The most frustrating bit is there's no reason it shouldn't be working, that I can tell. The drivers installed fine, and Windows is supposed to have built-in biometrics support.
But apparently there's another software layer that's needed for some BS reason.
The most ridiculous bit of it all is that the installers are showing as signed, but for some reason the unpacked executables are giving me signing errors.
And the errors are surprisingly not Google friendly.
"This program has attempted to load unsigned files in violation of policy and will now shut down."
"WARNING: This copy of HP ProtectTools has not been signed by Hewlett-Packard and may have been compromised."
@tylerl Which in most cases, as we all know, isn't.
I've had the flu for about 3 days now. It made me think about how incredible the virus causing it is. One of it's main symptoms is one of its spreading mechanisms.
It makes you sneeze, and it spreads with your fluids.
It's like if an STD does something to raise your libido.
Suppose that http://example.com/<foo> systematically redirects to https://example.com/<foo>. I enter http://example.com in my browser's URL bar, and I see a page load and the URL bar now displays exactly https://example.com/ (no Unicode hack, no whitespace hack, etc.). I verify that this is the c...
In Finnish, 'he' and 'she' are the same word 'hän'. Fun stuff when hearing Finns speak English and say "I was with my girlfriend, he made me go shopping".
Most of the time if someone assigns a gender to a car it's going to be female, but not always and that's usually only if the person has a sufficiently strong emotional connection to vehicles.
> In the United Kingdom, the term "twin towns" is most commonly used; the term "sister cities" is generally used for agreements with towns and cities in the Americas.[1][7] In mainland Europe, the most commonly used terms are; "twin towns", "partnership towns ", "partner towns" and "friendship towns".
@Adnan Yeah. For me it's really a "I have always seen it used this way so it just sounds right" thing. I never actually assigned genders to objects actually.