Jon,
LeNube - If you took apart your TiVo, installing a wireless card in a computer will probably be less tricky.
Oh really? Interesting. Maybe I will try this then! Thanks for all of your words of encouragement.
'Shindig'
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Jon,
LeNube - If you took apart your TiVo, installing a wireless card in a computer will probably be less tricky.
Oh really? Interesting. Maybe I will try this then! Thanks for all of your words of encouragement.
le nubian, in my experience, installing a wireless card in a desktop is relatively painless. (Getting the card to work after installed may involve some pain, but not so much that I'd advise against you doing this yourself.)
Theo, that should be no problem here.
okay buffistas, I bought the card, should be here next week, I'll let you know if I kill my machine while trying to install this card!
hoo boy!
Computer technician accidentally wipes out info on Alaska's $38 billion fund
That is what happened to a computer technician reformatting a disk drive at the Alaska Department of Revenue. While doing routine maintenance work, the technician accidentally deleted applicant information for an oil-funded account — one of Alaska residents' biggest perks — and mistakenly reformatted the backup drive, as well.
There was still hope, until the department discovered its third line of defense, backup tapes, were unreadable.
Oopsy.
Jesus fuckers. There are protocols, people! And wouldn't that be covered by some sort of regulatory board that would audit and make sure shit is backed up properly, above and beyond the department itself?
The technician is in hot water, but everyone above him in the org chart should be slapped around severely too.
ita, that's from the state with the Senator who believes that the Internets are a series of tubes.
But yeah, damn sure there are protocols, and good reasons not to skip on them.
At least they had their hard copies.
There are protocols, people! And wouldn't that be covered by some sort of regulatory board that would audit and make sure shit is backed up properly, above and beyond the department itself?
According to department staff, they now have a proven and regularly tested backup and restore procedure.
The technician is in hot water, but everyone above him in the org chart should be slapped around severely too.
Former Revenue Commissioner Bill Corbus said no one was ever blamed for the incident.
"Everybody felt very bad about it and we all learned a lesson. There was no witch hunt," Corbus said.
Governments jobs are the best...
they now have a proven and regularly tested backup and restore procedure.
It's 2007. Now they have one? Hopefully this'll prompt other groups to test their disaster recovery procedure.
At my last job, every system owner was required to test both disaster recovery and business continuity for not just data but business processes. So if hard copy it was, you had to show the process for resuming business that way too. Once a year. Because the Feds could come looking at any time.
Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?