Unless the old font didn't exist anymore on the computer and then Word will happily replace it. If it were PDF's that would be something different. You can't guarantee that a Word document will look the same in the future, it's why you don't use Word.
I've never seen that happen, if it can't send the e-mail from the address I've tried, it will sit there and wait until I press OK to send with another server (not unique to Mac Mail either, Thunderbird does the same thing).
Even with a different e-mail server, your From address should stay the same (if you have a proper SMTP server). Eg. when I click "Send with Gmail" it politely refuses because now my From address doesn't match what Gmail SMTP accepts. I know Exchange can silently rewrite addresses on their end, perhaps that's where things go wrong?
I have a Samsung tablet, the autocomplete is what's broken and correcting mistakes doesn't work because when you backspace something, it thinks you're starting a new word from that position.
Yes, iOS supports embedded development, it's been several years now that you can simply develop whatever you want, as long as you're not selling on the public App Store. The true problem with iOS (and somewhat Android) is the lack of an OSS repository for apps/code that would be useful.
No it doesn't do it automatically. Your wife is a moron as Mac Mail automatically chooses the right account based on current mailbox selection or previous interaction with the recipients.
If anything, you can just disable the personal accounts on work computers if sensitivity is an issue because at some point, someone will send an installer to your wife in her personal account and she will open it and install it and type in the admin password and have some malware on it.
I have the N800 predecessor, Nokia simply mothballed any support when the N900 came out and derivatives of Maemo still don't have support for it. Maemo was a somewhat-good attempt, I'm not sure if Sailfish improved much but I think development after Maemo has pretty much stood still.
Android is better? I still can't get the darn thing to type right, the autocomplete is horrendous and it's completely non-intuitive to use, you can drag any part of the screen and get different forms of menu's. Opening the settings requires me to pull down from the "top" of the current screen orientation, hold my finger there and push on the screen with another finger to open what I want because as soon as I release, the menu slides back up.
Want better performance? Make sure you know all the ins and outs of the Android App Store to get the Google WebView Plugin updated to the latest version, because why auto-update such an important part of the system? And then the App Store is absolutely flooded with fake plugins and malware of all sorts. If Google can't even keep it's own WebView "malware free", it doesn't bode well for smaller players like OpenVPN where the App Store is absolutely hundreds of "OpenVPN clients" of various sorts, except the official ones.
Android is absolutely UI and app garbage. I have a number of Android devices and I work with the thing for my business. I compile my own versions of Android without Google CrapStore. But holy cow, developing something against Android: First pull in ~120GB of absolutely useless code, then compile it into... "whoops, our boot loader won't fit this image" because you know, 2GB on a 64-bit system is too much to ask for, now we still have to go in and side load everything through ADB USB hell.
In 10 years, all those 'homeless people' will have been replaced by gang members and Seattle will turn out like Chicago. We call what Seattle's calls homeless "hipsters".
Sorry, but you are an idiot. There are plenty of alternative clients for the ACME protocol, plenty of them run without root access. I have never needed to run as root and the LE client also doesn't modify my web server configs. All the client does is update the certificate every so often and then tests the configuration before deploying it. It took me all of ~10 lines to get it to work the way I want it.
Your Apache scripts shouldn't be so complex that they become un-editable, do you even know what they do?
The average property tax in NYS is indeed 2.22% but it's a false statistic. NYC has the lowest property taxes at 0.75%. Given the majority of the state's population lives there, it's indeed an average of 2.2%. I currently pay over 3.5% and I'm in a city, once outside the city, the suburbs are often 5-6% and even further in "the boonies" it can go up to 6-7% for higher-end residential properties.
Yes I do, many companies try to do this though and I'm not sure Linus has ever actively tried to stop them. Samsung, Amlogic, HP, Netgear, Minix have all done it some time in the past or are still actively refusing to release Linux source code they have modified or require some form of NDA before they will give it to you, companies in China are even worse than companies in the US.
