It would be a waste of money to upgrade to the new product, who the hell cares 1 minute more for booting up, and just a bunch of points of advantage in some benchmarks. I'd like to know ram occupation, IO statistics, things like this. What a useless article, PCMag!
Nowadays most of the spam comes from infected pcs, connecting to the internet with residential ISPs, and they all (well, at least 90%) have a rDNS for their customers IPs.
I'm afraid that many agreed without even reading the changes in the terms of service. Few people read the countless pages you should read in these situations, and the worst is that you just can't say "no" and go on using your product as usual...
Am I being paranoid or... Being "files" and not printed paper... they could change it's content easily.... In the years being story could be modified...
I wonder how are they supposed to cool the whole stuff? I just can't figure out what temperature could be into that box because of the projector... This will be the most noisy desk ever.
<quote><p>The problem, however, is with the carriers who keep insisting on pushing custom firmware on their devices. With many devices never receiving any updates at all they are wide open - how long until we have massive malware issues because of this?</p></quote>
And obviously the users will say it's Google's (Android's) fault.
Well, the "device identity verification" is always done by a software. Won't take long till it is reversed, and a "patched" executable released, so that it always gives the "right answer".
... a desktop computer? That's not a desktop computer. No one should call it desktop, even if it's in a $40 worth case. That's thousands of dollars worth hardware.
It would be a waste of money to upgrade to the new product, who the hell cares 1 minute more for booting up, and just a bunch of points of advantage in some benchmarks. I'd like to know ram occupation, IO statistics, things like this.
What a useless article, PCMag!
Nowadays most of the spam comes from infected pcs, connecting to the internet with residential ISPs, and they all (well, at least 90%) have a rDNS for their customers IPs.
at the horizon. We all already knew, didn't we?
Not a supercomputer
I'm afraid that many agreed without even reading the changes in the terms of service.
Few people read the countless pages you should read in these situations, and the worst is that you just can't say "no" and go on using your product as usual...
You don't know what you talking about, man.
Mac filtering + WEP is useless.
Go for WPA2, and you are not 100% safe anyway. But better than WEP for sure...
Noob! :)
Am I being paranoid or...
Being "files" and not printed paper... they could change it's content easily....
In the years being story could be modified...
Well, actually I bet they were funded by the government.
about security concerns?
ROFL
I wonder how are they supposed to cool the whole stuff? I just can't figure out what temperature could be into that box because of the projector...
This will be the most noisy desk ever.
This one was paranoid but...
Damn shit, that's Orwell's nightmare coming true...
<quote><p>The problem, however, is with the carriers who keep insisting on pushing custom firmware on their devices. With many devices never receiving any updates at all they are wide open - how long until we have massive malware issues because of this?</p></quote>
And obviously the users will say it's Google's (Android's) fault.
http://www.vhemt.org
Well, the "device identity verification" is always done by a software.
Won't take long till it is reversed, and a "patched" executable released,
so that it always gives the "right answer".
Jerking, already? ;)
I was wondering how do they deal with the various protocols sessions, jumping from wan to wan?
at teh moment
And your ISP must support IPv6.
That's what is missing in the new generations of graduates.
That's what usually happens in Naples 2-3 times a day :)
Well, not really, only some kilometers long, but hey, WTF! 100km!!!
As usual, OT trolling.
to decrypt the insurance file!
... a desktop computer? That's not a desktop computer. No one should call it desktop, even if it's in a $40 worth case.
That's thousands of dollars worth hardware.