Skip Navigation

Posts
0
Comments
423
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • ...get home play the game, take a bathroom break... bring the box and manual to the bathroom to read it more.

  • Remote control over your phone or using a Xbox controller like if it were a console. Back in the day I had an htpc remote but ability to control apps is inconsistent.

    For me nothing is more simple then a PC interface. I hate having to scroll using a TV remote it takes so long to do anything and it's quite limiting in other ways.

  • Stremio/Plex with a Microsoft keyboard that has a touchpad built in. It's big but you can get small ones off Amazon for $20

  • Same. Seems like overkill when you can see what it can do. But also at that price you can velcro it to the back of your tv and it can literally do anything so have at. I don't see a lot of better options. I use full computers personally.

  • N100 mini PC imo. $150 does everything.

  • You'd be surprised maybe how many developers don't properly remove all files they put on your computer. Adobe is notorious for this.

  • You misunderstand. They're calculating a fingerprint that identifies you across sessions despite you changing up a bunch of values on your browser with an extension because that's all highly detectable. They know it's junk data they don't use it. It actually is worse because you stop blending in with the crowd.

    You're better off blending in then trying to look unique with every visit. The latter is a flawed concept.

    Read the arkenfox guide they get into it. Most extensions just reduce your ability to blend in to the crowd and thus should be avoided.

  • https://abrahamjuliot.github.io/creepjs/index.html

    Your extension might make you MORE finger-printable. Advanced fingerprinting scripts can detect lies told by extensions.

    https://github.com/arkenfox/user.js/wiki/3.3-Overrides-%5BTo-RFP-or-Not%5D#-fingerprinting

    If you're actually interested in reducing your fingerprint you should read the arkenfox guide which leverages built in features from firefox. You'll see very quickly that if someone wants to fingerprint you it's trivial and there's little you can do short of TOR.

    more reading: https://www.privacyguides.org/en/desktop-browsers/?h=fingerprint#anti-fingerprinting

  • Arkenfox is a set of Firefox flags.

    Librewolf/mule is essentially pre-packaged Firefox w/arkenfox and some things stripped out.

    The devs work informally on it which is why some releases lag. Like the jump to v128 lagged on mule because Firefox switched the way their repo worked and mull is based off of the Firefox source with some build scripts to change the logo, branding and add arkenfox settings by default.

    The flags used by Arkenfox are largely funded by the tor project as they work to upstream many of the tor browser changes back into Firefox which enables efficiency for future tor builds.

    This benefits everyone as the privacy preserving features of tor can be used off of the tor network too.

  • is your demo real? I don't like AI but this is not characteristically accurate for modern gen-ai.

  • They've been caught selling customer data to counter-interest groups which want to keep groups oppressed. E.g. the Christians are buying Grindr data to excommunicate people

  • That one feature in the blog the article doesn't talk about at all is called FRP and they aren't saying it's new they're saying they're upgrading it.

    We’re making it more difficult to do that with an upgrade to Android’s factory reset protection.

    And the reason for that is that FRP is easily bypassed if your phone isnt locked. Among other bypasses.

  • Except that isn't what this is.

    "The feature automatically locks your phone when it detects your phone has been snatched from your hand. It uses data from your phone's accelerometer and gyroscope"

  • Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • You can't just avoid a recession infinitely, the economy is cyclical - it's coming. People will debate about when right up to the day it's official.

    Not to mention "soft landing" implies the economy went down - e.g. a recession. So at best they're saying things recessed softly?

    Kinda wild to think we're not already or still in one.

  • I've owned/used HPs, Dells, and several Thnkpads and the thinkpads by far are always the best machines. They are built to last, support is top notch.

  • Only lawyers and politicians would be dumb enough to break DNS

  • People are definitely talking about that. Maybe not in the media but in the affected industries.

    It was different when we weren't living in a software as a service world. You could be mono platform but since you had complete control you didn't have to worry you could roll out how you wanted.

    Crowd strike by it's very nature is supposed to be live updated throughout the day as threats emerge.

    If we want services like these maybe we need to come up with better ways to isolate them from the kernel while still allowing crowdstrike type software to detect threats

    Solving the crowdstrike problem could solve kernel level anti cheat software too