

It does, in fact.
It does, in fact.
Yo! Man. I got me down on the two wheels
I got my own displacement
And the time - by line - is rent
Yo, man, got it down in the feels!
Pick up them claws;
We’re opening doors
An’ when I integrate again
I’m addin’ that C, ya ken?
Yo, man, check the map, yeah:
I’m the Velo’C’Rapper
Smh cancel culture these days
Is that when the humans it ate didn’t have enough fibre?
Displacemenraptor/timeraptor
Actually that’s still wrong.
dDisplacemenraptor/dTime. Otherwise you cancel out the raptors.
Doesn’t even need to be paper. Have locked-down, internet-disconnected computers in the exam hall bas glorified typewriters.
What is your worry about non authentic clients?
I think it might be the developers of that AI, letting their system make bug reports to train it, see what works and what doesn’t (as is the way with training AI), and not caring about the people hurt in the process.
Speedrunning the divorce here.
What’s the mysterious purple line? Red Hat?
Because you asked.
I still couldn’t see it, till I realised it’s underneath, not above, the climber!
I dunno, that background tho. Becomes something out of scifi.
The push to Microsoft accounts? More people, I expect, than I’d care to admit.
Is this serious? Grandsons’ photographs are not the only thing non-tech-savvy people keep on their laptops. Microsoft’s policies are not targeting this grandma specifically.
Can you imagine a distro made in Nepal, using as its logo a symbol of health, commonly seen patterned into gates and doors, displayed in windows, drawn on streets…
That’s fair.
(Though, small point, I think you can get the encryption keys to save even without a Microsoft account? Digging in regedit or something?)
Hah is there a rash of nursing home break ins that I’m unaware of?
I mean, not Windows user lives in a nursing home. I wish! But some lose laptops on the train, and some even throw their computers away!
Sure, most of the risk is remote through emails etc. Maybe you’re right. Maybe the balance is better the other way round: let all Windows Home users’ computers stay unencryptedv at rest, and keep encryption for Pro users. I grew up with a high focus on security; maybe I’m paranoid.
But phones are all encrypted these days. Obviously they’re more mobile and at more risk, but that suggests to me that laptops are subject to similar, if smaller, risks.
Why *vector? Displacement is already a vector; distance being a scalar.
Ah, is this a constant speed raptor?