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01:00 - 19:0019:00 - 00:00

01:19
Nice, a 64-bit processor in the new iPhone?
@tylerl Ugh. What a hassle.
@TerryChia how much RAM?
@Gilles No mention of that like usual. I'd be surprised if it's more than 1GB.
I see it as more of a transition thing.
01:57
@TerryChia I see it as “F!RST”
@Gilles Maybe... but considering how Apple doesn't usually focus on hardware specs, that will surprise me.
Perhaps the iPad in a generation or two will have > 4GB of RAM but I don't see the point of that in a phone.
@TerryChia I feel like programming the generator he wants.
@Simon Do it! Shouldn't be that difficult...
It shouldn't be too hard, you keep in a DB which character should be replaced with which one.
Then you go through the word and generate the possible entries. However, the algorithm to generate every single possibilities might be harder to figure out.
I'm actually surprised he needs it. AFAIK password crackers like john already mangles the dictionaries you pass in.
02:14
I'll think about it tomorrow when I'm not half asleep and I might start something later.
02:54
@Simon If you are bored, I got a few projects you could contribute to. :P
 
1 hour later…
03:57
Aside from just being weird, does anyone else feel like this is fairly off-topic?
0
Q: Using only private non-government resources, how can something be sent such that the NSA will see it?

John SmithSupposing you want the NSA to see something, what does one have to do to guarantee it. This means in their normal data collection it will be swept up, not in a targeted probe of an individual or with (or without) a subpoena. The restrictions are as follows: No use of government resources (can...

04:18
I posted a question on the main site too, but this is more discussiony: What do you guys think? Should browsers block passive content loaded over HTTP on HTTPS pages? (Mixed passive content)
04:59
@ManishEarth Interesting...
Never really thought about passive content before.
@ManishEarth why is that link you include linking to Optics Assignments.rar file? :O
Anyway, I've replaced it... but do note I've seen the link you posted here in the DMZ only now, AFTER I posted my answer. :P (I'll prolly read your discussion a bit later, maybe edit a few things in my answer, if that's necessary)
And if that wrong link is sensitive, you might wanna flag your question and ask mods to purge history, or whatever needs to be done to delete revisions.
I never had to do it myself, but I imagine mods need to request it in TL?
And when I asked about this on Google+ (didn't get an answer), it automatically tagged my post with #Cat and #CaturdayMatt 2 hours ago
Now I understand why G+ is awesome.
05:54
@TerryChia no, this is why:
xkcd has the answer to everything.
06:33
@LucasKauffman Morning
@AviD That's very true.
 
