What it means is that this chain of exploits is about to become exceptionally popular as Microsoft can't fix them, thereby ensuring that soon even the least knowledgeable of script kiddies will be able to gain access to systems on which they're not welcome.
Having done zero reading on the topic, is that a possibility? I have complete agenesis of the corpus calossum so if this could be used to grow said corpus calossum into my brain, I would be forever grateful to the doctor(s) who made it possible.
Banks get fined in the hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars (if at all) for robbing billions from entire countries, but what happens to this woman is somehow constitutional.
I bought Splinter Cell: Conviction at Christmas on Steam with but hadn't installed it yet. Looks like it was a waste of my money. Unsurprising, I should have expected this. Of course they won't spend a dime to patch their games, fuck the community! It's the bottom dollar that matters, I mean really, it's not like the gaming community are the ones who will buy the games, right? I guess I'll have to download a crack to play it.
PGO = Profile Guided Optimization. It allows the optimizing compiler/linker to figure out for itself exactly what the critical execution path(s) of the program (the code that runs most frequently) is/are by requiring the user to execute the code with this special pgo-instrumentation of the compiled code as many times as required to cover typical use-cases, and optimize the code based around the execution paths taken. Profile guided optimization is a strictly optional step which can be used to improve program performance (potentially) more or better than the generalized optimizer (/Ox compiler option with MSVC) can.
Fuck. Posting this is undoing my moderations. Oh well.
OpenID is decent, granted it doesn't solve the whole single point of failure problem but it doesn't try to, either. It does a good job of consolidating login and user data, so the only trust a user need grant is to that of their provider.
Untrue, the NSA intercept every software crash report that users send to Microsoft, that''s a gold mine to them.
What it means is that this chain of exploits is about to become exceptionally popular as Microsoft can't fix them, thereby ensuring that soon even the least knowledgeable of script kiddies will be able to gain access to systems on which they're not welcome.
Lock them up and throw away the key.
Having done zero reading on the topic, is that a possibility? I have complete agenesis of the corpus calossum so if this could be used to grow said corpus calossum into my brain, I would be forever grateful to the doctor(s) who made it possible.
Ahh, young accounts, always thinking they can make a difference. How cute. :)
Aces over Europe! I loved that game!
I don't remember getting very far in it, but I had so much fun!
I've heard that raiding them together drastically reduces their lifespan because the trim command gets disabled as a result.
Banks get fined in the hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars (if at all) for robbing billions from entire countries, but what happens to this woman is somehow constitutional.
Of course they're nearly as good. They were caught stealing Google's search results.
It's called moaning. Don't you like listening to sexually charged moans?
I bought Splinter Cell: Conviction at Christmas on Steam with but hadn't installed it yet. Looks like it was a waste of my money. Unsurprising, I should have expected this. Of course they won't spend a dime to patch their games, fuck the community! It's the bottom dollar that matters, I mean really, it's not like the gaming community are the ones who will buy the games, right? I guess I'll have to download a crack to play it.
Yeah and considering computers aren't people, it's nothing short of mind-numbing stupidity.
Highly interesting, thanks for the insight!
I agree totally, except for the first 5 words... not human nature. American nature. U.S.
Because destroying the hard drives wasn't enough, wasting tens of thousands of dollars in perfectly good hardware was the right thing to do.
Ha, beautiful. :)
Americans are war-weary? Legalize the hacking they've already been doing in secret!
PGO = Profile Guided Optimization. It allows the optimizing compiler/linker to figure out for itself exactly what the critical execution path(s) of the program (the code that runs most frequently) is/are by requiring the user to execute the code with this special pgo-instrumentation of the compiled code as many times as required to cover typical use-cases, and optimize the code based around the execution paths taken. Profile guided optimization is a strictly optional step which can be used to improve program performance (potentially) more or better than the generalized optimizer (/Ox compiler option with MSVC) can. Fuck. Posting this is undoing my moderations. Oh well.
No, she's all woman.
Qtel seems to do a really thorough job, unfortunately. :|
Master hypocrits.
Too bad, she's right.
A fox is now guarding this particular hen-house, how novel.
OpenID is decent, granted it doesn't solve the whole single point of failure problem but it doesn't try to, either. It does a good job of consolidating login and user data, so the only trust a user need grant is to that of their provider.
If I could mod you up I would, Anonymous would have to separate the list of those forced from those who joined willingly.