antenna
> > linesinteresting..do you have to pay for the GPS service?
> >
>
>
> Make your own simple GPS NTP c
I use this for the kids..
http://www.hectorsworld.com/island/index.html
On Mon, Oct 25, 2010 at 7:13 PM, Alex Thurlow wrote:
> I'm trying to find out if there are currently any resources available for
> teaching people how to be safe online. As in, how to not get a virus, how
> to pick out phis
On Mon, Oct 25, 2010 at 6:13 PM, Alex Thurlow wrote:
> I'm trying to find out if there are currently any resources available for
> teaching people how to be safe online. As in, how to not get a virus, how
> to pick out phishing emails, how to recognize scams. I'm sure everyone on
> this list kno
One can start with
http://antispam.br/videos/english/
Rubens
On Mon, Oct 25, 2010 at 11:13 PM, Alex Thurlow wrote:
> I'm trying to find out if there are currently any resources available for
> teaching people how to be safe online. As in, how to not get a virus, how
> to pick out phishing ema
I'm trying to find out if there are currently any resources available
for teaching people how to be safe online. As in, how to not get a
virus, how to pick out phishing emails, how to recognize scams. I'm
sure everyone on this list knows these things, but a lot of end users
don't. I'm trying
On 24 Oct 2010, at 18:28, Christopher Morrow wrote:
> On Sun, Oct 24, 2010 at 1:24 PM, Joel Jaeggli wrote:
>> On 10/24/10 10:20 AM, Christopher Morrow wrote:
>>> On Sun, Oct 24, 2010 at 10:44 AM, Peter Lothberg wrote:
>
How do you knew that your local NTP server knew what time it is? (for
> On 25/10/2010 15:56, Joe Greco wrote:
> > Four is, IMHO, the best number of servers to have. They do not need to be
> > fast or modern machines.
>
> They do need to have a somewhat unbroken internal clock.
That's a good point.
> This tends to mean that running ntp on a VM is not generally a g
Anyone else having trouble resolving .mil hostnames today?
Antonio Querubin
808-545-5282 x3003
e-mail/xmpp: t...@lava.net
On 25/10/2010 15:56, Joe Greco wrote:
> Four is, IMHO, the best number of servers to have. They do not need to be
> fast or modern machines.
They do need to have a somewhat unbroken internal clock.
This tends to mean that running ntp on a VM is not generally a good idea.
Nick
Hi,
As announced earlier, dnswl.org will change it's operating model.
"Heavy users" (defined as those doing > 100'000 queries/24 hours on
the public nameservers) and vendors of anti-spam products and services
will need a paid subscription.
We are now ready to implement the model and will graduall
> On Sun, 24 Oct 2010, George Bonser wrote:
> > The main reason for that is that the "free" servers won't remain "free"
> > if every single individual host on the Internet is hitting them. By
> > running your own internal servers a stratum down you offload that
> > traffic from the public servers
Leo Bicknell writes:
> For instance, for a couple of thousand dollars you can get a
> Symmetricom appliance that will do GPS timing with analog dial
> backup to NIST. That gives you two non-internet sources at relatively
> low cost and low effort. Deploy four in different POP's and you
> have
[Apologies for duplicate emails]
Hi,
We have redesigned and improved the way we mirror other databases
(Thanks to the RIPE NCC Database staff!). We now have a method of
translating the operational data from other registries (for instance
from other RIRs or the RADb) into the RIPE Database struc
On Sun, 24 Oct 2010 20:15:56 -0400
Brandon Kim wrote:
> I have heard that routers don't make good NTP servers since they
> weren't designed to keep track of time. This, I have read from a
> Cisco source. Can't remember where though. Or maybe they were just
> referring to older less powerful route
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