"Police in West Midlands, UK have released footage of criminals stealing a car by relaying a signal from the key inside the home, to the car in the driveway."
I have not found anything like that either so...
For the size form-factor I use an iPad Air with a cover that has a built in Bluetooth keyboard.
For a larger screen and better keyboard I use a ChromeBook.
I have a Linux and a Windows VM in "the cloud" that I connect to from those devices via Apache Guacamole
https://guacamole.apache.org/
I installed Debian Linux on my EeePC and I use it for command line access to the Linux VM via ssh and occasionaly I run Firefox (via 'startx' because there is not enough space to install a full window manager).
Those are not what I would call very old:-) The first computer I learned to program was originally built in 1966 and later donated to our university in the mid '70s http://2eo.blogspot.ie/2007/12...
I found an old printout among some old maths books. Our school was close to the NUIG university engineering building and the professor had invited our maths class to learn how to program the IBM 1800 computer. This was one of my first programs. http://2eo.blogspot.ie/2014/04...
To give a non-specialist a good understanding of what radiation levels were detected they should calibrate in units of banana equivalent dose
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
I downloaded and built there End-to-End Chrome extension. I reported a few bugs and they were quickly fixed. Then I waited for Google to finish the development/testing and announce it to The World, but two years later there is only silence on that. No news since 2014 https://security.googleblog.co...
To paraphrase XKCD, I have been posting my public key for 37 years now but nobody has ever asked me for it or used it for anything as far as I can tell.
I downloaded the end-to-end code https://github.com/google/end-... built it and ran some tests. I reported one bug to them (no biggie, just a mismatch with some libs they depend on). They were quick to respond, update their build and thank me. However there hasn't been any activity there for months. Yahoo had joined in and said they were putting it into production (but I don't use their mail so I have not seen it).
Has anyone any idea what's happening with Google End-to-End ?
Her dad has a love of maths and is a lecturer in a local university maths department. She writes about how he encouraged her interest in maths at a young age and about her own research.
In Code: A Mathematical Journey
by Sarah Flannery http://www.goodreads.com/book/...
Those who have never read "The Psychology of Computer Programming (Weinberg, 1971)" are doomed to re-invent small parts of it over and over and over.
http://www.geraldmweinberg.com...
Even then it would be easy to inject the backdoor when compiling as explained in the classic paper "KEN THOMPSON - 1984 - Reflections on trusting trust" https://www.ece.cmu.edu/~gange...
When the "bad guys" manage to download the password database from a Windows domain controller in your company (and that can happen) then they will be able to crack some of your previous 12 passwords that it stores in the history. Then you will be an easy target because they can predict your password from the history because you did not bother to comply with the company password policy. You were negligent.
https://youtu.be/bR8RrmEizVg
The Correct Plural of Octopus from an authoritative source - Merriam Webster https://youtu.be/n4PWP8uL-1o
I have not found anything like that either so...
For the size form-factor I use an iPad Air with a cover that has a built in Bluetooth keyboard.
For a larger screen and better keyboard I use a ChromeBook.
I have a Linux and a Windows VM in "the cloud" that I connect to from those devices via Apache Guacamole https://guacamole.apache.org/
I installed Debian Linux on my EeePC and I use it for command line access to the Linux VM via ssh and occasionaly I run Firefox (via 'startx' because there is not enough space to install a full window manager).
https://youtu.be/V4-Z_nJvGsM Come on Baby, Run Linspire!
recognized Pinball Wizard since 1969
not connecting his email reading Internet browsing PC to his hotel door lock system?
Would it not be wonderful to know that there is life out there, even if the probe they sent had been en route for millions of years?
Those are not what I would call very old :-)
The first computer I learned to program was originally built in 1966 and later donated to our university in the mid '70s http://2eo.blogspot.ie/2007/12...
I found an old printout among some old maths books. Our school was close to the NUIG university engineering building and the professor had invited our maths class to learn how to program the IBM 1800 computer. This was one of my first programs. http://2eo.blogspot.ie/2014/04...
Why limit the solution to 2D maps on paper? You can get a much better visualization on a computer, e.g. https://earth.nullschool.net/
full of children learning how to make computers do fun stuff https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
To give a non-specialist a good understanding of what radiation levels were detected they should calibrate in units of banana equivalent dose https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
To paraphrase XKCD, I have been posting my public key for 37 years now but nobody has ever asked me for it or used it for anything as far as I can tell.
Has anyone any idea what's happening with Google End-to-End ?
Her dad has a love of maths and is a lecturer in a local university maths department. She writes about how he encouraged her interest in maths at a young age and about her own research.
In Code: A Mathematical Journey
by Sarah Flannery
http://www.goodreads.com/book/...
Those who have never read "The Psychology of Computer Programming (Weinberg, 1971)" are doomed to re-invent small parts of it over and over and over. http://www.geraldmweinberg.com...
and the paper was presented at DEFCON https://www.defcon.org/images/...
When you change a forum against the wishes of the users you risk the Digg effect. Please undo the "Share" change.
Even then it would be easy to inject the backdoor when compiling as explained in the classic paper "KEN THOMPSON - 1984 - Reflections on trusting trust" https://www.ece.cmu.edu/~gange...
Error 1201 was not enumerated but luckily someone had read the system documentation https://www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/a...
you should watch WALL-E next, while pondering that question
Down with that sort of thing!
When the "bad guys" manage to download the password database from a Windows domain controller in your company (and that can happen) then they will be able to crack some of your previous 12 passwords that it stores in the history. Then you will be an easy target because they can predict your password from the history because you did not bother to comply with the company password policy. You were negligent.
I wonder if Kim Dotcom has an account yet?
You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.