When I went from a M7 to a M9 I was severely disappointed due to all the bloat that was in the phone, and now it's bricked instead in my attempts to de-bloat it.
I haven't been able to find an Euro RUU to restore it with, HTC doesn't seem to provide that, only the North American variants and my phone don't accept them.
In my disappointment I went for a CAT S60 instead, a lot less bloated, an IR camera but both the IR and ordinary camera gives pretty bad pics, but that's a trade-off I can take to get a device with minimal bloat and the advantage of dual SIM cards.
The assumption that fossil fuel vehicles may disappear may be almost right, but not entirely. A lot is going on in the vehicle industry to try to migrate to fuels based on recycled stuff.
So we may still have internal combustion engines but the fuel may come from renewables rather from fossil fuel.
And we will see more and more hybrid vehicles out there as well.
The correct way is to have each plane programmed individually by a security officer and then only the assigned personnel for that flight will have the access through their keycards and codes.
To allow for emergencies additional personnel could be added but never removed, but adding additional persons wold require that two different persons codes in the added personnel.
It's of course an inconvenience to have systems like this, but the inconvenience of being dead is worse.
An alternative is to have the cockpit inaccessible from the cabin, but that would make it hard in case of a medical emergency in the cockpit.
One of the more common things that causes problems with the updates is if the clock on your computer isn't correctly set, and that includes timezone and daylight saving.
Interesting that people classifies parent as "Troll" even though it's not far from the truth - better blame the messenger than addressing the problem.
Realize that the architecture that Windows today has is based on Windows NT, an architecture that was founded in the beginning of the 90's. This in turn is built upon OS/2, which originally came out in 1987.
There have been improvements to that architecture over the years, which have caused it to become more and more of a patchwork and resource hog in order to still maintain backwards compatibility while also keeping up with new functionality and improved security.
However a lot of the design in the platform is still causing problems that are hard to resolve without admin rights for the user. The current Windows versions also seems to only utilize two Privilege Levels in the hardware architecture, level 0 (kernel) and level 3 (user applications). This is also the case for Linux, so it's not better on that point.
However the age of an OS does not necessarily indicate how bad it is from a security point of view and the utilization of the capabilities of the hardware. E,g. OpenVMS utilizes four privilege modes (Kernel, Executive, Supervisor and User) and OpenVMS is now being ported to x86. This seems to be good news for nerds.
I just wait for someone to decide that enough is enough and prohibit bitcoins from being exchanged to real cash and ban the possession/use of bitcoins.
One thing that's important is to build up a segmented network where each department is insulated from the other departments and only exchange of approved information is going to be allowed.
Same goes for internet communication. Limit that to necessary services.
Mail services should go on virtual servers that are sandboxed, or even on a remote desktop server.
More than patches are broken is that applications sometimes are written to handle the the unpatched version and when the patch arrives then the workaround blows up.
You get the answer you want depending on how you ask. People in general thinks regulation is bad, but you will always have regulation, be it from the government or from the ISP. And the OSP regulations may be a lot more draconian.
There have been a large number of more or less obscure operating systems and not all have been ported to x86. Unfortunately the architecture has become a de facto standard even though it's not the best architecture or the most efficient but instead a patchwork of solutions to retain backwards compatibility. We have lost many interesting architectures over the years that would have deserved a better fate to the Intel bandwagon.
30+ years of political experience also means 30+ years of being exposed to corruption and becoming a stagnant and stale piece in the political field.
The latest US presidential election was a lose-lose situation. Overall the election highlights that the US election system has become pretty stale. A transit to the election pattern that France uses would be a step forward. But that would hurt both the Democrats and the Republicans.
Only the ad companies really likes to know which browser you have so that they can force their ads upon you depending on browser by exploiting the specific vulnerabilities.
When I went from a M7 to a M9 I was severely disappointed due to all the bloat that was in the phone, and now it's bricked instead in my attempts to de-bloat it.
I haven't been able to find an Euro RUU to restore it with, HTC doesn't seem to provide that, only the North American variants and my phone don't accept them.
In my disappointment I went for a CAT S60 instead, a lot less bloated, an IR camera but both the IR and ordinary camera gives pretty bad pics, but that's a trade-off I can take to get a device with minimal bloat and the advantage of dual SIM cards.
