It's unlikely since it uses the field ID and not the text, so it wouldn't know which question went with which answer.
It's so rarely needed to actually use these anyway, that it's a non-issue IMO. You should never opt to use security questions as they are terrible from a security standpoint. This is just for when they are required by stupid websites.
While I'm not 100% certain it's not just confusing perspective, it does appear that the slope rise is shorter than the run, suggesting that this is from the top of the stairs.
Yep, that would work fine for the first line of defense. Eventually, you can expand it to copy, replicate, or drive swap the onprem backups offsite somewhere (e.g., cloud, office, or family member) if you want to protect your data from site loss (e.g., house fire).
If you are storing anything important -- especially Immich and Vaultwarden data -- you should have a good offsite protection strategy. And even the HASS config should be backed up with versioning because rebuilding from scratch could be painful once you get deep into it.
I'll let others chime in on possible good backup options because I use Veeam and Azure, which really isn't in the spirit of this community, and I'd be interested in good open source options myself.
I read a lot of reviews before buying mine saying things like, "so heavy you could kill an intruder," but still wasn't prepared for just how heavy it was.
Totally not disagreeing, but for some more context she married into the Walton family, inherited a 1.9% stake in the company when her husband died in 2005, and has never had a role in the organization.
Lol Microsoft is not even close to a walled garden. This is just them removing the password manager feature that nobody used from their authenticator app.
This isn't Microsoft's announcement. They announced over a month ago. This also only affects bulk senders sending over 5,000 emails a day inbound to their Hotmail/Outlook.com service.
And if you can't send DMARC-compliant emails in 2025, frankly you deserve to be blocked.
Also it was black on red to make it harder to photocopy. I remember my mom being proud that she'd used the filters on the fancy copier she had at work to copy this sheet.
No that's not how it works. Handling a larger address space (e.g., 32-bit vs 64-bit) maybe could affect speed between same sized modules on a very old CPU but I'm not sure that's even the case by any noticeable margin.
The RA in RAM stands for random access; there is no seeking necessary.
Technically at a very low level size probably affects speed, but not to any degree you'd notice. RAM speed is actually positively correlated with size, but that's more because newer memory modules are both generally both bigger and faster.
It's unlikely since it uses the field ID and not the text, so it wouldn't know which question went with which answer.
It's so rarely needed to actually use these anyway, that it's a non-issue IMO. You should never opt to use security questions as they are terrible from a security standpoint. This is just for when they are required by stupid websites.