When I last had a card like this, I just took a hole punch and punched out the RFID chip. they're pretty easy to locate (small square divot, usually right near the RFID symbol printed on the back of the card). You can also pry them out easily with a razor blade if you don't want a hole all the way through the card.
Snipping out the RFID chip shouldn't affect the smart card chip in any way, since they should be totally unrelated mechanisms. I could be wrong though - I haven't seen an RFID included in a modern chip card yet.
This was my first thought as well... but I suspect the problem is the latter - where some data in the database has incorrect coordinates and needs to be adjusted so that it is properly relative to other data in the database.
The trick is to next automate the update of coordinates in the database based on the time that has elapsed since they were last "corrected" - and I'm sure with a bit of annual tracking and simple math, someone could implement such an algorithm.
Well, the first statement was correct if you want to re-watch a video over and over - by streaming it, you're using more bandwidth than downloading it once to watch it offline.
But... the second statement was correct if you want to watch it once...
You can configure a game controller, IR remote, or even a remote device over wifi using Kodi's HTTP interface, or a dedicated app (I often use an android tablet running Kore to control my kodi PC from the couch).
And when I want to do some serious work (like editing filenames, etc.) I grab the bluetooth keyboard with built-in trackpad that sits on the table next to my TV and use that.
Kodi rocks - I can't tell you how many people who visit ask me to setup Kodi machines for them (i usually refuse due to lack of time, not to mention it works best when you have a media library sitting somewhere on the network, which most people don't).
right afterwards got hired at a new job that pays closer to $78k a year. I'll be doing basically the same work at the new job.
Each time I've been laid off (twice in my career), I've landed a better job getting paid more money...
So being laid off isn't always a terrible thing - sometimes it's really just the spark that ignites the job hunt for a better paying job. I know the first time it happened my salary pretty much tripled with the next job - which suggests that the company I had been with for 5 years had been taking advantage of my accumulated skills and entry-level pay.
In my case, I ended up doing software development for different industries each time, which also gave me an opportunity to learn something new.
Actually, I believe there is absolutely no law against making copies of money for your own personal use.
Feel free to make a bazillion copies of a $20 bill - as long as you don't then try to use them as actual currency, you're all good! Use them to wipe your ass, draw mustaches on them, build a house with them, do whatever you want.
ANYONE can sell GPL software as long as any modifications they have made to it are released as GPL as well.
There is absolutely no restrictions on selling GPL software as long as you abide by the license, which states clearly that you must release all your modifications under the GPL license.
If you need to transcribe the actual error details, accuracy matters.
Most humans are terrible at transcribing what they read directly to text (especially if it's full of numbers and symbols).
In the case of Haiku (the operating system), the QR Code in the kernel debugger includes more information about the error (not just the error name), so it makes it easier to transcribe what the user sees on the screen to text which can be used to file a bug report.
I'm guessing the next step in their evil plan is to convince congress to pass some law making such mechanisms mandatory in the U.S. - at which point they will license the tech and profit.
Face it, Disney loves to lobby congress, they have done so successfully for many decades.
And it's interesting to note that Democrats love to raise taxes and give money to the people who cannot support themselves.
It would seem that a party that panders to poor, uneducated, jobless people would get the most support from those very same people... so build an education system that spits out people who support your agenda, and what do you get?
Paying people to find bugs and report them responsibly does give those people an incentive to not do something worse with them.
In a way, this economy takes possible would-be black hats and turns them into white hats. I suspect there are far fewer people capable of finding every last exploit than there are exploits, so if we keep those people busy and paid doing what they do best, at least they won't be doing something more nefarious.
No, but you can start by eliminating that $100/mo TV subscription, and then find some other ways to save money too
I'm constantly amazed at what people spend per month on things they think are "necessary".
I've come to realize that many people will spend every dime they make rather than save it - and then complain about it later when they have nothing saved and are still living paycheck to paycheck. I've witnessed several times people spend their "raise" after they get it, buying a new car, etc. It's pitiful.
A more fitting analogy would be that you gave your car away for free and sent in the release of liability form so that if the person who ends up with your vehicle decides to use it for a hit-and-run without registering it in their name, at least there's a record showing that you have released liability to the DMV (aka, you sold the car, and you're no longer responsible for whatever happens with it)
Except now pretty much every affected machine needs to have its SSL certificates and private keys revoked and trashed, and new keys/certificates issued.
