Most have multiple inputs and a remote. And of course an embedded processor for settings/decoding video, but no custom OS over top to be hacked or never updated. It's just a LCD. Many don't have tuners, so you would need an external tuner or HTPC with tuner for OTA broadcasts. For streaming just grab the latest chromecast/roku/apple tv whatever.
...is to get a commercial display. No smart IOT OS crap to get bloated, infected or ignored when the next 4k model comes out. Hook whatever inputs you want to it and have your intelligence there.
The ISRG is both right and wrong. CAs cannot respond fast enough and likely do not have enough information to vet requests for new certificates fully. However, once a cert is used in bad faith it should be revoked.
The ad brokers do not care that bad ads slipped in as they make money on any, so they have zero incentive to remove malvertising other than a cursory effort to appease the lawyers and government.
This is why I install adblocks on all customer machines now (and we process a large amount). To an end user advertising of of limited utility, and comes with at minimum high annoyance and at worst malware/fraud/id theft.
Case in point, I was trying to find news information on a police standoff near my house, and one of the official local news stations ads were targeting nexus 6 with a scam 'free iPad' redirect. This only occurred on my Nexus 6, not a PC or LG phone. This is just normal day to day browsing, and I could not even read the news.
The state of affairs when it comes to online advertising and scams is very bad and will kill the industry very soon if changes are not made. Unfortunately it will likely bring down many good sites for real content with it.
Burying you head in the sand to the larger social issues arising from how most people use the internet is part of the problem. Just because you have a home doesn't end homlessness. Just because you have a TCPIP pipe does not remove larger societal problems with its use.
However, abrogating any responsibility over these things is how they continue to exist and grow. This is one reason us neckbeards get a bad name.
Wikipedia is overrun with territorial asshats who decry even sane edits. The tools used to promote change are in their hands, so newcomers are alienated. Big surprise. As others have mentioned, good edits get warned and deleted constantly. It is not a fun place to be.
Now some may argue that this is part of an effort to keep out slanted/paid content, but that ship has sailed, and the interests that can afford to pay editors to push articles a certain way have the power and funding to push through the curmudgeons. The current attitude actually only serves those interests, as small, independent editors are more likely to get discouraged and leave.
Mr. Wales doesn't care though, as long as he can do his yearly beg for money dance all is good in his world.
Petrol and diesel generators are limited by thermodynamic laws (they do not allow an efficiency coefficient of more than 80% for example), but such laws do not apply to fuel cells.
OK, I know what the author was trying to say, but dang, if I had put that on paper in my thermo class, Dr Biritz would have run me through with a sword.
Free Bitdefender is actually pretty light, even runs well on AMD A8s and such. We also use the enterprise BitDefender engine with active protection as part of our MSP service package and it can be very resource intensive.
I do not touch combofix anymore. It broke to many services even in win 7 machines for my comfort. JRT has been good, but you need to be aware it clears the event logs, and you cannot stop it, so of you want to parse old events, do it before a JRT run. I do not like it because the developer basically said, yah I delete logs, I won't say why and I won't stop. Makes me wonder what JRT is actually hiding.
MSSE was great, but the catch rate has really fallen off in the past 2 years. For a free AV bitdefender or avira are where it is at. Avira tends to be spammy, while bitdefender is quiet, so there in is my current top of the heap.
Add in a free MalWareBytes scan every 2 weeks, a good adblocker, and non-ISP DNS and you can't get much better.
If you think you are infected, MalwareBytes anti-root kit, hitman pro, and malwarebytes, and adwcleaner are a good combot to get most stuff out.
Source, I manage a shop that does lots of residential repairs (ie 80% viruses).
It means MS has a copy of the keys to your bitlocker encrypted data. And by inference anyone with access to MS, hackers, government, disgruntled employees.. any could log into your computer and use the keys to unlock what you thought was encrypted and safe.
Will be when someone figures out they can attached digital books (and other media) to a block chain. Allowing new copies to be charged as the rightsholder wants, and used digital copies distributed at fair market prices.
While I do not agree with the Internet of Things completely, you are thinking about it incorrectly. Fail-safes have been around forever. In the case of an internet connected door, someone at some point would be responsible for programming its default behavior when power or data are unavailable (locked or unlocked, or manual mode). Same for any other device.
As to burglars, it simply changes the skillset required to be successful. A determined thief or gang of thieves will find a way in if they want regardless. A better preventative measure than any lock is taking away motive. While some people will always commit crime for the desire or thrill of it, most are of perceived necessity, and that often boils down to poverty (of money, family, and/or education). Locks, digital or otherwise will never fix that.
