Here's a mirror: https://bigsur.s3.fr-par.scw.cloud/InstallAssistant.pkg
MD5: 0030d26c6e5d01b7aa10a91b044d6ca7
The main reason I use Edge over Chrome (in Windows) is 4K support in Netflix. Last I checked Chrome didn't have the required Widevine protection level.
Perhaps the Linux Edge browser will have it?
You can cancel right away so that you won't get billed and you'll still get the month of access.
You should assume the network is vulnerable if there is physical access to the equipment!
GNOME developers remove desirable features (such as transparency) from their own terminal emulator.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=695371
AT&T Fiber just recently started to charge a $10/mo fee for their residential gateway which is "required" for service (they use 802.1x but it isn't specific to an account). You can buy a used gateway device online for $20 (and also extract the 802.1x certs and use your own router).
I wonder if I returned their gateway to get rid of the credit? What would stop them from deactivating my service and telling me it was required?
I might also mention that while you are a student (at least with Gmail), is that there are NO ADS.
When you graduate you can keep your existing e-mail and the ads will resume.
When one of the top public universities already switched?
Account choices:
- Students: Microsoft Live and/or Gmail
- Alumni: Gmail
- Faculty/Staff/Special cases: Exchange and/or CMS (former mail system)
It's probably cheaper to outsource e-mail providers, but UVA still maintains control of the @virginia.edu domain and forwards e-mail to Live or G-mail.
The current MagicJack is a device about the size of a matchbox with a USB connection and a phone jack. The USB connector plugs into the user's computer, loads software onto it, and uses the computer's power, processor and broadband connection. The femtocell will also use the PC, but it will let users make calls with their cell phones instead of wired phones.
Why can't they make a standalone device!?
Business is a good game -- lots of competition and minimum of rules. You keep score with money. -- Nolan Bushnell, founder of Atari