window.clipboardData.getData('Text') will work in some browsers. However, many browsers where it does work will prompt the user as to whether or not they wish the web page to have access to the clipboard.
only way to test if to find a website where you can successfully plant XSS and plant some JS to read the clipboard and insert the contents into the page in order to test this theory right??
I read about memory mapped I/O so some of the adress space is signed to I/O but is that the general way it works today?
Guys, now really of topic. But does it bother you that not a single person alive knows HOW exactly a computer works? I mean completely to rebuild one form scratch
I have no clue how the internals of a computer work and I wish I knew,
soo....... power on -> some electricity goes into the cpu and for some reason it comes from the BIOS right?
Then some electricity goes into the boot device and then some electricity comes out of the boot device to the CPU right? then before you know it electricity is going back and forth from the boot device to the CPU and from the CPU to the RAM?
and then well a hard drive is I/O so there you go
at Junaga I believe that's an uneducated question you're asking there and I love computers maybe one day I'll be one of those people who knows exactly
@Junaga Depends on how much stuff will cost where you live. Less than a year ago, I was earning USD 600 and spending USD 200 on my health plan. Cool, huh?
There's a dent over a large area near the optical drive bay indicating the impact occurred. I'm surprised and thankful nothing got cracked or broken; the main service cover popped out but oddly enough was not damaged.
@CausingUnderflowsEverywhere TCP does not guarantee the order, but it is capable of fixing out of order packets and requesting missing packets to be transmitted again.
windows doesnt shut down if it loses access to the hdd though it freezes at most or bsods so not sure, unless you have auto restart. maybe when it impacted the battery disconnected or something briefly
In all honesty, I'm impressed at how solidly these Clevo systems are built. I'm not sure whether a similarly-equipped Alienware 15 would have survived this sort of impact...
Of course I mean will my server application receive the data in the order the client code sent it. Ignoring what the back end is doing (IP stack, TCP etc)
When you say tcp is capable of re-ordering, do you guarantee that it always will?
I had a client bring in an alienware with BSODs, turns out they put a graphics card in there that BSODs.. so I dont think dell alienware is good at all
@CausingUnderflowsEverywhere If the TCP stack has been correctly written it should. Note that missing packets may not be retrievable (that is the definition of packet loss ...)
Oh yes, I remember being on the website, and it said things like "Pro hackers use Kali" and the "trailer" that was like 2 mins, just showed one and a half minutes of the gnome desktop. And an encryption program xD
I should be equiping myself with nice black jeans and a dress shirt but it's 20C outside and I bike and I'm hearty so Im still equiping myself in shorts and a t shirt and Im old now and feel like I need to wear clothes appropriate for my age where do I find shorts appropriate for a man in his 20s
the software I acquire marks packets and tells me it receives one packet, and then 10 packets in the order they should be, but that chain was supposed to come before that one packet. Do you think RTS is causing them to come in out of order?
maybe the client sends the 10 packets while the network is down then sends the next one so my server gets that one, then a tcp RTS re-sends those 10 that never made it and so they come after ?
I was wondering how exactly does TCP implement in-order delivery.
lets say this is list of events
packet1 sent , ack received.
packet2 sent , ack not-received.
packet3 sent.
packet4 sent.
ack4 received.
ack3 received.
ack2 received.
Can you describe to me what exactly happens sequentia...
well that's definitely a bone piece that was in the peperoni :/ sigh......... oh well I doubt peperoni was even healthy. I guess I can replace it with bacon as long as they use actual strips and not those balls that one again can have who knows what inside of it
I was eating pizza and there was something hard that could not be crushed by my teeth and it was a bone and I'm already very picky now I feel like I cant eat peperoni pizza anymore cause of the bone
First time in ages I ventured in a chat room other than here to try to get help. In a few minutes I've been callled retarded, accused of hacking, and told to "fuck you".
