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Quit hiding them near established trails, then. Here in AZ, we have lots of abandoned mines in this desert, so I usually drag mine to a deep adit far from the trail. Joggers never leave the civilized paths... No worries!
Will Rogers never met me.
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I have always protected my systems by keeping up to date system images and data backups, but I often wondered what would happen if some clever hacker developed a virus that corrupts the computer's BIOS. To the best of my knowledge, the BIOS is saved in a hardware chip on the computer's main board. Since the BIOS loads the operating system, if the BIOS is corrupted there's not much you can do about such a virus.
Yes, I have a utility from Dell that will reflash the BIOS chip, but since the BIOS virus controls the operating system, will it allow Windows to reflash the BIOS chip? I doubt it!
The main mechanism used by this malware is to corrupt the manufacturer's logo that first shows on startup, before Windows is loaded. I find this scary, but I have one point in my favor: I only bought Dell devices for my family. Here is a quote from the article below:
Quote: Many devices sold by Dell aren't directly exploitable because the image files are protected by Intel Boot Guard, making it impossible to be replaced, even during a physical attack.
You can read more here:
Just about every Windows and Linux device vulnerable to new LogoFAIL firmware attack | Ars Technica[^]
Ok, I have had my coffee, so you can all come out now!
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Cp-Coder wrote: if the BIOS is corrupted there's not much you can do about such a virus. Some motherboards, such as some Gigabytes, comes with a backup BIOS which can't be flashed. So, if the machine is mission critical then it's worth considering a board that has one. You can literally just boot with the backup BIOS and reflash the main one.
Cp-Coder wrote: Yes, I have a utility from Dell that will reflash the BIOS chip, but since the BIOS virus controls the operating system, will it allow Windows to reflash the BIOS chip? I doubt it! Windows has zero say-so on whether or not you can flash the BIOS. At best it can restart the computer. Any flashing software isn't using the Windows kernel, API, etc.
To your point though, a virus could in theory prevent the reflashing (not sure though). That being said, these days a BIOS is stored on EEPROMs, so nothing can prevent you from physically taking the chip out of the computer and rewriting a good BIOS on it before putting the chip back in the computer. Sure you'd have to soldier/desolder, but it would work.
Cp-Coder wrote: You can read more here: The logo fail thing has been around for a while, just FYI. There may be a new instance of this that just surfaced, but it's nothing new.
Secure Boot will help mitigate some issues with this. It's not perfect since a virus could bypass that too, but it'll at least make it a bit harder for the virus.
All scare tactics aside, this is one of those cases where an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure though. If a machine is mission critical it should be behind a DMZ/firewall/something with locked down restrictions.
Jeremy Falcon
modified yesterday.
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jmaida wrote: There is this going on Holy crap. Why does this not surprise me though...
Jeremy Falcon
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I've stubbornly use MBR on all my machines for concern the real reason for UEFI is so Microsoft can control from where your pc loads it's boot code such as Azure someday and viola Subscription Windows. I don't use 11 at all and only 10 on my MBR DAW because the audio software I use "requires" it. So UEFI is exploited, bummer drag.
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Ron Anders wrote: I've stubbornly use MBR on all my machines for concern the real reason for UEFI is so Microsoft can control from where your pc loads it's boot code
C'mon, even the hardcore Linux guys have come around on that one.
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... I found this promising: Alien: Romulus | Official Trailer - YouTube[^] - very much looks like it's "back to the roots" rather than the "oh gawd not again" of Prometheus and Covenant.
Of course, it could be another case of "trailer-with-all-the-good-bits" and nothing left for the actual movie, but we can hope.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Show the good bits then fill the rest with yawns and I gotta go pee.
A home without books is a body without soul. Marcus Tullius Cicero
PartsBin an Electronics Part Organizer - Release Version 1.4.0 (Many new features) JaxCoder.com
Latest Article: EventAggregator
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Man, these Romulans look nothing like what I remember from Star Trek.
Agreed on the trailer - one can only hope all the best bits aren't already in it and the movie brings nothing else.
I really should re-watch the first two again.
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One of the problems with teaching myself stuff is I end up with my own lexicon and orthography for whatever is I'm dealing with, and then I run into walls trying to come up with solutions where I need input or help from other people.
Having taught myself C++ and generic programming I'm facing one of those issues right now. I'm not sure it can be expressed in C++, and if so, it's through some magic like SFINAE (which i don't understand either)
I simply don't have the language necessary to ask the question.
Check out my IoT graphics library here:
https://honeythecodewitch.com/gfx
And my IoT UI/User Experience library here:
https://honeythecodewitch.com/uix
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I’ve learned programming all by myself too.
Programming is associated with math. Everyone had the mindset “Math and programming go hand in hand”. I didn’t understand why people thought this way until very recently when I stumbled upon the problem of writing a serious steering algorithm for my strategy game. To get the things I want working I’m facing the challenge of learning the math lessons I skipped over when I was in high school. You don’t need math to learn a programming language that’s true. However you won’t get too far if you don’t know math in a complex program.
modified 17hrs ago.
