Examples of using Certs in English and their translations into Polish
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Colloquial
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Official
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Medicine
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Financial
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Official/political
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Programming
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Computer
Dollars and Certs.
OS X new certs for easier install.
Oh, and three sugar-free Certs.
Create a crontjob that the certs will be generated every week.
That's it?- Oh, and three sugar-free Certs.
People also translate
Would you like some certs or a comb?
I cannot, for the life of me, remember the last time I bought Certs.
Only to certs, about which I know that they will not disappoint me.
Reinforced cooperation between National/Governmental CERTs.
Establishing CERTs in the remaining Member States and for the EU institutions by 2012.
ENISA will continue supporting the cooperation among National/Governmental CERTs.
To date, 20 Member States32 have developed National/Governmental CERTs and almost all others have plans to set one up.
A minimal set of standards for harmonised level functions andservices for National/Governmental CERTs;
Define, with the support of ENISA, a minimum level of capabilities andservices for National/Governmental CERTs and incident response operations in support to pan-European cooperation.
Agreeing on a minimum level of capabilities andservices for national/governmental CERTs;
Mobilising and supporting the Member States in completing andwhere necessary in setting up national/governmental CERTs in order to establish a well-functioning network of CERTs covering all of Europe.
Define ways to establish an effective European network through cross-border cooperation between national/governmental Computer Emergency Response Teams(CERTs);
ENISA will also analyse the operational gaps at European level andreport on how cross-border collaboration between CERTs and relevant stakeholders can be reinforced, in particular for incident response coordination.
Build strategic international partnerships- Strategic partnerships should be built on ongoing efforts in critical areas, like cyber-incident management,including exercises and cooperation among CERTs.
The people whose idea of fancy Your parents? is dropping a Certs into a jar of schnapps?
ENISA's work on baseline capabilities for National/Governmental CERTs, CERT exercises and national exercises, and cyber incident management has helped to stimulate andsupport stronger pan-European cooperation between National/Governmental CERTs.
In 2009, ENISA, together with the Computer Emergency Response Team(CERT) community in Europe, developed and agreed on a minimum setof baseline capabilities and services that National/Governmental CERTs need to have in order to function effectively in support of pan-European cooperation.
ENISA, with the cooperation of the National/Governmental CERTs, will discuss whether and how to extend the"baseline capabilities" in order to adapt the CERTs' ability to support Member States in ensuring the resilience and stability of vital ICT infrastructures, and to become the backbone of the European Information Sharing and Alert System(EISAS) for citizens and SMEs, to be built with national resources and capabilities by 2013, as announced in the ISS.
They underline the importance of the development of National/Governmental Computer Emergency Response Teams(CERTs) and the elaboration of national cyber incident contingency plans as well as the organisation of national cyber exercises.
The EU-level NIS authority proposed by the Committee at point 4.2 above, could be set- up on the foundations of the cybersecurity work already being done by ENISA,the European Committee for Standardization(CEN), the CERTs, European Government CERTs(EGC) group and others.
The minimum set of baseline capabilities and services20 andrelated policy recommendations21 for National/Governmental CERTs to function effectively and act as the key component of national capability for preparedness, information sharing, coordination and response have been developed.
Given the interdependence between countries for the security andresilience of CIIs-“A chain is only as strong as its weakest link”- it is alarming that only 9 Member States have so far established Computer Emergency Response Teams(CERTs) and joined the European Government CERTs Group EGC.
Drawing from national and international experiences, ENISA developed a good practiceguide on national exercises41; organised events with Member States and CERTs worldwide on national exercises; and, more recently, issued policy recommendations concerning the development of national strategies where National/Governmental CERTs/CSIRTs are given a key role in leading national contingency planning exercises and testing, involving private- and public-sector stakeholders.42.
The contributors included Member State NIS bodies, national regulatory authorities, telecommunications operators and internet service providers and related sector associations, consumers associations, ICT manufacturers,Computer Emergency Response Teams(CERTs), academics, and corporate users.
These bodies need to act as national catalysers of stakeholders' interests and capacity for public policy activities(including those related to information and alert sharing systems reaching out to citizens and SMEs) and to engage in effective cross-border cooperation and information exchange,possibly leveraging existing organisations such as the European Governmental CERTs Group(EGC).24.