1 hour later…
07:48
mornin' all
sup @RoryMcCune
not much just report writing (finishing big mobile assignment this week :) )
rest of the month is already mapped out as a web app review for a bank and a big external for a public body
life of the jobbing pen tester :)
08:14
@RoryMcCune good that you got a lot of engagements then ^^
08:25
@TildalWave Oopsies. Nope, not sensitive
thanks
@ManishEarth No problem ;) BTW I've borrowed a bit of wording from one of the Firefox articles on this same stuff, but added my own points to it too. I'm not too sure I chose the best approach tho, but I'm too tired to go through it again now. Maybe later, after I sleep a bit too LOL
@TildalWave Feel free to chime in on the bugzilla thread too :)
The guy is a bit aggressive and keeps screaming that Mozilla doesn't understand security
Well, nobody does, but he's just being imperative without giving reasons why things should be that way
And I'm no security expert, so I can't refute things clearly :s
@ManishEarth You should make an offering to the gods and sic @ThomasPornin on him.
@TerryChia What does TP like?
Do we feed him rainbow tables?
@ManishEarth Salmon and math.
08:34
@ManishEarth salmon
ah
George Salmon (25 September 1819 – 22 January 1904) was, firstly, a mathematician whose publications in algebraic geometry were widely read in the second half of the 19th century. He was also an Anglican theologian who devoted himself mostly to theology for the last forty years of his life. His publications in theology were widely read, too. He spent his entire career at Trinity College Dublin. Personal life Salmon was almost certainly born in Dublin, to Michael Salmon and Helen Weekes (the daughter of the Reverend Edward Weekes), but he spent his boyhood in Cork City, Ireland, where hi...
What about a mathematician named Salmon?
@TerryChia There's also the chance that that guy's right and I'm wrong , and then Thomas will maul me :S
@ManishEarth It's a risk you have to take when invoking the power of The Bear.
@ManishEarth This is a bit funny attitude actually, considering all this is better addressed in Firefox than currently in any other browser that I know of. :| And with some latest updates, these settings were even exposed more for users to notice them easier. What does he expect? That they'll decide what's best for users?
@TildalWave Yeah
Though I personally disagree with the color of the mixed content symbol and the other HTTPS things
Because IE and Chrome use bright colors. Noticeable. FF uses symbols with I think less color
But that's just me (I'm more used to chrome)
@ManishEarth If that was blocked by default, then Mozilla would be hit by all the rage their users are capable of, with most of the pages displaying improperly. Including SE
where HTTPS is enabled, Q&A still doesn't have it
08:38
@TildalWave Yep.
@ManishEarth Well me too, but I miss HTTPS Everywhere working as good as it does in Firefox tho
He said that browsers should always take the more secure route. I said that by that logic browsers should just block all HTTP
@ManishEarth Hehe true. And accept only httponly and secure tagged cookies, and block third-party contents, and make sure you're not accessing through or to a blacklisted IP, and ad nauseum until you break the bleepin' internet.
@TildalWave At the bottom of my comment I linked him to today's Abstruse Goose. Very pertinent in this case
They should also include a plugin that disconnects your NIC
08:45
Alt text: If you simply drop any packets that have a destination address, you should be alright.
@TildalWave ha
@ManishEarth just tell the guy that what he's after is called "offline browsers"
09:00
Huh, I got another answer on the supercollider.
It's not really a reptrain though, probably just a slow day.
 
3 hours later…
11:47
this looks interesting indiegogo.com/projects/…
linux/android dual-boot 10" tablet at $249..
@RoryMcCune Those specs strike me as "too good to be true".
That's like 2nd gen Nexus 7 specs.
@TerryChia mm possibly apparently they've shipped stuff before, so you'd hope it's not complete vapourware...
that said I've never heard of 'em up until now.
@RoryMcCune I'm still calling bullshit. That screen is iPad level.
The processor and RAM as good as a Nexus 10.
And they are selling it cheaper?
12:06
Salting has nothing to do with the cracking time of a single password, it only prevents running attacks in parallel. — Brendan Long 16 hours ago
lolwut?
well if you don't buy one you'll never know :) I'm moving house next month, so aff gadgets till after then...
@RoryMcCune I don't have that kind of disposable income. We need to find someone who does. :P
12:31
@TerryChia Well, I have plenty of stuff that I can do but I'm so not motivated to do any >.<
@Simon Hehe.
I'm doing some stuff with the Dropbox API now. Pretty fun stuff.
@TerryChia TWSS
Automatically uploading all the porn pictures to your dropbox whenever you browse those websites?
@LucasKauffman That's bad.
Clever, clever.
12:33
@Simon No, I'm afraid you will sue me.
I'm steering clear of all porn-based ideas now.
In Singapore? How is that possible?
@ScottPack They will kill TerryChia
I'm sure they would start with caning.
@ScottPack or worse, they make him cut up Durian for a day :p
@LucasKauffman They can't, it's banned in Singapore.
12:39
@LucasKauffman How is that worse?
@ScottPack Wut?
@TerryChia You will smell bad for the rest of your life
Oh, only on mass transit. My bad.
@ScottPack it's allowed, just not on public transport
@ScottPack That's like the unofficial national fruit of Singapore...
Nice
> The edible flesh emits a distinctive odour that is strong and penetrating even when the husk is intact. Some people regard the durian as pleasantly fragrant; others find the aroma overpowering and revolting. The smell evokes reactions from deep appreciation to intense disgust, and has been described variously as almonds, rotten onions, turpentine, and raw sewage. The persistence of its odour has led to the fruit's banishment from certain hotels and public transportation in southeast Asia.
Here we go
No fine listed for durian. Must be immediate execution.
12:42
@LucasKauffman or anyone that knows python.
1
Q: How to delete a file from the filesystem based on the returned case insensitive delta?

