witrak
No user record in our sample, but witrak has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
No user record in our sample, but witrak has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
>A product can be both LOL... A tent is a single product. What about a car? Do you expect to pay separately for the aluminum in the motor and gearbox, as well as for the entire car?
Is the described method good for Enterprise and IoT Windows versions?
>They just want you to log in. This costs nothing. You pay with your data...
>> What matters is domain age, IP, and compliance with DKIM/DMARC. >Maybe it was my IP, but I cycled a few with my hosting provider and none of them made a difference. If I am unable to reliable obtain a 'trusted' IP,…
Perhaps, but if you set your browser language to US English you have dates displayed as MM.DD.YYYY and there's no way to change it neither to European nor ISO (YYYY-MM-DD) format.
It seems nobody remembers the reason for the F-key assignment in the original i.e. Norton Commander... The assignment was very logical and easy to remember (and use) on the original PC keyboard, where F-keys were…
Until there are no unified, standard solutions this is too difficult to be achieved in practice.
What the hell is gpf? I don't like to be forced to search the web to find each locally used unit. And when will Americans finally learn that instead of the imperial system of units, the rest of the world uses SI?
Hmm... In all the cases I saw the prices were mentioned in EUR not USD as the unit. I consider it a clear indication that the discussion participants are mainly non-Americans ;-)
>most car manufacturers have 3-10% gross margins. I remember some analysis saying that it is true for classic versions like sedan. But on SUVs it is a couple of times bigger...
It is used in all European countries (I don't know any European country that doesn't use it). I know the long scale under the name "European" and the short scale as "American".
If you substitute subliminal messaging with any other technique allowing: - to influence human behavior, - to prevent an effective countermeasure, - to be controlled by a single issuer, you - use in a selective or mass…
As a result there always be a company accepting messages with false sender identity so scammers can operate easily...
Because to check email your active participation is needed so you must start an application while to accept texting no such action is needed. Thus for short information (read-and-forget) short messaging (SMS or RCS) is…
>The literature is a way of adding cost to those that would send spam, it also adds cost in other ways. It is an oversimplified way of evaluating of consequences of overwhelming control the two monopolists have over…
Taking into account how thoroughly you explain all the intricate details of memory handling it's strange that in the example you haven't clearly commented on the fact of oversimplification of handling unsuccessful…
This scenario is a solution only in simplest cases. It doesn't work when someone routinely uses a VPN on the phone (when often uses free public wi-fi in airports, railway stations, markets etc) because of possible MITM…
>Its really hard to say just how clever AI is getting IMO (as a non-expert in the field). >But then when you give a LLM a completely new problem, not similar to anything they have been trained on - For example, give it…
>When I publish code I don't pick any license. It's just free for anyone to use for whatever. That's not good in all cases as in some jurisdictions it means that any use is forbidden...
>ZFS's major failing is that it offers no way to address inevitable filesystem data and free space fragmentation, and while you can remove devices from a ZFS pool, it incurs a permanent performance penalty, because they…
I agree with one exception: > [...] and audience [...] If you take into account small market share of Firefox and even smaller percentage of Firefox user needing uBOL then "audience" isn't anything important in this…
>uBOL is not an important extension on Firefox. Perhaps you should read some earlier comments then you wouldn't say such things? Hints: Firefox mobile; range of privileges required.
It may be true, but your point of view isn't the sole possible. Many people have to use more than one browser and for them, the Google decision (effectively forcing the creation of uBOL) was really painful so Hill's new…
>Self-hosting inbound email is trivial. Anybody will send email to any random domain, they're just not willing to accept it from random sources. That is simply not true. I have self-hosted email service and starting…
>76 ideas which were submitted are currently in development and 84 have been delivered. So what? Does it invalidate the critics of glacial speed of making other improvements?