"For best results with applications like 3D games, set a display that's attached to the eGPU as the primary system display" https://support.apple.com/en-u...
Figured. But you wouldn't need an external monitor for GPU-accelerated applications, like photoshop or final cut.
So is this for external monitors only, I assume? It's not like you could just plug a thunderbolt cable to your Macbook and have the graphics capability on the laptop display.
I'd rather be spied on by the Chinese, than an American 3-letter agency. At a minimum, the Chinese can't arrest you, or extradite you to China if you go on vacation.
It would be interesting to try community fiber, 1Gbps symmetric broadband, for a low monthly cost maybe $30-$40 per month per household. There's all this "dark fiber" that the federal government subsidized just sitting under our streets. If communities were able to connect the last mile to all that fiber we could bypass the telecoms entirely.
You'd basically pay nothing for internet access then pay for TV and streaming services. Fuck verizon!
Obstruction of Justice: An Overview of Some of the Federal Statutes That Prohibit Interference with Judicial, Executive, or Legislative Activities :
Following are some of the statutes which exist to deal with obstruction of justice:
Witness Tampering (18 U.S.C. 1512) . Obstructing Federal Courts (18 U.S.C. 1503) Obstructing Congressional or Administrative Proceedings (18 U.S.C. 1505) Retaliating Against Federal Witnesses (18 U.S.C. 1513) Conspiracy to Obstruct (18 U.S.C. 371) Obstruction of Justice by Violence or Threat, or Violence and Threats Against Officials, Former Officials, and Their Families (18 U.S.C. 115) Violence and Threats Against Federal Officials on Account of the Performance of Their Duties (18 U.S.C. 115(a)(1)(A)) Obstruction by Mail or Wire Fraud (18 U.S.C. 1341, 1343, 1346) Obstruction of Investigations by Destruction of Evidence (18 U.S.C. 1519) Obstruction of Justice by Deception
Asking the Director of the FBI to stop investigating something isn't one of them. Unless Trump threatened an act of violence against Comey, or a federal officer, or tried to bribe him, or tampered or destroyed evidence. from what's been reported he hasn't committed any crimes, just by asking Comey to "let it go"
That the torrent site operators got spooked after kickass torrents operator, Artem Vaulin lost his extradition request in Poland. Now anybody linked to a torrent site is potentially liable to spend a decade or more in a federal prison, even if they don't live or host anything in the U.S.
"While the Tesla Motors co-founder spent more than ten years in the United States prior to becoming a citizen in 2002, it appears that he did so legally through various visa programs."
Has there been any updates on the SoundHound language processing tech. Because if it's not fake, than it's pretty impressive and sounds similar to what Google is trying to do.
It's funny you should say this, because (and more interestingly) a former tor developer, who also has a PhD in CompSci, is now the lead researcher for a security firm closely aligned to to the FBI, in fact employing some of the agents responsible for catching DPR and shutting down SilkRoad.
"Matt Edman is a cybersecurity expert who worked as a part-time employee at Tor Project, the nonprofit that builds Tor software and maintains the network, almost a decade ago." "By 2012, Edman was working at Mitre Corporation as a senior cybersecurity engineer assigned to the FBI's Remote Operations Unit, the bureau’s little-known internal team tapped to build or buy custom hacks and malware for spying on potential criminals. With an unparalleled pedigree established from his time inside the Tor Project, Edman became an FBI contractor tasked with hacking Tor as part of Operation Torpedo, a sting against three Dark Net child pornography sites that used Tor to cloak their owners and patrons."
And she's worried the FBI might try to use her to "infiltrate" Tor. Please, they're already using consultants who probably get paid 3x whatever she's making to actively deanonymize Tor.
But the thing is that outfits like the NSA (because, let's face it, all the FBI has to do to search or hack into your machine or wifi network, is get a rubber-stamped warrant)--who don't need a warrant and go after very hard to infiltrate targets, rely on very obscure and hard to reproduce vulnerabilities in hardware or software, that only they know about, and then very cleverly exploit those vulnerabilities to pown the system.
And then if that doesn't work, they get their friends at the CIA to exploit the 3Bs of encryption--burglary, bribery, and blackmail.
Last I checked they don't just hand out residency permits, and tourist visas for Americans expire after 90 days, at which point she has to leave Germany. How did she do it?
