Mages have three different specializations, which affect their play style: Arcane, Fire and, of course, Frost
He is mostly correct, since the only work being done in a computer system is the motion of the fans and hard disks.
Yes, on a machine where you do analysis like that, you typically monitor all outgoing and incoming connections.
When you inevitably unbox your new iPad, though, just remember that Apple has done little more than cram a bunch of bits inside a slick tablet chassis; bits that, except for the display, aren’t very exciting at all. I…
It doesn't seem that surprising. Just digging around in the passive DNS database at work, I see CloudFlare has their name servers in the NS records of several 10's of thousands of domains. I'm fairly sure that given the…
In my experience many ISPs do the exact opposite, and inflate cached TTLs up to a week. Makes migrations a pain in the ass.
I wouldn't be so sure: http://www.informationweek.com/news/security/privacy/2316022...
Using a VPN (or a proxy) just moves the argument from your ISP, to the ISP where the VPN endpoint is located.
Not surprising. There's at least one collection project that had already been running several years at that time: http://wigle.net/
Some of those numbers don't look correct at all. For example I can't find any host name that takes longer than ~500ms to do DNS resolution over 3G. (That's almost worst case scenario, where everything except the TLD is…
Mages have three different specializations, which affect their play style: Arcane, Fire and, of course, Frost
He is mostly correct, since the only work being done in a computer system is the motion of the fans and hard disks.
Yes, on a machine where you do analysis like that, you typically monitor all outgoing and incoming connections.
When you inevitably unbox your new iPad, though, just remember that Apple has done little more than cram a bunch of bits inside a slick tablet chassis; bits that, except for the display, aren’t very exciting at all. I…
It doesn't seem that surprising. Just digging around in the passive DNS database at work, I see CloudFlare has their name servers in the NS records of several 10's of thousands of domains. I'm fairly sure that given the…
In my experience many ISPs do the exact opposite, and inflate cached TTLs up to a week. Makes migrations a pain in the ass.
I wouldn't be so sure: http://www.informationweek.com/news/security/privacy/2316022...
Using a VPN (or a proxy) just moves the argument from your ISP, to the ISP where the VPN endpoint is located.
Not surprising. There's at least one collection project that had already been running several years at that time: http://wigle.net/
Some of those numbers don't look correct at all. For example I can't find any host name that takes longer than ~500ms to do DNS resolution over 3G. (That's almost worst case scenario, where everything except the TLD is…