Hell, you can get a variety of VNC clients on your iPhone now!cthulhu wrote:VNC has been out for 10 years. It's been used in brokered applications like this once since VNC was opensourced in 2002.
![LOL :lol:](./images/smilies/lyellow.gif)
Moderator: Moderators
Please, back in the old days of dumb terminals that connected to a mainframe it was possible to shadow another user's session without them knowing. Everything done on a corporate machine has always been owned by the corporation, the modern era is actually a lull in the level of control. Thats about to change, expect virtual PCs running on the modern equivalent of a mainframe to be the standard in the next few years.Crissa wrote:Exactly what do virtual networks have to do with a proprietary hardware solution which puts the system's resources on a network without the system's software being aware?
It is reinventing the wheel, hence my warnings.
-Crissa
Crissa wrote:Anyhow, new news: Why Capitalism Fails, an article about Minsky who predicted this bubble but died a few years back. Actually, he described the situation, there are more than a few who mapped out the bubble.
Nothing you say makes any sense. I'm not sure where your remake about VPNs came into the discussion, and how this comment fits into your discussion of VPNs?Crissa wrote:Please what? That the data wasn't secure then, or that people who think their PC is secure at their home or office are now mistaken?
It was across the entire state. I was up at dawn to pot lotus plants "before" the wind picked up, everything was red,orange, and later pink. And stupidly windy and there was a black out. A tree fell on the chicken coop.Heath Robinson wrote:This is beautiful. Were any Denners around for it?
Okay!Crissa wrote:Come back when you read the fucking article.
Hey, look, it's just like WoL except that you don't have to turn the computer completely on when all you need is access to the hard drive.The Fucking Article wrote:And in many ways, it is similar to current remote-access products that rely on "Wake-on-LAN" packets to power up a PC so it can then be controlled remotely. The difference here is of degree.
"enterprise computing" isn't a technical term; it just means computing as it relates to (generally large) businesses rather than individuals or public labs (like those found in schools and libraries). It's not uncommon for businesses to have their employees store data on a network drive on a server, rather than on their computer's hard drive, because then if the computer has a problem (say, a virus infection or corrupted program files) you can simply wipe it clean and start from scratch without losing any of their data, rather than spending a lot of time (and therefore money) on attempts to recover lost data.Crissa wrote:How is that Enterprise computing, where everything is stored on a server?
I was exaggerating for effect. I even used a smiley for emphasis.Crissa wrote:And how is that evil when I said it is insecure?
Would you like a dissertation on existentialism, or should I just take this as a rhetorical question?Crissa wrote:Why are you here and what purpose do you serve?
Too much government interference? Any less and it'd be Somalia! Seriously, she'd do just fine in the Austrian school of economics, where they use the same logic as my dog.Maxus wrote: By then I was in the elevator and, in fact, heard the words 'government interference' right as the doors closed.
Count Arioch the 28th wrote:There is NOTHING better than lesbians. Lesbians make everything better.