How many of us techies have had to bite our lips and say we know the windows 3.1 "operating system"?
[I resolved it on my skills list by putting it under 'other interfaces'.]
I am always flumoxed by job postings with misspellings. Should I fail the HR screen of my resume by not using their spelling or look like an idiot to a hiring manager because I spelled PERL as 'purl'?
BTW, how do you explain to someone that having too MUCH security can be a security problem in itself? I know one place with a mass of systems, each with their own password policies that are not consistant with each other. Sure enough, everyone keeps a post-it of their current passwords.
On some systems the passwords were randomly generated, others had ranges of what they wanted to make a 'good password' that were not good enough for other systems, and so on.
My point was that setting them all the same is better for security, since people do not need to write them down, but it was impossible to use the same password on all systems.
I am always amazed at security people who argue you should use a completely different password for every machine you use. Assuming no "password vaults", I wonder if they have REALLY thought how many passwords just the average web surfer would need to remember.
even people who know better ...
[I resolved it on my skills list by putting it under 'other interfaces'.]
I am always flumoxed by job postings with misspellings. Should I fail the HR screen of my resume by not using their spelling or look like an idiot to a hiring manager because I spelled PERL as 'purl'?
BTW, how do you explain to someone that having too MUCH security can be a security problem in itself? I know one place with a mass of systems, each with their own password policies that are not consistant with each other. Sure enough, everyone keeps a post-it of their current passwords.
Re: even people who know better ...
...or just sets all their passwords to the same one anyway. that's what I do.
(hi - got here through
What I meant...
My point was that setting them all the same is better for security, since people do not need to write them down, but it was impossible to use the same password on all systems.
I am always amazed at security people who argue you should use a completely different password for every machine you use. Assuming no "password vaults", I wonder if they have REALLY thought how many passwords just the average web surfer would need to remember.