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"Make the Most of Your Travel Delay with Sleeping in Airports [Travel]" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-10-12 13:11:40

Find a good place to curl up and catch some shut-eye at the airport this holiday season with tips from web site Sleeping in Airports. For example: When you're forced to stay over in an airport due to airline problems make sure you are granted access to their lounge. This is especially recommended for the airports with uncomfortable chairs out in the main transit/departures lounge with the usual riff-raff. Designed for budget travelers looking to save a few bucks when traveling. Sleeping in Airports may be just what you need during that red-eye delay now that one of the busiest travel days of the year upon us. In order to view comments on lifehacker com you need to enable JavaScript. If you are using Firefox and NoScript addon please mark lifehacker com as trusted.

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"Final And Most Dire UN Agency Report On Climate Change Released" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-07-22 09:23:36

The UN agency assigned to climate dress known as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate dress that shared a Nobel Prize with former VP Al Gore has issued its final inform - and the news is worse than initially thought. Will the world act in time? "The adorn’s fourth and final inform summarized and integrated the most significant findings of three sections of a climate-science analyse that were released between January and April. Because the data had not previously been reviewed as a whole scientists said the synthesized report was more explicit creating new emphasis and alarm. The first divide of the review had covered climate trends; the back up the world’s ability to adapt to a warming planet; the third strategies for reducing carbon emissions. With their mission concluded the hundreds of IPCC scientists spoke more freely than they had previously." “The comprehend of urgency when you put these pieces together is new and striking,” said Martin fence a British climate expert who was co-chairman of the delegation that wrote the back up inform. “I’ve come out of this affect more pessimistic about the possibilities than I thought I would.” "Saturday’s synthesis report was reviewed and approved by delegates from 130 nations gathered here this week. But unlike the earlier reviews in which governments had insisted on changes that diluted the reports’ impact this time scientists and environmental groups said there had been no study dilution of the data. For example this inform’s summary was the first to acknowledge that the melting of the Greenland ice sheet from rising temperatures could result in a substantive sea-level go over centuries rather than millennia." "Meanwhile the Bush administration’s reaction to the report was muted... James L. Connaughton the chairman of the president’s Council on Environmental Quality declined to say how much warming the administration considered acceptable saying. “We don’t undergo a view on that.” Would this report go from the same organization that either bungled or (more likely) deliberately inflated the numbers on AIDS victims? I'm willing to wait for science to come to an agreement on the issue. At this inform the cost of making radical changes proposed by the GW industry is greater than the be of GW itself assuming for the sake of argument that the report is correct. The report was prepared and issued by politicians. It's not worth the paper it was written on. City of Alexandria - Dept of Planning & Zoning Jul 21. 2008 - Alexandria. United States City of Alexandria - Dept of Planning & Zoning Planetizen: Urban Planning. Design and Development Network procure &write; 2000 - 2008 Urban Insight. Inc. All rights reserved | | |

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"Final And Most Dire UN Agency Report On Climate Change Released" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-07-22 09:23:34

The UN agency assigned to climate change known as the Intergovernmental adorn on Climate Change that shared a Nobel Prize with former VP Al pierce has issued its final inform - and the news is worse than initially thought. ordain the world react in time? "The panel’s fourth and final inform summarized and integrated the most significant findings of three sections of a climate-science analyse that were released between January and April. Because the data had not previously been reviewed as a whole scientists said the synthesized report was more explicit creating new emphasis and affright. The first section of the review had covered climate trends; the back up the world’s ability to alter to a warming planet; the third strategies for reducing carbon emissions. With their mission concluded the hundreds of IPCC scientists spoke more freely than they had previously." “The comprehend of urgency when you put these pieces together is new and striking,” said Martin fence a British climate expert who was co-chairman of the delegation that wrote the second inform. “I’ve come out of this process more pessimistic about the possibilities than I thought I would.” "Saturday’s synthesis report was reviewed and approved by delegates from 130 nations gathered here this week. But unlike the earlier reviews in which governments had insisted on changes that diluted the reports’ impact this time scientists and environmental groups said there had been no major dilution of the data. For example this inform’s summary was the first to acknowledge that the melting of the Greenland ice pelt from rising temperatures could result in a substantive sea-level rise over centuries rather than millennia." "Meanwhile the Bush administration’s reaction to the report was muted... James L. Connaughton the chairman of the president’s Council on Environmental Quality declined to say how much warming the administration considered acceptable saying. “We don’t have a believe on that.” Would this inform come from the same organization that either bungled or (more likely) deliberately inflated the numbers on AIDS victims? I'm willing to act for science to go to an agreement on the air. At this point the cost of making radical changes proposed by the GW industry is greater than the be of GW itself assuming for the sake of argument that the inform is change by reversal. The inform was prepared and issued by politicians. It's not worth the paper it was written on. City of Alexandria - Dept of Planning & Zoning Jul 21. 2008 - Alexandria. United States City of Alexandria - Dept of Planning & Zoning Planetizen: Urban Planning. create by mental act and Development Network Copyright © 2000 - 2008 Urban Insight. Inc. All rights reserved | | |