Terry ChiaI am attempting to write a code to fulfill this particular case documented in the Dropbox Core API python SDK. [path, nil]: Indicates that there is no file/folder at the path on Dropbox. To update your local state to match, delete whatever is at path, including any children (you will sometime...

Any ideas for this one?
Repcapped for the second day in a row. Huzzah!
Brag about it.
Hmm, I can actually get 10 more rep.
Bragging and lying.
@Simon you need to answer more questions if you want more rep
@Simon Well, I'm at 205 but 15 rep came from an accept.
12:45
Or I can simply not do it and keep complaining about my low rep.
@Simon You are such a whiny kid. :P
Well duh, I'm 13.
@TerryChia Well, it is true... for the right notion of "parallel", of course. Rainbow tables are a parallel attack, if you apply the adequate change of coordinates on space-time.
@ThomasPornin heh
Damn, this is pretty sweet deal. arstechnica.com/apple/2013/09/…
I have exactly 61000 rep difference between my two accounts.
12:56
gz but low
@ThomasPornin This month will see you hitting two major milestones. 100k for Big Bear and 3rd place for Small Bear.
@TerryChia Yeah, but @Gilles told me that there was a free T-shirt when reaching 100k. Now that this milestone is not completely meaningless, I find that it lacks elegance.
Is there a "Hall of fame" of rep?
@Simon You wouldn't know.
WELL DUH, that's why I'm asking.
Silly Terry.
12:59
@ThomasPornin Man, that's pretty cheap of SE. They should at least ship some salmon to you.
@Simon There are the leagues: stackexchange.com/leagues
@TerryChia When they distributed stuff upon site graduation from beta, Bear #2 suggested that they send socks, not T-shirts, but they did not get the joke.
@ThomasPornin Hahahaha!
@ThomasPornin Yep, that's what I was looking for, thanks.
I'm still waiting for a redesign of the site logo.
@Simon Meh, you can get the same information on the /users page.
The leagues page lags behind by about a day I think.
Unacceptable.
13:10
@Simon So's your face.
Well, bummer. Google considers that my "network" may be sending automated queries and refuses to talk to me.
@ScottPack Rude.
@ThomasPornin Google is also rude.
Their loss, I say. I'll do all my googling from memory, then.
Alright guys, who wants to pay me for the information?
Woot I just saw like 40 questions with reopen votes... every second a few less... what's going on?
13:12
I made it too obvious. There's 32 reopen votes.
Blah, I only grabbed 3.
@ThomasPornin You can always Bing that shit.
Where did they come from? Who's trigger happy?
I only got through 3 before the queue emptied
@TildalWave I think someone mentioned it was a change by SE that applied to questions retroactively.
And i only got credit for 1. :(
13:15
Again, nobody's thanking me.
@ScottPack Stat page shows 3 for you.
I really gotta figure out a way to make you guys pay.
@Simon Well, @TildalWave mentioned the key detail before you did. :P
@TerryChia NO.
@TerryChia Still only showing 1 to me. I blame the devs.
13:17
I think they applied a hard cap of 3 reviews.
@TerryChia Interesting. You have any link? Because I don't see that in effect on SEx.SE.... yet
@TildalWave Nope, someone mentioned it in chat yesterday I think.
Can't remember who.
@TerryChia Your mom.
@TerryChia That's what she said
@TildalWave We teamed up on him.
13:21
@Simon @TildalWave WEAK!
@Simon You tag teamed Terry's mom?
2
@ScottPack I've been single for 3 days now, I'm not that type of man.
Oh yeah. NSFW
@ScottPack I had someone make me open the bubblebut video by Major Lazer today.
AT WORK
13:31
Fine. So NSFsW
My favorite features are the undocumented ones where, when I ask my tech product manager for advice he says, "Yeah, the documentation blows. We get a lot of complaints about it, it's right here."
13:50
made 160 points on space already today... time to hit the pillows. t/c all!
Incoming
1
Q: Should I know my users passwords so I can check they can logon?

