And when you empty the vacuum, you get to breath a giant cloud dust
What are you doing? Maybe it it different for some models, but for mine, you place the end of the canister into a trash bag and pull the trigger on the handle. You can even close the base again by pushing it while it's still in the trash bag.
I've used findimagedups. IIRC, it rescales each image to a standard size (64x64 or something) then filters and normalizes it down to a 1-bit-depth image.
It then builds a database of these 'hashes'/'signatures' and can output a list of files that have a threshold of bits in common.
That's how it can ignore small changes, it loses most detail and then can ignore a threshold of differences.
It would fail if an image was cropped or rotated, for instance. It could handle picture orientation it it was modified to store 4 versions of the signature, I guess.
It won't actually remove images itself (I wrote a script to read it's output and delete listed images matching a specific path).
I needed it because Dropbox was 'fixing' orientation when it uploaded images and I wanted to clear out ones I'd backed up directly from the camera. (I usually delete duplicate images based on hash.)
You may need to use -c to force rsync to compare checksums.
I use something like this as part of my backup
DATE=$(date +%C%y%m%d%H%M)
rsync --del --backup --backup-dir=../changedfiles_$DATE
The whole backup also goes to S3 glacier.
As an added step - I don't delete pictures from my camera unless they match the checksum of files in the _backup_ - not the original copy (via a script).
That way, once they're first copied from the camera, a single failure in the original, PC copy or backup copy will all result in the camera version remaining and I can check what has gone wrong.
I just hold down the lock switch for a second to turn on the LED, it's a built-in feature on my Nokia.
But why doesn't Android sandbox apps in a way that the app is unaware of? Just present all apps with an empty contact list, a fake GPS location, an empty drive, etc and the user grants permissions to substitute the real ones as needed. That way, all apps could be installed and you'd get a popup such as "this app wants your location" in a similar way to IOS, only this way the app would keep working if you said no.
Don't the trees block a lot more of the road than they did then?
There's a webcam mounted inside the box near the window if anyone want's to check out the view (the pile of boxes placed there to represent the one's he's said to have placed there to rest the rifle on).
Well I was replying to a comment advising "keep local backups" and describing the situation where the provider or at least your account disappears.
For the scenario you describe, Dropbox, at least, allows restoring of deleted files for a while after, so you'd have to both delete your files and then lose your Dropbox account to lose everything.
I don't rely on anything like this myself, BTW, incremental encrypted DAR files stored in Amazon Glacier is my current offline storage (as well as encrypted local backups).
And that's actually one big strength of services like Dropbox and Box. To have automatically synced local backups, all you need to do is install the client on more than one computer!
So even if their servers vanish, you're left with multiple local up-to-date copies.
Presumably intended to handle hurricanes and flooding instead of tornadoes, the kettle house in Galveston TX is an inverted metal dome, (although I don't know why it has a door at ground level).
Have you seen the copyright warning in Revelations 22:19?
And if anyone takes words away from this scroll of prophecy, God will take away from that person any share in the tree of life and in the Holy City, which are described in this scroll.
I find it useful because I can just place a UK SIM in my phone when I visit there, giving me a UK number and rates.
I have a pay-as-you-go SIM in the US (T-Mobile) and I've had the same UK SIM for several years (Orange, now named EE, I think), topping it up with about 25 pounds each visit.
And I was originally with AT&T. When I wanted to switch to T-Mobile I just bought a new SIM.
So this isn't a perfect solution, but it's better than having a SIM-locked phone.
Is there some big advantage to viewing youtube via an app? I just use the browser on IOS. I used to use the app before it was removed in an upgrade, but I don't remember the experience being any better.
And when you empty the vacuum, you get to breath a giant cloud dust
What are you doing? Maybe it it different for some models, but for mine, you place the end of the canister into a trash bag and pull the trigger on the handle. You can even close the base again by pushing it while it's still in the trash bag.
I've used findimagedups. IIRC, it rescales each image to a standard size (64x64 or something) then filters and normalizes it down to a 1-bit-depth image.
It then builds a database of these 'hashes'/'signatures' and can output a list of files that have a threshold of bits in common.
That's how it can ignore small changes, it loses most detail and then can ignore a threshold of differences.
It would fail if an image was cropped or rotated, for instance. It could handle picture orientation it it was modified to store 4 versions of the signature, I guess.
It won't actually remove images itself (I wrote a script to read it's output and delete listed images matching a specific path).
