We do conditional access at the Azure level, and a device that doesn't meet some compliance policies on their machine (Windows, macOS, Linux) is unable to access their corporate account until they remediate that.
> For filter coffee, however, the ultrasound-brewed version performed even better: participants significantly preferred it overall, particularly rating its bitterness as more pleasant.
I'm surprised by this, my assumption from hot coffee vs cold brew was that since the water isn't hot, there wouldn't be as much bitterness? Or maybe I'm reading it wrong and it's why they prefer it, because it's less bitter?
QR codes are nonetheless useful at bridging the gap between the digital and physical world.
You have a physical copy of a document and you want to retrieve the latest digital copy? A QR code on the cover page or on the document footer works well from the printed copy.
You need to copy/transfer a tiny snippet of information from a computer to another device without relying on a computer network? Generate a QR code and scan it from the other device.
And there are other use case if you rely on URI scheme, such as crafting an email template that prefills the destination, the object of the message and the body, etc.
One of the potential issue is that they aren't digitally signed, so you cannot validate their integrity or origin so you need to be careful about what you scan in a public setting.
I stumbled upon the Biscuit fork of Crosspoint, which basically make it a tiny covert pentest tool while also keeping ereader functionalities. To be seen if it will keep up with the OG Crosspoint.
I do appreciate what Fedora does, particularly on the subject of immutability.
OStree and Bootc are great mecanisms that are based on existing concepts (git and OCI containers). IMO that is a great step towards stability and security.
But by doing that he would need to maintain more code, which is unreasonable if it isn't something he wants.
And someone using the Notepad++ brand without his consent isn't cool, as if something goes wrong, people might assume that the original Notepad++ author is behind it, tarnishing his reputation.
If he doesn't want to make a macOS version that's on him, other people can fork it and make their own versions if they want, just make it obvious it's not from the original dev.
I wouldn't mind seeing BcacheFS compared too, despite the current falling out between the main dev and Linus and its exclusion from the kernel (which will hopefully be a momentary thing).
I can imagine a BlackBerry-style keyboard showing up at some point, or maybe even something that isn't a keyboard (ex: a mini arcade joystick + buttons for games)?
It's likely that the onboarding system for activating and linking the Kindle to an account will no longer work after a factory reset, and you will not be able to progress further.
Because to me it's good enough, the syntax is simple and it's totally readable in plaintext, which makes it the ultimate format against vendor lock-in.