@ThatBrazilianGuy Damn. I have a Firefox extension that "Prevents websites from interfering with copy and paste actions." but the author has removed it :/
I'm not sure if I ever said that, but if / whenever any of the regular folks from here ever come to Rio, I'd be more than happy to pay any of you guys a beer! And I really mean it.
@DavidPostill But man, you have no idea how much stress you just saved me. I'd buy you a special, homebrewed beer.
Now I have to go, 7pm and the wife radiopatrol already rang :P
yes the weather, weather or not someone has something better to be doing :-)
@Burgi so do you feel all refreshed and ready to get right back to work doubling your effort after your extended and wonderous vacation? Or more like, wishing it was longer , much longer?
good things to hear after you come back from work vacation: Gesus! I thought you had quit, you gotta help me with . . . . Get on that now, you have had your fun, now get back to work. Heh, You should see what it's like when your not here.
Bad things to hear after you come back from a work vacation: Do you work here, I dont remember seeing you? I was hopeing you had quit. We got a lot done while you were gone.
I don't know much at all about networking, and I when I tried to find an answer to this online I found someone who posted a one sentence answer saying "It would cause lots of broadcasts and collisions."
What would happen, if anything at all, if I were to connect an unmanaged network switch to it...
I have had my phone tell me I have many viruses on it in the past. I don't know if its true, but I'm sure it is.
Now I have many photos of my son and other precious memories that I want to transfer to my computer before I get rid of the phone.
If I just transfer photos and videos that I have ta...
Quick question: If I create a network loop with unmanaged switches, would I see the network interfaces on the affected computer(s) run at their limit due to a broadcast storm?
Merely connecting the phone to the computer isn't going to result in infection. Unlike flash drives, Android devices communicate with PCs using a protocol called MTP, which does not allow code on the device to be executed by itself. You should just be able to transfer photos to the computer and factory-reset the phone. — bwDraco1 min ago
(recovered cleanly and succeeded in avoiding drama \o/)
The other computer here, works for the most part, but crashes with an error about every 2 days. I thought it was a driver. it errored with like 10 different errors, enough to indicate that none of the errors themselves would pinpoint the problem. slowly i was updating and changing drivers, assuming it was a leaking.
Found out last week, it all quit doing that , when i changed the power management for the PCI bus in windows ? so weird to have every error under the sun, and one button switched it from being DOA to living long happy life.
Which means that for me windows 10 does not work with samsung phones. I can alsways add a linux VM, or use a win7 host. (Which I do atm. move phone to w7 laptop, transfer files, move files to USB, plug USB in w10 compouter)
Uh, how is it related. All I want is a very simply driver to speak to an USB <strike>pendrive</strike> phone.
that is where a removable chip in the phone comes in really handy, can be many times faster, and just copies. leaving out the microSD chip slot in some phones sucks double.
@Psycogeek The point of having MTP is that it's file-level and that the device can control the transfer of files. MSC requires block-level access, which would quite literally require the phone's OS to be shut down.
Older virus exploited the fact that older versions of Android (before 3.0 Honeycomb) used MSC.
> Thankfully, however, this does not work for all devices. The attackers cannot use mobile devices that use the Media Transfer Protocol (MTP for short) and no longer make the internal memory available as an external mass storage device to transfer this malware. Here, however, there is a risk that a user could accidentally execute the Windows malware provided by Ssucl.A when he or she sees the files in Windows Explorer.
Hmm. So basically, if I put a windows virus on my phone, use my phone as an USB pen drive and click on the virus And my windows virusscanner is out of date, only then I am in trouble?
Except a virusscanner on a PC is always up to date (I think that is a default setting these days)
Autorun has been disabled on windows since, what was it, 4 years?
But yes, a good point
Personally my virusscanner is always up top date, so onlu new stuff would (should) infect me. And I do not click on sexy_picture_of_$famous.jpeg.exe And autorun is among the first things disabled after OS install
And blocked by the fileserver virusscanner at work (all autorun.inf auto deleted)