travis-old
Travis
travis-old

Looks to me like he fell in a can of purple pvc primer.

I do not think that Tomato has ever supported WPS.

Also, these are awesome and very well-supported in BackTrack: [www.amazon.com]

Yep, you can run it off of USB. I think they may even have a special image for it (check the site). Regarding Wifi in Linux, most stuff is supported now, but in general, older tends to be better since there's been more time for the drivers to be written. The only other "compatibility" issue is whether or not the

That is true, but the problem is that the vulnerability is in the service that automates setup of the WPA2 password on consumer grade routers. This attack will cause WPS to give up your WPA2 password.

I've killed both aloe and cactus as well :-(

Short answer: no.

I like this article. I think another very relevant piece is regarding the "Four Horseman of the Apocalypse". In this case, Criticism, Contempt, Defensiveness and Stonewalling.

It looks like the latest 8/25 4week t-bill for $100 had 0% discount and costed $100. Week before that - $99.999222 per $100. The highest discount rate in the last year was 0.175% (11-30-2010). $1000 @ .175% discount -> you earned $0.13611 over 4 weeks.

Yep, agree with ca_aok. I'd keep it if that's your only complaint. Totally worth it in that case (waiting on a file scan as opposed to an overall system slowdown).

I appreciate the back-handed comment about googling. Not really helping your credibility (or likability) in my eyes though ;-)

Probably none ;-) See my comments below

I respectfully disagree with TheFu. While it is definitely POSSIBLE to get infected on any platform, it isn't necessary something you always need to be worrying about. I don't run anti-virus on my iPhone, for example, though I COULD. It is just not a big enough threat to justify running extra software that is likely

lastpass.com

I do not run Linux regularly, other than a Backtrack VM, but I did not realize that there are any wide-spread viruses written for Linux, whether installed through a java/flash attack vector or not. Do you have any links? Also, how do viruses propagate from a Linux machine to a Windows machine (in reference to your

MSE seems to slow down everything for you? How so? Not that I don't believe you, but just that you're the first I've heard say that.

To a security professional, this is a very loaded question ;-)

I currently have a Windows "server" (Win 7 Pro) that runs AirVideo for streaming to my iOS devices, PS3 Media Server for streaming to my PS3, Juice for downloading podcasts in the background.