#1 2023-11-09 19:19:36

StanleySel
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Registered: 2023-11-09
Posts: 5
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Im happy I now signed up

A follow-up email might be asking whether the recipient has received the email and whether they’re interested. If the recipient doesn’t respond to that second email, you might want to send one saying that you won’t contact them again. Can you create an auto-reply in Gmail? Yes, you can create an auto-reply in Gmail. You can either do it using Gmail’s standard features or use an app like Right Inbox to make it faster. What are the advantages of using auto-reply in Gmail? Auto-reply has several advantages. You can use it for going on vacation, use it to respond quickly to quotes and proposals with clients or use it to confirm purchase transactions to a customer list. Can I create auto-replies on Gmail for my mobile device? If you’re using the Gmail mobile app, you can create auto-replies as well. You’ll need to download Gmail for either your iPhone or Android first. How long do auto-reply emails last? You can set the exact date and time that your auto-reply email will go into effect. Therefore, if you’re only using it for a vacation, for instance, it can have an expiration date.

The Web became more complex as it was adapted for a larger variety of uses. The ability to display images was implemented in the Mosaic Web browser and then became a standard in HTML 2.0 (Raggett et al. 1998). In 1995 JavaScript was created, which allows program code to be run within websites. Cascading Style Sheets allowed for more complex visual layouts of webpages. Server-side programming allowed for webpages generated on the fly using content from a back-end database. And AJAX brought dynamism to the front-end of webpages by allowing them to fluidly load new content in real-time. In addition to providing a richer user experience, Web design moved toward increased standardization. HTML became an open standard, published through the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) beginning in 1993 (Berners-Lee and D. W. Connolly 1995) and then through the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) from January 1997 onward (Raggett 1997). One of the goals of standardizing HTML and related Web protocols was to ensure Web pages looked and behaved the same on different browsers--a considerable challenge amidst the increasingly complex multimedia capabilities of the Web.

A Challenge Collapsar (CC) attack is an attack where standard HTTP requests are sent to a targeted web server frequently. The Uniform Resource Identifiers (URIs) in the requests require complicated time-consuming algorithms or database operations which may exhaust the resources of the targeted web server. In 2004, a Chinese hacker nicknamed KiKi invented a hacking tool to send these kinds of requests to attack a NSFOCUS firewall named Collapsar, and thus the hacking tool was known as Challenge Collapsar, or CC for short. Consequently, this type of attack got the name CC attack. A smurf attack relies on misconfigured network devices that allow packets to be sent to all computer hosts on a particular network via the broadcast address of the network, rather than a specific machine. The attacker will send large numbers of IP packets with the source address faked to appear to be the address of the victim. Most devices on a network will, by default, respond to this by sending a reply to the source IP address.

It is real quaint that humanitarian institutions that are meant for giving others are under the watchful eye of charity watchdogs. The whole idea of benevolence is getting a bit problematical! The Better Business Bureau in the USA, despite its name is also charity directory that lists both business and non-profit organisations. The fact is that there are enough guides that provide information about 100 top ranking charities but these ratings does not, in reality, convey the correct picture. The ratings of a charity has actually nothing much to do with what actually makes it superior to the rest. There are unique features that place a charity or non-charity institution above the rest. A YouGov poll of 2005 stated that about 56 percent of the British population did not have a considerable amount of belief even in well known global charities like Oxfam and Save the Children. Even among the charities that had a good charity rating, only about 15 percent enjoyed the public’s belief in them.

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