The assumption that fossil fuel vehicles may disappear may be almost right, but not entirely. A lot is going on in the vehicle industry to try to migrate to fuels based on recycled stuff.
So we may still have internal combustion engines but the fuel may come from renewables rather from fossil fuel.
And we will see more and more hybrid vehicles out there as well.
The correct way is to have each plane programmed individually by a security officer and then only the assigned personnel for that flight will have the access through their keycards and codes.
To allow for emergencies additional personnel could be added but never removed, but adding additional persons wold require that two different persons codes in the added personnel.
It's of course an inconvenience to have systems like this, but the inconvenience of being dead is worse.
An alternative is to have the cockpit inaccessible from the cabin, but that would make it hard in case of a medical emergency in the cockpit.
One of the more common things that causes problems with the updates is if the clock on your computer isn't correctly set, and that includes timezone and daylight saving.
Interesting that people classifies parent as "Troll" even though it's not far from the truth - better blame the messenger than addressing the problem.
Realize that the architecture that Windows today has is based on Windows NT, an architecture that was founded in the beginning of the 90's. This in turn is built upon OS/2, which originally came out in 1987.
There have been improvements to that architecture over the years, which have caused it to become more and more of a patchwork and resource hog in order to still maintain backwards compatibility while also keeping up with new functionality and improved security.
However a lot of the design in the platform is still causing problems that are hard to resolve without admin rights for the user. The current Windows versions also seems to only utilize two Privilege Levels in the hardware architecture, level 0 (kernel) and level 3 (user applications). This is also the case for Linux, so it's not better on that point.
However the age of an OS does not necessarily indicate how bad it is from a security point of view and the utilization of the capabilities of the hardware. E,g. OpenVMS utilizes four privilege modes (Kernel, Executive, Supervisor and User) and OpenVMS is now being ported to x86. This seems to be good news for nerds.
Looks like it's similar to bittorrent, that's also a de-centralized service.
I just wait for someone to decide that enough is enough and prohibit bitcoins from being exchanged to real cash and ban the possession/use of bitcoins.
One thing that's important is to build up a segmented network where each department is insulated from the other departments and only exchange of approved information is going to be allowed.
Same goes for internet communication. Limit that to necessary services.
Mail services should go on virtual servers that are sandboxed, or even on a remote desktop server.
More than patches are broken is that applications sometimes are written to handle the the unpatched version and when the patch arrives then the workaround blows up.
You get the answer you want depending on how you ask. People in general thinks regulation is bad, but you will always have regulation, be it from the government or from the ISP. And the OSP regulations may be a lot more draconian.
Where I live we can get 1Gbps for about $100/month.
Try to opt out of a HOA when buying a house in a HOA area.
Format drive and install one of the following operating systems:
There have been a large number of more or less obscure operating systems and not all have been ported to x86. Unfortunately the architecture has become a de facto standard even though it's not the best architecture or the most efficient but instead a patchwork of solutions to retain backwards compatibility. We have lost many interesting architectures over the years that would have deserved a better fate to the Intel bandwagon.
Can you live in Silicon Valley with a salary of $100k or less?
The world is full of dupes. And triplets.
And it takes double the amount of man-hours to lead them than it takes to have a developer that knows what to do.
Looks too good to me, my feeling is that it's worse in reality and that the test only was done on the good ones with experience.
30+ years of political experience also means 30+ years of being exposed to corruption and becoming a stagnant and stale piece in the political field.
The latest US presidential election was a lose-lose situation. Overall the election highlights that the US election system has become pretty stale. A transit to the election pattern that France uses would be a step forward. But that would hurt both the Democrats and the Republicans.
So all my tasks are interrupt service routines. There's no room for batch executions.
Only the ad companies really likes to know which browser you have so that they can force their ads upon you depending on browser by exploiting the specific vulnerabilities.
Which highlights that the goal should be to identify the control server operators and take them out permanently.
Alternatively an app that can detect this.
Ever heard of HDCP?
Of course - that can also be cracked.
No Such Agency here.
And the buying power of the US declines year by year.