Better yet, virtualize both into different servers, as well as any other major service. This partitions services, providing a layer of obfuscation and additional security
Simple solution. Have his mobile authentications go to YOUR phone, or to a Google Voice number you control. On personal machines he should stay logged in and not have to use it and bother you but rarely.
It surely does. Let me list some with government run and/or heavily regulated healthcare that run better than ours.
UK (although quickly changing), Canada, Japan, Sweeden, Norway, Denmark, Iceland....
The bottom line is that healthcare deals with pain, disease and death. There will always be a very vocal group that is unhappy with the current state of things because they or their loved ones are sick or dying despite best efforts. The least we can do is not have private corporations or government stick their hands so far in the pockets of those affected as to bankrupt them and ruin their lives.
Case in point. My grand mother recently had a stroke. I am her power of attorney, and signing papers for her. She is paralyzed and unable to speak. After Medicare, the skilled nursing facility is billing ME over $4000 a month. If needed I can likely get that debt reassigned to her, but that will also cost in time and legal fees and probably still leave a stain on my credit. I do not have $4000 a month. I make roughly 3k per month. Extra is reinvested in a business I am starting as my retirement vehicle (as an ex felon with 10 years in I have no savings or safety net). Medicaid denied covering her care for two very stupid reasons. 1. No balances on provided bank statements (untrue), and an unclaimed life insurance policy. I did not know of the policy, and found no paperwork on it. My grandmother cannot speak, and I asked the social services office to inform me of any assets they found that I was unaware of. They did not (even though the caseworker said she would).
Where in any sane world dose this make sense? Would it not make more sense to say that these absolutely normal parts of life such as illness and injury are covered by the payments you made earlier? And before you say, she could have saved or prepared for this eventuality, not everyone is financially or mentally capable to do so, and not all illness and injury is foreseeable.
So yes, my argument does follow. We have a failed system. Others work better even if not perfect. Even our new system (obamacare) was corrupted from the start by 'free market' interests. To act like the magical hand of the market will fix it is like relying on the tooth fairy for your retirement fund.
OP here. I challenge you to name a country with a fully free market healthcare system that works well. Please, I am waiting.
It either needs to be government run (with a largely non corrupt government that we do not have), or very heavily regulated in terms of pricing (ala the Japanese model).
I don 't control manufacturer decisions or neweggs catalog. I pointed in a direction where some examples could be found. Do your homework.
Most have multiple inputs and a remote. And of course an embedded processor for settings/decoding video, but no custom OS over top to be hacked or never updated. It's just a LCD. Many don't have tuners, so you would need an external tuner or HTPC with tuner for OTA broadcasts. For streaming just grab the latest chromecast/roku/apple tv whatever.
Since I like Neweggs stance on patents, here is a non affiliate link to some examples: http://www.newegg.com/Commerci...
This was not how I envisioned the Internet of "Things".
The ad brokers do not care that bad ads slipped in as they make money on any, so they have zero incentive to remove malvertising other than a cursory effort to appease the lawyers and government.
This is why I install adblocks on all customer machines now (and we process a large amount). To an end user advertising of of limited utility, and comes with at minimum high annoyance and at worst malware/fraud/id theft.
Case in point, I was trying to find news information on a police standoff near my house, and one of the official local news stations ads were targeting nexus 6 with a scam 'free iPad' redirect. This only occurred on my Nexus 6, not a PC or LG phone. This is just normal day to day browsing, and I could not even read the news.
The state of affairs when it comes to online advertising and scams is very bad and will kill the industry very soon if changes are not made. Unfortunately it will likely bring down many good sites for real content with it.
Read it as effective, not effect I've. God, some people are as dense as stellar material.
However, abrogating any responsibility over these things is how they continue to exist and grow. This is one reason us neckbeards get a bad name.
Oh.. and this: http://weknowmemes.com/wp-cont...
Now some may argue that this is part of an effort to keep out slanted/paid content, but that ship has sailed, and the interests that can afford to pay editors to push articles a certain way have the power and funding to push through the curmudgeons. The current attitude actually only serves those interests, as small, independent editors are more likely to get discouraged and leave.
Mr. Wales doesn't care though, as long as he can do his yearly beg for money dance all is good in his world.
I use boot camp you insensitive clod.
