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Fi8sVrs

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Everything posted by Fi8sVrs

  1. Unlock Keypad -> Settings -> Profiles -> Silent -> Activate ?
  2. tornada trimite si mie 5$ si dau o bere
  3. stii tu altu`mai bun Sicko?
  4. uita-te la shipping details, de unde se expediaza, timpul de livrare... iar daca nu e din europa platesti taxe vamale edit: pentru: Samsung OMNIA 7 i8700 8GB, cost transport: £19.99 - Royal Mail International din Marea Britanie - Romania
  5. Quite the dollar amount. This is the new LSI SLP-300 acceleration card, intended for a different set of purchasers that me and… well probably you too. It’s a low-profile solid state storage card aimed directly at big companies hoping to keep performance but reduce clutter. This bad boy delivers data efficiency to the tune of hundreds of hard drives while consuming less than 25W of power, claims LSI. That sounds quite amazing, says we. Sounds quite amazing indeed. By the numbers, you’d need 400+ mechanical hard drives and 36U of rack space, PLUS more than 300 times the power you’d usually use to achieve the same result. If you happen to get your hands on one of these, you can bet you’ll get up to 240,000 sustained IOPS and 300GB of SLC solid state storage capacity, all of this in a teeny tiny card (the one you see above.) You can plug it directly into your standard 8 lane PCI-Express Generation 2 server slot. Once plugged in, it can take up to 1,400MB/s of throughput with access latency of under 50 microseconds. That rocks. That rocks so very much. Read the entire press release below: LSI Bolsters Channel Portfolio with PCI Express Solid-State Storage Card for Application Acceleration New LSI™ WarpDrive™ plug-and-play I/O acceleration card dramatically improves application performance while reducing rack space, power and cooling costs MILPITAS, Calif., November 16, 2010 – LSI Corporation (NYSE: LSI) today introduced in the channel the LSI WarpDrive™ SLP-300 acceleration card, a PCI Express (PCIe®) card offering performance up to 240,000 sustained IOPS and 300GB of SLC solid-state storage capacity within a low profile form factor. The WarpDrive card can help customers accelerate application performance, reduce energy costs and eliminate racks of storage by delivering the I/O performance of hundreds of hard disk drives while consuming less than 25 watts of power. ”The LSI WarpDrive card sets a new standard for data center efficiency by providing IT administrators with previously unattainable levels of performance while helping to reduce operational and capital expenditures,” said Brent Blanchard, director of worldwide channel sales and marketing, LSI. “The WarpDrive card complements the LSI CacheCade™ and FastPath™ solid-state storage acceleration solutions, providing our channel partners with a one-stop shop to address the performance, deployment and integration requirements that high-performance applications and dense computing demand.” The low-profile, half-length WarpDrive card plugs into a standard 8 lane PCIe Gen 2.0 server slot and is designed to deliver high performance with low latency and a low CPU burden independent of main memory size. It offers system builders, system integrators and their end customers a cost-effective, plug-and-play solution for maximizing the transactional I/O performance of applications such as Web serving, data warehousing, data mining, professional video and high-performance computing. A WarpDrive card can sustain up to 1,400MB/s of throughput, with reliable and consistent performance across both sequential and random reads and writes. It delivers up to 240,000 4K read IOPS and up to 200,000 4K write IOPS, with access latency of less than 50 microseconds. To achieve equal performance on a write IOPS basis utilizing hard disk drives would require over 400 drives, 36U of rack space and consume more than 300 times the power. “The LSI PCIe-based WarpDrive card offers simple, effective, and affordable application acceleration for enterprise servers,” said Bob Farkaly, director of marketing, Storage System products for Exar. “Utilizing two WarpDrive cards combined with Exar’s BitWackr ™solution, we measured an aggregate performance of 1,028 MB/second, which is almost twice the speed we were able to achieve with other PCIe-based flash products.” “Schooner’s MySQL and NoSQL solutions combined with the LSI WarpDrive card provide industry-leading performance for database and key-value stores, delivering over 9x performance throughput increase relative to hard drive configurations and over 3x performance throughput increase relative to alternative PCIe flash-based solutions,” said Dr. John Busch, founder and CTO, Schooner Information Technologies. “Beyond raw IOPS and latency performance, we are very impressed with the LSI WarpDrive card’s performance stability, observing negligible performance variance over time. Also, the LSI WarpDrive card’s very low overhead consumption of server processor and DRAM memory resources enables even higher performance by leaving these resources available for useful application processing and data caching.” The WarpDrive card utilizes industry-standard and widely deployed LSI SAS software drivers to provide channel partners with simple integration and management using existing SAS infrastructure. It features the LSISAS2008 6Gb/s SAS I/O controller and is based on the enterprise-proven LSI Fusion-MPT™ architecture. The WarpDrive card is bootable, has no external power requirement and installs as a single drive with no user configuration required. The WarpDrive card helps to ensure high reliability with a management infrastructure offering extensive monitoring, including health, error rate and drive failure. The WarpDrive card builds upon LSI enterprise-level experience in the design, manufacture and support of advanced server and storage solutions. The WarpDrive card is designed to provide system integrators and system builders with a robust and stable solution with assured interoperability and a low-risk path to market. The WarpDrive card also helps to minimize hardware requirements, reducing initial investment costs and eliminating points of failure for greater overall system reliability. Price: $11,500 Sursa
  6. Fi8sVrs

