Comment Re:Mount Doane (Score 1) 25
Naming things after people is never so much a celebration as it is about notability.
So you're saying every town should have an Adolf Hitler street?
Naming things after people is never so much a celebration as it is about notability.
So you're saying every town should have an Adolf Hitler street?
Ironically the main choices I can think of are:
- if DIY a Pixel - they most reliably come with unlockable bootloader,
No. Google just took the Pixel device trees out of AOSP and is not publishing them elsewhere. Alternate OSes for Pixel devices just died.
Some ideas don't require lengthy exposition, but SEO demands longer articles, and that leads to this. In a reasonable world an editor would have ripped half this article's guts out due to redundancy.
Linux is just as vulnerable, and believe me I've tried it and it's not better than Windows for day-to-day use.
The issue is the modems. If the firmware can be modified, it can be made to exceed legal transmission power limits, or behave badly on the network in a way that affects other users.
The same is true of WiFi, but the damage tends to be more limited. Screwing up a cell tower can affect thousands of people.
"DirecTV Will Soon Bring AI Ads To Your Screensaver"
No they fucking won't, because I don't use DirecTV, and if I did I'd drop them like a bad habit.
But since I don't use DirecTV, this move only ensures that I'll never use DirecTV.
So, yeah congrats to DirecTV for alienating at least some fraction of their untapped audience. Truly forward thinking in reverse.
Before Secure Boot, rootkits were common. Back in the day I fixed a huge number of machines that were infected by malware that modified the Windows SATA/IDE driver. You couldn't remove it from inside Windows because the modified driver hid the files from AV software. You had to connect the drive to another machine, or boot a Linux live CD, remove the malware, and then do a refresh install of Windows to replace the deleted driver files.
Secure Boot put a stop to that and many similar attacks. It is a very, very worthwhile security enhancement.
Modern Thinkpads let you disable access to things such as USB boot with a password, and by all accounts it's decently well protected.
They also let you encrypt the boot drive with hardware encryption (no performance loss). Managed at the UEFI level, before the OS bootloader.
While a powerful attacker could still compromise the machine by say adding a hardware keylogger and then returning to collect your password, the reality is that unless you are up against state level adversaries that's not a realistic threat and the protections that Lenovo offers are more than adequate to protect your data even when someone has physical access.
It was that way here until the oil crisis, which shrank cars for a while. Now they are inflated again, but as things are getting crappier here, smaller vehicles are returning. If you have lots of space and fuel is cheap, larger vehicles are lovely. If neither thing is true, they are just more trouble and expense than they are worth.
Vehicles being higher up has little influence on how far their headlights cast, especially given safe following distances they are the least relevant thing. They are just commonly poorly aimed. I thought Europe had inspections for that kind of thing, though? In the US we theoretically do, but I see misaimed headlights constantly.
Technology is the answer, though. I don't plan to learn another script, though I might learn another language. But why should anyone have to? Computers are actually good at recognizing text and doing translations now. That's two legit uses for "AI" that have actually come true. For example I've successfully OCR'd Chinese documentation and translated it and had it not come out in broken English. This really makes one wonder why anyone is still doing bad documentation and ads, but I do still see them regularly. So weird.
"I got a question for ya. Ya got a minute?" -- two programmers passing in the hall