You cut off the second part of that sentence. The scam isn’t doing the work from a different location, the scam is that they’re using the money to fund North Korea. This isn’t “Kim gets a job online” it’s “Kim is a state actor that is a security risk at any moment and meanwhile causing KnowBe4 to send money to a sanctioned country.”
Honestly ceiling medallion isn’t a bad idea. It’s a nice accent. We don’t have a TV in our bedroom (because we don’t want to use the space like that) otherwise the projector isn’t a bad idea either.
I’m not weird enough for a doll head but fabric + max brightness at like 20% could be a nice mood piece.
Oh, it’s on a smart dimmer already. The placement in the room relative to where I sleep/lie in bed makes it super annoying even at low light, so I’d rather just replace the full thing with something more useful or at least nicer looking.
The register providing contrast to the AWS infrastructure build out:
The Register is aware of government agencies building on-prem private clouds – sometimes on open source platforms – so they can scour code to soothe their security worries.
That’s just a local data center, guys. Like how everything was done before “the cloud” became a buzzword.
Citing an internal investigation, the Chinese ByteDance-owned app said its systems correctly identified the breach, but the ads were approved due to “human error” by a moderator.
This makes it so much worse. If it were “our algorithms didn’t catch it” that’d be one thing, but “our algorithms caught it but we ran them anyway” reeks of malice.
There’s a great Veritasium video recently about this exact thing: https://youtu.be/d6iQrh2TK98
It’s a human thing, though. This is just more evidence of LLM’s problem with garbage in, garbage out: it’s human biases being present in a system that people want to claim doesn’t have them.
Yeah, it just replaces the cert files and reload/restarts nginx for me. I don’t want it anywhere near my config files.
Microsoft has been trying to be more proactive about this: they changed all their documentation to say Entra ID instead of Azure Active Directory…before actually changing Azure AD to be called Entra ID…
The Volkswagen e-Golf was literally just an electric GTI hatchback but they discontinued it…
Recompiling my foundation and hoping it still holds the house up when I’m done.
Yeah that’s like saying someone setting you up on a blind date is arranging a marriage for you
I’ve heard about this power-on issue but it’s not the one I’ve been experiencing - the only device is the AVR and it can turn on just fine if I pull up the menu and hit Power through that.
Well I’m glad you got them fixed!
I am aware of the CEC settings and they are working - the TV will power off the device just fine using CEC and it has the ability to power it on (I can manually trigger this) but the TV does not send a power on command to the AVR automatically when the TV is turned on. This seems to be a known issue but I don’t have a link to the forum discussion I found a while ago where others have the same problem.
I also have a C1 and have been annoyed that it won’t turn on my connected AVR when I turn on the TV even though it has the capability and it turns it off when I turn the TV off. This wouldn’t happen to be one of the bugs you upgraded to fix, would it? What bugs did you encounter that you fixed with firmware upgrades?
I really like Wikipedia for stuff like this. This chart is helpful for a quick overview and you can always dig deeper into the linked pages for each specific CAT cable:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twisted_pair#Building_infrastructure
No time is universal because time moves at different speeds under different gravity. The point of this initiative is to be able to accurately measure time in the moon’s lower gravity.