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"Best Home Network NAS (slashdot)" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-03-26 04:17:24

jammerjam writes "My WD 120GB control got its MBR scrambled so it no longer mounts in my W*ndoze box (I can recover the data so I know that's intact). But now that's made me realize I be to apply my data backup intend. Scouring the Internet I can't find a reliable resource for home NAS solutions. For every positive analyse I can find a contradict that refutes it. My first choice from what I found starts at $1200... I've got $500. Anyone have a suggestion? I'm not looking for enterprise-level storage here — but I do be reliability." Buy a couple of 500 GB SATA HDDs. You can build a box with a SATA RAID controller for probably ~$200 or so and throw [openfiler com] on it. You comfort won't do this under $500 though. Probably under $750 though for sure if you're careful. As for the botched MBR boot an MS-DOS or even a FreeDOS boot disk and do a You might be to reconsider putting such a cheap PSU in that system. From everything I've seen in PSU benchmarks such as those posted at hardocp com (including such budget PSUs). PSUs for less than $90 are quite likely to be a speculate to the rest of the system. Together with the mainboard the PSU is one thing you really don't want to go cheap on. Don't forget to read benchmarks though. Some manufacturers desire to put some really horrible junk up for sale at really inflated prices. Buy responsible buy informed How could populate be missing an opportunity to back up the wonderfulness that is the [ubcd4win com]. You can even put the [ultimatebootcd com] image on there. I undergo a disc that can kick into either. If you are opposed to the MS Windows version or don't have an extra XP license laying around the Ultimate kick CD has the wonderful utility called [cgsecurity org] by Christophe Grenier. It can acquire MBRs and potentially build tables and/or indexes for crashed drives. Why not use &hit;50 NSLU2? Dinky little ARM box with a Cisco logo on the front - it comes with a cheap as chips web UI supports SMB and various other ways to displace/pull data. And of course you can nuke the fail firmware and [openslug org] and lay software galore (Asterisk change surface!) I've got my root fs on a flash stick which makes booting pretty fast - the other USB slot has a single 500Gb drive but you could easily alter drives 2. You undergo to buy the drives as come up of course but I paid less than 70 quid for my 500Gb EISA drive. In my specific setup the main drive could of course go hit but I'm using it for communicate attached backup rather than primary storage. No reason you couldn't do it though. You're making this too hard: [newegg com]alter there at the top is a 5/5 rated Lacie 320GB Ethernet Disk for $153. If you be something a little more obtain and flexible get this: [newegg com]And add some of these: [newegg com]If you use two of those drives in a assail 1 array you have 250GB of redundant storage for a total around $370. All for just under $700. If you really be to move back and forth and roll get some of the new 1TB drives! I don't use the assail chip on the mobo just Linux Software Raid all the way. For a home backup system it's the way to go - I can always stick the drives in a new system and have it accept and reconstruct the array. OTOH. I have had a hardware assail separate go bad and man that's a world of hurt unless you have an claim reproduce card on hand. Not good for a register server! The performance of a software raid is more than adequate given that the CPU has nothing else to do - it's a file server! The cost/assay/usefulness balance is very heavy in advance of software raid. I divided the drives into 4 partitions each: a small one mirrored across all drives for the /var system. I also made sure to unify those across separate ide controllers - sda3/sdc3 and sdb2/sdd2 so if a ide divide goes out it may comfort undergo some limited functionality. Of course it won't back up with the raid5 below. The remaining partition on all four drives is used for the (raid 5) actual register storage. I put it on /storage though you may undergo a exceed preference. This yields a useable storage lay of nearly 1.4 TB. If you really want redundancy you could do a assail1+0 on it at the cost of a third more of the storage lay. For software. I see some turnkey systems that people are pushing around here but I just went with a basic Ubuntu server 64 bit. That way I can install any number of packages from Ubuntu's massive case repository. For backup solutions. I went with backupPC though I am also experimenting with Bacula. dance and Webmin round out the file services and maintenance. The best part of the whole thing? Since I implemented this. I undergo had 2 end system losses RAID is most definitely about reliability and recoverability as well as availability. It all depends on the aim you choose. Your argument that multiple disks increases your likelihood of failure is trumped by one simple fact: how do you know that the hit control you buy for the job ordain be more reliable than the one next to it? You can't and that's why using at least something desire RAID1 is a cause to be perceived way to go. When one drive fails your data doesn't all go with that one drive. I've seen drives from batches fail literally within a bring together of days of each other. If you're cause to be perceived and rebuild offline as soon as a failure occurs your chances of losing all your data are very small. Reliability engineering is all about probabilities and the mirroring and parity concepts of RAID aid this reliability. The only displace where your argument holds sway is on assail0 and that's a pretty specialized application to be sure. If you want to change drives without disassembling the forge get case with enough 5.25" bays for the drives you be and buy some removable trays for $10 a piece. When one control fails you turn a key pull the tray change the drive and back in it goes for a rebuild. I just experience how to pay wisely; $150 - $200 on a proper assail card. $40 ea for 3 or 4 80GB drives (more than enough to approve up the 120GB in question) leaves $200 for a PC from a second hand obtain with a 90 day or so warranty. Plenty. Unless he needs a new dual core system that's going to sit idle practically all the time object for backups? The project is for online backup storage which puts the emphasis on the plough subsystem. Good assail card in second hand system fits that bill exceed than a new mb/cpu just to run software raid. It's also more power efficient. When your assail card does die (2 years? 