So banning ublock origin lite from the addon store was malice, after all?
That means they will drop MV2 as soon as Chrome ends the business/legacy support, since they were the alternative.
So banning ublock origin lite from the addon store was malice, after all?
That means they will drop MV2 as soon as Chrome ends the business/legacy support, since they were the alternative.
You misspelled Library Genesis.
It’s $269.99 and has 9 programmable buttons.
The Streamdeck XL costs $200 and has 32 programmable buttons.
Yes, but for different reasons. They are much less popular, and have way lower market share as a result.
Lots of lower-end chinese projectors are also running Android (linux), with multi-core CPUs…
Don’t Google it. Just be happy you missed Liveleak and r/watchpeopledie.
My hot air station has a reeeealllly long cable.
So long. It’s the best. Unlike my…
SDRs like the Hackrf Portapack are, as well.
You know when people say “I’ve only talked about this once, never searched for it, and then I got ads a few days later”?
What if it hasn’t been phones that were listening (despite Siri/Google Assistant/Alexa mis-identifying something as a wake-word being the most sensible explanation), but TVs?
Joke’s on them. Their telemetry server is in another castle VLAN.
Google part numbers (if they aren’t scratched off/lasered off/ epoxied). Once you’ve found the ethernet controller, you can short out the pins, or yeet it off the board.
It’s called wardriving, a practise Samsung TVs are infamous for.
To be fair, the article linked this idiotic one about OpenAI’s “thirsty” data centers, where they talk about water “consumption” of cooling cycles… which are typically closed-loop systems.
It’s first-party, but somehow not installed by default on Samsung devices.
If you plug the dorm ethernet jack into the LAN side of a consumer router, there’s a chance they don’t.
Sure, you can catch this if you watch the dhcp leases your router is handing out, but…
Oh, for fucks sake
Moore’s Law disagrees
By the way, The Windows XP version has been ported to WASM, and you can play it in a browser.
I knew someone would post this link, thanks!
It’s still pretty well designed hardware.
Exactly the kind that attracts the Home-Assistant hacking crowd, as long as there’s a lack of decent alternatives.
There’s Tablacus. Opus is supposed to be good too, but I haven’t tried it.