
. Corporate IT managers and privacy advocates have long been concerned about the privacy and security of Skype. While Skype does encrypt its communications, it has not documented the proprietary protocols it uses. Furthermore, while the Skype clients
More importantly, they provide helpful hints on puting it back together as well - something that I appreciated when trying to recall how a cable was routed or which size screw went in which hole. An especially nice touch is the way the screw holes are labeled on the bottom of the machine. Notice the icons next to the screws in the photograph, indicating which screws need to be removed when servicing the keyboard, installing RAM,
diagrams that describe how to get things apart. More importantly, they provide helpful hints on puting it back together as well - something that I appreciated when trying to recall how a cable was routed or which size screw went in which hole. An especially nice touch is the way the screw holes are labeled on the bottom of the machine. Notice the icons next to the screws in the photograph, indicating which screws need to be removed when servicing the keyboard, installing RAM, etc. These
number of experiments like this and I won’t spoil you fun. There are two sorts of implications he explores that are worth our thought. First, how general is this phenomenon? It certainly applies to food and drink, to cars to a whole lot of things. Does that mean that we are manipulated into paying higher prices for goods that are essentially equivalent to lower price alternatives? Would we be better off if we brought this into our conscious mind as we decide
Our advisor Chris Herot started exploring a new “Startup Predictor” tool, at the site You Noodle, on our behalf. He punted when the Predictor questionnaire went too deep; so I finished the exercise. You Noodle gave us a nice valuation, which we know, at this stage, is worth on
the main focus of one's computing activity, it is more common to leave the browser running all day as one visits hundreds of web sites. With everything running in one process, memory becomes increasingly fragmented until things slow to a crawl. Chrome puts each tab in its own process and starts a new process each time you go to a new web site. While this approach consumes a little more time and memory at the beginning, it is more efficient in the long run. It also means that if there are
The culprit usually turns out to be the Flash plug-in, which consume more than half of the CPU even when the offending pages are not on screen. One wonders if this discovery will cause more people to use FlashBlock.
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