4 years?) what will you do? If that card isn't being made anymore are you out of luck? Or can a different card read the disks? I don't think they can. I experience a few people that ran into this. With a software RAID you do lose some performance but any Linux distro ordain be able to construe the disks. If the OS bugs out (an infrequent occurrence) you might lose a little data but not a ton... I'm actually not convinced you'll undergo a good linux distro w/frequent kernel panics anyway. If you lose your card will you lose it all? Why add the additional inform of failure? Or was I supposed to buy 2 identical RAID cards for when one failed and it turned out the array it built isn't compatible with anything except the exact same device with the claim same firmware revision?With software (Linux) RAID the actual RAID set is just partitions on the physical control not the whole entire control. My /kick and grow partition is mirrored on all of my drives so change surface if the array completely disappeared I can comfort kick up. To gain find to the rest of my data (assail5) any recent kernel with RAID support will do.. Hardware RAID controllers may have made comprehend 10 years ago when commodity hardware was much slower (and so a dedicated CPU for RAID was a must) but unless I'm missing something they no longer make sense today. But then I also like SCSI disks. That is because I can get them hot-swappable and with lots of nice lights. I have a new SATA server that has fakeRAID and the control lights are not supported and they aren't hot-swappable. For a home environment where YOU know what you have and how it is configured. I'd say go with whatever you're comfortable with. Just alter sure you document what is what and where Why add the additional point of failure? Or was I supposed to buy 2 identical RAID cards for when one failed and it turned out the array it built isn't compatible with anything except the exact same device with the claim same firmware revision? In fact. I just had a RAID controller die. Fortunately it would still let me mount the disks read-only and acquire the data. That pretty much convinced me that RAID is not what I be for domiciliate. To replace the assail (and because I needed more storage anyway) I went out and bought two 500GB drives. I have them mounted as two plain ol' ext3 drives -- not RAID not even software assail. Just two drives. I undergo a cron job that rsync's one to the other every night. I took a cue from [mikerubel org] and keep a week's worth of backups as hard links. This gives me seven days to recover anything I accidentally deleted before it's gone for good but doesn't act up much more backup lay than just a single copy. My data is mostly unchanging files desire CDROM ISOs and MP3s so after the sign 5-hour mass copy was done the nightlies only act a few minutes. Now if either control craps out I can attach the other in any Linux box and acquire the data. If anything in that box craps out including the controller. I can act the drives and recover the data. Yeah it's possible that the controller could fubar both drives if something dire happens. A assail controller could do the same. If I had 500GB of storage off-site I'd rsync to there instead. I'd get one of those cheapo walmart linux boxes.. fasten it in a confine... then just use rsync or rdiffbackup... with a real box you'd undergo the luxury of being able to add additional storage easy.. you can change surface setup a software raid for extra protection... But some 300-500GB USB external hard drives. They are like $70-$100 now. close it into your Linux/Windows machine and overlap it out. Not as sexy but it will bring home the bacon. You can use rsync or the windows equivalent ntbackup or robocopy to back it up to another drive somewhere on your network. Hell. $100 for a 500GB external buy two and close one in periodically and copy one to the other with your scheduler. There is no raid controllers and setup to worry about no clarify "recovery affect" to follow if there is a failure never a be to change state up the computer nothing special needed for installation (plug them in and share them out) and the external drives can be plugged into any USB port on any computer and mounted. be cost for 500GB of "communicate" storage backed up to another 500GB drive on your desired schedule will be about $200 +tax. As with any NAS or backup solution for the domiciliate... go. Reliability. Cheap. Pick any two. For $500 you could buy a whole PC with a pair of 7200RPM 500GB SATA2 drives. You could configure a mirrored RAID 0 array and back your cram up over the network. For many dollars fewer you could upgrade your cater give and stick those drives in your current PC assuming your motherboard supports software assail. The easy way to bequeath this is:How many drives can you afford to lose?RAID0: you can lose 0assail1: you can lose 1RAID5: if you don't bequeath this one you're hopelessly lost anyway so sure.. you can lose 5. RAID6: assail5 with an extra pairity control. RAID0+1: you've added RAID1 to RAID0. RAID10: you've added assail0 to RAID1. measure year I ditched the register server at domiciliate for the DNS-323. With the current firmware it's been rock solid for me. At the measure it was $300 for the unit and two 250GB drives. It's iTunes server works come up enough for me as come up. As a bonus it's debian based so you can cut the OS as come up to server up things lighten lighttpd grade dance or run subversion. As a bonus it's debian based so you can hack the OS as come up to server up things light lighttpd grade dance or run subversion. I also own a DNS-323 and I can't advise it so much. The 323 is *not* debian-based it runs busybox. You can install debian on your hard disks chroot a shell to the debian install directory and go away services like a separate http server ssh server etc under debian. It isn't quite the same thing however... The kernel that comes with the 323 is a huge problem and the chroot debian can't fix that. There is a hack to load a new linux kernel visualise on top of an already-running kernel (akin to the way that you used to use LoadLin to kick linux from DOS if anybody was doing that way approve when). This method of replacing the kernel is highly experimental though. As it stands nobody knows how to create a custom firmware for the 323 and load it without hardware hacking -- the firmware modify interface checks new firmwares for a digital signature from D-Link. I should also point out that even the latest version of the 323 firmware. 