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In other news, you get someone's passwords by convincing them to open their saved logins, click the show passwords button, take a screen shot of them and then send that bitmap.
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Oracle is appealing a federal court judge's decision striking down its bid for a retrial in a $9 billion copyright infringement suit against Google over the use of Java code in the Android operating system. Apparently, they can't handle the truth
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I'm having a deja-vu... They must have changed the Matrix (actually, Oracle may be changing the Matrix sooner than they release a new version of Java EE ).
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Apple's long-awaited MacBook Pro refresh is finally here and it's... well, pretty much what we expected. What happens if you jam an iPad into a Macbook?
Still, I'm sure it's "Brilliant! Genius! So innovative!"
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No Air laptops!!
(anyway, I will not have the money for nice things (excep for vacations) for another 10 months; knocks on wood that my gadgets hold up up to that point)
I'd rather be phishing!
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The Air is doomed. Along with Apple's consistent and simplified product line.
(Actually, I'm guessing the Air will live for another year or two, then maybe they'll have a MacBook Air SE. In rose gold, natch. And then they'll point to a "partner" who makes one that's actually a little better and cheaper, and then they'll wash their hands of it.
And yes: I miss Steve. Evil but focused and consistent)
cheers
Chris Maunder
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Something tells me Microsoft may have stolen their thunder with the new Surface Studio and the Surface Book refreshes.
Apple look more and more like a one trick pony nowadays - entirely reliant on iPhone revenue.
Good time to sell APPL.
"If you don't fail at least 90 percent of the time, you're not aiming high enough."
Alan Kay.
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New privacy rules require opting-in to sensitive sharing. Don't click here to not reject our never not sharing all your stuff
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Are you kidding me! I'm blocking ads, they want my browser history.
The best way to make your dreams come true is to wake up.
Paul Valery
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This "rule" is federally unconstitutional, as well as state-unconstitutional, such as in Idaho.
Only Congress or state legislatures can write laws which are then invoked upon the people and/or businesses.
A contract between an internet service provider (ISP) and their customer, that being a private person, is what dictates what the ISP can and cannot do with the customer's personal information.
If of the contract the ISP requires the customer to allow the ISP to share the customer's personal information, the ISP has violated the customer's right to that of protecting property (property being whatever we the people so define it as).
You see, an ISP as business is considered a "foreign corporation" in any state, and within the U.S. When they apply for a "business license", they sign a contract to abide by the state and federal laws and constitutions, *just* as if they were the govt itself. What this means is, a business *cannot* inhibit free speech, the bearing of arms, peaceful assembly; basically, a business, just like the govt, cannot impair or deny the rights of the people.
However, public govt schools have brainwashed the masses into thinking otherwise.
Govt: We FORCE you to send your children to a school, or we will take your children away, at gun-point if necessary. This, reader, is not bullying at all (and, bullying is a wrong social culture word, anyway, the masses have been gag-fed). This is forced lethal coercion at its utmost.
So, the FCC, which is an unconstitutional entity, for it entirely impairs or denies free speech at its core, is 'enacting' a rule that is also unconstitutional.
Were the FCC constitutional, the only thing a "rule" can do when they create it is that the rule applies only to the FCC, and no one else.
When an executive branch creates a rule that is forced upon the private citizen, this is not "regulation" or even "over-regulation", this is tyranny at its utmost.
The executive branch is only to abide by and "execute" law, not create near-law-like "rules" and enforce it upon we the people.
This is why HJR5, a proposed amendment to Idaho's Constitution, is wrong. For, it "constitutionalizes" executive "rules".
So, if you are from Idaho, vote NO on HJR5.
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With Twitter’s future still in question following failed attempts at finding an acquirer and the recently announced layoffs of nine percent of its workforce, the company today announced it’s shutting down its standalone short-form video app, Vine. Never saw it. Can't make a joke about it.
Wait, was that their "GIF killer"? 140ms of video or something?
Yeah, never saw one. It will be missed.
edit: fixed the title. Yeah, having troubles today.
and the URL
modified 27-Oct-16 14:41pm.
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Always amusing to hear about a product being canceled that I never heard of.
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6 seconds of my life I'll never get back.
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As rumored, part of the new Windows 10 Creators update is a brand new version of Paint. In 3D. All that crazy Paint artistic power, now with a Z-axis
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Now I literally cannot say "Finally. Said no one ever." Because now you've said it.
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Honestly if it works as smooth as that cringy video then it's awesome. What's less awesome is the cringes in that video.
I'm just going to sit here and smile like a psychopath while i'm doodling like a 6 year old. Look I drew a 3d p*n*s.
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Over the summer, the team launched what they called the Footprints Project, which invited individuals to participate in an online experiment that allowed researchers to access their anonymous web browsing history, including information about active Twitter usage. Especially if you share your browsing history with researchers
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I'm so elephanting exciting. knock yourselves out.
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10 years ago I was all for anonymity, less video surveillance etc etc.
Now these days I'm happy as long as no one steals my identity or accounts and that what I browse in incognito isn't published on facebook.
Unless someone wants to try to blackmail me that information is useless in itself but as with anything someone somewhere is mining it for gold.
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What they actually did isn't as impressive as the headline claims.
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There are 15 emerging technologies Forrester thinks you need to follow closely. As the wise man says, "but they won't give me the source code"
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- IoT software and solutions that bring customer engagement potential within reach. *
Yup. RTFM to figure out how to change the default passwords.
- Intelligent agents coupled with AI/cognitive technologies will automate engagement and solve tasks.
Sounds like a wedding planner.
- Augmented reality overlays digital information and experiences on the physical world using combinations of cameras and displays.
I don't think Oprah can be augmented any further. Trump, however, could definitely benefit from augmentation. Actually, he would benefit from the "erase from sight" affect.
- Hybrid wireless technology will eventually create connected everything.
Ah, that's what the intelligent agent is for. Figuring out how to keep everything connected. Except when I don't want my wife to know I'm with my mistress. But hey, there's augmented reality for a foolproof alibi, and intelligent agents to make it appear I was somewhere else doing something else, like convincing the IoT microwave that I was cooking dinner!
Yay for world changing technologies!!!
Oh, and I suppose they mean only the small percentage of the world that has access to electricity, potable water, the Internet, and isn't worried about starvation, disease, dictators, and terrorist groups. Yeah, that world.
Marc
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Marc Clifton wrote: Yup. RTFM to figure out how to change the default passwords. Just to allow to change them for something better would be a nice improvement.
Marc Clifton wrote: I don't think Oprah can be augmented any further. I do... pizza can do miracles
Marc Clifton wrote: Ah, that's what the intelligent agent is for. Figuring out how to keep everything connected. Except when I don't want my wife to know I'm with my mistress. But hey, there's augmented reality for a foolproof alibi, and intelligent agents to make it appear I was somewhere else doing something else, like convincing the IoT microwave that I was cooking dinner!
brilliant idea
Marc Clifton wrote: Yay for world changing technologies!!!
Oh, and I suppose they mean only the small percentage of the world that has access to electricity, potable water, the Internet, and isn't worried about starvation, disease, dictators, and terrorist groups. Yeah, that world.
elephanting sadly true
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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In this blog, I will discuss features, techniques and tools you can use to reduce build time for C++ projects. Buy a new machine?
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