there's a long held tradition on many chats here - its not a great place for live support, and most of the time questions are of the "damn it, why does it not work" kind of format.
> Possible values for encoding are: s = single-7-bit-byte characters ( ASCII , ISO 8859, etc., default), S = single-8-bit-byte characters, b = 16-bit bigendian, l = 16-bit littleendian, B = 32-bit bigendian, L = 32-bit littleendian. Useful for finding wide character strings. (l and b apply to, for example, Unicode UTF-16/UCS-2 encodings).
Carrom (also spelled karrom) is a "strike-and-pocket" tabletop game of South Asian origin. The game is very popular in Nepal, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and surrounding areas, and is known by various names in different languages. In South Asia, many clubs and cafés hold regular tournaments. Carrom is very commonly played by families, including children, and at social functions. Different standards and rules exist in different areas.
== Origins ==
The game of carrom is believed to have originated from the Indian subcontinent. Although no concrete evidence is available, it is believed...
There's a few reasons:
CPU Fans generally aren't revesable on their mounts on the heatsink and a lot now work in a 90 degree orinitation to the CPU itself, meaning they'd either blow 'front to back' or 'back to front' (or up and down in a tower case but I've never seen one which did this). Beca...
why are the 2nd and 3rd points indented so far? :/
apparently a bunch of seemingly random triangles is super NSFW, and a slightly altered picture of a pretty girl in a bikini goes from almost certainly NSFW to almost certainly not NSFW but still looks to the human eye to be the same
Yea, when I tried out-printer $pdf it just opened to PDF. So I tried get-content $pdf | out-printer and had to run over to the printer and spam the cancel button.
a bunch of "IT admins" (basically, those poor people who are required to comply with retarded "international standards" like ISO 9001) have been weighing in trying to get Mozilla to make pdf.js lock out printing when the "restrict printing" flag is set in the PDF, but so far they haven't
looks like they're going to make it an option, so anal-retentive companies can ship Firefox on their super locked down workstations and allow them to view documents but not print them
We were about to implement a visitor registration kiosk here as a local project... but then GDPR happened and now we can't.
> Yes, there may be better, more secure security solutions. But what is next? We won't use SSL to secure transactions just because 128 bit may be computationally feasible to break? Obviously we should just not use SSL at all then. Make it clear text. Why bother?
@Bob I'd be the first person to file a bug if they release it without adding an option to disable the skin-deep fake DRM on PDFs (or at least to make DRM an option that's disabled by default)
(Group Policy support is one of those things that Firefox seriously lags behind in — Chrome supports it, Firefox does not and requires a commercial add-on)