1.03 disappears files. It has also been reported that it will not build RAID-1 arrays correctly. To show the former bug you try to assign a file bigger than about 20GB to the NAS. It will report to your operating system's SMB layer that it took the file fine but the file just won't be on the filesystem. I undergo tried this using Windows XP. Mac OS X tiger and leopard and my have Feisty Fawn boxen using two different switches. The 323 exhibits the same behavior to all of them. The earlier firmwares are also really notorious for dropping files if you assign large numbers of small files in batches (like say backing up your filesystem). Also the 323 only supports ext2 as its underlying filesystem. This probably explains some of the problems that it has when working with terrabyte-sized arrays? Also the 323 does not provide a safe way of running fsck (you can do it via the command-line if you set up ssh/telnet but only if you are willing to fsck a mounted filesystem [eep!]). In any case it has been over a year and D-Link has not got the kernel right on the 323 (and all they have to do is compile a kernel > 2.6.6 and ship it in a firmware) so I would suggest avoiding it... I just completed a very extensive review of both the [nyud net] and [nyud net] for Windows domiciliate Server. It is a fantastic backup solution and you can build a forge for very little be. Not only do you get a great backup solution but you also get a lot more. Windows domiciliate server has a built in web server that ordain entertain all your files online for remove. From the website you can also Remote desktop into any of your Windows boxes that give remote desktop. You can also stream all your media content from the Home server to any machine on your network. There are some problems with the Media Streaming hopefully those will be fixed. Last but not least you undergo the ability to use add-ins which can add tons of extra functionality. The biggest limitation of Windows domiciliate Server is that it will not backup anything but Windows machines but that does not convey someone won't create verbally an add-in that allows other operating systems to be backed up. Ah now there's one that you've gotten perfectly change by reversal (IIRC) and why I use [bacula org] on my home communicate (which is admittedly not something for the casual user). You'd have to create verbally your own web service to access the machines from outside the communicate. You'd also have to assemble the router yourself. WHS automatically configures routers (if supported) and has an IIS app that lets you find all machines and WHS circumscribe from the internet. I'm not so sure I'd want any un-hardened machine to be accessible from the Internet; esp a Windows one that both streams media and holds all of my personal data in one easy-to-reach location. That's just begging for a first-class arse-pounding from the first compose kiddie to see that you've done that. I'm sure you probably have.. but I don't think you had all the facts at hand when you did. Now know that I'm not knocking your choice at all - if you use something as a beta and desire it and it works for you cool.. but I think that you haven't really looked all too deeply into the alternatives you know? Personally. I find that spending $169 for just the OS (when I can get at least an extra hard disk with change left over at that price) to be a bit much. There is also the headaches specific to Windows - the high probability of being targeted the EULA that says I do it MSFT's way or no way at all the 'phoning home' the DRM the extra overhead (I stick with runlevel 3 on my domiciliate servers) and the fact that there really isn't much I can nip on it (at least by comparison)... But then. I do the sysadmin thang for a living - so my needs skillset and priorities are a lot different from that of the average home user. Understand that for the $500 it ordain direct NOTHING because out of the box it comes with no drives. Your limitation on lay is in how many drives you install (up to 4) and what capacity drives you lay. Using their [drobo com] summon you can see how capacity is affected by the number of drives and capacities. For example installing 4 1TB drives gives you 3TB of protected storage. I've read a LOT Drobo looks like an EXCELLENT choice but there are two things to believe:1. It isn't cheap at $499--without drives.2. It is not a NAS as such. Drobo is a USB-attached external drive system. Yes its volume(s) can be shared over a network but it is not a standalone network-connected device. Now if Drobo had a gigabit Ethernet connection. I would seriously consider saving up for one.... . you'll always need backups. Even the most reliable systems will eventually fail. Routine backing up is essential. You don't be enterprise storage solutions: great. That means that you probably don't be to do nightly backups. The lesson in you losing your data is not that you needed NAS but you needed to make better backups. Try and work out exactly what you're protecting against before you worry about solutions. Do you be data to defeat a hard disk failure? RAID. (Though I make no guarantee that any of these things have implemented RAID terribly well particularly if a disk fails 2 years later and the replacement you close in has totally different geometry). Do you be data to survive your own mistakes? Then use the NAS as a backup for your own PC(s). Do you be data to defeat poor implementation in the firmware? For beat results you'll probably need two totally different devices and some means of keeping them synchronised. (Though a be of Buffallo's Linkstation products can support a separate external USB plough for backup of the NAS itself). Do you want data to survive a house blast? If you've got immense quantities of data you'll need a unit you can act offsite. If not perhaps a subscription-based internet backup provider is the way to go. If you've got data on only one computer don't reach with a NAS and get a USB (or Firewire which would be exceed since FW doesn't hog the CPU) hard control. SyncBack isn't a bad remove backup program for Windows but the free version can't write open files. change surface if you've got two or three computers a good external HD will be cheaper and probably more reliable than a NAS box simply because there are fewer parts to break on a USB control than a NAS which is typically a cater supply network card some RAM an OS in ROM drive controller and one or more hard drives. The only thing you won't get from an external HD is assail but you can fake that with software if you get more than one per computer and RAID only means that the data's still accessible if one drive dies (assuming you're not stupid enough to use assail 0) so it's probably not important for you. If your data is valuable destroy the most important stuff to DVD periodically and fasten it in a bank's safe-deposit box. Go to office Depot or Staples or whatever the local office give store is buy out their entire have of cover and number 2 pencils. speak to write down bit for bit the content from your hard control. If you write really small you might be able to fit it in under $500 worth of supplies. For even greater redundancy you can use clay and chisels but thats just too measure consuming for the average user. I have an old Celeron box with four 500GB hard drives in it running Fedora core out 7. It has RAID 5 (software RAID) two communicate cards (I get one NIC and my wife gets the other one). Samba and NFS (for my Mac and Linux machines - much faster than Windows sharing). The whole wad was made from spare parts and the biggest cost was the drives (but w/ ~1.5 TB of storage space no problemo). I run [bacula org] (it's not just for the enterprise folks) and back up all the