@Bulb said in Hacking News:
Fuzzing a CPU is a neat trick.
You will not... use... the Software or associated documentation;
Pretty sure I'm reading that right. Don't care enough to go find the original license text to see if it makes sense in context.
Yodel was formed when Home Delivery Network acquired DHL. The two couriers that I'd had the most trouble with. DHL once put a note through my door for a failed delivery the day after after I'd walked the ~2 miles to their depot to pick up the parcel.
UPS and DPD have always been reliable in my experience. DPD's website is even quite good. You can see the driver's location on a map.
@Polygeekery Currently it's the only way to play Gears of War 4 on PC. That's the only game I care about on there that isn't also on Steam.
Plus, there's Microsoft Rewards, which gives you points for using Bing which you can spend on Store credit.
@SirTwist The service was (probably) automatic ordering of ink cartridges when the existing ones ran out. Not paying for that does not justify remotely bricking hardware they (probably) paid for.
I have seen Windows 10 reinstall an uninstalled app, but not for a long time. It was probably within the first year of availability.
I have also seen it re-enable the touchscreen on my laptop, which I disabled intentionally because I never used it. It does this after every major update.
I'm kinda in both categories on this one.
My music and videos are meticulously organised, but if I want to listen to a particular song I usually just search for it.
Pictures and documents are less organised. There are some subfolders, but also a lot of loose files. Documents are easily findable with Windows search, but for pictures, especially if it's something from my phone camera, I sometimes have to look through several IMG_[timestamp].jpg, DSC#####.jpg etc. until I find it.
For games I usually use either Windows or Steam's search function.
Then there's my 'Brain' folder, which contains things I'm totally going to get around to dealing with soon.
@pie_flavor said in Samsung, bunch of *****:
OnePlus, on the other hand, delivers.
Unless you were one of their early supporters. They promised Nexus-like updates, but the OnePlus 2 was abandoned on Marshmallow, while it looks like the OnePlus 3 is getting Pie.
A quick Google suggests that the majority of Snapdragon 810 devices got at least Nougat, with some even getting Oreo.
@Gurth I usually spend about 2 minutes a day searching for:
a
aa
aaa
aaaa
etc. while listening to a podcast or something.
@SirTwist The service was (probably) automatic ordering of ink cartridges when the existing ones ran out. Not paying for that does not justify remotely bricking hardware they (probably) paid for.
I'm kinda in both categories on this one.
My music and videos are meticulously organised, but if I want to listen to a particular song I usually just search for it.
Pictures and documents are less organised. There are some subfolders, but also a lot of loose files. Documents are easily findable with Windows search, but for pictures, especially if it's something from my phone camera, I sometimes have to look through several IMG_[timestamp].jpg, DSC#####.jpg etc. until I find it.
For games I usually use either Windows or Steam's search function.
Then there's my 'Brain' folder, which contains things I'm totally going to get around to dealing with soon.
@Steve_The_Cynic said in Apple launches new products so minimally different from previous generation that their biggest innovation was removing the charger from the box:
It reminds me of when Nintendo released the "New" 3DS models, and they, too, didn't include a charger in the box. It was pretty clear for various reasons that Nintendo did this because their main market was people looking to upgrade from an existing DS or 3DS, rather than for new players
Except only the 3DS used the same charger, and there were so few games that took advantage of the features of the "New" 3DS that it wasn't really worth the upgrade (except maybe for the auto-focusing 3D thing, that's kinda cool). And now (at least in the UK) you can't even buy official 3DS chargers anymore, and 3rd party gaming accessories aren't exactly known for their reliability.
Nothing better to do, so I'll check my keyboards too:
Clevo laptop: bent arrow on both, numpad also says "Enter". Fn+either does the same thing as no Fn.
Dell laptop: too small for numpad, only has bent arrow. Not switching it on just to test what Fn does.
Desktop (HyperX Alloy Core): both only say "Enter". Has a Fn key, but it's just for controlling the lighting.
Old spare USB keyboard that I stole from work, branding has worn off, model number has no Google results: "Enter" on both, main one also has bent arrow. Has a Fn key that doesn't seem to do anything.
@pie_flavor said in Samsung, bunch of *****:
OnePlus, on the other hand, delivers.
Unless you were one of their early supporters. They promised Nexus-like updates, but the OnePlus 2 was abandoned on Marshmallow, while it looks like the OnePlus 3 is getting Pie.
A quick Google suggests that the majority of Snapdragon 810 devices got at least Nougat, with some even getting Oreo.
You will not... use... the Software or associated documentation;
Pretty sure I'm reading that right. Don't care enough to go find the original license text to see if it makes sense in context.
@Gurth I usually spend about 2 minutes a day searching for:
a
aa
aaa
aaaa
etc. while listening to a podcast or something.