I've contacted the FSF about it prior and they seem unwilling to pursue the case unless portions of GNU software are included in the distribution which makes it a bit of a chicken and egg problem, they won't give me the source and the binaries don't contain comments/licenses so it's unclear as to whom they are actually infringing against and FSF won't pursue it unless you can prove the source code contains GNU licensed material.
Given Linus is also more of a technical rather than legal mind, I doubt the GPLv2 on the Kernel is even enforceable at this point unless individual coders want to pursue cases against their more recent contributions.
You are more than welcome to make derivatives of the Linux kernel and sell them (see Android). You do however have to comply with the license and thus you should see GPLed release code on sites from Samsung etc (which you often but not always do).
The company is not required to release the code publically either, only their customers can demand the code, however this has to be under the same license (thus you cannot do like Amlogic does and claim NDA for the Linux kernel)
No you cannot do that under proper open source licenses such as the GPL. In the cases of paint.net and classic shell and many more, they just want to have other people build and fix their product and then once successful, they want to close it and sell a commercial product. It's the main reason never to contribute to anything obscure that is under a MIT or BSD license.
Not really. If you have entered into a contract with a company that buy your products you cannot after the fact add terms such as those about your customer using real fur.
It is similar to what happens here, the company has entered into a contract with Linux (the real fur) and GRsecurity has entered into the same contract but now GRsecurity is saying you can't execute your contract with Linux and they won't either even though you have the contract with them that explicitly says otherwise.
GRSecurity cannot patch the kernel and sell their product, regardless how crappy it is without breaking their contract with Linux and/or violating the contract their customers have with Linux.
How do you upstate grsecurity? Their patches add zero net worth of security, they just hope by calling something security it will sell to some large companies.
If they want to add to security, submit patches to the kernel where things are broken.
Seems like the Grsecurity guys have no idea how to work with others and instead of respecting the copyright of many of their past contributors, they simply steal it in the hopes of making a buck before it dies in obscurity.
In most of NY, except NYC 25k is often more than 25% the equity of the property. It's simply not an investment I would make given energy prices being so low and property taxes making out most of the cost, 25k even without maintenance is about 20-30 years of heating costs and if it raises the value of your house by that much, any savings will quickly be overshadowed by the property taxes of the increased value of the property which could be as much as $2000/year for $25k
In those cases any outside certificates are useless since you can't verify trust. You only need to have an Internal CA system for those sorts of setup.
300ms? That's for the network latency on some CAs alone. Checking revocation, if at all possible since many CAs simply don't have the infrastructure up and running, can take several seconds to verify the entire chain which often contains 3-5 chained certificates, if the CA doesn't respond, this could easily be a full minute before your certificates have been verified without even a proper response on the condition.
If Google were concerned about latency, they could simply do the lookups on their end and cache the results.
People have tried that, doesn't work. The only reason Pokemon Go had a bit of a fad is because the massive advertising campaign, but even so, you don't see the majority of people still running for Pokemon everywhere.
I highly doubt you've eaten "inland Chinese food" or even classic Asian food - it's pretty meager on the farms, you may get chicken feet in your broth soup but that will be the extent of the meat. Dumplings aren't stuffed with meat but rather tough and doughy and dry out in a matter of hours. Half of Chinese "traditional" food would be too spicy for most of us and a lot of it you wouldn't recognize. A lot of soybean and cucumber though.
Muslims don't really have a cuisine, they only have restrictions although goat is pretty good food but the Middle Eastern area is wide and diverse in food products from Turkish tea that's mostly sugar to Afghan goat with couscous (as a visitor at least, the hospitality customs almost require lavish meals, I'm pretty sure the regular food is rather meager).
The typeface was commissioned in 2002, Office 2007 was RTM in November 2006, an early version was already available in 2005 though.
Unless the old font didn't exist anymore on the computer and then Word will happily replace it. If it were PDF's that would be something different. You can't guarantee that a Word document will look the same in the future, it's why you don't use Word.