PhilI have an issue with support for a system and I don't know what approach to take. It boils down to the question: Should I know my users passwords so that I can check with certainty that a particular user can logon and there is not a problem with their account? If I can view my users pa...

Any objections?
@ManishEarth Nope
And the answer is: "No. Your application should be smart enough to be able to tell the difference between an account lockout and bad password."
@ManishEarth Thanks for the warning. :P
13:59
Ha :)
@ThomasPornin there is a t-shirt - why was I not told???
Annnnnnnd rep capped. (For real this time).
@RoryAlsop I don't have confirmation (yet). Right now this is, from my point of view, a rumour.
High chance I'll be passing @AJHenderson in rep tomorrow. :)
But if the T-shirt is real, I'll be sure to tell you.
I mean, I'll be sure to gloat in the DMZ.
14:04
@ThomasPornin well, sadly it isn't total site-wide rep, otherwise I'd already have one :-(
Can we expect a picture of you wearing it?
@ThomasPornin oh, of course
@ThomasPornin They don't have t shirts in Bear size
@Simon and a salmon
We should have a Bear Day to celebrate this momentous occasion.
14:05
@RoryAlsop That'd be awesome.
@Terry - best be careful... your avatar is the only thing in the way of a Bear's full house on stackexchange.com/leagues
@RoryAlsop Oh dear....
@RoryAlsop This happens occasionally. Rep trains tend to wreck weekly stats. I just have to wait for next week to see the situation go back to normal.
Unless @TerryChia decides to make more lasting efforts, an event which I could only applaud to.
Active users who write good answers: we cannot have too many of them.
4
14:07
@ThomasPornin Normal as in last week normal or normal as in before-Terry-existed normal? :p
@ThomasPornin Nah, I usually hit 2-3 reptrains in a row then go on a long hiatus.
You're falling behind on crypto. Soon poncho will overtake you in the all time stats
@TerryChia Noooooooo!!!
grats
yeah, Photography and AVP have been taking too much of my time to get answers in quick here and I don't like posting follow up answers if there is already a good answer
@ThomasPornin Plus my reptraining answers certainly aren't good. Hell, most of them does not break the 100 word mark.
Oh, now that there are more people here, what do you think of bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=906069 ? Should FireFox block mixed passive content on HTTPS by default?
14:09
IMO being able to embed http images in a https site without too many issues is essential
else you can't practically migrate forums etc. to https
@AJHenderson it's okay - if you leave AVP alone for a wee bit I might get some answers in and get my rep up :-)
@ManishEarth What @Code said.
I'll take the risk of goatse
@RoryAlsop yeah, but I just got the kitty full house
@AJHenderson lol
14:11
though I suppose 5x anyone else's rep gain is probably unnecessarily overkill
@CodesInChaos Amended question, by default?
my 5k is not far off - that's my net target
@AJHenderson tell that to the bears!
@ManishEarth Well, that's the most optimal user experience.
at last in a way that the website can opt-in, not the user
Think about it, what's the worse that could happen? Some images get MITM-ed and replaced?
14:12
@CodesInChaos The most optimal UX is no warnings whatsoever :p
No lasting harm, important content should be served over HTTPS anyway.
@TerryChia Well, the HTTP images have full URLs and there's a chance that they can be tracked back to the HTTPS site visited
I find this over paranoid though
mostly replacing images. There are some minor risks regarding referer, IP leaks and XSRF. But those can be mitigated.
@ManishEarth Sorry, a bit sleepy. I can't seem to parse this sentence.
@ManishEarth one can do similar attacks by using a unique domain, which will leak through SSL
14:14
@TerryChia I visit abc.com/a.htm, which contains b.com/b.jpg. On abc.com, b.jpg is only used on a.htm. Normally the attacker would just know the domain, nothing more. Now he can guess the full path
but if somebody embeds unique.something.com tracking works even with SSL
or use an attacker controlled server
@CodesInChaos oh yeah
@ManishEarth So yeah, I really think it's not a big deal if it's not blocking. That bug report is rather stupid.
@TerryChia I find it stupid. But I find myself stupid, so I thought I was missing something security-related
Does anyone know what might port scan it's local network for UDP 2054 ? I currently have 2 separate Windows 7 machines on our guest WiFi that are doing this, I haven't seen that before and googling 2054 UDP doesn't help.
14:23
@ManishEarth Your point about Vista is appropriate. If you throw too many warnings at the user he is gonna ignore it anyway. There was a UX question about it on the supercollider yesterday.
@TerryChia yeah, saw that
@RodMacPherson You want to find out what process is listening on UDP 2054 on your machines?
doesn't netstat do that?
netstat -panu | grep 2054
@ManishEarth Yeah... that's why I wanted him to clarify it. Seems a bit basic. :P
0
Q: How could `iptables -F` lock me out of the server?

