Solomonster

Back in 10.

Thursday, February 28, 2008

 

RANT: VMWare Vulnerability

If you don't use a piece of software called VMWare, then you're not going to want to read the rest of this. If you DO use VMWare, then perhaps you've heard about the newly announced vulnerability that's got the technology media all in a tizzy (maybe it just seems that way because I'm concerned about it!) exposing access via VMWare's shared folders.

Wait! Don't go away! This is where it gets ANNOYING! I've read at least half a dozen articles on this hole and only just today did I decide to go and take a look at the vendor's web site for news on how I can protect my servers from this thing. I'd like to paste in a portion of their warning, the part telling us which products are affected:

Vulnerable packages


All versions of VMware's desktop products that include the Shared Folders feature up to:



  • VMWare Workstation 6.0.2
  • VMWare Workstation 5.5.4
  • VMWare Player 2.0.2
  • VMWare Player 1.0.4
  • VMWare ACE 2.0.2
  • VMWare ACE 1.0.2


Non-vulnerable packages



  • VMWare ESX
  • VMWare Server

Now, the media articles I've been reading are all, "VMWare-this..." and "VMWare-that...", when the more accurate finger would be pointing at "VMWare Workstation-this..." and "VMWare Player that..."

Enterprises use ESX server. Smaller companies and individuals, for the most part, use the free VMWare Server.

Tech Media: Why are you frightening us with lumping in Server and ESX with the vulnerable products???


Thursday, February 21, 2008

 

Identical Twins Not As Identical As Believed

For those of you who may be concerned about your discordant monozygotic brethren:

ScienceDaily (2008-02-20) -- Contrary to our previous beliefs, identical twins are not genetically identical. This surprising finding may be of great significance for research on hereditary diseases and for the development of new diagnostic methods. How can it be that one identical twin might develop Parkinson's disease, for instance, but not the other? Until now, the reasons have been sought in environmental factors. The current study complicates the picture.

Monday, February 11, 2008

 

Everything You Know About Disks Is Wrong

Storagemojo.com has a very interesting article dating from February 2007 that I've just found, that kinda shakes the foundation of many of my assumptions about hard drives' reliability, RAID reliability, and vendors' MTBF estimates. Robin translates the original study pretty well, so it's a terrible headache to read:


Everything You Know About Disks Is Wrong



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Sunday, February 10, 2008

 

PostSecret

PostSecret is an ongoing community art project where people mail in their secrets anonymously on one side of a homemade postcard.  I love it.
PostSecret

Blogged with Flock


 

Find Chuck

go to Google and, after pasting in 'find Chuck Norris’, hit 'I'm Feeling Lucky'.

Blogged with Flock


Sunday, February 03, 2008

 

4th Undersea Internet Cable Damaged in Mideast

WTF? Doesn't this stink of some sort of plan or conspiracy to anybody else?


Another undersea Internet cable damaged in Mideast









AFP - Sunday, February 3

NEW
DELHI (AFP) - - Another Middle East undersea Internet cable has been
damaged, adding to disruption in Indian online services caused when
several lines were cut earlier this week, a cable operating firm said
Saturday.

The
Falcon cable was cut 56 kilometres (35 miles) from Dubai, between Oman
and the United Arab Emirates, according to its owner FLAG Telecom, part
of India's Reliance Communications.

The company said on its
website that a repair ship had been notified and was expected to arrive
at the site in the next few days.

The cause of the latest cable damage was not immediately known.

Flag
Telecom owns another undersea cable which was damaged off Egypt on
Wednesday in the Mediterranean. Indian media reports have attributed
that damage to a ship's anchor which dropped on the cable.

On the same day in Kuwait, the government reported two cables damaged by "weather conditions and maritime traffic."

The
cable damage has left India's vital outsourcing industry grappling with
major communications disruptions and businesses saying they could take
up to two weeks to return to normal.

It has also disrupted Internet service across the Middle East and other parts of South Asia.

A
repair ship was expected to arrive by next Tuesday to restore the FLAG
Telecom cable that was damaged off Egypt, the company said.

Smaller
Indian firms will be harder hit as they depend on a single service
provider, said R.S Perhar, secretary of the Internet Service Providers'
Association of India (ISPAI).

"But traffic has already started moving after being re-routed," Perhar said.

Around 90 percent of the services were expected to be restored by Sunday, the ISPAI said.

India's
11-billion-dollar outsourcing industry is made up of 1,250 firms that
deliver services ranging from answering customer queries to processing
credit card and mortgage applications.

The industry employs
700,000 people, serving clients mainly in the United States and Europe
that sought to cut costs by farming out work to the country.



UPDATE: Funny thing seems to have happened after all these cable cuts: Iran has no more terrestrial Internet service. Pretty much entirely isolated, now. Odd coincidence, eh?


 

4th Undersea Internet Cable Damaged in Mideast

WTF? Doesn't this stink of some sort of plan or conspiracy to anybody else?


Another undersea Internet cable damaged in Mideast









AFP - Sunday, February 3

NEW
DELHI (AFP) - - Another Middle East undersea Internet cable has been
damaged, adding to disruption in Indian online services caused when
several lines were cut earlier this week, a cable operating firm said
Saturday.

The
Falcon cable was cut 56 kilometres (35 miles) from Dubai, between Oman
and the United Arab Emirates, according to its owner FLAG Telecom, part
of India's Reliance Communications.

The company said on its
website that a repair ship had been notified and was expected to arrive
at the site in the next few days.

The cause of the latest cable damage was not immediately known.

Flag
Telecom owns another undersea cable which was damaged off Egypt on
Wednesday in the Mediterranean. Indian media reports have attributed
that damage to a ship's anchor which dropped on the cable.

On the same day in Kuwait, the government reported two cables damaged by "weather conditions and maritime traffic."

The
cable damage has left India's vital outsourcing industry grappling with
major communications disruptions and businesses saying they could take
up to two weeks to return to normal.

It has also disrupted Internet service across the Middle East and other parts of South Asia.

A
repair ship was expected to arrive by next Tuesday to restore the FLAG
Telecom cable that was damaged off Egypt, the company said.

Smaller
Indian firms will be harder hit as they depend on a single service
provider, said R.S Perhar, secretary of the Internet Service Providers'
Association of India (ISPAI).

"But traffic has already started moving after being re-routed," Perhar said.

Around 90 percent of the services were expected to be restored by Sunday, the ISPAI said.

India's
11-billion-dollar outsourcing industry is made up of 1,250 firms that
deliver services ranging from answering customer queries to processing
credit card and mortgage applications.

The industry employs
700,000 people, serving clients mainly in the United States and Europe
that sought to cut costs by farming out work to the country.



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