å¤ç¥ãå²©ç· wrote:
On 12/30/2011 12:00 AM, m.roth@5-cent.us wrote:
å¤Å神ãâ¬â¬Ã¥Â²Â©Ã§â· wrote:
On 12/29/2011 10:21 PM, Marko Vojinovic wrote:
On Thursday 29 December 2011 13:07:56 Reindl Harald wrote:
Am 29.12.2011 12:56, schrieb Leonard den Ottolander:
On Thu, 2011-12-29 at 12:29 +0100, Reindl Harald wrote: > Am 29.12.2011 09:17, schrieb Bennett Haselton:
<snip>
When traveling I log in to my home server and work servers with my laptop. Its really a *lot* easier than using a bunch of pasword schemes.
<snip> Ah, that brings to mind another issue with only passwords: synchronization. I worked as a subcontractor for a *huge* US co a few years ago. I've *never* had to write passwords down... but for there, I had a page of them! Our group's, the corporate test systems, the corporate *production* systems, and *each* had their own, along with their own password aging (there was *no* single sign-on), the contracting co's....
Ah, forgot about that because its no longer a problem for me anymore. Using the same password on two systems is a religiously-to-be-observed rule that *most* users violate.
<snip> Yeah, but this was *corporate*: systems I had no access to other than as a user, with very limited sudo. I was *appalled* that they didn't have single sign-on.
mark