In operations that need decision-making in the (near) realtime, policy framework is a
good input. For that, the OSS can efficiently use the policy framework if it is itself
policy based. Examples of QoS and NMS are common. However Security seems just as
strong a candidate (if not stronger) for
At 08:40 AM 10/22/2002 -0600, Vernon Schryver wrote:
Again, other big organizations (specifically including Cisco) are not
above embracing-and-extending out of ignorance, provincialism, and
failures to bother to do interoperability testing (possible causes of
the Microsoft PPP hassles) if not
inventory time - will those chips be ipv6 enabled?
-- Forwarded message --
Date: Wed, 23 Oct 2002 10:25:11 -0400
From: Declan McCullagh [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: FC: FDA permits use of implantable ID chips in humans
[There are two obvious questions: Should
On Wed, 23 Oct 2002 09:37:44 BST, Sean Jones [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
Why is a PTR (or DNS) record with MS TCP different from the standard TCP/IP record?
(Perhaps it is me in my ignorance, or lack of understanding :o) )
It's not different. Or in any case, it's not sufficiently different to
Well the first thing you have to realize is that there is no such thing
as TCP/MS, and there for any answer you get would be highly speculative
at best.
This is a huge red herring, based on speculation that for some unknown
reason, Microsoft will Embrace/Extend/Extinguish the IP protocol and
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
And anyhow, using a router block is a bad idea in this case. There's two
cases - either you still have machines using that vendor's software, and you
WANT them to reach the servers so they can update,
That doesn't necessarily follow. I read a report (*) today that
Hello,
I already know that Active Directory can integrate with ISC BIND. In addition, I can
use ISC DHCP.
However, I would like to ask the following questions about Active Directory (I'm not
an expert on this):
a) How standards-compliant is Active Directory's LDAP implementation?
b) Are
Hello,
I meant to say c) I know that the Active Directory schema does not follow the X.400
schema strictly. Therefore, what are the deviations? instead of X.500 sorry...
Brian B.