Word: servers
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Harvard’s other two points came from dominant victories at No. 4 from junior Dan Nguyen, who won his singles match, 6-1, 6-1, without seeming to break a sweat, and at No. 3 from co-captain Scott Denenberg, who silenced the Wildcats’ biggest server, 6-3, 6-1. For Nguyen, the dominant performance in both singles and doubles continued a hot streak that stretches back to the beginning of the spring season. He has won six straight matches, but none as decisively as Friday’s match. “I was clear...
...could not access their grade reports online also were barred from checking their grades by phone due to privacy concerns, according to the registrar’s office. According to Basin, the Law School also experienced difficulties earlier this semester with online course selection and the new e-mail server. “I went to [the University of Southern California], and we had an electronic situation in place for 25,000 students that was far more effective then what the law school has for 1,500 students,” Basin said. Kagan—who made...
...year, the government sends you a bill? Not a bill as in "The Senate passed the McCain-Marx bill," but a bill as in "Excuse me, is the tip included in this bill?" And by the way, whether or not you give your server a tip should not be under the purview of the U.S. Government, in my opinion, unless, of course, some of the other presidential hopefuls endorse this. In that case, I will do as the others...
...When an ace was delivered down the middle of the court, he says, the ball would still be climbing when it crashed into the backboard. "In my time," he says, "a serve that reached the backboard on the first bounce would draw a gasp from the crowd." The biggest server in Cooper's day was the American Pancho Gonzales, who was the first player to break the 100-m.p.h. barrier. These days, when racquets are made out of the same materials used for spaceships, 100 m.p.h. (160 km/h) would be a middling first serve-in the women...
...makers claimed their products were secure, no independent academic had managed to dissect an actual machine to check the assertion. Kimberlin called Professor Avi Rubin of Johns Hopkins University, who had written about vulnerabilities in Diebold's e-voting source code after it was inadvertently left on a public server. "When Brett first contacted me, he seemed surprised that I didn't recognize him," Rubin says. "He said, 'It's Brett with Velvet Revolution,' and I felt like, 'Oh, boy, let's figure out how I can get off of this call...