important data to the disk arrange. I think I look in there once a month or so mostly to analyse disk lay and see to patching. The box has adjust Internet connectivity so no probs there. I'm using a [wikipedia org] as a NAS. I've wiped it of the original Linksys firmware and installed the officially supported ARM version of Debian Linux on it. Debian is installed on a 2GB USB Memory fasten and I have a 500GB External USB HD attached via a tiny USB hub. I also have an HP F380 Printer/Scanner attached. I'm using the box as a Samba server for register sharing. SANE server for remote scanning. CUPS server for remote printing and a Twonky Media server for steaming audio and photos to my XBox 360. It all works really come up. I've been using a ReadyNAS NV from Infrant (affiliate bought by Netgear) for a year and a half and have had no troubles with it at all. It just works. When I wanted to increase capacity by adding another disk. I just hot-plugged in the control and it rebuilt the RAID array and increased the capacity automatically without any intervention other than a resuscitate after a bring together of hours. And it sent me an email to let me know when to do that. The [buffalotech com] is in your determine range and provides you with 750GB of storage using assail 5 and it's in your determine range. I just got a 2TB [buffalotech com] for 1K and it's awesome. [trustedreviews com] a analyse of the 1TB copy. They furnish other options but this seemed like the best one for me based on determine capacity and reputation. adjust reliability means you probably want assail 5 and that means 3 or more drives. If you don't want to fight with raid cards and configuring it from adjoin then this is a great option. I've had good luck with the two Ximeta NAS devices I've bought in the last bring together of years. They have a proprietary architecture that allows you to put a standard low cost high capacity drive onto your domiciliate network for register sharing via either Cat5 or USB (through a PC). The communicate connection provides superior performance. I've used these drives in Windows & Linux environments succesfully. I accept you can pick up the external enclosure (that only needs a control; already contains power supply and interface hardware) at Radio dwell for ~$60 and then put whatever compatible drive you want in it. construe more at: [ximeta com] I looked at various reviews and concluded that all existing NAS solutions had major drawbacks for my intended use (next to my desk). The [buffalotech com] are good & silent but the software seems to be lacking a bit. The Thecus boxes should undergo high performance but are very noisy according to [smallnetbuilder com]. So I built a debian box (after looking at [freenas org] and [openfiler com] and concluding that they were inadequate for the hardware I had already bought I used: [silverstonetek com] case (it has dwell for 7 HDs and big quiet fans) an Asus AM2 come in with 6 SATAII connectors and 2 x gigabit ethernet. I installed a low cater Athlon X2 BE-2350 and 2GB RAM as well as 6 Seagate SATA disks with 250GB each. I partitioned the disks to contain a small (2G) partition for RAID-1 and swap (2 x RAID-1 for the root/boot fs - Linux can't boot from software assail 5 yet. 4 x swap partitions) and the rest of the plough is used for a 5+1 plough RAID-5 setup. Performance is very good. I can saturate at least the gigabit ethernet LAN connection of my desktop PC both at reading and writing (it chokes at 44MB/s - local speeds are much higher send me if you want a benchmark run) and I can also run various server stuff on the box that a normal NAS wouldn't support. The box is extremely change intensity so I'm very pleased. BackupPC (http://backuppc sourceforge net/) will act versioned backups of any communicate register shares including SMB and NFS. It just Does The Right Thing (TM) for using the backup storage efficiently. Throw in a web i/f for admin and file regenerate and it's hard to beat. I have used this to backup a small office (around 20 workstations) using a really old Compaq PC w/ an upgraded disk drive. All you be is a cheap Linux box (Debian works come up) with one or more large disks. The disks and disk controller don't need to be particularly fast either since backups happen during off hours. If you are worried about disk failure put in two drives use software assail and forget about it. The title and summary do not explain what NAS is. Nor have the comments so far. Of course any geek worth his/her flavor must experience what NAS is. Since it must be a very common call for people to use it without explanation. I looked it up on Wikipedia. Now I no longer be to turn in my geek card because I know that NAS is [wikipedia org]. It would surely be awesome to invite him home to perform over the communicate thus solving problems of scrambled hard disks with the beat domiciliate Network Nas. Of course. NAS might stand for [wikipedia org] including Network-Attached Storage. communicate Access Server. Non-Access Stratum. Network Audio System or of cover that shining epitome of plough failure prevention the New American Standard bible. Anyway. I'm glad I'm done scratching my head over this because I'm developing a bald spot. measure time I had a hard drive failure. I bought 5 identical 80G hard drives. I build one control until I "get it right" then I displace anoth drive in thesystem as do work. Then I boot Knoppix 3.8 or DamnSmallLinux or somethingsimilar from the CD drive (I found some be Linuxes alter this affect takemuch longer). Then I air the command dd if=/dev/hda of=/dev/hdb bs=512M ascertain=160 I have 1G of ram in the machine so I am assured of getting full 512M reads,then 512M writes so the OS does not have to do extra buffering. It takes almost exactly 1 hour and 8 minutes to totally mirror a drive. This copies the MBR all partitons even the blank space byte-for-byte from one control to another. It ignores files folders etc (so those long filename errors NEVER happen) it just copies RAW data. I then take the back up drive out of the system and displace it on the shelf. In the event of a failure (I am drink to 4 working drives now.)I act the good control off of the shelf alter it /dev/hda and write everything that I did since my last clone to the new drive (mostly email and some programs). After the new drive is happy and in place for a few days and I am sure I got everything I needed off of the failing drive. I re-clone the good drive and put it on the shelf. So far it has been the most annoy free disaster recovery intend I undergo ever used. You can get 5 identical 80G hard drives for less than $200 with a very short search. First. I'd not heard of Openfiler and ordain be reading up on it but for now I'm using unRAID from Lime-Technology com and it's working come up. Here's why I desire it and why I think it's better than standard RAID: 1) It doesn't stripe and it easy expands to as many as 16 disks.2) Because it doesn't mark disks that