

A guy at work asked if he could use some similar pair of AR glasses at work and was rejected because the companion app for it required to always be running as elevated in windows. Was a solid no there.
A guy at work asked if he could use some similar pair of AR glasses at work and was rejected because the companion app for it required to always be running as elevated in windows. Was a solid no there.
The folding at home folks have been going for a very long time now and that’s contributed a lot to various fields of medicine over the years.
Given you essentially made no money of this would you stick with crypto if you did this again or go with a more altruistic project such as folding@home as that would provide essentially the same heating effect?
I mean since the advent of SSDs I’ve not found the boot times of computers to be all that slow and I typically quite like coming back to a clean desktop on a new day rather than having junk from yesterday being thrown at me.
Ah yeah I forgot about hybrid sleep as I turned if off years ago and forgot it existed. Such a nonsense feature.
The main thing I’m learning from this thread is that a surprising number of people don’t shut their machines down when they’re done using them. Which is wild to me.
Can you mount SMB shares in unprivliged containers? I thought that was blocked.
Can the host itself write to the file share? You can check this by trying to create a file in it via the host’s shell. If it can’t write to it the container won’t be able to either.
If you’re getting these regularly I’ve found more potassium in my diet helped a huge amount.
What was this guy doing to break his pihole all the time? I can’t remember the last time I logged into mine at all.
I think he should hear the chimp out.
Man I miss having a dishwasher. Definitely a requirement for the next place I’m in.
Ah final liberation. I love that game, picked it up on gog a couple of years back and you know it’s still fun if incredibly dated.
+1 for keepass. Been using it for years and love it.
Microsoft is a lot more aggressive with EoLing it’s Windows versions now exactly because XP lived so long. It was an absolute pain for them to maintain and support that for so long and they’ve made very sure they don’t repeat that experience.
This doesn’t remove security and compliance requirements for the business though. For our Linux endpoints we still deploy an AV on them and limit the user’s ability to add exclusions.
You’d be surprised. For medical info a lot of that is going to be sorted in windows servers running as either file or sql servers.
Probably for the best.
I’m still not convinced the BIMI is all that useful as email security. Feels more like a marketing exercise to me but I am in an exclusively B2B org so it probaly doesn’t matter as much.