Peter SnowI was just configuring IPtables and whilst doing so, had the default chain policies set to ACCEPT, but when happy with the generated rules I changed that to DROP for all chains. I did not run iptables-save at any time. After do this, I still had good access, but noticed that one of the rules wa...

U&L/SU?
14:26
yes
Pretty sure.
@ManishEarth Well, which? :P
@TerryChia If only they were my machines. That would make it easy. They are not my machines, they are on a public access point at a marina that I manage the WiFi for. I don't know who's they are, but if it is an infection I'd like to notify the marina staff who do know who the users are.
@TerryChia all of them :P
@RodMacPherson Ahh, so you want to identify the remote service. That's a little tricky...
Are the machines just listening on the port or actively communicating on it?
14:29
I suppose if it continues I'll packet capture and see what that can reveal, but I was wondering if anyone here might have seen this behavior before.
You could sniff the traffic and try to deduce the process, but it can pretty much be anything.
They are sending out packets in a scan fashion, same port one IP after another
Like they are looking for a service
@RodMacPherson Ahhh, so they are scanning for UDP 2054?
Huh, that's a weird one.
What sort of packets? SYN?
14:36
Google says it's for "weblogin"
15:16
Is this really us, or should it go to User Experience or somewhere else? Or is it just not an SE question at all?
0
Q: Data Cleaning in User Profiles

NWilliamsI have no idea if this is the right stack exchange group for this question, but at work we recently adopted a new name, and that led to a new website. This means that users went from having [email protected] to [email protected]. During the rebranding of our various applications the topic of data cle...