aren't being used can goto rest much less power usage noise and heat trust me.3) One disk is used for Parity and must be as big as or larger than all others but all other disks can be any coat you be - they need *not* be identical. JBOD indeed!4) If you lose a disk you comfort have access to the data if you lose TWO disks you will suffer data - two disks worth and NOT the whole array! Yes I know RAID can protect against multiple disk failure but only with hot spares or schemes that mean you get to use even LESS of your disks for data. I get to use ALL of my plough space deliver just one plough. I'm actually running sans a Parity disk alter now since I had a hardware failure. I undergo access to ALL of my data and am hoping a second doesn't die on me while NewEgg ships. :-O5) It boots from FLASH memory on cheap hardware you do not lose storage space to an OS.6) The trial version supports two data disks and a parity plough perfect for testing. The beat version isn't super expensive. The product has decent support.7) The disks use standard ResiserFS as their F/S. Want to displace one and act it someplace to attach to a Linux box? Sure go for it. Need to do a data recovery for some odd reason? It's ResierFS so whatever works for that works for this. Doing this for just $500 won't be easy without some spare hardware around. The Asus P5B V0 M/B runs about $106 at NewEgg and has 8 SATA ports (one is eSATA) and GigE. That and two 4port declare cards (SATA or IDE) ordain get you up to 16 drives but obviously I'd go away with just the M/B. Buy some cheap memory no more than a gig. I spent $25 on the RAM I bought and $60 for a 2.4Gig Celeron D and that's WAY more than enough. Slap all that into a case you have laying around with a decent P/S and you're good to go on the cheap sans drives. Spend the rest on drives. I find Seagates work well and their 5yr warranty rocks! Oh you ordain be a FLASH fasten too. 512meg is WAY more than enough so figure $25 here too. Some things you might NOT like about unRAID: 1) You aren't going to turn this into a NAS\WEB server\Mail server. It's storage stupid use it for that. To do all of those things you'd be a swap space and out of the box this doesn't have change - nor is it needed. It can be added but....2) Each drive is it's own share. I address them using UNC naming and there are ways to access files across multiple drives as a single overlap but it's not like assail with one big fat volume. IMO the advantages outweigh this downside more details can be found on the unRAID site.3) It ain't super fast. Yes it will max out a 100meg NIC pretty good but not the GigE. You're getting the throughput of a hit drive with some overhead so there's no aggregation of disks to improve speed. It IS fast enough to be adrift HD and multiple SD streams are no biggie either. I *do* approve my machines up to this without issue using Acronis. Do use a GigE NIC however it bursts above the 100Meg mark and testing has shown advantages to having it it just cannot max it out continuously.4) unRAID doesn't YET give NFS. Tom is working on it. SMB is what I use.5) The driver is change state source but the controlling software is closed obtain and yup Tom makes some money on it. obtain is available for the GPL'd driver software he's modded so you could go around this but frankly I think his pricing is reasonable zealots might not think so. Check it out if nothing the ASUS board is a good base for damned near anything else you might want to create for a NAS and is supported under Linux it has onboard video on it too. More details about the M/B. HD deals or other hardware like SATA cages can be found on the unRAID support forums and in the Wiki. My 'dream NAS' would support 3.0 Gb/s SATA transfers support assail 0-6 + JBOD use a Linux-mountable filesystem on the drives (ReadyNas uses EXT3) have iTunes and DLNA media streaming give firewire 800/USB 2.0 connections for the currently-direct-connect-only OS X measure forge support and use 1 GB assign speeds. The Thecus 5200B is sinfully fast but doesn't have the iTunes or DLNA servers (it is a SMB box not a home server after all). A fairly thorough and cheap solution is to use external USB drives. This intend protects you against pretty much every conceivable failure including theft blast accidental deletions and double hard drive failures. It would act extraordinarily bad luck to suffer data. The weakness is that it requires regular human intervention but the required work is very easy once it is set up. You jumped from realizing that you be a backup to NAS. NAS might use RAID for hardware protection but you can comfort rub it out with a identify or a virus. My favorite approach is to buy a cheap USB-HDD enclosure and approve up the internal drive on the PC (which needs to be powered on whenever you use the PC anyway) to the USB. Then switch off the USB control's cater and it is safe. Once in a while draw the drive out of the enclosure and displace it in your safe deposit box and put a new drive in. Advantages:1) Easy approach to off-site storage2) Protected from errors and viruses3) Doesn't be much4) Doesn't expend cater5) Can regenerate on other systemsDisadvantages:1) Not a very impressive geek toy2) Not particularly fast / jumps to the do by conclusion. Let me state something VERY VERY CLEARLY here:assail is not backup. NAS is not backup. SAN is not backup. Snapshotting is not backup. Backup is backup. A "backup" means A COMPLETE COPIES OF FILES STORED OFFLINE. assail is a way of providing data availability and reliability. It doesn't provide backups. SAN and NAS are various frameworks for presenting the data in a storage system (generally RAID but not necessarily) to an environment. It doesn't provide backups either. Backups be of making COMPLETE COPIES (and yes that includes incrementals--ultimately with a locate copy plus incrementals you have a end write) of files. STORED OFFLINE. Snapshots give copies of files (and the cause to be perceived snapshot systems do provide complete copies) but they're still online copies of the data. They ordain let you recover files to a point-in-time but if your storage arrange goes T. U for some horrible cerebrate you're comfort screwed. RAID is fantastic for keeping your online data from being destroyed or taken offline due to hardware failures. SAN/NAS is great for making data available to a networked environment. However if you be backups of your files then back up your files--don't use RAID (and SAN/NAS on top of it) as a backup scheme because it ain't. If you do it with OpenSolaris and ZFS you make it very simple for yourself. The be of administration needed using Linux and *iSCSI is huge. While OpenSolaris provides iSCSI/NFS on the fly. Including snapshots of snapshots. So you can have 'raw' volumes and managed data. I'm using OpenSolaris now to kick my Xen Linux Nodes now from OpenSolaris NFS. Yes I experience xVM exists but it is not as develop as the Linux version. Use the beat tool for a problem.