I needed it because Dropbox was 'fixing' orientation when it uploaded images and I wanted to clear out ones I'd backed up directly from the camera. (I usually delete duplicate images based on hash.)
Well I heard that they track the trains, so they're sure to be tracking buses too.
You may need to use -c to force rsync to compare checksums.
I use something like this as part of my backup DATE=$(date +%C%y%m%d%H%M)
rsync --del --backup --backup-dir=../changedfiles_$DATE
The whole backup also goes to S3 glacier.
As an added step - I don't delete pictures from my camera unless they match the checksum of files in the _backup_ - not the original copy (via a script).
That way, once they're first copied from the camera, a single failure in the original, PC copy or backup copy will all result in the camera version remaining and I can check what has gone wrong.
Google Chrome allows easy creation and switching of user profiles.
I've wondered whether I should have a separate profile for each social site as a way to isolate them.
I turn off 3rd party cookies, but I heard that there was an exclusion for sites that you had logged into and received cookies from.
Meaning, 3rd-party ad site could not send you cookies, but Facebook still could if you'd signed in to it earlier.
More drastic isolation of browser instances is another option (I've wondered about sandboxie but not tried it).
I just hold down the lock switch for a second to turn on the LED, it's a built-in feature on my Nokia.
But why doesn't Android sandbox apps in a way that the app is unaware of? Just present all apps with an empty contact list, a fake GPS location, an empty drive, etc and the user grants permissions to substitute the real ones as needed. That way, all apps could be installed and you'd get a popup such as "this app wants your location" in a similar way to IOS, only this way the app would keep working if you said no.
Especially as a Faraday cage wouldn't prevent any device from recording video.
Don't the trees block a lot more of the road than they did then?
There's a webcam mounted inside the box near the window if anyone want's to check out the view (the pile of boxes placed there to represent the one's he's said to have placed there to rest the rifle on).
Those who count from 0 and the other 10 types.
that would probably take too many volts of time
Light-years of time.
Maybe even parsecs.
BTW, the term "new town" in this context is from a development plan to create more urban areas, not simply a reference to its age.
the concept of instantaneous control with the ansible
Fun fact: there is an anagram of 'ansible' that's connected to much of the discussion here.
Personally, I love the idea of autonomous vehicles, but what about privacy?
Well, one advantage of self-driving cars is that they can be fitted with curtains...
Well I was replying to a comment advising "keep local backups" and describing the situation where the provider or at least your account disappears.
For the scenario you describe, Dropbox, at least, allows restoring of deleted files for a while after, so you'd have to both delete your files and then lose your Dropbox account to lose everything.
I don't rely on anything like this myself, BTW, incremental encrypted DAR files stored in Amazon Glacier is my current offline storage (as well as encrypted local backups).
Keep at least one local backup.
And that's actually one big strength of services like Dropbox and Box. To have automatically synced local backups, all you need to do is install the client on more than one computer!
So even if their servers vanish, you're left with multiple local up-to-date copies.
Presumably intended to handle hurricanes and flooding instead of tornadoes, the kettle house in Galveston TX is an inverted metal dome, (although I don't know why it has a door at ground level).
And if anyone takes words away from this scroll of prophecy, God will take away from that person any share in the tree of life and in the Holy City, which are described in this scroll.
It would become a fairy-tale-like urban legend. "But when he went to find the yogurt shop, there was just a brick wall."
I find it useful because I can just place a UK SIM in my phone when I visit there, giving me a UK number and rates.
I have a pay-as-you-go SIM in the US (T-Mobile) and I've had the same UK SIM for several years (Orange, now named EE, I think), topping it up with about 25 pounds each visit.
And I was originally with AT&T. When I wanted to switch to T-Mobile I just bought a new SIM.
So this isn't a perfect solution, but it's better than having a SIM-locked phone.
It's finally the year of WAP.
Is there some big advantage to viewing youtube via an app? I just use the browser on IOS. I used to use the app before it was removed in an upgrade, but I don't remember the experience being any better.
Does anyone remember when the press covered stuff like this?
It was second from the top on http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/ this morning:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-23627656
Do any of the alternatives that people know of work on a wifi-only tablet?
"Find My iPhone" is really useful for tracking down the children's iPods if they're just lost in the house (or garden).
Sometimes a tablet goes missing and it would be helpful to be able to make it ping in a similar way.
Perhaps the lesson is don't search for a pressure cooker bomb at work, dumbass
But I work in video games, we're expected to!
The clock display on my C6 moves around, screen-saver fashion, and it is pretty dim.