Can they now investigate why some online calendars and date selectors start the week on SUNDAY? Do the words WEEK END have some different meaning for the programmers who do this?
Hmm, I don't know. Makes sense to me but I am a programmer... If I told you to put a pencil in front of you and asked you to point at the end (however many there are), would you point to just 1 or would there be 2? Why can't the 'beginning' of something also be an 'end'? Just because it is measuring time instead of something more physical doesn't mean it doesn't have 2 edges and I'm fine calling those edges 'ends'.
I think what the parent is saying is there is a big difference here.
Option 1) Government puts up a server that they control with a recommended setting and asks manufacturers to provide a software option that users can enable/disable that follows that setting
Option 2) Government has a backdoor to every AC thermostat out there and can actively connect to each one and change what it is set to possibly with a registry of some kind for participants and non-participants
I would guess I am like most people and would be ok with one of the options and not the other...
It's killed over a half million people in the USA alone. That is a minor threat to you? Some of us care about others. Unlike you.
I think some are having a hard time knowing what to believe since there is so much information out there that contradicts. For example, you are saying over half a million but the CDC is saying about 375,000 which is a lot but quite a bit different then 500,000+. 375k needs to be put in perspective as well since in 2019 that would put it in a solid 3rd place ahead of Accidents at 173k and behind Heart Diseases at 659k and Cancer at 599k.
I think I should spin up Android emulator and hilariously dominate any and all other players while playing and watching Netflix at the same time, because keyboard and mouse is a categorically better controller for any FPS.
Sure but since a keyboard doesn't do you any good how do you think you would do with one mouse on a game that players use multi-touch to play?
In the literary sense, this person is 'a hack', but what she did was not 'hacking'.
What she did was notice a large bank had poor security practices, put that in her pocket, waited a couple years in an attempt to distance herself from being employed at AWS, then stole all the stuff. No hacking was involved in this at all, it was simple theft.
If you held on to a key from your apartment when you moved out and returned two years later to break in and steal stuff, you are not a lock picker. You're a dude with a key.
In my mind it has more to do with intent. I like your example. So I keep a copy of a key to a place I rented a couple years ago and go back and use the key and go in the front door. I think we would commonly say I broke in even though I didn't bust the door or a window or pick the lock. If you don't have permission and try to go in a place that you know isn't yours, are breaking in to someone else's place. If you don't have permission, I think it is fine to call it hacking on a computer even if that is a generic term meaning just doing something you aren't supposed to be allowed to do on a computer and put in even a little effort to circumvent security.
If you save your password on the phone (so that it gets entered automatically on an app or website), then you are not really adding a second factor by proving that you have the device. For the password to be the "something you know" factor, the something needs to be something in your brain, not something stored the same device that is the "something you have" factor. Does this new setup ensure that passwords can not be saved?
This is for logging into a web site on a separate computer. Google doesn't provide any way to save your Google password on your phone and have it automatically sent to your computer, AFAIK.
Actually your saved passwords are synced from computer to phone and back again if you are signed in to chrome on both devices. Very convenient but some risk for sure.
Can't be done. Visa, Mastercard, and Amex all have clauses forbidding those cash discounts, which can cause a merchant's account to be pulled.
I'm pretty sure it can be done you just have to do it the right way. I see places all the time offer a ~2% cash discount but what you can't do is add on a 2% credit card fee.
A company is known by the men it keeps.