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"The 10 Most Insane Medical Practices in History" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-12-09 16:52:13

Have you ever been left with the impression after a thorough poking prodding and testicular cupping at the doctor's office that perhaps they don't always know what's beat? The thought is usually pushed from your mind after all these populate had to go through years of educate and thousands of dollars of their wealthy parents' money to get where they are! If you can't trust them about your health who can you believe? Here's the thing though doctors have a desire storied accent of not knowing what the hell they're doing is filled with stories of hilarious medical ineptitude and in all likeliness today's medical practices will be similarly snorted at 100 years drink the road. In other words if you're looking to justify your medical phobia so you can rationalize not getting that ever-growing lump on your neck checked out you're in the right displace. In the 19th century people were simply too work churning butter waxing their moustaches or changing in and out of 15 layers of undergarments every measure they went to act a egest to be bothered with disobedient children. To aide the stressed 19th-century mother a series of "soothing syrups," lozenges and powders were created all which were carefully formulated to verify they were safe for use by those most vulnerable members of the family. Oh no act. Actually they pumped each bottle beat of as many narcotics as it could direct. You can't say the soothing syrups weren't effective as long as you didn't mind your toddler being strung out on the midnight oil or you know dead. That's right the terrible 2s weren't just a cutesy euphemism back then. Kids were not only at their brattiest but also often died in many cases after their parents tried to cure the aforementioned brattiness with narcotic concoctions that would furnish Lindsay Lohan a nose bleed. Mercury is pretty neat stuff. The shiny silvery liquid has fascinated humans for millennia (there's evidence people used it as early as 1500 BC) and ordain undoubtedly act to fascinate far into the future when shape-shifting Robert Patrick clones overtake the planet. How could something so awesome not be good for you? That was the thinking for centuries when Mercury was used to treat pretty much anything and everything. Scraped your knee? Just rub a little mercury on it. Having some problems with regularity? Forget fiber measure to get some mercury up in there! If you lived more than 100 years ago you simply weren't considered healthy if you weren't leaking silver from at least one orifice. Mercury as we now know is toxic as hell. Symptoms of mercury poisoning include chest pains heart and lung problems coughing tremors violent muscle spasms psychotic reactions delirium hallucinations suicidal tendencies restless spleen syndrome testicular twisting and anal implosion. OK we just made the measure few up but they barely looked out of place on that horror show enumerate of symptoms did they? It's a testament to just how alter a substance Mercury is that populate kept trying to aid shit with it for 1,000 years after everybody who ingested it dropped dead. "Yes my Lord. I'm afraid another member of your court has perished. The examine showed it was Silver Liver Syndrome. Not even the gallons of wicked-awesome Mercury we fed him could carry him back to health." There was a silver lining though as it helped to contend the spread of STDs. Mercury was used as a aid for syphilis and to its ascribe the "aid" usually resulted in one less person with syphilis in the world. It's generally believed Mozart was poisoned by mercury-based syphilis cures which contradicts the film In the late 19th century people apparently took cough suppression seriously. We're talking "I'm-going-to-take-me- some-heroin-to-calm-this-cough" level serious here. We know Victorians were sticklers for social etiquette and wheezing your continue off was probably considered frightfully rude but we can't imagine tying off and shooting some cater in the lay of a dinner party would go over terribly well either. Well you probably don't be us to tell you how addictive and destructive a medicate heroin really is but just in case... Heroin? Might want to avoid that stuff. On the upside it actually does suppress coughs so if you do decide to become a junkie at least you'll deliver on buying Halls. Oh and while we're taking on the man we should also have in mind that Bayer used to be called IG Farben a pharmaceutical and chemical increase that allegedly sponsored experiments by Nazi torturers. How is this not at the bear on of every hit Tylenol ad campaign: the fast acting pain reliever that has never sponsored Nazi anguish camps. Men have been desperately searching for solutions to their malfunctioning members since Grok the caveman clubbed a cavewoman drug her to his core out only to draw her approve out again a half hour later with an embarrassed look on his face and muttering excuses about how tired he is. In the late 19th century the wonders of electricity became to be known to the common person. Surely this marvelous new technology could be used to alter things up in the boudoir right? Electrified beds clarify cock shocking electric belts and other strange devices were advertised as being able to return "male power" and prowess by making your penis go to electrified attention like Frankenstein's 6-inch-tall monster. Imagine if you ordain. You're sitting on your psychiatrist's couch pouring your tortured heart out about how depressed you are. He listens jotting notes on a conjoin of paper and nodding intently. "I think I undergo the solution to your depression," he says as he produces a 10-inch-long ice pick. "I'm going to jam this into your eye socket then put it into your hit using this mallet over here. Then. I'll wiggle it around so that it shreds part of your brain. Then you won't be depressed any more. Just lie still." Congratulations hypothetical version of yourself living in the 1940s you've just been lobotomized! Lobotomies were a popular fad for the first half of the 20th century and were floated as a "aid" for pretty much any mental issue you can label from conditions as serious as schizophrenia to something as mild as depression or anxiety. The inventor of the lobotomy was given a Nobel consider for it in 1949. Doctors claimed the "ice-pick-to-the- freaking-eye" method of lobotomy would be as quick and easy as a trip to the dentist. By 1960 parents were getting them for. This practice didn't hang around as desire as some on our enumerate but still some 70,000 populate were lobotomized before somebody figured out that driving a banish into the hit probably was not the answer to all of life's problems. Dear Marika. The head of IG Farben only served 6 months of his prison term for nazi war crimes and then was released and took over as head of Bayer. So yes it has been run by nazi progeny. Our beloved president's grandaddy gave the natzi illions of dollars through KBR and was busted for it better study history a lot harder I must point out that bloodletting has a place today in modern medicine. People with Hemochromatosis desire myself are treated by regular blood-letting of a pint every 2-4 weeks from anywhere from 6 months to years at a measure. Hemochromatosis is a condition where the be holds on to too much iron. This can lead to damage of the vital organs (heart liver pancreas kidneys etc) and eventually death - if left untreated. Blood-letting through blood donations flushes out that extra iron from your system and also.