The U.S. Marshals are responsible for securing Federal Courthouses, acting on arrest warrants, and retrieving fugitives. They're not detectives, responsible for building a case, like the FBI.
To my understanding the feds used a flashed-based exploit based on the decloak module in metasploit
"It worked because Adobe’s Flash plug-in can be used to initiate a direct connection over the Internet, bypassing Tor and giving away the user’s true IP address." https://www.wired.com/2014/12/...
Is this still the case? What other ways could the feds have used to decloak a Tor session?
"it was that the fastest to digest and most pedestrian content would be promoted to the front page the fastest whereas any technically involved content will taper off into obscurity."
Also the fact that you can't sort by lowest rated comment, and are artificially restricted to the first 500 comments (on top of the fact that when you 'load more' it only loads like the next 20, so you can't even navigate to the downvoted comments quickly) adds to that hive mentality. It makes seeing dissenting or unpopular comments next to impossible, by design.
I'm not sure I follow. Most home "routers" also have wifi capabilities. They allow you to connect to your ISPs modem, connect several LAN computers to the modem, as well as connect WiFi devices.
How would your setup work? Do you have a LAN router that connects to the WAN modem, and then a separate AP for Wifi devices? That seems expensive, and not easy to maintain.
I had a Chromebook with an Exynos 5 and wasn't that great, in addition to the hoops I had to jump through to install Ubuntu on it. I traded it in for a Celeron Cromebook, which is faster. Much better experience, plus the i915 graphics driver is much more mature and has video acceleration support.
"just because of how they think is too different from mainstream."
Pretty sure a crippling mental illness is a little different than thinking Renoir was out of his league when painting "The Piazza San Marco"!
"For best results with applications like 3D games, set a display that's attached to the eGPU as the primary system display"
https://support.apple.com/en-u...
Figured. But you wouldn't need an external monitor for GPU-accelerated applications, like photoshop or final cut.
So is this for external monitors only, I assume? It's not like you could just plug a thunderbolt cable to your Macbook and have the graphics capability on the laptop display.
I'd rather be spied on by the Chinese, than an American 3-letter agency. At a minimum, the Chinese can't arrest you, or extradite you to China if you go on vacation.
It would be interesting to try community fiber, 1Gbps symmetric broadband, for a low monthly cost maybe $30-$40 per month per household.
There's all this "dark fiber" that the federal government subsidized just sitting under our streets. If communities were able to connect the last mile to all that fiber we could bypass the telecoms entirely.
You'd basically pay nothing for internet access then pay for TV and streaming services. Fuck verizon!
Obstruction of Justice: An Overview of Some of the Federal Statutes That Prohibit Interference with Judicial, Executive, or Legislative Activities :
Following are some of the statutes which exist to deal with obstruction of justice:
Witness Tampering (18 U.S.C. 1512) .
Obstructing Federal Courts (18 U.S.C. 1503)
Obstructing Congressional or Administrative Proceedings (18 U.S.C. 1505)
Retaliating Against Federal Witnesses (18 U.S.C. 1513)
Conspiracy to Obstruct (18 U.S.C. 371)
Obstruction of Justice by Violence or Threat, or Violence and Threats Against Officials, Former Officials, and Their Families (18 U.S.C. 115)
Violence and Threats Against Federal Officials on Account of the Performance of Their Duties (18 U.S.C. 115(a)(1)(A))
Obstruction by Mail or Wire Fraud (18 U.S.C. 1341, 1343, 1346)
Obstruction of Investigations by Destruction of Evidence (18 U.S.C. 1519)
Obstruction of Justice by Deception
Asking the Director of the FBI to stop investigating something isn't one of them. Unless Trump threatened an act of violence against Comey, or a federal officer, or tried to bribe him, or tampered or destroyed evidence. from what's been reported he hasn't committed any crimes, just by asking Comey to "let it go"
That the torrent site operators got spooked after kickass torrents operator, Artem Vaulin lost his extradition request in Poland. Now anybody linked to a torrent site is potentially liable to spend a decade or more in a federal prison, even if they don't live or host anything in the U.S.
People with legitimate grievances aren't "trolls", just people you disagree with.
That's not trolling.
Trolling is the art of annoying people on the internet through the use of contrarianism, and/or dickishness, purely for the lulz! Jeez!