15:48
UX or SF sounds right to me.
probably more an SF question than a UX one, since it's about back-end admin
@Polynomial No, I think it's more about user respect and trust than the actual admin work.
hmm, maybe
I didn't really give it a thorough read
I have a headache and I'm tired
plus it's the last day of work for me today. at 44con tomorrow/friday.
and delving through reams of IDA output is hurting my head
16:14
@Polynomial so between that and all the booze at 44con it's not really going to be a good week for your head is it!
@RoryMcCune hardly :P
also house party on Saturday
so yeah, hardcore head-fuck
so a busy week all in! let me know if there's any cool stuff at 44con :)
16:29
Ported XSalsa20Poly1305 (what a great name) to C#. 25cpb, so about 5x as slow as fast implementations.
I blame lack of SIMD and lack of rotation support
symmetric crypto tends to have a much bigger gap that asymmetric (ECC etc.)
@CodesInChaos A 3x gap is typical, but the algorithms from Bernstein tend to be very optimized for usage of some specific opcodes (e.g. SIMD), and suffer quite a bit when such opcodes are not used.
My main point in all the SHA-3 process was to explain, again and again, that high-end platforms with nifty opcodes are not an important target for performance, since they don't have such performance issues to begin with.
The difference for Curve25519/Ed25519 on the other hand is pretty small. .net is barely slower than equivalent c code (32x32->64 based), and even 64x64->128 based c code doesn't gain that much on top of that.
16:45
@CodesInChaos For some algorithms I had Java code which was only 30% slower than optimized C code. But usually a 2x to 4x factor is obtained. Array accesses, in particular, kill performance because the array bounds are checked (both in .NET and Java). Maybe some "unsafe pointers" could speed up things ? I have yet to lookup exact usage conditions for those.
I used mostly structs and local variables
I generally avoid arrays in my crypto code
@CodesInChaos Sometimes you cannot (e.g. RC4).
Or AES, for that matter.
I mostly implement/port those fixed memory access bernstein style functions (Blake, Salsa, Ed25519, Poly1305)
strangely enough, one algorithm where I got the "only 30%" figure was Sosemanuk, a stream cipher where the implementation does use some arrays.
array access is not that expensive, probably because branch prediction works really well
and sometimes the check gets eliminated. But the JITter is rather dumb in that area
Lack of SIMD and lack of specific instructions (big multiplication, integer rotation, etc.) are the biggest issues in my experience
16:52
I was with you two up to "Ported" :op
in first order it's copy&paste of the c code, and then fixing it until it compiles
@CodesInChaos Well, sure -- but it is not totally a C# issue. When dealing with a "small" platform (embedded ARM or Mips... the kind which actually has performance issues and benefits from the fastest algorithms) you do not have these nifty SIMD instruction even with native code.
Can you launch JS directly from the button e.g. onclick="function() { alert('test'); }"?
If so, what's the damn syntax?
modern ARM has quite a bit of SIMD
@RoryMcCune Well, they sure did a bit of research, but not enough. They speak about indistinguishability of AES-CBC, but that holds only for unpredictable IV, and they don't speak about it. They also don't speak about active attacks (malicious alterations).
Last but not least, they begin the post with an interesting goal: ability to compute "aggregate answers" without revealing the individual identities. But that goal disappears quite quickly.
16:57
@ThomasPornin see I thought it was an interesting approach but not being crypto types they may not have thought out all the angles..
@CodesInChaos Modern big ARM has quite a bit of SIMD. You'll have that in smartphones. But not in smart cards. Or in RFID tokens. Or even payment terminals.
@ThomasPornin yep there'd need to be more details there, I'd guess that some of the data isn't encrypted in the same way but that with only the unencrypted data it shouldn't be possible to tie it back to a unique person...
@RoryMcCune Actually it is an hard and essentially unsolved problem, which is why I deem that goal "interesting".
For a practical situation, they would have to make a "trusted aggregator": some shielded machine which is granted access to the user data, but will refuse to reveal it except as "aggregate answers"
(and, even so, some dichotomic requests can reveal quite a lot)
@ThomasPornin yep that bit is tricky. I've not looked at it at all in healthcare, but I thought in a similar case the panoptikon stuff about browser fingerprinting made an excellent point about how data which doesn't appear to be uniquely identifiable may well be..
with health data I wouldn't think you'd need too many factors to tie one set of data to a real person..