    Welcome

    bun venit!
  7. vorba lu` blech, posteaza la Bloguri si bloggeri
  8. Fi8sVrs

    Spatiu pe hdd

    e 48,9 GB ± 0,1
  9. la yahoo e din registri start -> run -> HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Yahoo\pager\Test -> clcik dreapta -> new -> dword value -> rename Plural -> value data-> nr sesiunilor -> hexadecimal -> ok
  10. am sunat eu la un mesaj trimis de pe moove si mi-a raspuns mesageria "sunteti in reteaua cosmote...""
  11. Fi8sVrs

    flash game

    Ghost Hacker
  12. ce înseamn? irs ?
  13. pune si playlist
  14. http://videos.clipjunkie.com/videos/The-Credit-Card-of-the-Future-vid7826.flv
  15. We get a little taste of cyber attacks all the time — look no further than this week's Twitter virus — but what about full-on cyber warfare? Recently the true destructive potential of a cyber attack became frighteningly clear: whole government, banking and military networks overloaded and shut down, vital data and money stolen, and even physical damage if the right components are targeted. The worst part? We usually only find out after the fact. 1. Titan Rain Target: U.S. military intel Attacker: China Damages: In 2004, a Sandia National Laboratories employee, Shawn Carpenter (pictured above), discovered a series of large "cyber raids" carried out by what is believed were government-supported cells in China. "Titan Rain" is the name given to these attacks by the FBI, and it was found that several sensitive computer networks were infiltrated by the hackers, such as those at Lockheed Martin and Sandia (owned by Lockheed), but also at the likes of NASA. The danger here is not only can the attackers make off with military intel and classified data; they can also leave backdoors and "zombify" machines — as you'll read below — that make future cyber espionage easier. Titan Rain is considered one of the largest cyberattacks in history. (It's worth mentioning that Carpenter lost his job for blowing the whistle. You can read about him here.) ________________________________________________________________________ 2. Moonlight Maze Target: Military maps and schematics, U.S. troop configurations Attacker: Russia (Denies involvement) Damages: Much like Titan Rain, Moonlight Maze represents an operation in which hackers penetrated American computer systems and could pretty much raid at will. It's also one of the earlier major cyber infiltrations that we know of, starting in 1998 and continuing on for two whole years as military data was plundered from the Pentagon, NASA, the Department of Energy and even from universities and research labs. ________________________________________________________________________ 3. The Estonian Cyberwar Target: Estonia Attacker: The Nashi, a pro-Kremlin youth group in Transnistria Damages: What happened to Estonia in 2007 is considered a model of how vulnerable a nation can be to cyberattacks during a conflict. In a very brief period of time, a variety of methods were used to take down key government websites, news sites and generally flooded the Estonian network to a point that it was useless. The attack is one of the largest after Titan Rain, and was so complex that it's thought that the attackers must have gotten support from the Russian government and large telecom companies. Pictured above is the Bronze Soldier of Tallinn, an important icon to the Russian people and the relocation of which played a part in triggering the attacks. ________________________________________________________________________ 4. Presidential-level Espionage Target: Obama, McCain presidential campaigns Attacker: China or Russia (Suspected) Damages: No one wants to get a message from the FBI saying, "You have a problem way bigger than what you understand," but that's exactly what happened to both Obama and McCain during their run for the 2008 presidency. What was first thought of as simple cyberattacks on the computers used by both campaigns was discovered to be a more concentrated effort from a "foreign source" that accessed emails and sensitive data. The FBI and secret service swooped in and confiscated all computers, phones and electronics from the campaigns and — with the kind of stuff that gets dug up on the campaign trail — there are probably plenty of folks hoping the FBI keeps them. ________________________________________________________________________ 5. China's "750,000 American zombies" Target: U.S. computer networks, all levels Attacker: Chinese hackers (Government-supported, organized crime related, cyber gangs) Damages: The worst fallout from a cyberattack can be what it leaves behind, such as malicious software that can be activated later. That, compounded with ongoing efforts by hackers to infect as many machines as possible using bogus email offers, harmful website code and what-have-you can leave a lot of "zombified" machines. Those machines can then be made into cyber weapons, which can overload a network, website or other machine with a deluge of data known as a DDoS, or distributed denial of service attack. Even back in '07, former senior U.S. information security official Paul Strassmann (pictured above) estimated that there were over 730,000 compromised computers "infested by Chinese zombies." ________________________________________________________________________ 6. The Original Logic Bomb Target: Siberian gas pipeline in Soviet Russia Attacker: U.S. Central Intelligence Agency Damages: One of the scariest implications of cyberwarfare is that the damage isn't always limited to networks and systems. It can get physical, too. In 1982, the CIA showed just how dangerous a "logic bomb" — a piece of code that changes the workings of a system and can cause it to go haywire — can be. The agency caused a Soviet gas pipeline in Siberia to explode in what was described by an air force secretary as "the most monumental non-nuclear explosion and fire ever seen from space," without using a missile or bomb, but a string of computer code. Today, with the proliferation of computer control, the possible targets are virtually endless. Pictured above and right is William J. Casey, director of the CIA in 1982. ________________________________________________________________________ 7. "The Most Serious Breach" Target: U.S. military computer network Attacker: "Foreign intelligence agency" (unspecified) Damages: A cyber attack can come in any shape or size — digitally or physically — and one of the worst on an American network happened in 2008. Did it involve thousands of zombie machines and the muscle of a national telecom giant? Nope, you could have held it in the palm of your own hand: a corrupt flash drive. Inserted into a military laptop in the Middle East, the malicious code on the drive created a — according to Deputy Secretary of Defense William Lynn (pictured above) — "digital beachhead, from which data could be transferred to servers under foreign control." The attack acted as another reality check in security, and prompted the Pentagon to form a special cyber military command. Sursa:
  16. Fi8sVrs