Petrol and diesel generators are limited by thermodynamic laws (they do not allow an efficiency coefficient of more than 80% for example), but such laws do not apply to fuel cells.
OK, I know what the author was trying to say, but dang, if I had put that on paper in my thermo class, Dr Biritz would have run me through with a sword.
And, entropy would have increased thereby.
Free Bitdefender is actually pretty light, even runs well on AMD A8s and such. We also use the enterprise BitDefender engine with active protection as part of our MSP service package and it can be very resource intensive.
I do not touch combofix anymore. It broke to many services even in win 7 machines for my comfort. JRT has been good, but you need to be aware it clears the event logs, and you cannot stop it, so of you want to parse old events, do it before a JRT run. I do not like it because the developer basically said, yah I delete logs, I won't say why and I won't stop. Makes me wonder what JRT is actually hiding.
MSSE was great, but the catch rate has really fallen off in the past 2 years. For a free AV bitdefender or avira are where it is at. Avira tends to be spammy, while bitdefender is quiet, so there in is my current top of the heap.
Add in a free MalWareBytes scan every 2 weeks, a good adblocker, and non-ISP DNS and you can't get much better.
If you think you are infected, MalwareBytes anti-root kit, hitman pro, and malwarebytes, and adwcleaner are a good combot to get most stuff out.
Source, I manage a shop that does lots of residential repairs (ie 80% viruses).
It means MS has a copy of the keys to your bitlocker encrypted data. And by inference anyone with access to MS, hackers, government, disgruntled employees.. any could log into your computer and use the keys to unlock what you thought was encrypted and safe.
Will be when someone figures out they can attached digital books (and other media) to a block chain. Allowing new copies to be charged as the rightsholder wants, and used digital copies distributed at fair market prices.
As to burglars, it simply changes the skillset required to be successful. A determined thief or gang of thieves will find a way in if they want regardless. A better preventative measure than any lock is taking away motive. While some people will always commit crime for the desire or thrill of it, most are of perceived necessity, and that often boils down to poverty (of money, family, and/or education). Locks, digital or otherwise will never fix that.
Better yet, virtualize both into different servers, as well as any other major service. This partitions services, providing a layer of obfuscation and additional security
Possibly, but there is an upper limit to the processing power and energy available to an AI, so a million copies may not be possible.
This is potentially good for an obfuscated messaging service, not an encrypted internet proxy for all traffic.
Soon you will receive a cease and desist from "Eventuated Technologies LLC", leaders in fusion, flying cars and holographic storage.
Simple solution. Have his mobile authentications go to YOUR phone, or to a Google Voice number you control. On personal machines he should stay logged in and not have to use it and bother you but rarely.
My parole office and therapist asked me NOT to think of the children so much.
UK (although quickly changing), Canada, Japan, Sweeden, Norway, Denmark, Iceland....
The bottom line is that healthcare deals with pain, disease and death. There will always be a very vocal group that is unhappy with the current state of things because they or their loved ones are sick or dying despite best efforts. The least we can do is not have private corporations or government stick their hands so far in the pockets of those affected as to bankrupt them and ruin their lives.
Case in point. My grand mother recently had a stroke. I am her power of attorney, and signing papers for her. She is paralyzed and unable to speak. After Medicare, the skilled nursing facility is billing ME over $4000 a month. If needed I can likely get that debt reassigned to her, but that will also cost in time and legal fees and probably still leave a stain on my credit. I do not have $4000 a month. I make roughly 3k per month. Extra is reinvested in a business I am starting as my retirement vehicle (as an ex felon with 10 years in I have no savings or safety net). Medicaid denied covering her care for two very stupid reasons. 1. No balances on provided bank statements (untrue), and an unclaimed life insurance policy. I did not know of the policy, and found no paperwork on it. My grandmother cannot speak, and I asked the social services office to inform me of any assets they found that I was unaware of. They did not (even though the caseworker said she would).
Where in any sane world dose this make sense? Would it not make more sense to say that these absolutely normal parts of life such as illness and injury are covered by the payments you made earlier? And before you say, she could have saved or prepared for this eventuality, not everyone is financially or mentally capable to do so, and not all illness and injury is foreseeable.
So yes, my argument does follow. We have a failed system. Others work better even if not perfect. Even our new system (obamacare) was corrupted from the start by 'free market' interests. To act like the magical hand of the market will fix it is like relying on the tooth fairy for your retirement fund.
It either needs to be government run (with a largely non corrupt government that we do not have), or very heavily regulated in terms of pricing (ala the Japanese model).