In the meantime, thousands (if not millions) of sites leaked sensitive data to anyone who wanted to snoop on it.
Yeah, no big deal, none at all...no repercussions will come of this.
I'm pretty certain all of the responses to my comment have proven the story in this article.
After reading all these righteous people claiming I'm the ignorant asshole causing the world to die, I'm pretty much dead-set against ever getting a flu shot at this point.
Maybe I'll die, maybe you'll die, but you can all go fuck yourselves for telling me what I must stick in my body.
I've had the flu - I have 3 kids, the eldest in high school. I know what the flu is like, and, yes it's miserable.
But, I choose not to get flu shots.
For those with compromised immune systems, that feel like they must have a flu shot, by all means, get one. I will still laugh at you when you complain that you feel like crap for several days after getting said shot, and you can laugh at me when when i'm incapacitated for a week after getting the flu. We'll call it even.
Maybe if the health community spent less time pushing flu shots every year, people would begin to respect vaccinations for their useful purpose.
I refuse to get a flu shot - I'd rather my immune system had a natural chance at defending me against it, and it's not likely to kill me. And yet, doctors and nurses try their hardest to convince us that these flu shots are necessary to remain healthy. Every time I walk into a doctors office, it seems like they're asking me if I've had my flu shot yet.
I think there needs to be a clear line between vaccinations that prevent crippling and life-destroying disease, and those that just prevent a standard illness that almost everyone gets and naturally overcomes.
And neither are spaces (with proportional fonts)
When I last had a card like this, I just took a hole punch and punched out the RFID chip. they're pretty easy to locate (small square divot, usually right near the RFID symbol printed on the back of the card). You can also pry them out easily with a razor blade if you don't want a hole all the way through the card.
Snipping out the RFID chip shouldn't affect the smart card chip in any way, since they should be totally unrelated mechanisms. I could be wrong though - I haven't seen an RFID included in a modern chip card yet.
This was my first thought as well... but I suspect the problem is the latter - where some data in the database has incorrect coordinates and needs to be adjusted so that it is properly relative to other data in the database.
The trick is to next automate the update of coordinates in the database based on the time that has elapsed since they were last "corrected" - and I'm sure with a bit of annual tracking and simple math, someone could implement such an algorithm.
Surveyors start with known markers, and use angles and distance to find property borders... as has been done for hundreds of years.
GPS is a modern invention, and pretty nifty, but it doesn't dictate property lines by law for historical reasons.
When AT&T oversells their local infrastructure, there are definitely "peak hours"...
Bonus when they decide upgrading and maintaining it is pointless, and simply stop signing up new customers in the area.
Well, the first statement was correct if you want to re-watch a video over and over - by streaming it, you're using more bandwidth than downloading it once to watch it offline.
But... the second statement was correct if you want to watch it once...
Obviously you've never used kodi...
You can configure a game controller, IR remote, or even a remote device over wifi using Kodi's HTTP interface, or a dedicated app (I often use an android tablet running Kore to control my kodi PC from the couch).
And when I want to do some serious work (like editing filenames, etc.) I grab the bluetooth keyboard with built-in trackpad that sits on the table next to my TV and use that.
Kodi rocks - I can't tell you how many people who visit ask me to setup Kodi machines for them (i usually refuse due to lack of time, not to mention it works best when you have a media library sitting somewhere on the network, which most people don't).
right afterwards got hired at a new job that pays closer to $78k a year. I'll be doing basically the same work at the new job.
Each time I've been laid off (twice in my career), I've landed a better job getting paid more money...
So being laid off isn't always a terrible thing - sometimes it's really just the spark that ignites the job hunt for a better paying job. I know the first time it happened my salary pretty much tripled with the next job - which suggests that the company I had been with for 5 years had been taking advantage of my accumulated skills and entry-level pay.
In my case, I ended up doing software development for different industries each time, which also gave me an opportunity to learn something new.
It's certainly on the wrong track all right - when the people enforcing the laws can't even follow them, we know we're fucked.
Actually, I believe there is absolutely no law against making copies of money for your own personal use.
