I was looking into things like citrix (we use it already) but I'm not sure about the "Virtual Desktop" - does it use a PC (when they log in using Citrix - that PC becomes available) or is it a completely separate thing that we set up, controlling what they can/can't see and what they can/can't access?
@JourneymanGeek I'm not sure. New to this. I want to know what you can and can't do
Ok... I'll try and clarify the situation so you can get a better understanding (if possible)
What we want to do is set up a pc on a client site that has access to a program. It is not connected to their network, it only has a connection to our network via wifi.
Nevermind... ditch that for now haha. If something comes up I shall return
Options I can see are: it functions as a USB/cardreader while powered off, or the RPi OS would need to support acting as a MTP device or be able to mount some other partition as mass storage.
Dunno if there's some other USB protocol more suitable.
Still easier to write programs targeting this rather than some other board, since you have a familiar OS to fall back on. But the drawback is it also uses more power.
we can't solve world hunger, we can't cure cancer, we can't stop wars, we can't figure out how to live without stripping the planet of resources.... but we CAN flood the market with good quality general purpose computers for $5 :|
I encountered a very strange behaviour in my ionic/cordova app on the windows phone 8.1 platform, where i implemented an instant messenger. I teared my whole application down to a simple cordova (starter) application to eliminate potential side effects with other app related code like other css ...
looks like fun, because "out of context" snag of a tiny portion of the TOU, kinda misses the IMO "openness" intended by youtube. therefor the comment does not belong.
Section 6-C for example
For clarity, you retain all of your ownership rights in your Content. However, by submitting Content to YouTube, you hereby grant YouTube a worldwide, non-exclusive, royalty-free, sublicenseable and transferable license to use, reproduce, distribute, prepare derivative works of, display, and perform the Content in connection with the Service and YouTube's (and its successors' and affiliates') business, including without limitation . . .
including without limitation for promoting and redistributing part or all of the Service (and derivative works thereof) in any media formats and through any media channels. You also hereby grant each user of the Service a non-exclusive license to access your Content through the Service, and to use, reproduce, distribute, display and perform such Content as permitted through the functionality of the Service and under these Terms of Service
AKA given enough lawyers and variations in court systems, it says "put your own IP up on YouTube and you lost all your rights" :-)
Short Version "You also hereby grant each user of the Service a non-exclusive license to . . . use, reproduce, distribute, display and perform
Mortarboard Earn at least 200 reputation (the daily maximum) in a single day.
Ironic how I got that on a site I've only ever answered one question on (GD) but not even got close on the site where I'm active 99.9% of the time (SU)
@allquixotic To be fair, they can't do that either.
They're already out of stock at all UK stockists. So market not flooded. Rather droughty right now actually :-P
@qasdfdsaq The trick is to get a (the first?) good answer on a question which makes the "Hot Network Questions" list. If you are lucky that is good for a couple or three days of rep caps. Most of my reps caps were given a big helping hand from answering hot questions. The trick is guessing the hot questions ;)
I have Windows 8.1 with Realtek RTL8187SE and I wanted to start a WiFi access point from my laptop but I checked on the Device Manager and "Microsoft Virtual WiFi Adapter" was missing. I clicked "Show hidden devices" but I couldn't find it under "Network Adapters". I tried disabling my WiFi adapt...
@DavidPostill I remember buying a second hand DSL modem off a local auction site once thinking we could hook it up to our dial up and get better speeds.
Unfortunately, I went to buy a DSL service recently and even paid the subscription to find out a week later that my phone line was PCM or Cafu-optic as they call it and it cannot give DSL :(
I found it after I had waited for DSL light to show up on my modem for a week !
I bought the subscription from a private company but they all get it from Telecom Company which is the monopolistic company in charge of Iran's Telecom
I wonder if this problem exists in other ISPs of the world? I mean the lines that cannot provide DSL
Yes you're right. Unfortunately there is only one Telecom provider in Iran
But, they say I can still get DSL on the same line but only from Telecom
I recently read an article that PCM lines actually use empty space of a line to provide up to 4 voice channels thus leaving no space for data transfer as used by DSL technology
@MichaelFrank do you use DSL for Internet use now?
@JasonStack Couldn't imagine being on internet that slow again. My parents can get fibre, which would be up to 100mb/s down, and cheaper than their current plan. Yet they still won't call to get it install even though I tell them every week.
Why would someone enter my address and click the link 70 times if you only need a few attempts, gonna just assume he's not smart enough to get in anyway.
What is the difference between the iPhones "flash storage" and its "main system memory"? It's the terms that confuse me, are we talking about Flash drive vs RAM here?
@Manumit impossible to tell without any context, but in the general sense I'd never, ever interpret "main system memory" to mean anything but RAM, and "flash storage" is, well, flash storage - non-volatile flash that does the same function on a phone as an HDD on a desktop
This is the sentence: Every iOS device has a dedicated AES 256 crypto engine built into the DMA path between the flash storage and main system memory, making file encryption highly efficient.
@MichaelFrank actually, just the term "memory" alone wouldn't be enough to really know... if that sentence said "between the flash storage and memory" instead of including the vitally important terms "main system", I wouldn't really be able to definitively tell that they're talking about RAM
there are plenty of different things called "memory" that can exist within a complex device such as an iPhone, some of them volatile, some not
VRAM, main system memory, the memory on the baseband, you could even call the firmware's EEPROM "memory" (that's what the "M" stands for, so yeah)
@Manumit and possibly make it harder for an attacker to inject code into the CPU's instruction sequence that might do something malicious with the decryption step
@allquixotic Encryption only protects data at rest. Everything in memory is decrypted anyway. And frankly, the quote doesn't say that the encryption engine isn't in the CPU
From what I've understood the main processor is seperate from the co-processor Secure Enclave. But I can't say whether the cryptoengine is inside or or isolated from the main processors (like A7/A8)
I'm assuming it's seperate, so we have 3 processors :P (maybe 4 in addition to a mention I saw of a SHA-1 hardware module). iOS security is tought stuff. So vaguely covered.
@Manumit the iFixit teardowns of iPhones reveal literally dozens of separate Integrated Circuits. Not all of them are general-purpose processors with high-level software running on them, but all of them contribute important functionality to the phone.
Some of them are very tightly "wired" at an electrical level to perform very specific functions, while others are hard-coded in software or firmware to do specific functions but are electrically Turing-complete