Facebook killed the radio star. And by radio star, I mean the premise of distributed forums around the internet. And that got got by Instagram/SnapChat. And that got got by TikTok. Where the fuck is the internet we once knew?
0 Members and 6 Guests are viewing this topic.
[20:21:13] xar: i was just thinking about the time iago came over here and we made this huge bomb and light up the sky for 6 min[20:21:15] xar: that was funny
Your crazy Newby if you think someone actually installs all the security updates and jazz by hand for companys. You do it once, make an image of that harddrive, and then just use that image on all the other ones.
Quote from: Blaze on August 23, 2005, 02:45:26 amYour crazy Newby if you think someone actually installs all the security updates and jazz by hand for companys. You do it once, make an image of that harddrive, and then just use that image on all the other ones.Or you use tools like CA Unicenter or WSUS or others. For patching corporations, the problem isn't actually rolling out the patches, it's compatibility issues. Windows patches tend to do things that Microsoft doesn't tell us, and occasionally it conflicts with installed software. So before patches are rolled out, they have to be tested. That leaves a window for worms. As soon as we see an exploit, we tell them to hurry up and get the patch out. If we see a worm, like last Monday, we tell them to put on the patch _NOW_.
Quote from: iago on August 23, 2005, 07:47:39 amQuote from: Blaze on August 23, 2005, 02:45:26 amYour crazy Newby if you think someone actually installs all the security updates and jazz by hand for companys. You do it once, make an image of that harddrive, and then just use that image on all the other ones.Or you use tools like CA Unicenter or WSUS or others. For patching corporations, the problem isn't actually rolling out the patches, it's compatibility issues. Windows patches tend to do things that Microsoft doesn't tell us, and occasionally it conflicts with installed software. So before patches are rolled out, they have to be tested. That leaves a window for worms. As soon as we see an exploit, we tell them to hurry up and get the patch out. If we see a worm, like last Monday, we tell them to put on the patch _NOW_. Yeah, which they do neither of.
Quote from: Scr33n0r on August 25, 2005, 06:19:28 amQuote from: iago on August 23, 2005, 07:47:39 amQuote from: Blaze on August 23, 2005, 02:45:26 amYour crazy Newby if you think someone actually installs all the security updates and jazz by hand for companys. You do it once, make an image of that harddrive, and then just use that image on all the other ones.Or you use tools like CA Unicenter or WSUS or others. For patching corporations, the problem isn't actually rolling out the patches, it's compatibility issues. Windows patches tend to do things that Microsoft doesn't tell us, and occasionally it conflicts with installed software. So before patches are rolled out, they have to be tested. That leaves a window for worms. As soon as we see an exploit, we tell them to hurry up and get the patch out. If we see a worm, like last Monday, we tell them to put on the patch _NOW_. Yeah, which they do neither of. Which "they" are you talking about?If you mean the people we tell to patch, then yes, it gets done. Being in a security department, we have some level of influence.