It could be running as a VM..
The ISP might not have any idea, but your usenet provider does. I'm curious if it's common practice for them to log user activity.
In my opinion, this is an unfortunate side effect of the "growth at all costs" economic policy of China. Money becomes the only thing that matters -- IP, the environment, even the health of citizens is second-class. As…
If the subject interests you, I'd recommend it since I've personally found it difficult to find detailed information about side projects. I purchased it partly for the information, but also to hopefully motivate myself…
It's a common way to describe uptime. It means 99.99% uptime/availability, which works out to under 1 hour of downtime per year. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nines_(engineering)
Somewhat off-topic, but I'd like an explanation for why startups are requiring facebook in order to sign up for a service? I'd love to try turntable.fm (as well as rolling.fm, and mixapp.com), but I'm not on facebook…
It could be running as a VM..
The ISP might not have any idea, but your usenet provider does. I'm curious if it's common practice for them to log user activity.
In my opinion, this is an unfortunate side effect of the "growth at all costs" economic policy of China. Money becomes the only thing that matters -- IP, the environment, even the health of citizens is second-class. As…
If the subject interests you, I'd recommend it since I've personally found it difficult to find detailed information about side projects. I purchased it partly for the information, but also to hopefully motivate myself…
It's a common way to describe uptime. It means 99.99% uptime/availability, which works out to under 1 hour of downtime per year. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nines_(engineering)
Somewhat off-topic, but I'd like an explanation for why startups are requiring facebook in order to sign up for a service? I'd love to try turntable.fm (as well as rolling.fm, and mixapp.com), but I'm not on facebook…