I've never seen that happen, if it can't send the e-mail from the address I've tried, it will sit there and wait until I press OK to send with another server (not unique to Mac Mail either, Thunderbird does the same thing).
Even with a different e-mail server, your From address should stay the same (if you have a proper SMTP server). Eg. when I click "Send with Gmail" it politely refuses because now my From address doesn't match what Gmail SMTP accepts. I know Exchange can silently rewrite addresses on their end, perhaps that's where things go wrong?
iOS lets you do that as well, as long as you don't sell the app that breaks security and user experience on the "official" App Store.
I have a Samsung tablet, the autocomplete is what's broken and correcting mistakes doesn't work because when you backspace something, it thinks you're starting a new word from that position.
Yes, iOS supports embedded development, it's been several years now that you can simply develop whatever you want, as long as you're not selling on the public App Store. The true problem with iOS (and somewhat Android) is the lack of an OSS repository for apps/code that would be useful.
No it doesn't do it automatically. Your wife is a moron as Mac Mail automatically chooses the right account based on current mailbox selection or previous interaction with the recipients.
If anything, you can just disable the personal accounts on work computers if sensitivity is an issue because at some point, someone will send an installer to your wife in her personal account and she will open it and install it and type in the admin password and have some malware on it.
I have the N800 predecessor, Nokia simply mothballed any support when the N900 came out and derivatives of Maemo still don't have support for it. Maemo was a somewhat-good attempt, I'm not sure if Sailfish improved much but I think development after Maemo has pretty much stood still.
Android is better? I still can't get the darn thing to type right, the autocomplete is horrendous and it's completely non-intuitive to use, you can drag any part of the screen and get different forms of menu's. Opening the settings requires me to pull down from the "top" of the current screen orientation, hold my finger there and push on the screen with another finger to open what I want because as soon as I release, the menu slides back up.
Want better performance? Make sure you know all the ins and outs of the Android App Store to get the Google WebView Plugin updated to the latest version, because why auto-update such an important part of the system? And then the App Store is absolutely flooded with fake plugins and malware of all sorts. If Google can't even keep it's own WebView "malware free", it doesn't bode well for smaller players like OpenVPN where the App Store is absolutely hundreds of "OpenVPN clients" of various sorts, except the official ones.
Android is absolutely UI and app garbage. I have a number of Android devices and I work with the thing for my business. I compile my own versions of Android without Google CrapStore. But holy cow, developing something against Android: First pull in ~120GB of absolutely useless code, then compile it into... "whoops, our boot loader won't fit this image" because you know, 2GB on a 64-bit system is too much to ask for, now we still have to go in and side load everything through ADB USB hell.
In 10 years, all those 'homeless people' will have been replaced by gang members and Seattle will turn out like Chicago. We call what Seattle's calls homeless "hipsters".
Sorry, but you are an idiot. There are plenty of alternative clients for the ACME protocol, plenty of them run without root access. I have never needed to run as root and the LE client also doesn't modify my web server configs. All the client does is update the certificate every so often and then tests the configuration before deploying it. It took me all of ~10 lines to get it to work the way I want it.
Your Apache scripts shouldn't be so complex that they become un-editable, do you even know what they do?
I'm glad there are people willing to stand up to corporate misbehavior. Now if only we could get some better way of doing revocation checks.
The average property tax in NYS is indeed 2.22% but it's a false statistic. NYC has the lowest property taxes at 0.75%. Given the majority of the state's population lives there, it's indeed an average of 2.2%. I currently pay over 3.5% and I'm in a city, once outside the city, the suburbs are often 5-6% and even further in "the boonies" it can go up to 6-7% for higher-end residential properties.
Yes I do, many companies try to do this though and I'm not sure Linus has ever actively tried to stop them. Samsung, Amlogic, HP, Netgear, Minix have all done it some time in the past or are still actively refusing to release Linux source code they have modified or require some form of NDA before they will give it to you, companies in China are even worse than companies in the US.