Personally I care most about PC and smartphones, so I live in a world where SIMD is available
17:04
@CodesInChaos That's fine. However, that's less fine when researchers trying to define an all-encompassing standard only care about PC and smartphones as well.
That was the point which I relentlessly make (to a large extent, it made me quite "unpopular" with DJB).
I think Salsa doesn't that badly even on smaller devices
One thing I'm interested in is how well schemes can be sped up with special purpose instructions that aren't too expensive to implement
@CodesInChaos By "too expensive", you mean "in hardware" ?
The SHA-3 competition is a good example: if you have opcodes which compute one round of AES (and that's rather cheap in terms of silicon area, much cheaper than, say, a multiplication), then you can go real fast.
Does anyone else feel like he doesn't belong here anymore?
Nope, just me, alright.
@Simon don't worry I think you'll find that a fair amount of crypto stuff goes right over the heads of most security people (myself included) :)
@RoryMcCune Good because that's exactly what I'm doing, haha.
Totally ignoring it.
17:23
where the additional hardware for the instruction is small, but the instruction gives a nice speedup for the algo
17:41
@CodesInChaos Then there will be few bargains better than including an AES round, at least for symmetric crypto. Also add a "carryless multiplication": it will help about everything which does operations in GF(2^m), in particular GCM, but also binary elliptic curves.
I should try to write an optimized implementation of Koblitz curves with the carryless multiplication opcode added by Intel with the AES instructions.
to my surprise AES based SHA-3 submissions didn't seem to have too much success
@CodesInChaos Well, that's because you don't always have the choice to add an AES hardware implementation to your CPU.
And without it, they kind of plain sucked.
groestl didn't seem to be too great even with AES-NI
@CodesInChaos Yes, that was the other surprise: given the 3 AES-based candidates, why did NIST choose the slow one ? It was as if they wanted to kill the idea of an AES-based SHA-3...
I only looked into SHA-3 in the final phase, so I don't know too much about round 2 candidates.
17:47
@CodesInChaos Basically none of them was broken. The second half of the SHA-3 competition was boring.
The bright side is that we now have many backup algorithms.
18:25
Does anybody knows a way to tell to Android (2.2) that I do not want to be bothered with updates for some app (namely, the Facebook app, which I don't use but cannot remove because it is part of the vendor-provided firmware) ?
If I install the updates, they cumulatively saturate the internal Flash (and the app being part of the OS, the OS refuses to move it to the SD card).
I don't think it's possible. You could root the device to remove it if you're motivated.
it seems like pre-installed applications take twice the space one you update them. Once for the original version, and once for the updated version. Really annoying.
@CodesInChaos I concur. I am really annoyed.
@ThomasPornin android 2.2 <shudder> that's .... old
I think my nexus 1 had 2.3 before it died. And all newer nexus devices have less memory WTF
18:37
@RoryMcCune <ScottMode> Not so much as your mom </ScottMode>
also less vulns (well apart from the master key one which is still present on fully patched samsung Galaxy S3s amongst other devices)
@ThomasPornin me too, please
Same's happening for me
Internal memory filling up
I'll probably hard reset one of these days
I don't want to change my phone because it works well for what I want it to do (mostly, to be a phone; also to serve as Internet access for my laptop, and occasionally to use Google Maps) and it has good autonomy (it can keep on running for five days on its battery).
why can't google sell some 32 GB nexus (don't care if SD or internal) grrr
@ThomasPornin 5 days android huh? And why 2 bears
18:44
@OlegOstroumov Yes, five days being on continuously, on a full charge. I cannot abide smartphones which must be recharged every night.
As for the two bears, it is for showing off. I show that I have so much rep that I can afford to maintain two high-rep accounts.
18:54
I think there is some correlation between question quality and the choice of bear. But that might just be the usual human fault of seeing patterns in randomness.
Tom Leek seems to be a bit harsher in his answers
That's voluntary. Bear #2 is "less polite".
Main drive for bear selection is whatever account has not reach rep cap yet that day, though.
@CodesInChaos "patterns in randomness"... "codes in chaos"... hmm, I think I see a trend.
I tend to use Bear #1 for the hairy crypto questions where I complement my explanations with the authority of my name.
01:00 - 19:0019:00 - 00:00

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