Comment I look forward . . . (Score 1) 437
. . . to the YouTube videos showing how to hack these features.
What I want to know is why there are no heated steering wheels? My hands get damn cold.
. . . to the YouTube videos showing how to hack these features.
What I want to know is why there are no heated steering wheels? My hands get damn cold.
What if OS companies ran the capital punishment system?
[insert obvious geek jokes here]
I work for one of the major ATM vendors in the world and replacing Windows with Linux has become one of the top priorities across the whole portfolio (which is now a lot of other things than just ATMs).
Good to hear as long as you don't leave unnecessary services, libraries, applications and backdoors in the Linux system to make it vulnerable.
And I'm surprised QNX never made any inroads in to this use.
So if the person the credit card is issued to is gay, the Russians won't use the data?
OK.
How sad for these children no one is thinking about.
I like that person.
Read "Enemies: A History of the FBI" by Tim Weiner and you'll see that we have been through this BS before. Nothing changes.
Including this.
RedHat admits that it cannot come up with dumber names than Canonical.
What a Kool Desktop Environment.
Google is like a knife: neither inherently good nor inherently evil.
This is slashdot. I need a car anlogy.
I use the Zim Desktop Wiki http://zim-wiki.org/ plus Dropbox.
Zim is a graphical text editor used to maintain a collection of wiki pages. Each page can contain links to other pages, simple formatting and images. Pages are stored in a folder structure, like in an outliner, and can have attachments. Creating a new page is as easy as linking to a nonexistent page. All data is stored in plain text files with wiki formatting. Various plugins provide additional functionality, like a task list manager, an equation editor, a tray icon, and support for version control.
If you need version control, Zim supports Bazaar, Git, and Mercurial as backends.
Zim is not network aware, so I just keep its ~/Notes files in my Dropbox folder, install that and the desktop Linux/Windows/OSX Zim client as needed and I'm good to go.
Unfortunately, there is no smartphone version of Zim, but I have little need for a smartpone app of this sort. I do email myself info as needed to integrate into Zim later.
Not worth it.
This will fail miserably.
GrumpyCatGood.jpg
He needs a squid proxy and also block the ads there.
Another speed tip: Use the mobile version of the website.
Living on Earth may be expensive, but it includes an annual free trip around the Sun.