Has the ability to navigate via UNC been added? Or more importantly, has search/replace with regular expressions improved?
I did a search/replace of [a-z] to 0 in a 50 meg text file before as a comparison between Sublime Text 2, UltraEdit, and gVim. UltraEdit was slower than I would have liked, gVim was < 10 seconds, and Sublime crashed. That's a deal breaker.
I tried Sublime Text 2 but ended up going back to UltraEdit. Appearance, support for regular expressions, and the ability to load large files are my three needs.
Sublime wins it on appearance. UltraEdit is nice with my dark theme, but Sublime is better. However, Sublime lost it on regular expressions. Attempting to perform a search/replace in Sublime on a 55 meg file wasn't just slow, the application crashed. UltraEdit was slower than I'd prefer ([a-zA-Z] to 0 in gVim took 15 seconds), but it doesn't crash at least.
I am a programmer/analyst in a hospital. I administer several systems and have my hands in most of the databases. Outside of work, I consult and write healthcare software.
You store it the same as you would any sensitive information -- behind a locked door with a ridiculous amount of audit data. It's more about identifying improper access (nurse A looking at patient B when she's not in his "circle of care") than it is about preventing it, for legitimate users of course.
You do not need to encrypt the contents of the database or any such extreme measures.
Something else to remember is that there is no bulletproof "HIPAA-Compliant" stamp. It's more a set of guidelines and best practices that you're trying to follow. Most vendors do not provide a row-by-row audit table for every single action, for example, but they should.
Interesting - our hospital written policy is that SSNs must be encrypted when stored. Other PII is somewhat less restrictive.
But, we had a high-profile case where a server with a file of SSNs and patient names was hacked. There was no evidence the person(s) who hacked the server ever knew this particular file existed, but it generated a bunch of headaches here. Maybe policy makers went off the deep end in response.
Looks good! I submitted feedback using the demo account but I'm not sure it'd make it to you. What I'd like to see added..
- Support for other ranking systems such as EPGP.
- Integration with existing guild sites (or Facebook?).
- Links to profiles on the Armory.
- Support for an addon so that events on the calendar sync with the game itself. Ideally, it would link to the in-game calendar, but I'm not sure that is possible.
- Additional options on creating an event. Min/max per class or per group (tank, heal, DPS), minimum rank, private invites, private events, or something similar to (but not quite) GearScore based on their Armory profile.
The two major hurdles for adoption will be the in-game calendar (convincing people to use this over it) and existing guild websites (integration).
Yeah, it would be really nice if Blizzard would give the Armory a bit more read/write functionality so that I could push and pull events to the calendar through that. But I think you're right that I would have to do that through an addon.
I do plan to add EPGP support to the balances section, that's actually pretty high on my list.
All cars have lots of "known bugs", many of which could cause loss of life but are not subject to recall.
Why? Because there is a cost benefit equation that car companies use. If the cost of doing a recall is less than the possible bad publicity + lawsuit damages.
Toyota is no different, if anything, that they decided not to mention it suggests it's a low risk (if the cars killed even a few dozen people the cost the recall would have been obvious from the beginning).
I happen to cough know people that work with the same software suite described in the article. They encounter errors daily that are unexplainable by IT and by the company itself. Scary stuff.
I have worked through Guru.com and enjoy it. The web site provides a lot of nice tools, including escrow payments, work rooms, and private message boards. You pay for it though -- around 7% fees on each project.
The one complaint is that you have to lower your rates substantially at the start until you build up return clients. At the point, they like your work and give you private projects.
I did a search/replace of [a-z] to 0 in a 50 meg text file before as a comparison between Sublime Text 2, UltraEdit, and gVim. UltraEdit was slower than I would have liked, gVim was < 10 seconds, and Sublime crashed. That's a deal breaker.