But sketchbooks don't run 9front :(
> Wacomized laptops with pens. > Crack the screen open and draw on it. I don't think "crack the screen open" is the best choice of words here …
I fed the technical data of my motorcycle into the model and it told me right away that this build would destroy a real engine because the piston speed would be too great. The real thing has been running for 56,000…
For me, it's the European Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR). It is intended to reduce/recycle waste from shipping packages. The eyebrow-raising part is that each country has a registry at which every…
I for my part didn't like the sparse selection of colors. Blue, silver, green, but nothing reddish. But later there came the Zune theme and it was awesome (silver-black with orange X buttons).
In Germany, using shock collars on dogs is even verboten.
The account is not directly required, but you have a very hard time using an Android smartphone without a Google account. It's a bit easier with Apple, however both have in common that the apps required for eIDAS are…
Fairphone actually does this. My FP3+ displays a red bar with an open padlock as long as the bootloader is unlocked, and when one changes the bootloader lock one way or the other, the phone wipes itself.
This. The German government issues electronic IDs which can provide proof of age in a privacy-saving way, but I've never seen that being used in the wild.
Hewlett Packard had a lifetime warranty on their network gear back in the day.
So, do you like this? I do.
These 0.21/day are MPESA transaction fees. I stumbled upon that, too.
Well, to get started you could buy one of these: https://www.reiner-sct.com/en/produkt/reiner-sct-authenticat... … and then decide whether you really want to get into electronics development.
That book looks very promising. Thanks a bunch!
Is there an exploit? I've always wanted to explore the inner workings of my car's computer system, but I don't know how.
Does it work better when you use the key fob from inside the car? I would expect that because they surely tested a "unlocked accidentally and locked again right away" kind of scenario.
The cars I know lock their doors automatically when they go at a certain speed (e. g. mine does at 20 km/h). Doesn't yours?
Maybe it's intended to help with calculations. For comparison, the German BBK recommends a emergency stock to last ten days.
Amazing! The DTMF sounds look like the pins on the barrel of a music box. I am intrigued, I wouldn't ever have pictured them like that.
Thank you for the article! I found the "I understand computers and therefore the world" in the beginning a bit pretentious, but after reading the rest anyway, it doesn't anymore. I'd summarize the piece as: "The hacker…
> You can't solve political problems with technical solutions. Yes, that's what I've been thinking too. Tom Quiter even mentions in the interview that there already have been companies which tried to offer cheap…
What the article does not seem to mention is that an usual electric wheelchair costs about $65,000 (and is intended to be replaced every six years or so). This and the non-availability of replacement parts is why some…
> “Why”? What kind of question is “why”? Because low-level applications like this were promised when UEFI was introduced, that's why. UEFI's creators went even as far as to dream of replacing the Linux-based…
But sketchbooks don't run 9front :(
> Wacomized laptops with pens. > Crack the screen open and draw on it. I don't think "crack the screen open" is the best choice of words here …
I fed the technical data of my motorcycle into the model and it told me right away that this build would destroy a real engine because the piston speed would be too great. The real thing has been running for 56,000…
For me, it's the European Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR). It is intended to reduce/recycle waste from shipping packages. The eyebrow-raising part is that each country has a registry at which every…
I for my part didn't like the sparse selection of colors. Blue, silver, green, but nothing reddish. But later there came the Zune theme and it was awesome (silver-black with orange X buttons).
In Germany, using shock collars on dogs is even verboten.
The account is not directly required, but you have a very hard time using an Android smartphone without a Google account. It's a bit easier with Apple, however both have in common that the apps required for eIDAS are…
Fairphone actually does this. My FP3+ displays a red bar with an open padlock as long as the bootloader is unlocked, and when one changes the bootloader lock one way or the other, the phone wipes itself.
This. The German government issues electronic IDs which can provide proof of age in a privacy-saving way, but I've never seen that being used in the wild.
Hewlett Packard had a lifetime warranty on their network gear back in the day.
So, do you like this? I do.
These 0.21/day are MPESA transaction fees. I stumbled upon that, too.
Well, to get started you could buy one of these: https://www.reiner-sct.com/en/produkt/reiner-sct-authenticat... … and then decide whether you really want to get into electronics development.
That book looks very promising. Thanks a bunch!
Is there an exploit? I've always wanted to explore the inner workings of my car's computer system, but I don't know how.
Does it work better when you use the key fob from inside the car? I would expect that because they surely tested a "unlocked accidentally and locked again right away" kind of scenario.
The cars I know lock their doors automatically when they go at a certain speed (e. g. mine does at 20 km/h). Doesn't yours?
Maybe it's intended to help with calculations. For comparison, the German BBK recommends a emergency stock to last ten days.
Amazing! The DTMF sounds look like the pins on the barrel of a music box. I am intrigued, I wouldn't ever have pictured them like that.
Thank you for the article! I found the "I understand computers and therefore the world" in the beginning a bit pretentious, but after reading the rest anyway, it doesn't anymore. I'd summarize the piece as: "The hacker…
> You can't solve political problems with technical solutions. Yes, that's what I've been thinking too. Tom Quiter even mentions in the interview that there already have been companies which tried to offer cheap…
What the article does not seem to mention is that an usual electric wheelchair costs about $65,000 (and is intended to be replaced every six years or so). This and the non-availability of replacement parts is why some…
> “Why”? What kind of question is “why”? Because low-level applications like this were promised when UEFI was introduced, that's why. UEFI's creators went even as far as to dream of replacing the Linux-based…