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Apple iPad

Its more then a e-book reader and more then an iPhone ...lets have some good and basic know how and difference
Reasons to Buy:
1. Undeniably cool. The iPad looks like a giant iPod and the look supersizes quite nicely.
2. The best e-reader? The iPad is already generating comments that it will be a Kindle-beater and Nook-destroyer. The 16 GB $499 model may not be good for carrying around lots of movies and music, but it should hold a lot of books. I want to hear more about the hands-on reading experience, but early word is the iPad is an excellent place to enjoy a good book. Or a textbook, which is a huge potential market for the device.
3. Gaming. The iPhone became a surprise hit among gamers, or at least expanded the market to include lots of previous non-gamers (such as myself). Either way, the iPad is optimized to improve the iPhone gaming experience, allowing new elements to be added to games that can be played on both the iPhone/iPod touch and the new iPad.
4. The iPad makes it easy to share media. Not for a whole room, but you and a friend or two should be able to watch movies, listen to music, or pass the iPad back-and-forth for games. It's just the right size for sharing up-close and the lack of a keyboard makes the iPad easier to handle than a notebook.
5. Applications. With all the above going for it, the iPad almost doesn't have to do things like Web surfing and e-mail checking or document writing. But, it does them all and runs 140,000 iPhone apps besides. Sure, the best apps will be specially-written for the iPad, but you can use iPhone/iPod touch favorites right away.
6. Time may be on your side. The iPad may become much more compelling--thanks to new apps--between now and its March/April ship dates.
Reasons to Hold Off:
1. There is no subsidy on the 3G version. Apple wants you to pay $829 for the 64GB device, plus monthly wireless fees for AT&T's 3G. The first year total: $1,189.
2. The wrong screen. It's not clear why Apple didn't choose a 16:9 aspect ratio, the standard for widescreen entertainment, but not doing so makes the iPad much less interesting for watching movies.
3. It's not much of a work machine. New applications may hammer away at the iPad's limitations, but the truth is that a notebook or netbook or even (in many circumstances) an iPhone is much more useful. Maybe it isn't even fair to ask a device so well-tuned for entertainment to work at the office too, but Apple is promoting the iPad as a work tool. And right now, I have to respond, "No" in most circumstances.
4. If you don't need all the other features, a Kindle or Nook offer better battery life for e-reading, but lack the color screen.
5. The iPad is a "tweener," in the bad sense of the word. Not a computer, but not a smartphone, the iPad lacks the functionality of a notebook and the convenience of an iPhone or Droid. The iPad may be just one more thing to haul around if you already carry a notebook, which it doesn't come close to replacing.
6. By the time the iPad ships, the excitement may be over. Perhaps helping lots of people save money.
There are many more reasons, both pro and con, regarding an iPad purchase but the best one may be the simplest: You've either got to have one (and have the spare cash) or the iPad doesn't do much for you.
Since it won't be available until March or April (for the 3G models), you have lots of time to change your mind. And for the initial excitement to wear off.

-Abhishek
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Microsoft Web Application

http://www.microsoft.com/web/downloads/platform.aspx
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IIS 7.5 Features

A nice list of all new features in IIS 7.5 (the one in Windows Server 2008) is located in Michael Pietroforte post - Windows Server 2008 R2 new features - the complete list - Part 3: IIS 7.5 and Performance.
Internet Information Services 7.5 (IIS)

* PowerShell provider for IIS 7 has more than 50 new cmdlets
* Administration Pack extensions: Database Manager (SQL Server management within IIS
Manager), Configuration Editor (generate scripts with a GUI to automate administrative
tasks), IIS Reports, Request Filtering (HTTP filtering, URL rewriting, etc.)
* One-click publishing in Visual Studio 10
* Web Deployment Tool (formerly MS Deploy): Deployment, management, and migration of Web
applications, sites, and entire servers
* Configuration Tracing: track configuration changes to IIS and applications
* New performance counters
* .NET support for Server Core
* WebDav integration (was available before as a separate extension)
* URLScan 3.0 integration: restricts the types of HTTP requests (was available before as a
separate extension)
* FTP server services: integrated in the IIS administration interface; new .NET XML-based
*.config format; virtual host names for FTP sites; improved logging
* Integrated extensions: new kind of extensions that appear to be an integral part of IIS



See more detailed info at the IIS team post - IIS7 in Windows Server 2008 R2.
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Evaluate SIEM, Event & Log Management Solution

How do you evaluate a Security Information and Event Management Solution For your Company.

Below are the questions you need to ask yourself because buying a SIEM Solution.

Threat identification: Raw log form vs. descriptive.
Threat tracking: Ability to track through the various events, from source to destination.
Policy enforcement: Ability to enforce defined polices.
Application analysis: Ability to analyze application at Layer 7 if necessary.
Business relevance of events: Ability to assign business risk to events and have weighted threat levels.
Measuring changes and improvements: Ability to track configuration changes to devices.
Asset-based information: Ability to gather information on devices on the network.
Anomalous behavior (server): Ability to trend and see changes in how it communicates to others.
Anomalous behavior (network): Ability to trend and see how communications pass throughout the network.
Anomalous behavior (application): Ability to trend and see changes in how it communicates to others.
User monitoring: User activity, logging in, applications usage, etc.

Some questions you also need to ask your teams about Data Collection and Assest Management.

What devices would be candidates for log and event collection?
What policies would you like to track?
What information would you like to have available if a threat or vulnerability was identified?
What sort of devices and information would be valuable for your area, in terms of asset collection?
What length of time for access to current/archival information is acceptable?



I got this list of questions off some RSS feeds and cannot remember the source.
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Google Launch Public DNS

When you type www.wikipedia.org into your browser's address bar, you expect nothing less than to be taken to Wikipedia. Chances are you're not giving much thought to the work being done in the background by the Domain Name System, or DNS.

Today, as part of our ongoing effort to make the web faster, we're launching our own public DNS resolver called Google Public DNS, and we invite you to try it out.

Most of us aren't familiar with DNS because it's often handled automatically by our Internet Service Provider (ISP), but it provides an essential function for the web. You could think of it as the switchboard of the Internet, converting easy-to-remember domain names — e.g., www.google.com — into the unique Internet Protocol (IP) numbers — e.g., 74.125.45.100 — that computers use to communicate with one another.

The average Internet user ends up performing hundreds of DNS lookups each day, and some complex pages require multiple DNS lookups before they start loading. This can slow down the browsing experience. Our research has shown that speed matters to Internet users, so over the past several months our engineers have been working to make improvements to our public DNS resolver to make users' web-surfing experiences faster, safer and more reliable. You can read about the specific technical improvements we've made in our product documentation and get installation instructions from our product website.

If you're web-savvy and comfortable with changing your network settings, check out the Google Code Blog for detailed instructions and more information on how to set up Google Public DNS on your computer or router.

As people begin to use Google Public DNS, we plan to share what we learn with the broader web community and other DNS providers, to improve the browsing experience for Internet users globally. The goal of Google Public DNS is to benefit users worldwide while also helping the tens of thousands of DNS resolvers improve their services, ultimately making the web faster for everyone.
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Command to stop all nobody processes in Linux

for i in `lsof -i :80 | grep http | awk {' print $2'}`; do kill -9 $i; done
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