https://www.hwaci.com/ See https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23511151
Doing it for company-owned laptops seems a lot different than doing it for customers' devices. I think the complaint is more about the latter.
Probably, but not at any meaningful concentration.
Pulled out of fair hat. Guaranteed to be random.
Similar to wifi et al using light beyond the range of human seeing.
aka spirit level?
We have our NBN fibre here in Australia and it works fine. We can get 1000 down / 400 up for ~100USD.
POSIX compatibility > https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/000095399/functions/op... > The open() function shall return a file descriptor for the named file that is the lowest file descriptor not currently open for…
English too
> jam the same stream. To add to that, other people won't be able to spoof the original stream (as that needs the private key), but instead only jam it. It would be the same failure mode as SSL certificates.
Does the US have the same distinction we have here in Australia where there will be a small local government area in the centre of a city named that? For example, the City of Sydney LGA is only one of 33 LGAs that make…
Or if your editor is happy to store them in a subfolder that is useful. I use Sublime with the AutoProjects extension and it puts .sublime-project snd .sublime-workspace under a .sublime folder that I can have a…
Not OP, but I have an Asus StudioBook 17. Of what is builtin, the fingerprint reader and the numberpad functionality of the touchpad don't work. Everything else works fine though.
No, but they aren't the ones designing them. Politicians normally aren't engineers.
The UK did just recently do that for a Chinese-owned steel mill.
From my reading through the RFCs a few months ago the message and smtp envelope also have different rules for addresses, and the message allows the local-part to contain whitespace but the envelope doesn't.
> Maybe that's all silly No it isn't. Both examples match perfectly physically: - Touchpad is like dragging the piece of paper directly. - Scroll wheel is like having the paper on the other side of the wheel.
The builtin keyboard on Asus StudioBook laptops also gets this right. When holding Alt, the F4 key always acts as that rather than its special action (backlight brightness down).
Won't your first line mean every Monday in May as well as days 25 to 31 of May? At least busybox's cron implements it that way: if (line->cl_Mins[ptm->tm_min] && line->cl_Hrs[ptm->tm_hour] &&…
Or in Lua you'd wrap the initial call in a coroutine, possibly with coronest[a] or something similar to make handling the effects at the right layer easier. And so then the outer code is a loop around coroutine.resume,…
But then there is the other side that companies are adding MCP servers to stuff that has never had a public API.
Silver anniversary for it
Though Android does help a little for existing toggles by giving you an 'About 129 notifications per day' blurb below the entry.
https://xkcd.com/1172/
> The attack suggests a hacker compromised some portion of BasedApparel.com
https://www.hwaci.com/ See https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23511151
Doing it for company-owned laptops seems a lot different than doing it for customers' devices. I think the complaint is more about the latter.
Probably, but not at any meaningful concentration.
Pulled out of fair hat. Guaranteed to be random.
Similar to wifi et al using light beyond the range of human seeing.
aka spirit level?
We have our NBN fibre here in Australia and it works fine. We can get 1000 down / 400 up for ~100USD.
POSIX compatibility > https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/000095399/functions/op... > The open() function shall return a file descriptor for the named file that is the lowest file descriptor not currently open for…
English too
> jam the same stream. To add to that, other people won't be able to spoof the original stream (as that needs the private key), but instead only jam it. It would be the same failure mode as SSL certificates.
Does the US have the same distinction we have here in Australia where there will be a small local government area in the centre of a city named that? For example, the City of Sydney LGA is only one of 33 LGAs that make…
Or if your editor is happy to store them in a subfolder that is useful. I use Sublime with the AutoProjects extension and it puts .sublime-project snd .sublime-workspace under a .sublime folder that I can have a…
Not OP, but I have an Asus StudioBook 17. Of what is builtin, the fingerprint reader and the numberpad functionality of the touchpad don't work. Everything else works fine though.
No, but they aren't the ones designing them. Politicians normally aren't engineers.
The UK did just recently do that for a Chinese-owned steel mill.
From my reading through the RFCs a few months ago the message and smtp envelope also have different rules for addresses, and the message allows the local-part to contain whitespace but the envelope doesn't.
> Maybe that's all silly No it isn't. Both examples match perfectly physically: - Touchpad is like dragging the piece of paper directly. - Scroll wheel is like having the paper on the other side of the wheel.
The builtin keyboard on Asus StudioBook laptops also gets this right. When holding Alt, the F4 key always acts as that rather than its special action (backlight brightness down).
Won't your first line mean every Monday in May as well as days 25 to 31 of May? At least busybox's cron implements it that way: if (line->cl_Mins[ptm->tm_min] && line->cl_Hrs[ptm->tm_hour] &&…
Or in Lua you'd wrap the initial call in a coroutine, possibly with coronest[a] or something similar to make handling the effects at the right layer easier. And so then the outer code is a loop around coroutine.resume,…
But then there is the other side that companies are adding MCP servers to stuff that has never had a public API.
Silver anniversary for it
Though Android does help a little for existing toggles by giving you an 'About 129 notifications per day' blurb below the entry.
https://xkcd.com/1172/
> The attack suggests a hacker compromised some portion of BasedApparel.com