Jump to content

fusion

Members
  • Posts

    5,035
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    1

Posts posted by fusion

  1. In Ohio it's also illegal to put two bikes in the same parking spot. Although it takes an LEO with hand cuffs stuck sideways up their @ss to enforce it. So it is probably heavily enforced in New Albany and Gahanna.:p

    :lol:

    That at least makes more sense then parking in non-parking spaces when there isn't an obvious or stated exception (bike shops,...)

  2. exFAT probably doesn't work in the Clarion because it's an older unit. FAT32 should work with both, but Win7 can't do it natively.

    Pull this down to format in FAT32. http://www.softpedia.com/get/System/Hard-Disk-Utils/FAT32format.shtml

    Pretty much this. You can think of exFAT kind of as FAT64.

    You can format FAT32 from the command line in Windows 7 also. You just need to know the drive letter, run CMD from the run/search bar and type:

    'format /FS:FAT32 X:'

    "X:" being the drive letter of the drive you want to format. You should be prompted yes/no if you really want to format it.

  3. I guess i dont understand the actual size of things... They are talking 6 foot swails to hit Hawaii? I think of it as a solid wall of water moving hundreds of miles wide 6 foot high... But Hawaii has waves 14 foot high during storms?

    Tell me what I am missing?

    Sroy Lanka only had a what 5 foot swail hit?

    Normal waves move in and then back out again even in storms. Tsunamis just keep coming and carry their momentum up onto land. Tsunamis can travel at over 500 miles an hour across open water and a 6 foot tsunami wave can build on its self as it hits land then pushes over.

  4. Who all here open carries?

    I will depending on where I am. There are businesses that don't care if you conceal carry but don't want you to open carry in their establishment. Most of the time I don't make a point of trying to conceal it much anyway, it's just a shirt or hoodie pulled over it and a lot of the time it sticks out the bottom or shows if I reach for something or something like that.

  5. I've always been interested in learning all this stuff too, just to know it. I think I'm done chasing paper unless I decide to get a law degree.

    But, and forgive me true IT nerds with skillz, what would all this knowledge give me as a rather savvy casual user? I'm not heavy on command line like I used to be as a kid playing with DOS, but I don't think it's something that would be difficult for me to pickup...

    I think you'd be better off pursuing something more generally networking related instead of Cisco specific if you're not in IT. Even just reading through the material for CompTIA Network+, which is pretty basic stuff, would put you ahead of a huge majority of the ordinary little people.

    If you are interested in command line type stuff, go with Linux and download a copy of something like Ubuntu or Knoppix and start learning it. Bonus is you can boot from a thumb drive or CD to run it until you are sure you want to go through the effort of installing it somewhere. You could always run it in a VM also if you didn't want to mess with disks, dual boot or dedicate a box to it. If you're feeling really froggy, learn it using something like Slackware.

  6. CCNA and CCNP are both pretty cake if you've been around networking at all especially on Cisco equipment. It's been a long while since I've taken any of the exams though. They have slew of advanced exams and for things like security that tend to be harder.

    The MCSE and similar are harder only because there are more exams (7).

    CompTIA A+, Network+ and Security+ are all easier than the previously mentioned and you can study for and take the tests under 2 weeks for all three combined.

    CISSP is harder than all of those, I think...I haven't had the time to finish studying or take the exam due to work. My coworkers that have it and others seem to think it's harder compared to those others.

    And there's more. There's 1000's of IT certs it seems. CCNA and CCNP are pretty much basic level Cisco certs.

  7. Yes...if you have experience to back them up. Most places I've been have seen those certs flooded. It can't hurt to have them but they won't help as much as they once did. The tests for those aren't that difficult since they are pretty basic compared to some others. One of those if you have the time and means go ahead and take them.

  8. Because like fusion we are all masters of tatics and could have stopped this had we not been in a cubical at a office somewhere trolling all day. I am glad I don't go to bars and ha e to worry about knife crazed people like the one here.

    :D Hey it was a REALLY slow day and even after Ben called me out people were still giving me material. :p

  9. Even at 21', which I know is extremely close for a knife assault, you are still going to fight off the attack, clear your attacker, n draw your weapon. If you don’t, you are going to die!

    Seriously though since I still have a minute before I can leave work. That's different than just saying your going to draw and fire, which was the impression you left me with (and I was playing with). You still have to clear the attacker which means more than likely going hand-to-hand or retreating to fire.

  10. Dude, do you were a cape?

    Seriously?? The way you're talking you are the baddest mother f-er on the planet. I used to think that way too until about 20 years ago...when I hit puberty. So either your head is the size of Mount Rushmore or you're 10 years old.

    Seriously, do you think you always have time to pull your weapon? Did you want to reply to what I wrote or did you truly have nothing intelligent to say?

  11. It doesn't change the fact that it is a deadly force situation and you SHOULD be shooting.

    Not if you can't. Should be obvious. If you can't draw and fire your weapon, you can't draw and fire your weapon. If the situation presented means you won't have time to draw and fire your weapon, still trying to probably isn't the best option.

×
×
  • Create New...