Feel free to make a bazillion copies of a $20 bill - as long as you don't then try to use them as actual currency, you're all good! Use them to wipe your ass, draw mustaches on them, build a house with them, do whatever you want.
WRONG, you clearly don't understand GPL.
ANYONE can sell GPL software as long as any modifications they have made to it are released as GPL as well.
There is absolutely no restrictions on selling GPL software as long as you abide by the license, which states clearly that you must release all your modifications under the GPL license.
If you need to transcribe the actual error details, accuracy matters.
Most humans are terrible at transcribing what they read directly to text (especially if it's full of numbers and symbols).
In the case of Haiku (the operating system), the QR Code in the kernel debugger includes more information about the error (not just the error name), so it makes it easier to transcribe what the user sees on the screen to text which can be used to file a bug report.
https://www.haiku-os.org/blog/...
Probably the latter.
I'm guessing the next step in their evil plan is to convince congress to pass some law making such mechanisms mandatory in the U.S. - at which point they will license the tech and profit.
Face it, Disney loves to lobby congress, they have done so successfully for many decades.
And it's interesting to note that Democrats love to raise taxes and give money to the people who cannot support themselves.
It would seem that a party that panders to poor, uneducated, jobless people would get the most support from those very same people... so build an education system that spits out people who support your agenda, and what do you get?
Paying people to find bugs and report them responsibly does give those people an incentive to not do something worse with them.
In a way, this economy takes possible would-be black hats and turns them into white hats. I suspect there are far fewer people capable of finding every last exploit than there are exploits, so if we keep those people busy and paid doing what they do best, at least they won't be doing something more nefarious.
No, but you can start by eliminating that $100/mo TV subscription, and then find some other ways to save money too
I'm constantly amazed at what people spend per month on things they think are "necessary".
I've come to realize that many people will spend every dime they make rather than save it - and then complain about it later when they have nothing saved and are still living paycheck to paycheck. I've witnessed several times people spend their "raise" after they get it, buying a new car, etc. It's pitiful.
And that's hard?
As mentioned further below, saving ~$5000/year is possible - maybe throw away that $100/mo TV subscription or something.
It's funny how often you run into a "software developer" that is also bad at math - it seems to be pretty common these days.
A more fitting analogy would be that you gave your car away for free and sent in the release of liability form so that if the person who ends up with your vehicle decides to use it for a hit-and-run without registering it in their name, at least there's a record showing that you have released liability to the DMV (aka, you sold the car, and you're no longer responsible for whatever happens with it)
And don't forget the GnuTLS failure similar to Apple's
Now we're just waiting to hear that Microsoft's IIS was also borked in some unexpected way, and it'll be a royal flush eh?
Except now pretty much every affected machine needs to have its SSL certificates and private keys revoked and trashed, and new keys/certificates issued.
In the meantime, thousands (if not millions) of sites leaked sensitive data to anyone who wanted to snoop on it.
Yeah, no big deal, none at all...no repercussions will come of this.
I'm pretty certain all of the responses to my comment have proven the story in this article.
After reading all these righteous people claiming I'm the ignorant asshole causing the world to die, I'm pretty much dead-set against ever getting a flu shot at this point.
Maybe I'll die, maybe you'll die, but you can all go fuck yourselves for telling me what I must stick in my body.
And I have a right to be a selfish jackass. Thank you very much.
I've had the flu - I have 3 kids, the eldest in high school. I know what the flu is like, and, yes it's miserable.
But, I choose not to get flu shots.
For those with compromised immune systems, that feel like they must have a flu shot, by all means, get one. I will still laugh at you when you complain that you feel like crap for several days after getting said shot, and you can laugh at me when when i'm incapacitated for a week after getting the flu. We'll call it even.
Maybe if the health community spent less time pushing flu shots every year, people would begin to respect vaccinations for their useful purpose.
I refuse to get a flu shot - I'd rather my immune system had a natural chance at defending me against it, and it's not likely to kill me. And yet, doctors and nurses try their hardest to convince us that these flu shots are necessary to remain healthy. Every time I walk into a doctors office, it seems like they're asking me if I've had my flu shot yet.
I think there needs to be a clear line between vaccinations that prevent crippling and life-destroying disease, and those that just prevent a standard illness that almost everyone gets and naturally overcomes.