@Pheonixblade9 - Alternatively, you can choose a fixed 0% Fed and 0% State tax rate and use the savings to invest with. If you double it in 12 months then you will cover your taxes for the year :)
@SpencerRuport - I have no insurance at the moment, they wanted $250 to insure me with no past history of anything, and for what basically amounts to catastrophic insurance.
@AhmedDaou - Yeah, that is a common problem. Truth is, people will always manage to get in because they can mask all of the identification you would be using.
@TravisJ nice! I am going to start throwing money at my student loans because they're almost 7%. My auto loan is like 2.8% so I don't even care about that
@Pheonixblade9 - My student loan is 4.5% and I feel like if I defer for 5 years then it is only going to be an extra 2500 but after 5 years 2500 will be a lot easier to handle than now.
@AhmedDaou - Pair the cookie with the IP and hope for the best :) Users can always bypass it though. On thing you can do is implement a targeted denial of response which is basically where you monitor current sessions for activity and if they exceed a certain rate of requests per time you begin to delay the response or block it. The session is also token based, so if for every request they do they also remove the cookie then that would also be bypassed. Stopping a DDoS is kind of difficult.
If they manage to automate that process and then vary their IP address while sending broken packets then you will get into issues, but that is really unlikely.
score will more determine the interest rate you'll get and whether you'll qualify for certain types of loans. Amount is typically more income + debt based
@ton.yeung its so screwy really, the more credit you are granted the higher the score, but the more you use it, the lower. The higher the loan amounts youve been granted, the better, but if your payments VS gross income are too high, lower
@Osadellah best practice if you really want it to be secure is to store an encrypted version in the web.config and make a call to a web service over HTTPS to decrypt it, or something like that
security is not my strong suit - but I think it is safe to store the encrypted message and public key in a repository, and make the call to the server with the private key to decrypt it
I hate this statement : "We have reviewed your resume and have carefully considered your qualifications. While your skills are certainly impressive, we have decided to pursue other candidates to the next stage of our hiring process.
Anyone knows how to send a request with System.Net.HttpClient and pass both a string and a file to the web service, this is what I've tried and the response says that a parameter is missing : this is my code http://pastebin.com/F93HCcj8
better than when you shoot an application into the aether and never ever hear back until 1 year later you already have a new job and you get "we're sorry, your application with Boeing has been denied"