For most people, rooting makes them less secure not more. It all depends on who you're securing against.
As someone who doesn't use iOS often I have to agree. Changing the brightness on an iPad took me a minute because I had to work out which corner to swipe from. Such poor design.
Is there any evidence for that? I know that for example women are more likely to be injured in car crashes because most car seats/interiors are designed around the average man so if be surprised if a human half didn't…
Not that I use it but Outlook in Office 365 is radically different. Has full integration with M365 groups etc.
It's a part of Google one, no idea how good it is though.
That functionality also allows someone to turn your oven on while you're on holiday, but worth the risk in my opinion.
Most kids only experience computers through a smart phone and a collection of social media apps.
Boost is a brilliant app, never use the desktop site because it's junk in comparison.
Windows 10 on a core 2 duo and an SSD is still pretty quick, it just doesn't run well on HDDs.
There are some good electron apps and some bad ones.
You can easily enforce installations of extensions via Chrome's admin templates.
I mean it's pretty easy to prove that's not true. Just stick it on a network and check the network traffic. The bandwidth required to do that would be immense anyway for basically no benefit.
Because they're cheap, low powered devices.
If you're deploying office anyway you simply remove teams from the config XML for the installer. Pretty simple really.
Failing to mention the massive tariffs on many products.
There's different rings for different customers like government and military. I imagine their updates are deployed slower.
There's was also providers in the UK who's bad video compression made the picture so dark it was unwatchable.
Because it would undermine trust in their system.
A privacy feature on a Huawei laptop...
Maybe not for hosting but I think the Active directory server at the heart of just about every company would disagree with your statement.
Depends on the station. Some stations are broadcasting 32Kbit mono audio which certainly doesn't stand up to FM.
Any private company in China is by default a business partner with the state. If you believe that the government doesn't coerce companies to comply with their wishes you are mistaken.
I'm pretty sure that's the OS itself analysing the highlighted text and offering suggestions on which app to open it with.
You can't take attendance in Google classroom because schools use MIS/SIS software to track attendance/assessment data etc. Without links back to the schools MIS data it gets held in a Google silo where it's not useful…
Depends on the application, Torx doesn't cam out for example which in some cases could be undesirable.
For most people, rooting makes them less secure not more. It all depends on who you're securing against.
As someone who doesn't use iOS often I have to agree. Changing the brightness on an iPad took me a minute because I had to work out which corner to swipe from. Such poor design.
Is there any evidence for that? I know that for example women are more likely to be injured in car crashes because most car seats/interiors are designed around the average man so if be surprised if a human half didn't…
Not that I use it but Outlook in Office 365 is radically different. Has full integration with M365 groups etc.
It's a part of Google one, no idea how good it is though.
That functionality also allows someone to turn your oven on while you're on holiday, but worth the risk in my opinion.
Most kids only experience computers through a smart phone and a collection of social media apps.
Boost is a brilliant app, never use the desktop site because it's junk in comparison.
Windows 10 on a core 2 duo and an SSD is still pretty quick, it just doesn't run well on HDDs.
There are some good electron apps and some bad ones.
You can easily enforce installations of extensions via Chrome's admin templates.
I mean it's pretty easy to prove that's not true. Just stick it on a network and check the network traffic. The bandwidth required to do that would be immense anyway for basically no benefit.
Because they're cheap, low powered devices.
If you're deploying office anyway you simply remove teams from the config XML for the installer. Pretty simple really.
Failing to mention the massive tariffs on many products.
There's different rings for different customers like government and military. I imagine their updates are deployed slower.
There's was also providers in the UK who's bad video compression made the picture so dark it was unwatchable.
Because it would undermine trust in their system.
A privacy feature on a Huawei laptop...
Maybe not for hosting but I think the Active directory server at the heart of just about every company would disagree with your statement.
Depends on the station. Some stations are broadcasting 32Kbit mono audio which certainly doesn't stand up to FM.
Any private company in China is by default a business partner with the state. If you believe that the government doesn't coerce companies to comply with their wishes you are mistaken.
I'm pretty sure that's the OS itself analysing the highlighted text and offering suggestions on which app to open it with.
You can't take attendance in Google classroom because schools use MIS/SIS software to track attendance/assessment data etc. Without links back to the schools MIS data it gets held in a Google silo where it's not useful…
Depends on the application, Torx doesn't cam out for example which in some cases could be undesirable.