Just another case of feelz before realz!
Because West Virginia broke off from Virginia during the Civil War, and Congress recognized the new state.
Well, you do have the specs to work off of, and you can audit Android 7.1 which it's running. Not that hard really.
"While the Tesla Motors co-founder spent more than ten years in the United States prior to becoming a citizen in 2002, it appears that he did so legally through various visa programs."
http://www.snopes.com/elon-mus...
Has there been any updates on the SoundHound language processing tech. Because if it's not fake, than it's pretty impressive and sounds similar to what Google is trying to do.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
This car has maybe 3" of clearance off the ground. i could see it easily getting stuck pulling in to a parking lot.
It's funny you should say this, because (and more interestingly) a former tor developer, who also has a PhD in CompSci, is now the lead researcher for a security firm closely aligned to to the FBI, in fact employing some of the agents responsible for catching DPR and shutting down SilkRoad.
"Matt Edman is a cybersecurity expert who worked as a part-time employee at Tor Project, the nonprofit that builds Tor software and maintains the network, almost a decade ago."
"By 2012, Edman was working at Mitre Corporation as a senior cybersecurity engineer assigned to the FBI's Remote Operations Unit, the bureau’s little-known internal team tapped to build or buy custom hacks and malware for spying on potential criminals. With an unparalleled pedigree established from his time inside the Tor Project, Edman became an FBI contractor tasked with hacking Tor as part of Operation Torpedo, a sting against three Dark Net child pornography sites that used Tor to cloak their owners and patrons."
http://www.dailydot.com/politi...
And she's worried the FBI might try to use her to "infiltrate" Tor. Please, they're already using consultants who probably get paid 3x whatever she's making to actively deanonymize Tor.
She's a tad paranoid if you ask me.
But the thing is that outfits like the NSA (because, let's face it, all the FBI has to do to search or hack into your machine or wifi network, is get a rubber-stamped warrant)--who don't need a warrant and go after very hard to infiltrate targets, rely on very obscure and hard to reproduce vulnerabilities in hardware or software, that only they know about, and then very cleverly exploit those vulnerabilities to pown the system.
And then if that doesn't work, they get their friends at the CIA to exploit the 3Bs of encryption--burglary, bribery, and blackmail.
Last I checked they don't just hand out residency permits, and tourist visas for Americans expire after 90 days, at which point she has to leave Germany.
How did she do it?
The U.S. Marshals are responsible for securing Federal Courthouses, acting on arrest warrants, and retrieving fugitives. They're not detectives, responsible for building a case, like the FBI.
To my understanding the feds used a flashed-based exploit based on the decloak module in metasploit
"It worked because Adobe’s Flash plug-in can be used to initiate a direct connection over the Internet, bypassing Tor and giving away the user’s true IP address."
https://www.wired.com/2014/12/...
Is this still the case? What other ways could the feds have used to decloak a Tor session?
A college freshman designing a new way of testing blood that the big labs couldn't figure out how to do? Really?
But she's an empowered female disrupter! You're just jealous!
"it was that the fastest to digest and most pedestrian content would be promoted to the front page the fastest whereas any technically involved content will taper off into obscurity."
Also the fact that you can't sort by lowest rated comment, and are artificially restricted to the first 500 comments (on top of the fact that when you 'load more' it only loads like the next 20, so you can't even navigate to the downvoted comments quickly) adds to that hive mentality. It makes seeing dissenting or unpopular comments next to impossible, by design.
Keeping physical copies of keys or keyfiles makes them subject to being seized by LE upon the serving of a subpoena, at least in the U.S.
I'm not sure I follow. Most home "routers" also have wifi capabilities. They allow you to connect to your ISPs modem, connect several LAN computers to the modem, as well as connect WiFi devices.
How would your setup work? Do you have a LAN router that connects to the WAN modem, and then a separate AP for Wifi devices? That seems expensive, and not easy to maintain.
I had a Chromebook with an Exynos 5 and wasn't that great, in addition to the hoops I had to jump through to install Ubuntu on it.
I traded it in for a Celeron Cromebook, which is faster. Much better experience, plus the i915 graphics driver is much more mature and has video acceleration support.
Add to that the fact that she's not a gamer:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
was involved in a MLM handwriting scam:
http://webcache.googleusercont...
https://www.reddit.com/r/Kotak...