Many kids that I talk to say they use it because it auto deletes messages so it is safer, for filters, and because everyone else is using it for their age range. But then I tell or show them how easy it is to recovery deleted messages their faces turn to panic out of fear that what was viewed as a privacy app, now is more real for leaks of what they are up to. I think if most of their user based realized how insecure it is compared to other options, they would shift to this, since it seems like this was the first core reason kids/teens started to use SnapChat, because they do not want things to be public like on other social networks.
I will say that they offer 2 things that no one else does: Network sync, so a file does not have to go into the cloud or come from the cloud in order to sync to another device on the network; no one else supports this. And, they also support following symlinks.
Place IoT on a separate subnet or vlan with extra firewall filtering that includes only letting it speak to a whitelist of locations defined on the router.
One can wipe ChromeOS and just install certain Linux flavors.... but ChromeOS is for some and is about to get the Play store on many Chromebooks. And, using Crouton to run full blown Linux side by side is very easy to do. Plus there is a built-in self destruct since the CB needs to be in Developer Mode to run Crouton and thus it is easy to powerwash at start up when in that mode since it tells you press the space bar to leave DevMode which will delete everything for a clean install.
If a number is not in the list contact list, have the caller answer a question before they can have it ring the phone. Maybe it is a personal question or access code, or maybe it is a basic question. For instance what color is grass when it is dead? 1 green, 2 blue, 3 yellow, 4 brown.
What is frustrating is the article makes no mention of whether it is for both versions (free or pro) or just the free version. The Pro version is very cheap and worth the cost, so hopefully, the Pro version is not affected by this.
Mesosphere is suppose to be taking the concept of OpenStack to the next evolutionary level using the next more recent concepts that have been released on how Google's BORG worked it (Google has evolved past this, but everyone else is still catching up).
I don't know about you, but most of the Prime stuff I order comes UPS or FedEx Ground or via USPS that FedEx or UPS gave to them. They don't send all things 2 day air, thus saving them a lot of money, on top of that huge discounts they get from the carriers due to their shipping volume.
They, also, license their tech to companies and provide a SDK for developers to include their prediction engine in products. BB10 even uses Switfkey tech in it.
I loved how MS claimed one of my systems was fully supported, only to discover the video card driver was discontinued and super buggy with display glitches over areas that have font in the system related things or in MS Edge (so far other apps are fine). Intel refuses to release a fix. Makes the system unusable for using the start menu, system search or any metro App (including system settings). Lucky it is a parents old system and I merely use it to access old files.... sometime soon I will just upgrade it to Linux to make it more usable.
Maybe, but he said he does not have the free time to re-code the site, due to family and work, thus is Google does not back down or someone offers to update the site for him, then this is the end of it.
I have ordered 3 42-inch screens from Amazon and each came double boxed, all arrived via UPS, and only 1 was broken, which they replaced for free with a return label for the bad one. Also, got great deals on quality smart tv's on deep sales where it was 200 bucks off for a few hours... find what you like/want and check every few hours if the price drops to a level you are willing to pay.
I once saw in Popular Science back in 2002, I think, that a university had developed a tattoo that changes color so that a diabetic would know when they had a low blood sugar, therefore not needing to take blood samples all the time. It is a shame that it never became a option for people.
Might be easier if they buy or license Sailfish OS, after all it was a joint Intel project they cancelled to make Windows Phones and former employees created a company to continue it.
Fine if you don't want or need it, but recently Massachusetts law went into full effect that requires automakers to give owners access to that data. Hopefully more states will follow suit.
I know several places that require internet access for the POS to work right, such as ones that generate UPS/FedEx/USPS labels, people using Inuit's Online POS system, and people using Square's Register app.
With that said, the one I use to support, I filtered what sites one could access, and it was kept on a isolated network from the rest of the company.
What happened? They had said 2 years ago it was hit market last year. We have heard no real updates since.
Many kids that I talk to say they use it because it auto deletes messages so it is safer, for filters, and because everyone else is using it for their age range. But then I tell or show them how easy it is to recovery deleted messages their faces turn to panic out of fear that what was viewed as a privacy app, now is more real for leaks of what they are up to. I think if most of their user based realized how insecure it is compared to other options, they would shift to this, since it seems like this was the first core reason kids/teens started to use SnapChat, because they do not want things to be public like on other social networks.
