Comment Re:I Don't Undertsand (Score 1) 38
Comment Re:This is how shuttleworth kills ubuntu (Score 1, Funny) 279
although I still prefer yum to apt-get...
I much prefer pacman to any of them
Comment Re:Hammer to kill a swarm of flies (Score 1) 226
It is not stupid by any means, the system stores information all over the place. It would be to hard to try and encrypt each one by itself. It is far easier to just encrypt the whole thing. You would be surprised how little of a hit you take in performance. I used TrueCrypt for a good while and I never notices any slow down at all. Encryption like AES are extremely fast.
System encryption provides the highest level of security and privacy, because all files, including any temporary files that Windows and applications create on the system partition (typically, without your knowledge or consent), hibernation files, swap files, etc., are always permanently encrypted (even when power supply is suddenly interrupted). Windows also records large amounts of potentially sensitive data, such as the names and locations of files you open, applications you run, etc. All such log files and registry entries are always permanently encrypted too.
Comment Left a long time ago (Score 1) 646
Comment Re:Hah! Take that, my bank! (Score 1) 497
Comment Re:if they used a hash...? (Score 5, Informative) 497
We understand what he means, but if you did not read the update here you go
This doesn’t mean that your password has been shortened. Actually, Windows Live ID passwords were always limited to 16 characters—any additional password characters were ignored by the sign-in process. When we changed “Windows Live ID” to “Microsoft account,” we also updated the sign-in page to let you know that only the first 16 characters of your password are necessary. To avoid this error message in the future, you only need to enter the first 16 characters of your password.
Comment hmm can't think of anything (Score 1) 399
Comment Re:Win8 is just Win7 SP2 (Score 1) 504
Comment Bad driver will always be bad drivers (Score 1) 335
Submission + - Apple loses bid to exclude evidence in Samsung patent trial (bloomberg.com) 1