I've contacted the FSF about it prior and they seem unwilling to pursue the case unless portions of GNU software are included in the distribution which makes it a bit of a chicken and egg problem, they won't give me the source and the binaries don't contain comments/licenses so it's unclear as to whom they are actually infringing against and FSF won't pursue it unless you can prove the source code contains GNU licensed material.
Given Linus is also more of a technical rather than legal mind, I doubt the GPLv2 on the Kernel is even enforceable at this point unless individual coders want to pursue cases against their more recent contributions.
You are more than welcome to make derivatives of the Linux kernel and sell them (see Android). You do however have to comply with the license and thus you should see GPLed release code on sites from Samsung etc (which you often but not always do).
The company is not required to release the code publically either, only their customers can demand the code, however this has to be under the same license (thus you cannot do like Amlogic does and claim NDA for the Linux kernel)
No you cannot do that under proper open source licenses such as the GPL. In the cases of paint.net and classic shell and many more, they just want to have other people build and fix their product and then once successful, they want to close it and sell a commercial product. It's the main reason never to contribute to anything obscure that is under a MIT or BSD license.
Not really. If you have entered into a contract with a company that buy your products you cannot after the fact add terms such as those about your customer using real fur.
It is similar to what happens here, the company has entered into a contract with Linux (the real fur) and GRsecurity has entered into the same contract but now GRsecurity is saying you can't execute your contract with Linux and they won't either even though you have the contract with them that explicitly says otherwise.
GRSecurity cannot patch the kernel and sell their product, regardless how crappy it is without breaking their contract with Linux and/or violating the contract their customers have with Linux.
You don't sound like a security expert either. If the kernels are so buggy, write patches and demonstrable exploit code.
How do you upstate grsecurity? Their patches add zero net worth of security, they just hope by calling something security it will sell to some large companies.
If they want to add to security, submit patches to the kernel where things are broken.
Seems like the Grsecurity guys have no idea how to work with others and instead of respecting the copyright of many of their past contributors, they simply steal it in the hopes of making a buck before it dies in obscurity.
In most of NY, except NYC 25k is often more than 25% the equity of the property. It's simply not an investment I would make given energy prices being so low and property taxes making out most of the cost, 25k even without maintenance is about 20-30 years of heating costs and if it raises the value of your house by that much, any savings will quickly be overshadowed by the property taxes of the increased value of the property which could be as much as $2000/year for $25k
In those cases any outside certificates are useless since you can't verify trust. You only need to have an Internal CA system for those sorts of setup.
300ms? That's for the network latency on some CAs alone. Checking revocation, if at all possible since many CAs simply don't have the infrastructure up and running, can take several seconds to verify the entire chain which often contains 3-5 chained certificates, if the CA doesn't respond, this could easily be a full minute before your certificates have been verified without even a proper response on the condition.
If Google were concerned about latency, they could simply do the lookups on their end and cache the results.
If you have a properly configured and standards-compatible e-mail server (not Exchange) then every e-mail from at least Gmail should be TLS.
People have tried that, doesn't work. The only reason Pokemon Go had a bit of a fad is because the massive advertising campaign, but even so, you don't see the majority of people still running for Pokemon everywhere.
I highly doubt you've eaten "inland Chinese food" or even classic Asian food - it's pretty meager on the farms, you may get chicken feet in your broth soup but that will be the extent of the meat. Dumplings aren't stuffed with meat but rather tough and doughy and dry out in a matter of hours. Half of Chinese "traditional" food would be too spicy for most of us and a lot of it you wouldn't recognize. A lot of soybean and cucumber though.
Muslims don't really have a cuisine, they only have restrictions although goat is pretty good food but the Middle Eastern area is wide and diverse in food products from Turkish tea that's mostly sugar to Afghan goat with couscous (as a visitor at least, the hospitality customs almost require lavish meals, I'm pretty sure the regular food is rather meager).