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Win+C has been assigned to some of Windows' least successful features. How will I ever summon the Copilot now?
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Kent Sharkey wrote: How will I ever summon the Copilot now? Don't worry - they've only eliminated the 'C' part. The 'Win' key will now do the job by itself.
/s (but probably not by much)
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Single individuals make less of a difference to the success or failure of a technology project than you might think (and that’s a good thing). "Ready to form Voltron!"
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It identified the text file as Trojan:Win32/Casdet!rfn. Because you can never trust those text files
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Someday, something like this will bring down the entire web.
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Programmers should be paranoid. Or people that write articles (or post them in a newsletter)
"Trust everybody, but cut the cards"
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How "The Innovator's Dilemma" explains the demise of Java as the predominant payments language Why use a language everyone knows, when you can just slap something together and run with it?
At least that's one interpretation of this opinion.
Discuss.
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Multiple AI companies are bypassing robots.txt instructions, according to Reuters. If they're ignoring the robots, maybe we should send the robots after them?
Weaksauce, sorry. It's Sunday and I don't feel like thinking today.
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Terms and Conditions: Whether or not you agree to these conditions, you agree to these conditions.
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The Wi-Fi router is baked into the laptop-sized dish which can be powered by a standard USB power bank. Because you never know where you'll be when you need to access CodeProject
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I can see these being very useful for search and rescue or disaster response teams in remote areas.
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The technique has come full circle. pI?
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Cobbler?
I’ve given up trying to be calm. However, I am open to feeling slightly less agitated.
I’m begging you for the benefit of everyone, don’t be STUPID.
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IP address of downloads offers crumb trail to orgs who should be ready for Big Red, says licensing expert "I got a name, I got a number, I'm coming after you"
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Oracle: Making Microsoft Access look like a valid database option since 1982. Or was that 1977 (even before Access came into existence)?
edit:
"With Access v2.0, Microsoft specified the minimum hardware requirements to be Microsoft Windows v3.1 with 4 MB of RAM required, 6 MB RAM recommended; 8 MB of available hard disk space required, 14 MB hard disk space recommended. The product shipped on seven 1.44 MB diskettes. The manual shows a 1994 copyright date." - Wikipedia
Wow! Even though I never worked with Access back then, those system specs bring back memories! And the disks! Oh my God, the disks!
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And Oracle makes Microsoft’s business shenanigans seem clean and pure.
TTFN - Kent
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Ah, Oracle's latest attempt to eliminate Java as a useful language.
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Workers stayed remote even when told they could no longer be promoted. Maybe they should try double dog daring them to come to the office?
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This is hilarious. The comments on the article are even better. Wednesday is my last day as a full-time consultant. I went into the building a couple of weeks ago to drop off some hardware. Prior to this, there was an email sent out shuffling cubes so that people in XyZ organization were all co-located so that they could "cooperate" more. I could not find anyone. 60% or more of the cubicle dungeons were empty. And I don't mean unoccupied, I mean empty - no phone, no computer, no papers, just unoccupied.
I'm still mindful of the manager that retired saying, "I don't care if you are more productive at home, you MUST come back to the office." I have to laugh, because the new trend was to move all senior management to corporate head quarters.
8 months after he retires... here we are, and I see no hiring.
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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RTO requirements are always driven by one of two things:
1) CFOs trying to justify the contracts they have for office space.
2) CxOs who don't trust anyone.
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According to a new report, tech giants like Amazon and Alexa are allegedly spying on us with their smart home devices. Who would have thought that devices designed to spy on us are spying on us?
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We’re pleased to announce that starting in August 2024, developers who are not part of an organization managed by an IT administrator can choose to receive monthly Visual Studio security updates through the Microsoft Update (MU) system on “patch Tuesdays”. We dare you
Yes, I've reported on it in the past. But this one includes the Registry key to shut it off.
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you just cannot make this $$## up.
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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New global research from secure storage maker Apricorn into the security and storage of data finds corporate information is knowingly put at risk by 55 percent of mobile workers. *Workers* put corporate data at risk. The remote ones just do it in their pyjamas
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