It's time for a new Microsoft rant. :)
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[Some general, deep in the bowels of the Pentagon] Nuke Redmond; It's the only way!
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows. -- 6079 Smith W.
I wish, but the Pentagon, in an infinite amount of stupidity has pushed their stuff to the cloud being assured it was secure.
Charlie Gilley “They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759 Has never been more appropriate.
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I wish, but the Pentagon, in an infinite amount of stupidity has pushed their stuff to the cloud being assured it was secure.
Charlie Gilley “They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759 Has never been more appropriate.
No worries. The cloud operators were undoubtedly certified for compliance with a 1000-page manual of DoD HW, SW, and operational requirements that guarantee the security of any system.
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The fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing. -
No worries. The cloud operators were undoubtedly certified for compliance with a 1000-page manual of DoD HW, SW, and operational requirements that guarantee the security of any system.
Robust Services Core | Software Techniques for Lemmings | Articles
The fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing. -
Now, if any of you know me here, there is one issue that just burns me. Microsoft forced updates rebooting **** for seriously stupid reasons. I think that decision deserves a baseball bat to the knees of the person who made that decision. But wait, maybe it was made by committee. Fine, more baseball bats and I'll start a lottery of who wants to whack a knee. Why do I bring this up now? Well, I'm trying to stage a virtual machine for my customer before I disappear into the retirement cloud. I'm clicking on Windows Update. It will not install. It won't download. I've been at this for 4 hours. Grrrr. Elephanting clowns.
Charlie Gilley “They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759 Has never been more appropriate.
I'm so sorry to hear of your retirement. I guess that means you won't be spending as much time around here, then :(
The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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I'm so sorry to hear of your retirement. I guess that means you won't be spending as much time around here, then :(
The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.
:) not quite. but you bless me with your comment. At my retirement party with my main customer, I had many people come up to me and express their appreciation for my teaching attitude. I homeschooled 11 children, so I guess it carried over. I even had the opportunity to apologize to a co-worker when in a meeting I seriously shoved my foot in my mouth.. :) This will side track my rant, but I'm wrapping up one customer, and I still have one on the hook until the end of the year. Been working on this retirement project a couple of years. What blindsided me was my wife indicating she was about done as well and in-laws in their late 80s. So, after my 3 month sabbatical and marrying off my last daughter, I suspect I'll be back in the ring.
Charlie Gilley “They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759 Has never been more appropriate.
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and there you go. Back in the 80s, I was "involved" in the area of secure operating systems. At the time, the point behind a secure OS was user a, b, and c are authorized to access project a, b and c. There should be no way, user b should see what a is working on, etc. We're talking deep down in the kernel. There was NO network access. Period. We started having to epoxy USB slots to prevent the clowns from doing seriously stupid stuff. Fast forward to Desert Storm, and the USNAVY had to ban cellphones. The sailors were talking pictures of the sky not realizing the pictures were geocoded. Basically, if you farmed facebook, you could easily track fleet movements. But wait, it gets better. When the US went into Afghanistan and then later Iraq, the drone footage was being streamed over an unencrypted internet connection. The bad guys were watching it faster than our operators. We figured this out when the drone would fly over a group of them, and they would scatter. The drone that crashed gently in Iran? Hacked. Putting classified data in the cloud from the clowns from Microsoft? Just blow your brains out now. Let me clarify, so that I don't seem too harsh as clowns seem to be multiplying. Basing ANYTHING secure on a Microsoft OS is simply doomed. The core OS is hopelessly open. Now we inject the bean counters in the DoD or any other government agency... Microsoft - and if anyone from Microsoft wants to chime in - limits it's liability to what the contract says. The problem is, your bug gets people dead right there. If you want a secure cloud environment, design it and staff it with people who understand that this stuff is life and death. I'm certain their are people at MS or Amazon that get this, I am dubious about management.
Charlie Gilley “They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759 Has never been more appropriate.
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:) not quite. but you bless me with your comment. At my retirement party with my main customer, I had many people come up to me and express their appreciation for my teaching attitude. I homeschooled 11 children, so I guess it carried over. I even had the opportunity to apologize to a co-worker when in a meeting I seriously shoved my foot in my mouth.. :) This will side track my rant, but I'm wrapping up one customer, and I still have one on the hook until the end of the year. Been working on this retirement project a couple of years. What blindsided me was my wife indicating she was about done as well and in-laws in their late 80s. So, after my 3 month sabbatical and marrying off my last daughter, I suspect I'll be back in the ring.
Charlie Gilley “They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759 Has never been more appropriate.
charlieg wrote:
Been working on this retirement project a couple of years.
Do you mean you're making a big push at the end to maximize earnings?
The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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charlieg wrote:
Been working on this retirement project a couple of years.
Do you mean you're making a big push at the end to maximize earnings?
The difficult we do right away... ...the impossible takes slightly longer.
No. Sort of... I sort of blundered into this retirement thing. I just turned 65, and over the last couple of years I've had some health issues. It makes you re-evaluate your priorities. I'm not dead yet :). Going to work up an article on this - my first ever. As for your specific question - the time to push is not at the end. Unless you have royalties or some such thing.
