It's a TD classic - never gets boring!Originally Posted by Dragonfly
betta is dumb beyond redemption, so him trying to score "originality" points to feel better about himself is quite interesting and funny
Last edited by Dragonfly; 28-11-2015 at 11:12 PM.
Buttplug the difference between you and boo.... is
betty knows enough to know he's not an expert
you know even less than that, thus you think you are an expert
And for your reference experts do make mistakes, but fails as epic as your wifi switch thread are almost unknown
Teakdoor CSI, TD's best post-reality thinkers
featuring Prattmaster ENT, Prattmaster Dapper and PrattmasterPseudolus
Dedicated to uncovering irrational explanations to every event and heroically
defending them against the onslaught of physics, rational logic and evidence
listen you have proved yourself to be an incompetent fool when it comes to computers, even for doing simple tasks
granted, the WIFI switch was funny, but to extrapolate the whole thing for more of what it is just demonstrate how petty and stupid your little mind is. But again, you are a retired old English man living in Thailand, full of prejudice and British nationalism
when you say people, you mean other men ?Originally Posted by harrybarracuda
priceless, TD's very own 'only gay in the village'
they don't even know what's regedit, and neither do you, you lazy server room boyOriginally Posted by harrybarracuda
Hilarious, ah the hazards of the upgrade, sorta hazzmat
Yeah, man, I'm not even going to mess with that lil' "upgrade to 10" icon by trying to remove it.
The Open Office sw I'm using has been just fine so far.
do yourself a favor and Install MS Office 2010 which is quite nice and stable, cheap also
OO is a bit of a joke really, but since you seem to be a joker, I guess that's where you will go at the end
windows 10 - so efficient , you don't need to email the NSA your encryption keys
https://theintercept.com/2015/12/28/...ncryption-key/
One of the excellent features of new Windows devices is that disk encryption is built-in and turned on by default, protecting your data in case your device is lost or stolen. But what is less well-known is that, if you are like most users and login to Windows 10 using your Microsoft account, your computer automatically uploaded a copy of your recovery key – which can be used to unlock your encrypted disk – to Microsoft's servers, probably without your knowledge and without an option to opt-out.
During the "crypto wars" of the nineties, the National Security Agency developed an encryption backdoor technology – endorsed and promoted by the Clinton administration – called the Clipper chip, which they hoped telecom companies would use to sell backdoored crypto phones. Essentially, every phone with a Clipper chip would come with an encryption key, but the government would also get a copy of that key – this is known as key escrow – with the promise to only use it in response to a valid warrant. But due to public outcry and the availability of encryption tools like PGP, which the government didn't control, the Clipper chip program ceased to be relevant by 1996. (Today, most phone calls still aren't encrypted. You can use the free, open source, backdoorless Signal app to make encrypted calls.)
The fact that new Windows devices require users to backup their recovery key on Microsoft's servers is remarkably similar to a key escrow system, but with an important difference. Users can choose to delete recovery keys from their Microsoft accounts (you can skip to the bottom of this article to learn how) – something that people never had the option to do with the Clipper chip system. But they can only delete it after they've already uploaded it to the cloud
whoosh
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