You are not the sort of customer that AT&T really want. They want the guy who 'needs' fast access so the websites will come down quickley, but dosent download alot. Thats where thay make their real money. They will probably save money stopping you using p2p and puting you on a cheeper tariff.
So keep your day to day stuff in a normal partition. But keep you sensitive stuff encrypted.
If it means enough to you, you will encrypt it. If its not worth the effort, its not worth encrypting.
Ha, back in school when i really didnt know any better, we replaced the startup screen on windows 95 with the 'it is now safe to turn off your computer' screen
The poor buggers didnt last the week
I think its much more likely that malware will just start to target specific banks / logins. The attacks would capture just the right area of screen / key strokes to compromise that account. Add auto update to the mess and they could be pretty hard to stop.
Another approach could be to have 2 'boxes' that follow the mouse & screen focus. Takes a shot of those small boxes every time a key is pressed or the mouse enters a 'hot zone'. This would be most effective in one program with my 1st idea.
Try dipping the print head in some warm water for a few seconds & wiping with a lint free cloth. Usualy removes the try ink after a few iterations
You are not the sort of customer that AT&T really want. They want the guy who 'needs' fast access so the websites will come down quickley, but dosent download alot. Thats where thay make their real money. They will probably save money stopping you using p2p and puting you on a cheeper tariff.
Easy, it effs up the gps & the male sperm wont stop and ask for directions
I think that if they go to the effort to get the terrs iris scan in the 1st place, they should be able to include pictures too?
So keep your day to day stuff in a normal partition. But keep you sensitive stuff encrypted. If it means enough to you, you will encrypt it. If its not worth the effort, its not worth encrypting.
But still, 2000 * $20m is a hell of a lot of $$ in law suites.
Ha, back in school when i really didnt know any better, we replaced the startup screen on windows 95 with the 'it is now safe to turn off your computer' screen The poor buggers didnt last the week
I think you mean 1024Khz per mhz
I think its much more likely that malware will just start to target specific banks / logins. The attacks would capture just the right area of screen / key strokes to compromise that account. Add auto update to the mess and they could be pretty hard to stop.
Another approach could be to have 2 'boxes' that follow the mouse & screen focus. Takes a shot of those small boxes every time a key is pressed or the mouse enters a 'hot zone'. This would be most effective in one program with my 1st idea.
Me
I assume its a compaq lte serise laptop? I have the exact same proble on 3 units & have no idea why. did you ever figure it out?