    muzica super

    http://www.rrrmusic.com/ Top 100 Music Hits, Top 100 Music Charts, Top 100 Songs & The Hot 100 | Billboard.com
  17. da, intradevar prinde mai repede, e mai usor de înv??at
  18. On Monday, The city of Chattanooga, Tennessee has unveiled Fastest Internet connection, with 1 Gigabit speeds being made available for both businesses and residents in the U.S. The United States is not famous for world’s speediest broadband connections, but Chattanooga, Tennessee is distinguishing itself by declaring plans to present the fastest Internet service of any city in America. For providing fastest internet services, Chattanooga’s municipally-owned fiber-to-the-premises network has partnered with Alcatel-Lucent. It is available to purchase starting from 13th September, 2010. It will be the fastest household internet connection available in America. It will connect just a handful of consumer 1 Gbps providing worldwide, including the fastest connections in the city of Hong Kong. According to analysts, the service is almost 200 times faster than the average U.S. broadband speed. In the recent time, only few cities around the world offer fastest internet service. Over half of the top 100 cities with the fastest Internet connections are located in Asia. According to City’s mayor, Ron Littlefield, “This makes Chattanooga — a midsized city in the South — one of the leading cities in the world in its digital capabilities.” Once every housing home and business unit inside the EPB’s 600 square-mile area, with nine counties, increase access to the new network, this business enterprise will eventually be the most extensive service within its industry across the United States. Currently, most Americans access the web at speeds ranging from 3 megabits to 20 megabits per second, but a 1-gigabit-per-second speed could allow users to download HD movies in a matter of minutes. EPB is offering fastest internet service to its 1, 70,000 customers though the $350-per-month rate may be expensive to most individuals and some small businesses. Harold DePriest, chief executive of EPB told the New York Times, “We don’t know how to price a gig. We are experimenting. We’ll learn.” Previous this year, Google released plans to make a new fiber-optic network that would deliver internet speeds of 1 gigabit per second to up to 500,000 Americans. Users who want to get full 1 gbps speed to their residence will have to shell out some cash, $350 to be exact. On a per-megabyte scale, though, the rate is a bargain. EPB offers tiers of Internet service: 30 Mbps up and down for $57.99; 50 Mbps per second for $69.99; 100 Mbps per month for $139.99; and 1 gigabit for $350 per month. This plan would put 100-megabit-per-second connections in 100 million American homes by 2020. Recently, the Federal Communications Commission again defined broadband internet service as 4 Mbits per second downstream and 1 Mbits per second upstream; Chattanooga’s 1 Gbps service is 10 times faster. sursa: today24news.com
  19. crypteaza pass, e vreunu nedetectabil?
  20. e duminica 22:04:07, nu idicã bine
  21. eu, ai PM cu mail edit: thannks Orlandino
  22. Alien Plasma tunnels 3D screensaver
  23. Fi8sVrs

    Salut !

    Salut Drago?, bine ai venit, r?mâi cu bine aici, Succes!
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