Some users have recently had their accounts hijacked. It seems that the now defunct EVGA forums might have compromised your password there and seems many are using the same PW here. We would suggest you UPDATE YOUR PASSWORD and TURN ON 2FA for your account here to further secure it. None of the compromised accounts had 2FA turned on.
Once you have enabled 2FA, your account will be updated soon to show a badge, letting other members know that you use 2FA to protect your account. This should be beneficial for everyone that uses FSFT.
I read the title real quick and thought that Intel was woofing some shit about some other companies product's security. Then I realized it was the US government.
An answering service like an Auto Attendant used on a phone system would stop them for the most part. Something stupid "like pres 5 to speak to the Johnson's"
You think so? I think Atmos is a completely unnecessary marketing ploy for "we've run out of ideas and need to make money to stay in business so lets add more outputs and call it better" No one wants to have to deploy that many speakers in a living room. And not everyone has the ability to...
A police officer I knew when growing up told me once "Ignorance of the law is no excuses" I was young at the time, and dumb, it was eye opening and I will never forget it.
You just retorted your own retort with your last sentence. Which is one major reason why you would not recall something at this scale with a solution that can be handled with by a standard notify recall notice to not operate the device until a patch is produced to fix it. You put the onus on...
I work for a municipal ISP and we have the same issue with Duke Power and TimeWarner. Most of these poles are Duke owned. Half the time the existing poles are not even up to code and we have to flip the bill to have the poll done right. AKA pay for all the attachements already on the pole to...
Correct, there are some trade off's when using any NAS/SAN that does thin provisioning like the Drobo does.
The reason for thin provisioning stems from the way Drobo sets the volume up when you first put the NAS together. In order for you to be able to add more disks later to increase space...
Sounds like the perfect candidate for a Drobo 5N. Though its a 5 bay device, it will leave room for expansion so your not having to buy the largest spinners on the market. Slap some Western Digital Reds in it, and be on your way.
Edit:
Disk replacement is as simple as removing the marked...
I typicaly do this on my hardware router/firewall. To only accept requests from my specified IP's. May be a bit easier then messing with Windows firewall configs?