Comment s/jujo/juju (Score 1) 23
Looks like I have to type more than that so the code knows I really mean:
sed -e 's,jujo/juju,g'
Looks like I have to type more than that so the code knows I really mean:
sed -e 's,jujo/juju,g'
This Operation Sundevil from the 1990s ?
https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fen.wikipedia.org%2Fwiki%2F...
Exactly. I'm doing this as well. I configured a second wifi interface, wl1, and once you have second interface in dd-wrt, you can apply bandwidth throttling. It works like a champ. I connect my systems to the primary wifi interface, and any guest can connect to the open secondary interface. To test the throttling, I fired up a bandwith test on the open guest interface, and then another on the primary network and confirmed that the primary network takes priority over any of the guest traffic.
I used this wiki to help configure my setup:
Sew you are saying they have a hole in the garment called used games? Maybe they should stitch that up... =)
"now a push for stronger controls and monitoring for technology exports 'that would provide a national strategy to prevent the use of American technology from being used by human rights abusers.'"
Where is the grilling of our own country's use of this technology to spy on our citizens? Yeah, I thought so, not a single word. That'd be looking in the past and we never do that. Nope never...
Honestly, this is consistent with what the US has been saying for the past 10 years on any human rights abuse. We've continued to rack up our own abuses and as long as the targets are "terrorists" or "Muslims" or whatever the current boogeyman, it's OK if the US does these things. Meanwhile, out of the other side of our mouth, while we continue these abusive and repressive tactics, we have the gall to point the finger at other countries, ones who we even have supported and ASKED to do our repression because it gives the US some value, we point our finger and tsk tsk tsk, spying, invasion of privacy, these are the things of tyrants and dictators... let the sound of freedom ring...
Nope, not even a hint of irony there...
Because we live in a democracy, and the public cannot make an informed decision about their elected leaders unless they know what those leaders are really doing.
The leaks are primarily -- and perhaps exclusively -- from the writings of career civil servants, not elected officials.
It doesn't matter who *wrote* the cable so much as for whom the cable was written. Specially, these cables were for the state department as a whole. That's clearly government and it reasonable falls into an area (diplomacy) that US Citizens have an interest in understanding what their state department is doing on their behalf.
But he doesn't seem to be exercising a lot of descretion in these releases. I wonder if he might not always be completely truthful.
How can you claim that there isn't a lot of discretion with the leaked documents?
Assange has requested support from the US Govt on redactions; he was rebuffed[1]. He's provided the cables to newspapers and has only released a small portion of documents that they've felt were important. To date, were talking ~1% of the total documents.
None of this sounds like someone who just dumped the whole lot without a care in the world besides total transparency.
1. http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2033771,00.html
So far, Wikileaks has published approximately nothing that is shocking or surprising or that reveals unlawful activity -- and I include the misleadingly edited "Collateral Murder" video in my consideration
Maybe it wasn't shocking to you, but I consider things like lying about military action (Yemen, Pakistan), coercion to prevent prosecution (Spain, Germany) pretty big deals. I can't say that I'm shocked, but you can't say there aren't huge huge stories included in just the first 2000 (1% of the total volume) documents that have been released. A small list of those here:
http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2010/12/24/wikileaks
and more exhaustive list here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contents_of_the_United_States_diplomatic_cables_leak
Just take 5 minutes and read through those lists and come back and tell me nothing shocking, surprising, or unlawful behavior is included.
Don't disagree that good character, to the best of your ability to judge is a good idea, but the whole point of elected officials and transparency is that those in power have demonstrated time and time again that we just can't trust them. The US constitution was written to enshrine this idea. We don't have to trust officials because we're in control and demand accountability through elections.
So folks get up-in-arms about a 100k email addresses leaked by AT&T api but never mind the *millions* of emails, email contents, phone conversations, irc chats, *everything* that we've sent over the intertubes that AT&T, for the last 8 years, shuffled to the NSA? Really?
Awesome, have the government archive my internet content just don't send me SPAM?
That's a very fair point on stability. Boxee certainly could use something that can restart it when it crashes; mythtv frontend makes a nice place to do that.
Not sure why it fails for you, but I have a fully populated Movie and TV browsing in Boxee -- I never use Browse because everything is in either Movie or TV. You may want to look at the boxee forums on media naming conventions to ensure it can classify your local media correctly.
Other than the livetv part, there isn't much to love in mythtv. Mythvideo is *horrible*. It doesn't have much in the way of automatically finding and acquiring metadata around your local media. The navigation menu assumes one big flat folder with everything in it. While it does work with directory trees, you end up having to click through that to get the video. Boxee really shines here -- it separates TV series from movies, and for tv shows, groups them according to season. This was exactly what I wanted. When you add new media, in myth you have to go an select scan from the setup screen while boxee is always watching for new media and it just shows up under the recently added section.
While the alpha does crash every now and then (the 0.12 has improved a lot for me) what I'm struggling with is the need for the fglrx -- the LTS fglrx support on my ati 9500 pro was horrible (freeze the screen, took 5 reboots to get stable from power on) -- I'm currently on 9.04 with xorg from 8.10 and that's been working out quite well now.
I tend to agree that the "social" aspect of boxee is a bit in the way in the main interface, but what the reviewer didn't mention is whether zinc or hulu do anything with local media. From the zinc website it seems like it too can scan local media like boxee, what I would have liked in the review is some coverage over how well each one worked. In my experience, boxee does a really good job at this and includes a built-in interface for correcting the mistakes (aka Wrong Video link). I do agree that boxee could use a global search, however, I'm quite happy with boxee having just converted away from a mythtv setup.
"What people have been reduced to are mere 3-D representations of their own data." -- Arthur Miller