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honey the codewitch wrote: I simply don't have the language necessary to ask the question.
"Fire bad." Maybe you have to explain it at that level? Remember, they say if you can't explain something so a 5-year old understands, you don't understand it nearly as well as you think you do. I had a (childless) co-worker adapt that saying to explaining something to his dog. Between us, I don't think the damned dog ever wrote a single line of code in its entire life.
I don't necessarily keep up with all the latest and greatest coding fads. A few years ago I remember reading something on design patterns and thinking to myself, I've already been doing that for years. That's new?
Turns out, I've been using various design patterns for decades, I just never assigned them any fancy name.
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I inserted my OP from here as a disclaimer, and then posted my question over on reddit but I haven't had much luck there. One person tried to be helpful, but I don't think they understood my question. Nevertheless, they gave me an idea, but it didn't work. Oh well.
https://www.reddit.com/r/cpp_questions/comments/1dluti9/how_do_i_filter_arguments_from_a_parameter_pack/[^]
dandy72 wrote: Turns out, I've been using various design patterns for decades, I just never assigned them any fancy name.
If I had a nickel for every time that happened, I'd have a sock full of nickels to beat annoying people about the head with.
Check out my IoT graphics library here:
https://honeythecodewitch.com/gfx
And my IoT UI/User Experience library here:
https://honeythecodewitch.com/uix
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honey the codewitch wrote: If I had a nickel for every time that happened, I'd have a sock full of nickels to beat annoying people about the head with.
ducks
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I'm not sure if it would help, but you might get in touch with an old friend of mine from college; I became an engineer, she diverged into a brilliant software developer. Her company is thriving and I can barely understand her language anymore, though her webinars are interesting. https://www.linkedin.com/in/barbara-geller-856491116/[^]
Will Rogers never met me.
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I've got a bit of a "not invented here syndrome" (other people's work often just doesn't cut it) and so I created my own time registration and invoicing software for use at my company.
Usual story, it started out as Excel, migrated to a database, then a simple .NET Core application born from hopes and dreams of which I've realized maybe a third.
So this application works really well for me and my coworkers, but it has some quirks and lots of stuff I don't use or haven't finished...
Decided to fix them, then decided to completely modernize it, then decided to cut the fluff, then decided to add features I was really missing...
And a business partner of mine has been nagging me to let him use it for years now so I'm making it multi-tenant (he's my best salesman, bringing in two of my best clients, and I don't even pay him, so I guess I owe him one).
Haven't had so much fun programming in years!
I've been programming instead of gaming, so that's really saying something!
And then when all was good and well my girlfriend suddenly broke up with me this week (we weren't in a fight or anything, but she just lost her romantic feelings for me and thought of me more as a good friend)
It's only been three days, and usually I wouldn't even have seen her in that time either, but I'm already missing her and somehow the house feels empty even though she was around only about half of the time.
Well, sh*t happens and I've been through breakups before so I'll probably survive this one as well.
At least I've found a sort of new purpose in my software and I'm not bored
Oh yeah, and I've been losing weight (after gaining 10 kg in about a year time! ) and this morning I was "suddenly" 1.5 kg lighter (after watching my eating and hiking and biking for weeks, mind you)
I've already lost about 5 kg in as many weeks (really going for it)!
I guess with my girlfriend breaking up I've even lost 65 kg (quote Ross from Friends: "ah, humor based on my pain, ah, ha, ha")
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We have lived a parallel life up to the point where your girlfriend left.
I found myself in a sole proprietor retail given quickbooks desktop and a laser printer with the un-spoken words of ok, get after it.
Oh, hell no and got to writing my own POS webapp to support daily life in the little shop.
It also grew the same way as yours, going multi-tenant along the way etc.
Best of blessing going forward bro.
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Ron Anders wrote: Oh, hell no and got to writing my own POS webapp to support daily life in the little shop. 1,000%. If you're a small business, reinventing the wheel while getting started is lacking focus at beast and a waste of resources at worst.
Jeremy Falcon
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Sander Rossel wrote: I created my own time registration and invoicing software for use at my company
I learned Classic ASP over 23 years ago writing a little customer lookup utility. Over the years, it grew to handle other stuff like billing, customer portal, bug tracking/reporting, and customer contacts (remotes/issues/offline work, etc.) That's the nice thing about 'rolling your own'.
Sorry to hear about your breakup.
BTW, did you ever get those Azure DNS issues worked out from last week?
"Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse
"Hope is contagious"
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kmoorevs wrote: BTW, did you ever get those Azure DNS issues worked out from last week? Sort of, I had to ask the Azure problem to my customer because we don't have full access to their network and DNS, so they should be the ones to fix it.
The localhost issue was a weird one.