Charlie Gilley “They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759 Has never been more appropriate.
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Wow. A true story about Russians?! :laugh:
Robust Services Core | Software Techniques for Lemmings | Articles
The fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing. -
and there you go. Back in the 80s, I was "involved" in the area of secure operating systems. At the time, the point behind a secure OS was user a, b, and c are authorized to access project a, b and c. There should be no way, user b should see what a is working on, etc. We're talking deep down in the kernel. There was NO network access. Period. We started having to epoxy USB slots to prevent the clowns from doing seriously stupid stuff. Fast forward to Desert Storm, and the USNAVY had to ban cellphones. The sailors were talking pictures of the sky not realizing the pictures were geocoded. Basically, if you farmed facebook, you could easily track fleet movements. But wait, it gets better. When the US went into Afghanistan and then later Iraq, the drone footage was being streamed over an unencrypted internet connection. The bad guys were watching it faster than our operators. We figured this out when the drone would fly over a group of them, and they would scatter. The drone that crashed gently in Iran? Hacked. Putting classified data in the cloud from the clowns from Microsoft? Just blow your brains out now. Let me clarify, so that I don't seem too harsh as clowns seem to be multiplying. Basing ANYTHING secure on a Microsoft OS is simply doomed. The core OS is hopelessly open. Now we inject the bean counters in the DoD or any other government agency... Microsoft - and if anyone from Microsoft wants to chime in - limits it's liability to what the contract says. The problem is, your bug gets people dead right there. If you want a secure cloud environment, design it and staff it with people who understand that this stuff is life and death. I'm certain their are people at MS or Amazon that get this, I am dubious about management.
Charlie Gilley “They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759 Has never been more appropriate.
Managers never get it, they just want the fastest and the cheapest, usually to justify their existence to their manager and then up the chain it goes. Project managers are even worse still because it all has to fit in their gantt chart and then, at the bottom of the pile, are scrum masters. More often than not, none of them have done any development work so they don't understand it nor know what's involved. None of them want to hear, "to implement this properly will take us 6-12 months" they just suggest we have 3 months. I envy you that you are in a position to retire.
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and there you go. Back in the 80s, I was "involved" in the area of secure operating systems. At the time, the point behind a secure OS was user a, b, and c are authorized to access project a, b and c. There should be no way, user b should see what a is working on, etc. We're talking deep down in the kernel. There was NO network access. Period. We started having to epoxy USB slots to prevent the clowns from doing seriously stupid stuff. Fast forward to Desert Storm, and the USNAVY had to ban cellphones. The sailors were talking pictures of the sky not realizing the pictures were geocoded. Basically, if you farmed facebook, you could easily track fleet movements. But wait, it gets better. When the US went into Afghanistan and then later Iraq, the drone footage was being streamed over an unencrypted internet connection. The bad guys were watching it faster than our operators. We figured this out when the drone would fly over a group of them, and they would scatter. The drone that crashed gently in Iran? Hacked. Putting classified data in the cloud from the clowns from Microsoft? Just blow your brains out now. Let me clarify, so that I don't seem too harsh as clowns seem to be multiplying. Basing ANYTHING secure on a Microsoft OS is simply doomed. The core OS is hopelessly open. Now we inject the bean counters in the DoD or any other government agency... Microsoft - and if anyone from Microsoft wants to chime in - limits it's liability to what the contract says. The problem is, your bug gets people dead right there. If you want a secure cloud environment, design it and staff it with people who understand that this stuff is life and death. I'm certain their are people at MS or Amazon that get this, I am dubious about management.
Charlie Gilley “They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759 Has never been more appropriate.
We should have stuck with OS/2 :)
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Now, if any of you know me here, there is one issue that just burns me. Microsoft forced updates rebooting **** for seriously stupid reasons. I think that decision deserves a baseball bat to the knees of the person who made that decision. But wait, maybe it was made by committee. Fine, more baseball bats and I'll start a lottery of who wants to whack a knee. Why do I bring this up now? Well, I'm trying to stage a virtual machine for my customer before I disappear into the retirement cloud. I'm clicking on Windows Update. It will not install. It won't download. I've been at this for 4 hours. Grrrr. Elephanting clowns.
Charlie Gilley “They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759 Has never been more appropriate.
I love Microsoft, it guarantees me a job till the day I die or loose my mind. ;P (Whatever comes first)
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I love Microsoft, it guarantees me a job till the day I die or loose my mind. ;P (Whatever comes first)
This is true sort of... unless your application and thousands of devices in the field depend on Microsoft supporting their product as they had promised to do. Then, Microsoft makes a left turn and screws you. Years later, the Microsoft people reach out to see if our team wants to use them. "Sorry bud, we're OS agnostic, our interface is all JavaScript hosted in an embedded browser, we we for elephanting sake don't need your eco system." <--- true story. I never really did much desktop development, my main area was embedded systems and Windows CE and WEC7.
Charlie Gilley “They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759 Has never been more appropriate.