I think this is very clever, a great idea. I also think someone is going to figure out how to turn on iphones via NFC and upload malware of some kind.
I think this is very clever, a great idea. I also think someone is going to figure out how to turn on iphones via NFC and upload malware of some kind.
I’ve actually thought for a while now that a big software company should come out and say they support ReactOS for whatever their product is and advertise it like “Full, Oracle 23c DB support on ReactOS - but without the Microsoft tax.”
Yes, that’s not realistic between Oracle and MS, but it would be such a boon to ReactOS.
This drove me up the wall. And, I hate to admit it, but I’ve let Apple win. I use Windoze for work so I’ve swapped @ and " to be the same as Apple UK, and if I run Linux I choose the Apple UK layout as well. It’s just…easier rather than having to reset my muscle memory every day.
I’ll probably not use it until they have a CDKTF equivalent, but it’s good to see progress.
I’ll make it spin my desktop cube, force every window to move slightly so they wobble and play Louis Theroux’s lyric Jiggle Jiggle.
Why? Just because Windows uses can’t.
They’re advertising alt-cigarette products, right? Probably from their parent companies alt subsidiary.
I vaguely remember in the '90s they used to have slips like that in the UK. Can’t remember if it was advertising or things like “Collect 100 of these tokens, get a 20 pack for free!”
creating an app that essentially copped their proprietary OS
The OS hasn’t been ‘copped’. They emulated the protocol, and your lack of understanding and confusing the two has led us to having this conversation.
Because you’re confusing the difference between an OS, an application and a protocol.
This is nothing to do with the OS.
He has a point though, you haven’t refuted that.
Why? As the article states this actually lessens security for everyone (including iPhone users).
An OpenVPN profile generator with valid client certificate and the private key never leaves the client workstation.
I don’t think you need to learn it, you just need to use one command. Even from a CMD prompt you can invoke powershell and a powershell cmdlet in a one-liner:
powershell send-mailmessage -from "[email protected]" -To "[email protected]" -subject "Test to me" -smtpserver My.Mail.Server.co.uk
Is there a reason not to use PowerShell?
In the UK we tend not to tip if there’s a service charge.
Code storage. They’re keeping bugzilla.
Using Privacy Badger (15 trackers blocked), uBlock Origin (29 blocked - this keeps on increasing) and Consent-o-Matic (no idea how to check if this has done anything) I haven’t seen a cookie prompt, thankfully.
The wifi worked fine for me on Fedora Asahi, macbook air m2.
If you have MFA enabled, and getting these alerts it would suggest MFA has been bypassed. I would contact Apple immediately.
What an incredibly unmemorable name they've given it. Looks funs though.
It’s fairly important to keep it private for US citizens, see here.