>> - "Brian" wrote:
>> > We've been using our iphones to navigate through our file system over
>> > https/basic-auth to pull up pdf drawings and other documents remotely
>> > at job sites.
Brian, what app are you using to read the pdfs?
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Jonathan..
THanks for the advice.. I tried out the free software from
http://autoindex.sourceforge.net/
and it worked great! I'm styling now.. My bosses love it :-)
Especially the 'search' form.. Awesome Bonus!
-Brian
On May 7, 11:20 am, "Steven S. Critchfield"
wrote:
> Your question is sort of
Isn't Windows security an oxymoron?
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Your question is sort of incomplete.
If you are using apache, the solution is really simple.
In the directory you have the autoindex, you place a file
called HEADER.html. In that file you write something like
That puts all your text up to x-large.
On Thu, May 7, 2009 at 9:05 AM, Brian wrote:
>
> Has anyone know of anything that will let you increase the text height
> for an indexed site? (example: http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.6/
> )
> We've been using our iphones to navigate through our file system over
> https/basic-auth to
On Thu, May 7, 2009 at 9:05 AM, Brian wrote:
>
> Has anyone know of anything that will let you increase the text height
> for an indexed site? (example:
> http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.6/
> )
> We've been using our iphones to navigate through our file system over
> https/basic-auth to
Has anyone know of anything that will let you increase the text height
for an indexed site? (example: http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.6/
)
We've been using our iphones to navigate through our file system over
https/basic-auth to pull up pdf drawings and other documents remotely
at job s
More good advise. We have firewalls enabled on all machines, in addition to
a Linux firewall/router/gateway. All machines have AV that checks daily, as
well as Windows defender scans. This, apparently, was not enough for the
powers that be. I'm digging deeper, and as usual, don't like to spend mone
I'll add one more little thing. Take admin access away from all end users
including yourself. There is no good excuse to log into any box as
admin/root unless you are doing maintenance. Period.
On Thu, May 7, 2009 at 7:21 AM, Daniel Owen wrote:
> Regardless of OS security in depth is key.
>
> On
Regardless of OS security in depth is key.
On the box itself:
Some brand of AV that can be remotely managed. Your end users will not
consistently tell you when the AV warns them so it's nice to be able to get
a screen that covers all your machines.
Some sort of anti-spyware that can be r
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