Comment Re:Get offa my lawn! (Score 1) 201
I actually purchased something for my girlfriend using my smart phone.
Ugh, a gift that needed to meet specs?!
I actually purchased something for my girlfriend using my smart phone.
Ugh, a gift that needed to meet specs?!
Cut off the hand in such a way as to keep the appendage from bleeding out (think fire-heated axe), and there's still going to be blood (and hemoglobin) in there.
Pretty sure it uses the RF properties of iron when in motion. If it does use IR, then the blood needs to be a different temperature than the skin. Cutting off the hand would cause the blood to cool too much.
Not unless you can print a picture that will show different levels of reflection to the near-infrared wavelengths.
Actually, you'd just have to print something using a Laser printer (toner contains iron oxide, just like Hemoglobin) and tape it to something, like a copper sheet, to produce a very similar picture to the camera.
...but in euro generally you can get ten bucks a month plans for all you can use data plans I think the speed was capped to 3mbit/s though
I'm sorry but a 3Mbit/s capped connection is a not something I'd consider "all I can use".
It's expensive for even the most evil carrier in the world, AT&T, which only charges $10/gb. And that's without any kind of bulk data rate discount.
Indeed. Mostly give up the idea of having the host encrypt files for you. You never know if they have a backdoor of some sort. Find/write software (I use Arq) to encrypt files and then send the encrypted files to a host like Amazon S3. It's really the only way for the host to have the "zero-knowledge" you desire.
And here's an article about MathML in WebKit from another source. http://www.maths-informatique-jeux.com/blog/frederic/?post/2013/10/12/Funding-MathML-Developments-in-Gecko-and-WebKit
Note that Google removed MathML from their hostile fork of WebKit, Blink.
Current versions of Mac OS X require 64-bit EFI. The original Mac Pros only had 32-bit EFI. Mountain Lion does not have a 32-bit kernel and will not load 32-bit drivers in kernel space (kexts). If you replace the graphics card in the original Mac Pro with one that has a 64-bit driver, you can install Mountain Lion on the original MacPro1,1.
See http://www.jabbawok.net/?p=47 for instructions.
comes with some incredible first party applications.
On Windows, I believe that's called "crapware".
Confused. What does SSL handshaking with a remote server relate to what an app does internally to itself in a virtual machine?
I don't see what this has to do with Oracle/Java politics.
Google had/has absolutely no idea what the "correct" list of cipher order was/is. Google copied the order from OpenSSL. Google removed dependency on OpenSSL. Google copied from another source, which happened to be Java.
The ultimate choice may have been done for compatibility with websites not supporting TLS 1.2 but it was not done for compatibility with Java.
The iOS version no longer works.
Aside from the fact the government and many institutions (like Banking in the US) already have your fingerprint...
Is there any evidence at all that the fingerprint data store in the A7 is even usable outside of iOS? There's no reason at all to store a raw image of the fingerprint. How would you recreate the fingerprint to make it usable to someone?
Not really, the article is quite specifically talking about Unix. Linux and iOS and OSX are not Unix.
Mac OS X is UNIX. iOS and Linux are not.
"how is this any different than the fact that Apple pays for product placement in *every* TV show or movie that has a laptop or phone in it?"
Apple doesn't tend to pay for product placements. When TV shows/Movies use a product on camera they will often go to the manufacturer demanding money for the logo to be seen. Apple says no in these cases. That's why most TV shows/movies using Apple products have the apple logo hidden under something (like a post-it note).
When the companies go to the TV show/movie people asking for product placement, the camera will usually hover unnaturally over the product for an extended period of time.
Two wrights don't make a rong, they make an airplane. Or bicycles.