Now how will anyone go to Microsoft WindowsUpdate for updates, it barely works with Firefox but has no problem with IE.
You don't need to browse to Windows Updates. With Vista and Windows 7 the updates are integrated into Control Panel, you can also select which updates you want to install.
Obviously it's not the batteries or anything actually required to run.
Actually it has a battery in the keyboard too. From the FAQ:
Q. How long is the battery life?
A. Battery life really depends of usage. Standalone touchscreen should last between 3 and 5 hours. With the keyboard attached, the system should last between 10 and 15 hours.
This is an extremely insecure procedure, unless you make sure that, upon receiving the e-mail, the user will quickly log-in and change the pass to another one (the mailed password only used as a temporary pass). Or if the mail actually is a special reset-URL which could let the user choose his own.
An email is just as secure as a postcard. Everyone (for example the postman could read it). Same for the e-mail : it transits un-encrypted and could be intercepted at any point on the way to the receiver.
1) this is an update, not a full installation. There is no "full price" edition, you MUST have mac os 10.5 on it now
Only the $29 version is an update and you need Leopard to use that version.
Tiger users can buy the Mac Box Set at $169 that includes Snow Leopard, iLife 09 and iWork 09.
Now how will anyone go to Microsoft WindowsUpdate for updates, it barely works with Firefox but has no problem with IE.
You don't need to browse to Windows Updates. With Vista and Windows 7 the updates are integrated into Control Panel, you can also select which updates you want to install.
Obviously it's not the batteries or anything actually required to run.
Actually it has a battery in the keyboard too. From the FAQ:
Q. How long is the battery life?
A. Battery life really depends of usage. Standalone touchscreen should last between 3 and 5 hours. With the keyboard attached, the system should last between 10 and 15 hours.
This is an extremely insecure procedure, unless you make sure that, upon receiving the e-mail, the user will quickly log-in and change the pass to another one (the mailed password only used as a temporary pass). Or if the mail actually is a special reset-URL which could let the user choose his own.
An email is just as secure as a postcard. Everyone (for example the postman could read it). Same for the e-mail : it transits un-encrypted and could be intercepted at any point on the way to the receiver.
What method of password recovery do you suggest ?