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PIEBALDconsult wrote: Pressed the restart button... no prompt.
What's "the restart button"?
If you mean the Restart option in Windows (or your OS of choice), then yeah, it makes sense. The OS has already booted, so you've proven you know the BIOS password by that time.
But if you mean the physical power button on your PC to restart - from the BIOS password prompt (because that's as far as you can make it) - then it might as well not be there, because it offers no protection at all...
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dandy72 wrote: the physical power button
Yes.
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A Reset button, I'd understand. Maybe.
But the power button (that requires to be held down for 4 seconds when the system's already running), which powers everything down, and then you have to press it again to power it back on...then yeah, that pretty much sounds like a cold boot to me.
If you're not getting prompted for the BIOS password after that sequence...then I agree, it's useless.
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dandy72 wrote: yeah, that pretty much sounds like a cold boot to me. It is not completely powered down. I have had to turn off the main switch power supply (on a full sized desktop PC) to make the PC clear all its caches, soft switches and selectors. For a period, our tasks at work repeatedly brought the PC into a state requiring a PS OFF reset; it always worked, and there was no other way of getting out of it.
For a laptop with no classical PS, you might have to unplug the power cable - but power will usually be supplied by the battery. So you may have to unplug the power cord and remove the battery, at the same time. Maybe you even may have to leave them out for a while: Some electronics have a large capacitor that will supply essential circuits with power while you replace the battery pack with another one. If the battery can't be removed, you'll have to leave the PC running until the battery is completely drained.
Religious freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make five.
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True, some modern power supplies can play all sorts of tricks so "powering down" no longer necessarily means what it used to.
Nothing beats yanking out the power cord however (and taking out the battery if it's a laptop). And then waiting a bit since, as you say, some systems have large capacitors.
trønderen wrote: If the battery can't be removed
...I won't be buying it.
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Cp-Coder wrote: if I turn off the PC by hitting the power button instead
If a desktop then it means power outage would do the same.
Cp-Coder wrote: My main PC may get stolen with the external drives during a burglary, for example.
I am not rigorous in this but I do see a lot of PC cases with lock ports. Attach a cable lock to it and a heavy desk. Then less risk unless it is a targeted theft.
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jschell wrote: I am not rigorous in this but I do see a lot of PC cases with lock ports. Attach a cable lock to it and a heavy desk. Then less risk unless it is a targeted theft.
Lift the closest corner, pull the cable from under the leg. I don't consider myself to be particularly strong, but I don't think I've ever seen a desk I couldn't lift a corner at least the thickness of those metal security cables off the ground.
Or they'll just take your own wire cutters from the garage and cut the cable.
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dandy72 wrote: Lift the closest corner, pull the cable from under the leg.
My desk has support braces. One cannot 'lift' it to get the cable off.
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Where there's a will, there's a way.
Wire cutters are easy to get ahold of.
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Certainly. But so is a targeted robbery.
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Beware the Fast Startup as it stores the status of the OS drivers (incl. decryption keys) (but not the userland).
It hit VeraCrypt, too.
It may hit the task scheduler, too.
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I love solving problems using template metaprogramming. It's probably a bad thing, because I tend to gravitate toward it unless I stop myself.
In this case, I have a good reason for it. I need to do color model conversions at compile time.
A pixel has channels, like Red Green and Blue, or Hue Saturation Value, or Y U V, etc
It may also have a metachannel of sorts called an alpha channel.
It might even have no-op channels that do nothing but take up space (for in memory padding)
The presence of no-op channels and alpha channel makes things sort of complicated when determining the color model.
I have
rgb_pixel<16>::has_channel_names<channel_name::R, channel_name::G, channel_name::B>::value
For example (which resolves to true in the above case) for determining the color model - RGB as above in this case.
In order to be more robust, I need to have a different version of that template like, has_color_model or something.
But also, it's a tricky problem to solve with templates. That's what I like.
Sane people play sudoku.
Solved it. Not so bad, because I have other helpers.
template <typename PixelType,typename... ChannelNames> class is_color_model_inner_impl;
template<typename PixelType,typename ChannelName,typename... ChannelNames>
class is_color_model_inner_impl<PixelType,ChannelName,ChannelNames...> {
using chidx = typename PixelType::template channel_index_by_name<ChannelName>;
public:
constexpr static const bool value = (-1!= chidx::value) &&
PixelType::template channel_by_index_unchecked<chidx::value>::color_channel &&
is_color_model_inner_impl<PixelType,ChannelNames...>::value;
};
template<typename PixelType>
class is_color_model_inner_impl<PixelType> {
public:
constexpr static const bool value = true;
};
template <typename PixelType,typename... ChannelNames> class is_color_model_impl {
public:
constexpr static const bool value = sizeof...(ChannelNames)==PixelType::color_channels && is_color_model_inner_impl<PixelType,ChannelNames...>::value;
};
Check out my IoT graphics library here:
https://honeythecodewitch.com/gfx
And my IoT UI/User Experience library here:
https://honeythecodewitch.com/uix
modified 21-Jun-24 13:26pm.
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honey the codewitch wrote: rgb_pixel<16>::has_channel_names<channel_name::R, channel_name::G, channel_name::B>::value Maybe has_channel_channels ? (But kinda serious.)
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I ended up going with is_color_model<> which makes perfect sense in my library's vernacular where a color model is a composition of color channels with particular names.
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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When they rewrote Windows explorer for Win 11, they clearly gave the job to the office junior, who had no idea what the previous version (matured for decades in the warm heat of actual usage) was capable of. And they didn't bother to find out because adding tabs was clearly a much more interesting use of their time.
And today I notice they have put something back: you can now drop files onto parts of the address bar to copy / move files to the parent folder (for example) or onto the folder list on the left!
Taken 'em long enough to put back a useful function, but I'm happy they finally did.
"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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Oh I've missed that particular feature greatly!
I've just got to wait for our instance to catch up ... :tapping fingers:, :tapping foot:
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So have I - the tabs are still useless because you can't drop onto tabs, but ... maybe in a decade they'll think of that.
"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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Quote: maybe in a decade they'll think of that. they'll probably reincarnate VB6 before they think of that
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Still on Win10 here... are you telling me that in Win11 you couldn't (until now) drag/drop directly onto the folder (treeview) panel? That's absolutely crazy! I even have links to FTP sites so that I can just drag-drop up to FTP (without having to open the FTP folder and get the file list, which takes foreeeeever).
That said, I currently (starting a week or so ago) have an issue where if I right-click anything in explorer (to access anything on the context menu) it takes a good 30 seconds to open... I'm assuming a 3rd party tool (e.g. SodaPDF, Notepad++, PowerISO or something) is broken... nothing updated for a while. Except.. yes a Windows update, 13th June. doh...
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I had that as well - lasted about a week, but suddenly went away. I thought it was doing a "proper reboot" of my system that cured it, but probably not.
"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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I had an issue like that for a long while… then I found that one of the short cuts I rarely used referenced my previous system which was off network!
Updated the shortcut to fix it.
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Kent beat you to it: The Insider News[^]
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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Strange. I could've sworn Kaspersky got banned at least half a decade ago.
Or maybe that was "the US government", as opposed to "the US" in general...?
I'm tempted to suggest that while they're at it, they should ban the sale of all antivirus software (since, according to most industry pundits, the one built into Windows is now, and has been, "good enough" for a long time...but then I suppose MS would become complacent.
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