Comment Re:Dupe (Score 1) 840
Replacing an incandescent bulb with an LED assembly is not a repair, but an upgrade.
Apple, meet orange.
Replacing an incandescent bulb with an LED assembly is not a repair, but an upgrade.
Apple, meet orange.
Cable TV would devolve into each service like HBO having their own streaming site available on the 'Net. And Comcast would have no reason to exist.
Comcast would still have a reason to exist: To provide last-mile access to such sites as, say, hbo.com.
Just like any other Internet provider.
*shrug*
In the US, we have a long tradition of paying both to place and receive mobile phone calls and SMS.
We also have a long tradition of receiving landline calls for free, and also placing them for free to numbers in a specific local area. We have never had a custom of paying to answer a landline.
Nor, I must point out, have we ever had a custom of paying more to call a mobile number than any other number, as I understand is/was commonplace in some other parts of the world. When I would pick up my landline to dial a local number, it would cost me nothing additional, as with any other local number.
(these lines are blurred now that inexpensive landline-esque service is generally unlimited and flat-rate within the US, and many people opt for mobile plans that are similarly unlimited and flat rate (aside from data)).
Correction: Navy *pays* a company $0.01 to a company for the service of removing it and dismantling it.
It didn't sell anything.
That is what it is being used for in your use-case.
Looking around in the Worx Gallery (which, I must say, the very concept of which sours my mouth), it looks like it can also do just about everything else, too.
Hence, why it needs all of the permissions in the world (or at least enough of them that arguing otherwise is a moot point).
If you don't like it (and I certainly don't, don't get me wrong), there's Xposed modules that can fix it. (And Xposed modules that defy root-detection. And, and, and. See also: Cat and mouse, Tom and Jerry, and DRM wars going back decades before DRM was even a TLA.)
Or, do it the old-fashioned way: One device for work, one device for other. Power off one or the other when not needed.
If a woman has had a violent boyfriend and he leaves Eninem's "Smack my bitch up" on her answering machine, that's a pretty blatant threat.
That wasn't Eminem. That was the UK-based group called The Prodigy.
(srsly. If you want to name names, please at least make sure that the names are correct.)
I still haven't upgraded Waze since their new "social" integration required a ton more privileges, mostly to phone private info. And this despite running XPrivacy - I just can't be bothered to go through the whitelisting for it, when current version works well enough.
Chances are good that Google already knows everything about your contacts. Google wholly owns Waze.
What is the difference?
That, actually, doesn't look all too onerous for such a product.
Of course I want my fancy remote-everything program to be able to manage the network, see the status of the network, use the network, vibrate, pair with devices, manage shortcuts (shortcut to email on the homescreen?), change settings (so that the remote apps can, you know, do their thing), draw on top (notifications), take pictures, use a microphone, use the camera, access files (do you like attachments with your email?) and read phone status and identity (it knows you're on the phone, just like every other app that handles audio).
I don't know why it needs precise location, but sheesh. At least it's not like Pandora, which is just a bloody streaming music player:
find accounts on the device
read your contacts
add or modify calendar events and send email to guests without owners' knowledge
test access to protected storage
modify or delete the contents of your USB storage
view Wi-Fi connections
read phone status and identity
receive data from Internet
install shortcuts
run at startup
full network access
pair with Bluetooth devices
connect and disconnect from Wi-Fi
change network connectivity
access Bluetooth settings
view network connections
prevent device from sleeping
Your numbers are off by a factor of one thousand.
I used to have a Sound Blaster Pro which had some lightning damage. Something on the board had turned microphonic, and you could shout at the card and hear it through the line output.
Fun stuff.
Because nobody at Facebook is an engineer with enough knowledge to be capable of thinking of such things before endeavoring on a scaled test, right?
Oh, and by the way, maximizing the lifespan of a lead acid battery is a wee bit more complicated having them "fully charged and kept that way, and discharged infrequently."
But I'm sure you already know that.
Please look into Pale Moon.
Built from Firefox sources, it is the closest thing to the lightweight and flexible browser that Firefox promised to be that I'm aware of.
Linux, Windows, Mac, Android, etc.
It's more convoluted than that.
In order for these cameras to be accessible on the Internet in a world of NAT and deny-by-default inbound firewall rules, someone (at the home) MUST have set up port forwarding explicitly...unless the cameras are shipped with UPnP enabled.
I've got mixed thoughts on UPnP (I both loathe and utilize it for different things), but I'm firmly of the opinion -zero- cameras should come with it enabled.
Hi. I have found the solution to your problem.
Longer wires. Put the box where the high-pressure water jet isn't.
You're welcome.
Indeed.
To further muddy the waters, DropBox supports (under Windows, at least) what it calls "LAN sync," with the goal of having data traverse LAN-WAN only once, no matter how many LAN clients want that data.
I do not know if it is default behavior. But I've seen it work just fine.
Waste not, get your budget cut next year.