I attributed the problems to differences in different (local?) DNS servers and fixed it by adding the following to my hosts file:
127.0.0.1 sub1.localhost
127.0.0.1 sub2.localhost So it's fixed, but not the satisfying sort
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Sander Rossel wrote: I've got a bit of a "not invented here syndrome" (other people's work often just doesn't cut it) and so I created my own time registration and invoicing software for use at my company. You sure that's the best use of your time for a small business, man? QBO will handle both of these and just about any CPA can work with QBO exports. Remember, just because you can do something, doesn't mean you always should.
Sander Rossel wrote: I've been programming instead of gaming, so that's really saying something! Noice
Sander Rossel wrote: And then when all was good and well my girlfriend suddenly broke up with me this week (we weren't in a fight or anything, but she just lost her romantic feelings for me and thought of me more as a good friend) Sorry to hear that buddy. Not sure if you wanna hear my thoughts on the matter or just need to let it out. So, I'll shut up and just say sorry to hear that.
Sander Rossel wrote: I guess with my girlfriend breaking up I've even lost 65 kg Niiiice. I'm in a similar boat. Let myself get way out of shape. You're human. At least you're fixing it man.
Jeremy Falcon
modified yesterday.
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Jeremy Falcon wrote: You sure that's the best use of your time for a small business, man? I'm pretty sure it's not, but time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time
I've looked at some alternatives, but they get pretty expensive once you want time registration and invoicing and have employees.
And I'm doing with the time I've got to spare, so mainly instead of gaming.
It's a bit of a "playground" for new tech and upgrades too, though.
So I'm updating some components and checking if they're not breaking anything so we can update them for customers with minimum risk when the time comes.
Don't worry, there's still plenty of stuff I'm not doing myself
Jeremy Falcon wrote: Not sure if you wanna hear my thoughts on the matter or just need to let it out. So, I'll shut up and just say sorry to hear that. Not really, well enough equipped emotionally and rationally to deal with this.
Jeremy Falcon wrote: Niiiice. I'm in a similar boat. Let myself get way out of shape. You're human. At least you're fixing it man. In fact, my girlfriend was a bit of the reason I gained so much in the first place.
She likes candy and bought it.
I like it too, so I never bought it, but when she bought it I just couldn't help myself (while she could, so more for me!)
I've been pretty much stable for years until I met her
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Sander Rossel wrote: I've looked at some alternatives, but they get pretty expensive once you want time registration and invoicing and have employees. There's also OSS time tracking. Granted, I never used it so it may suck.
I can give you idea of how much QBO is though. I pay around $300 a year and $50 an employee per month for payroll. I don't do any hardcore time tracking, so I don't use that package. But, according to their site it's $10-$20 a month and $10 per user. So, to go all out for 5 employees it's about $4k USD a year, but the biggest chunk of that is payroll. If you don't need that module it gets cheaper.
Granted Intuit's customer service sucks when it comes to Payroll. So, maybe I should change.
Sander Rossel wrote: It's a bit of a "playground" for new tech and upgrades too, though. If you find something that handles Payroll and is better/cheaper than QBO, let me know please.
Sander Rossel wrote: Don't worry, there's still plenty of stuff I'm not doing myself Noice
Sander Rossel wrote: In fact, my girlfriend was a bit of the reason I gained so much in the first place.
Been there, done that. For me it was stress in a bad relationship that's been on and off over 5 years. I'm a stress eater. So....
Sander Rossel wrote: I like it too, so I never bought it, but when she bought it I just couldn't help myself (while she could, so more for me!) Dunno why, but even when I'm on a health kick, there's just something about junk food already being inside the home. Like, you can resist it at the store no prob, but when it's home... you can hear it calling your name... eat me... eat me... it says.
Jeremy Falcon
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Sander Rossel wrote: time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time
Sander Rossel wrote: It's a bit of a "playground" for new tech and upgrades too, though.
Bingo, got it in 1, imo.
I too started invoicing with excel and grew to hate it, so similarly rolled my own in html. Then I got the hump with the pdfs the virtual printer was producing so rolled-up my sleeves and wrote a pdf creation library. In javascript.
I'm in the middle of dealing with becoming frustrated at having to choose from one of the 14 inbuilt fonts. I've got a browser window open with more documents that say Apple on them than is reasonable and I've got a basic understanding of True Type Fonts, all ready to start creating a 'subset-font' which only contains the glyphs actually present in the document. Did you know that some TTFs are in excess of 25mb !?
The last invoice I created with Excel has a single line-item and is about 37.5kb, while the ones my library is bashing out often have about 20 line-items and weigh-in at about 2kb The font I started using in Excel was Calibri. The TTF file for that bad-boy is something like 8mb.
No. I'm not a complete masochist. I did grab someone else's library to handle the FLATE compression used in the document. (but only after becoming frustrated with my inability to create a compatible bit-stream)
Even entering the 20 or so line-items for each client every month is getting a bit old now. Next step is to write a mobile-app with access to SMS messages, since I send "start work" and "stop work" messages and bill by the minute instead of 15 min blocks, as is the norm with the work I'm doing.
But none of the software-dev is what I consider uselessly wasted time. It's all been as Sebastian Lague puts it, a coding-adventure.
Coding Adventure: Rendering Text - YouTube
/ramble
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