We have been using http://twist.com for several months and it sounds very close to what you described. You create a thread with a title and a message and replies are threaded.
The bolt has over the air update capabilities, but iirc, it was used only once in the past 4 years.
And the bolt has an option to limit charge to X%. I set mine to about 80%, and it's plenty for my needs. So you can leave your car plugged in all day long
That's an awful reason to block a PR. I've been doing code review for the past 6+ years and I'm on the other side, I often ask for better, and longer code comments, for the reason you highlighted, 5 years later (or even months later) that long comment will save us hours
the password length was part of the issue, but one where I need help with is them saying: "Widely accepted by cryptographers as a more secure solution than AES/Rijndael"
We have two kids (in NC, US)), both were c-sections, we had insurance on the first one, but because she was born in Feb, we had to pay the deductible twice, because even though it was the same pregnancy, it was "over two billing years". And even with insurance we still ended up paying the rest of the bill over 3 or 4 years.
Second kid was with no insurance, I think we'll finish paying that one when he turns 10 years old.
I don't know about other areas in the US, but around here you can at least setup a payment plan with the hospital and they are 0% interest rate.
I think the prev. comment is accurate in the sense that Mastodon can easily be vulnerable to social engineering attacks, because as long as humans run it, humans are going to make mistakes.
To be super clear, any (chat/microblogging/etc) software is going to be vulnerable to social eng attacks.
Like many others, we were also forced to use it at work, hard to pick the worse part of Teams but a big one is how slow it is from the time I click the "reply" link until I can actually type a message. So many times I click, start typing and then I notice it missed about 4 to 5 letters, and I don't even consider myself fast at typing.
Oh, and how you upload a file/image, need to wait until it is fully uploaded but after that you still need to click the "Send" button to actually post the file.
It's definitely an enterprise kind of app, one that makes sure you take forever to do anything.
You can definitely have the best of both worlds. People will tell you (or me here) that it's rare, etc, and maybe it is, but all you need is one.
Keeping balance is not something you do once and then you are done, it is similar to, you are not a recovered alcoholic, you are a recovering alcoholic, because any day you can fall back.
You don't have to say, I can either have a happy personal life or make money, you can do both.
Like others have said, check with an accountant, I have worked remotely for the past 11 years in NC, for companies in GA, CT and NY, but because I'm 100% remote, I only have to pay NC taxes. None of them ever had an office in NC
Somewhat off topic but, when I simply typed the site bill.com on Firefox's private browsing, scrolled down a bit, they show me a popup to chat and they have my first and last name there.
The same thing happened when I went on my cell using Firefox Focus, which doesn't keep any cookies.
1. Anyone else seeing this?
2. I hate it
3. Where do they get this info from?
I didn't want to include the much longer list, if we look to more recent events, Google Play Music is in the process of being replaced by Youtube Music, but with way fewer features.
I was also a Google Wallet user, and they killed it, Google Notebook, I'm sure I can keep going if I try to remember for a few more minutes.
Besides the privacy risks with full on moving your banking to Google, I think another big issue is when they decide this product isn't profitable any more, and/or some other department in Google comes up with banking 2.0 and you end up having to move all your bill payments, auto draft, etc back out.
If we thought killing Google Reader was bad, killing your bank app would be even worse.
If we apply this to a human, let's say I'm getting old and my eyes aren't as good any more, I don't just keep driving like nothing changed, I need to find a way to see better, because the risk of getting into an accident is higher.
If the car's system cannot tell what an object is, you don't just assume it's going to be ok, you need to either get better sensors or find some other real solution.
https://www.flowdock.com , besides all the normal features you mentioned, it has excellent thread support, which is huge! So you can have multiple conversations in the same channel/flow during several days and can just ignore whichever thread isn't for you.
We have been using it with a 100% remote team for over 6 years.
I think your definition of a burner phone is different than what the article describes.
It's not supposed to have much in the way of navigation/UI. To place a call it should be just unlock it, open it (for flip kind), press the numbers and then press the green button :)
I bought one for my 8 yod, unknown brand "Plum" and works great, battery lasts like a week.