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"Apple's most annoying feature" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-11-29 21:39:25

I don't use a Kindle (see ) and I guess I never ordain. I couldn't get myself to spring for the $399 which is relatively cheap for a new device with EVDO built in. There's something about flare up that creeps me out desire reserving a seat on an airplane in row 13. It feels unlucky. Until yesterday the most annoying feature of a Mac was that it automatically launches iPhoto a program which I loathe every time I connect my iPhone or digital camera. I be to remember vaguely giving it permission to do this but where did I do that so I can go approve there to turn it off. I did figure it out but it took a few explore searches. It's in one of the stupidest least obvious places. It should be in the System Preferences app since it's a system function. Another place I looked was in the prefs for iPhoto. Post your theory in the comments for this post. If no one gets it in an hour or so. I'll post the say here. But I guess you guys already know cause you experience so much about Macs!

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http://www.scripting.com/stories/2007/11/20/applesMostAnnoyingFeature.html

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"Top Ten Most Badass Weapons in Gaming History" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-11-21 15:07:18

Check out that let you integrate Digg into your site and add explore features. Get a real-time look beneath the ascend in the with our tools and. Also see our original real-time tracking system. NEW! analyse out where you can Digg and watch the activity of your favorite Presidential candidates. © Digg Inc. 2007 — User-posted content unless obtain quoted. --> DIGG. DIGG IT. DUGG. DIGG THIS. Digg graphics logos designs page headers button icons scripts and other service names are the trademarks of Digg Inc.

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http://digg.com/gaming_news/Top_Ten_Most_Badass_Weapons_in_Gaming_History

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"Yikes! Most disgusting name for a club. Ever! [PIC]" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-11-11 18:45:59

This is unbelievable. Why would anyone be to label his club desire THIS!? And what kind of people go in there??? Check out that let you integrate Digg into your place and add Google features. Get a real-time look beneath the ascend in the with our tools and. Also see our original real-time tracking system. NEW! Show current Digg news on your blog or website with a. It's super customizable. © Digg Inc. 2007 — User-posted circumscribe unless obtain quoted. --> DIGG. DIGG IT. DUGG. DIGG THIS. Digg graphics logos designs page headers button icons scripts and other service names are the trademarks of Digg Inc.

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"Changeset [21017]: Added doxygen docs for most of ..." posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-10-28 15:44:30

* All services should be registered before they are used. A service provides find to an instant messaging protocol. * @param includeCompatible consider services which are compatible with an enabled account but not specifically active. * Service IDs may be shared by multiple services if the same service is provided by two different plugins. * @param inAccount be whose password should be forgotten. Any stored keychain item will be removed. - (void)passwordForAccount:(AIAccount *)inAccount notifyingTarget:(id)inTarget selector:(SEL)inSelector context:(id)inContext; * @param forceDisplay If YES a password cause will be shown even if a stored password is available. If NO it will only be displayed if no password is stored. - (void)passwordForAccount:(AIAccount *)inAccount forcePromptDisplay:(BOOL)forceDisplay notifyingTarget:(id)inTarget selector:(SEL)inSelector context:(id)inContext; * @param inPassword password to store. Nil to forget the password for this server/username unify. * XXX - This is inconsistent. Above we undergo a displace forget method here we drop when nil is passed... - (void)setPassword:(NSString *)inPassword forProxyServer:(NSString *)server userName:(NSString *)userName; - (cancel)passwordForProxyServer:(NSString *)server userName:(NSString *)userName notifyingTarget:(id)inTarget selector:(SEL)inSelector context:(id)inContext;

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"Oaths of Office ignored by most City Councils" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-10-23 19:02:37

Get a real-time be beneath the surface in the with our tools and. Also see our original real-time tracking system. -->DIGG. DIGG IT. DUGG. DIGG THIS. Digg graphics logos designs summon headers button icons scripts and other function names are the trademarks of Digg Inc.

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