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On Mon, Oct 05, 2009 at 08:04:03PM -0500, Penguin Lover David Juhl squawked: |
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> I am trying to find away to access files securely from my home computer. |
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> The network I am on is really strict on email attachments and no usb |
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> drives are allowed, so I possibly thought of a website that uses ssl and |
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> a password to access the files. I really don't know where to begin. |
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> Since the files have personal information in them, I need to make sure |
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> no one can ease drop. I have a Linux machine at home, and the computers |
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> at work run Windows. There is really no hope in installing additional |
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> software on the computers at work. Hell I haven't even had time to ask |
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> anyone if accessing my computer via the web would be a problem. I have |
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> a domain name from dyndns.org. I can only use a CD-R which gets |
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> cumbersome at times... Sometimes I only need to bring in work I did that |
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> is less than 10M, and what a real waste of a CD-R. I rather just go to |
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> the files and do what I need. |
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|
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Run a ssh server on your home box, and use putty (doesn't require |
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installation, you can just download a binary and run it as a user). |
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|
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W |
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-- |
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Introducing: the |
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Universal Conterexample Matrix |
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[ 0 1 ] |
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[ 0 0 ] |
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if you ever suspect a statement is false for linear transformations, |
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it will be false for the Universal Counterexample Matrix. |
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~Prof. Edward Nelson. MAT 217. P-town |
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Sortir en Pantoufles: up 1033 days, 8:50 |