Comment Re:Zero Cost Alternative (Score 1) 59
And you get to track several other objects as well. Once I moved out to the country that site was open on my desktop every day.
And you get to track several other objects as well. Once I moved out to the country that site was open on my desktop every day.
It's not to hide income info. It's to keep the tax forms that the Canadian government uses that have enough info for ID theft secure from prying eyes.
The only things in my TrueCrypt volume are password lists, tax info, etc.
And those are encrypted separately before being put in the Truecrypt volume.
That way if my machine were to be hijacked while I have the volume mounted, I wouldn't lose all the data to nefarious purposes.
And if the device is stolen, there's two layers of security to get through. (Which around here would just be the thieves deleting everything and selling it for Oxy)
Linus gave an intro speech for the course. That doesn't mean he's going to be teaching it.
The course staffer is Jerry Cooperstein.
A strange example, considering we now have people who aren't exceptional singers but have charisma and looks and are auto-tuned to make them marketable.
I have 400+ unique passwords. I don't think I'll be changing those for password day.
I suppose putting my trust in a password manager could also be considered a risk, but I use a passphrase long enough that even someone with an extensive dictionary attack would take years to get through it.
It's strange having a disease that some doctors don't accept.
I've had doctors look at my chart or ask me for background and give great sympathy for having fibromyalgia, and mention other patients they have whose symptoms are even worse. Then there are other doctors who have sneered at it, and basically accused the other doctors of being incompetent for even believing in such a thing.
Don't trust the shover robot.
Yup. It was.
Actually, scratch that. This is a better link to the source:
Good tools are expensive.
Someone that makes an income selling firewood can really boost their output with one of these.
The Geek.com article seems so close to the Boing Boing article I read last week I'd be surprised if he didn't just shift a couple of words around.
I had a watch with a full scientific calculator on it when I was a kid. My fingers were small enough to press the buttons, but an adult likely would have needed a pencil lead to push the buttons.
It died when we were having squirtgun fights and I dunked my arm in a bucket and forgot I was wearing the watch
I loved that watch.
I lucked out guessing a wifi password once. The neighbor's had put up a network and called it "harunyahya". I googled for it and came up with some wacky creationist conspiracy nut. One of the most common words on the site was 'truth'. So I used that as the password and got in on my first attempt.
A little bit research and a lot of luck. Pretty satisfying either way
A morsel of genuine history is a thing so rare as to be always valuable. -- Thomas Jefferson