It also uses 2G, which ATT and others are dropping support for.... don't expect support in the US to be offered by many, if at all.
I will say that they offer 2 things that no one else does: Network sync, so a file does not have to go into the cloud or come from the cloud in order to sync to another device on the network; no one else supports this. And, they also support following symlinks.
Place IoT on a separate subnet or vlan with extra firewall filtering that includes only letting it speak to a whitelist of locations defined on the router.
Vivaldi formed by the former founder of Opera web browser. Uses the Chrome's Blink rendering engine and supports Chrome Extensions. Vivaldi website
One can wipe ChromeOS and just install certain Linux flavors.... but ChromeOS is for some and is about to get the Play store on many Chromebooks. And, using Crouton to run full blown Linux side by side is very easy to do. Plus there is a built-in self destruct since the CB needs to be in Developer Mode to run Crouton and thus it is easy to powerwash at start up when in that mode since it tells you press the space bar to leave DevMode which will delete everything for a clean install.
If a number is not in the list contact list, have the caller answer a question before they can have it ring the phone. Maybe it is a personal question or access code, or maybe it is a basic question. For instance what color is grass when it is dead? 1 green, 2 blue, 3 yellow, 4 brown.
Now if they are transparent rollable displays with tactile sensing we could have Earth Final Conflict scroll like smart phones. Example here.
Sesame Street is now funded by HBO and has first air rights now.
Two things to do: 1) Turn off auto-updates 2) Disable the upgrade with GRC's Never10
What is frustrating is the article makes no mention of whether it is for both versions (free or pro) or just the free version. The Pro version is very cheap and worth the cost, so hopefully, the Pro version is not affected by this.
Mesosphere is suppose to be taking the concept of OpenStack to the next evolutionary level using the next more recent concepts that have been released on how Google's BORG worked it (Google has evolved past this, but everyone else is still catching up).
Last year they got rid of a majority of their testers. Making are making Win10 users beta testers.
I don't know about you, but most of the Prime stuff I order comes UPS or FedEx Ground or via USPS that FedEx or UPS gave to them. They don't send all things 2 day air, thus saving them a lot of money, on top of that huge discounts they get from the carriers due to their shipping volume.
They, also, license their tech to companies and provide a SDK for developers to include their prediction engine in products. BB10 even uses Switfkey tech in it.
I loved how MS claimed one of my systems was fully supported, only to discover the video card driver was discontinued and super buggy with display glitches over areas that have font in the system related things or in MS Edge (so far other apps are fine). Intel refuses to release a fix. Makes the system unusable for using the start menu, system search or any metro App (including system settings). Lucky it is a parents old system and I merely use it to access old files.... sometime soon I will just upgrade it to Linux to make it more usable.
Very useful. Thanks.
Maybe, but he said he does not have the free time to re-code the site, due to family and work, thus is Google does not back down or someone offers to update the site for him, then this is the end of it.
I have ordered 3 42-inch screens from Amazon and each came double boxed, all arrived via UPS, and only 1 was broken, which they replaced for free with a return label for the bad one. Also, got great deals on quality smart tv's on deep sales where it was 200 bucks off for a few hours... find what you like/want and check every few hours if the price drops to a level you are willing to pay.
My right to arm bears shall not be infringed!!!
I once saw in Popular Science back in 2002, I think, that a university had developed a tattoo that changes color so that a diabetic would know when they had a low blood sugar, therefore not needing to take blood samples all the time. It is a shame that it never became a option for people.
Might be easier if they buy or license Sailfish OS, after all it was a joint Intel project they cancelled to make Windows Phones and former employees created a company to continue it.
Fine if you don't want or need it, but recently Massachusetts law went into full effect that requires automakers to give owners access to that data. Hopefully more states will follow suit.
I know several places that require internet access for the POS to work right, such as ones that generate UPS/FedEx/USPS labels, people using Inuit's Online POS system, and people using Square's Register app. With that said, the one I use to support, I filtered what sites one could access, and it was kept on a isolated network from the rest of the company.