Saturday, December 11, 2010

Video: If | Bread - simply beautiful

Nostalgic and beautiful

Amplify’d from www.youtube.com
 

Video: If | Bread - simply beautiful

Nostalgic and beautiful

Amplify’d from www.youtube.com
 

Procrastination is the bad habit of putting off until the day after tomorrow what should have been done the day before yesterday. ~Napoleon Hill http://bit.ly/eVU8aJ
The past was once the future which we made up as we went along. If you don't like where you've been, then change where you're going! ~ Tim Hutchinson http://bit.ly/eF1CDG
The greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well-meaning but without understanding. ~Louis D. Brandeis http://bit.ly/eL2Xx1
Men fight for liberty and win it with hard knocks. Their children, brought up easy, let it slip away again, poor fools. And their grandchildren are once more slaves. ~D.H. Lawrence, Classical American Literature, 1922 http://bit.ly/eCBWxe
Many politicians are in the habit of laying it down as a self-evident proposition that no people ought to be free till they are fit to use their freedom. The maxim is worthy of the fool in the old story who resolved not to go into the water till he had learned to swim. ~Thomas Macaulay http://bit.ly/epcjAU
We on this continent should never forget that men first crossed the Atlantic not to find soil for their ploughs but to secure liberty for their souls. ~Robert J. McCracken http://bit.ly/hLIUrv

Ten Online Project Management Mistakes to Avoid | ITBusinessEdge.com

A major transformation is taking place in how organizations use project management software.



Instead of being the sole province of the project managers, the rise of online project management applications heralds a new era of collaboration across the enterprise.



The challenge, of course, is getting the organization to embrace online project management in the first place, so here are some tips to get you started.


Shadow DNS is in the works: Do we need a second Internet? | IT Security | TechRepublic.com

When the Internet was first created under the auspices of academic and military institutions in the United States, part of the design goal was decentralization so that it could survive damage to arbitrary sections of the complete network. A big concern at the time was the ability of the nascent Internet to continue functioning as a whole even after key sites had been destroyed by nuclear attack.



Years later, in a 1993 TIME interview, EFF co-founder John Gilmore said “The Net interprets censorship as damage and routes around it.” This has, to some extent, proven true over the years. When small, regional organizations try to impose censorship controls on segments of the Internet, technology seems to almost magically find ways to bypass those controls.



Gilmore’s quote makes things sound a lot more one-sided than they have appeared to be in recent years, however. China gets a lot of press for its “Great Firewall of China”, by which a lot of Internet traffic available around the world is filtered out of availability for residents of China. Some savvy Internet users find ways to get around the filtering, but many do not — and those who do run the risk of getting in trouble with a government widely recognized to treat peaceful protest as a crime. China has reinforced its international reputation with high profile activities like cracking Google security to gain access to information about dissidents.



http://blogs.techrepublic.com.com/security/?p=2996