Things like this can only be endorsed by malicious or very stupid people (if you are getting excited about this and have Minority report pop into your head -- you're of the latter).
What "security industry"? In how many companies nowadays is sitting and thinking things through an encouraged approach? It goes against the current economical values. The problem are not IoT vendors, the problem is money-driven economics.
Does anyone know what the maximum possible (combined-)output resolution of the Radeon Pro 460 is? I'm having a hard time finding this info on AMD's website.
"Why Tokyo Is the World’s Best Food City"? Because the author uses the word "fucking" at least once per paragraph. That is why. So off I go to Tokyo, visibly impressed.
I'd just gone through the process of moving some ~40 accounts on various websites from having a Yahoo email address to a Gmail one. By far the most unpleasant experience was with PayPal.
First I changed my email address. I received a confirmation and re-activated my account. Nice so far. Then I thought I'd generate a new, longer password. I pasted the 24-character password into the settings form. It was saved successfully.
After trying to login again though, it just wouldn't accept my login! So I went through the password recovery process. I received a link and then was asked to answer security questions. The security questions were ancient, so I facepalmed at first, but I was pretty sure I got the answers right after some thinking. It took me 10 tries to get the proper variation of the answers (it doesn't tell you which one is wrong).
Then I was presented with the new password form. I tried to paste the new 24-character password again. This form didn't allow you to paste the password in, you had to type it in manually for "added security". Then I realized the password was limited to 20 characters, and the previous form (in account settings) was just happily letting me paste a 24-character password while trimming the end silently!.
Unfortunately, even though I would very much like to abandon mine (even though it's used only for some spammy registrations), email forwarding is not possible unless you pay them, which is obviously out of question.
So basically, the best I can do is start changing my associated email address at the services I care about that are still using my yahoo email address. After a while, my yahoo inbox will be 100% spam (as opposed to 90% spam now), so I'd be able to move on.
From the pricing, and the fact that the blue version is available only in the US, this seems to be an "iPhone for Muricans that don't want an iPhone" (for whatever hissy fit). Now they have a choice, exactly like between Republicans and Democrats. Enjoy your HTC Pixels.
Everyone is hypersensitive.
Nobody thinks or researches anything past a Google search.
Everyone has an opinion.
Everyone is on the internet.
Everyone yells everything they think on social media.
An article was recently featured here, that said functions were limited to 60 lines. That seems like way too loose of a restriction considering the possible consequences.
As someone who doesn't know much about how parallelism primitives are implemented, I need to ask why SharedArrayBuffer needs a length to be specified? From my layman viewpoint, this seems too low-level to be used for casual everyday applications.
They should be tested independently, each with a completely reproducible setup that does only what is required for the assertion that will be made. I'm not sure what's hard to understand here... Are you trying to say that they need to be run together? Because it doesn't seem like that to me.