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Recent Posts

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276
The authentication that takes place when Sticky Password syncs or performs a backup to the cloud (Sticky Password uses Amazon cloud services for our backend services) involves only your StickyID (your email address) and your StickyPass – which is different to your Master Password.
Seems like they've made changes since that text was written.

I can't find anywhere to change the StickyPass, there's nothing in the StickyAccount regarding passwords - and when I change the Master Password in the Windows application, it affects the login for the StickyAccount. Also, the StickyAccount password input field says "Master Password".
277
@f0dder: if you're interested in Sticky Password. Premium,  it's fairly often on Bits du Jour, and appears so now:
Thanks, it's tempting - even if it's still a pretty steep price for a password manager.

Also, I tried installing it on OSX, but it claims the StickyPassword for my account is wrong... even though I can login to the StickyAccount just fine from that system in a webbrowser. Not very confidence inspiring! I'm also not super fond of how you master password seems to be tied to your StickyAccount. They might have implemented in a secure and zero-knowledge way, but it feels a bit odd.
278
I've been using 1Password (trial version) for a while on OSX, and it's kinda nice - but it doesn't have non-cloudbased syncing across devices, which sucks.

I am trying out Sticky Password as an alternative to LastPass.
Oh, that seems to have the perfect feature set for me! Cross-platform, WiFi sync... I'm definitely going to give this a go! The license model nags me a bit, though. Have I misunderstood it, or will you lose premium features once the license period is over? Lifetime license price is a bit steep.
279
Living Room / Re: Malware uptick using WordPress Exploit
« Last post by f0dder on September 18, 2015, 05:44 PM »
If you run a WordPress site, make sure it's updated and secure..
If you're running a WordPress site, switch to something else.

They've had way too many security incidents - I doubt they'll ever produce anything secure.
280
Living Room / Re: New Computer
« Last post by f0dder on September 17, 2015, 05:46 PM »
And I need the extra speed of the stripped NLSAS for the Hyper-V VMs, but wanted the safety net of parity also. Not to mention that I've seen these controllers do mirroring...performance is not impressive (read horrid).
Weird - 3x1TB mirroing ought to perform better than RAID5 (for some workloads)... reads can be fully striped, even if writes have to go fully to all drives, but don't require the seek overhead of parity.

I don't care much about the non-Redundancy parts of RAID, though :)
281
General Software Discussion / Re: Request: Deepdream frontend.
« Last post by f0dder on September 17, 2015, 05:39 PM »
Spend a lot of time camping in peaceful surrounds.
**Thread Hi-Jack Alert!**

Got any nice recommendations?

I recently did trekking+camping on the West Highland Way in Scotland - that was pretty great :)
282
General Software Discussion / Re: Sudo and Kill commands for Windows
« Last post by f0dder on September 17, 2015, 05:06 AM »
If you just need to edit protected files every now and then, it's easier to launch your editor with administrative privileges - fastest way to do that is launching it with Ctrl+Shift+Enter from the start menu/screen (silly it doesn't work with Win+R).

If, on the other hand, you're often doing stuff in a console, have a look at ConEmu - it's pretty great, and also makes it easy to start a tab with an administrative shell.
283
General Software Discussion / Re: Raymond.cc roundup of ad blocking extensions
« Last post by f0dder on September 17, 2015, 04:52 AM »
And the fact that I couldn't even get to pages that I wanted to with origin running made me not regret my decision to uninstall it and go with the other.
You can choose not to subscribe to the badware filters, or you can use one of the buttons for specific sites...
ublock-badware.png
284
Living Room / Re: The End of my Macbook Pro Experiment
« Last post by f0dder on September 17, 2015, 04:48 AM »
That dock isn't all it's cracked up to be.
Hence why I have it set to auto-hide :)

Can't really recall when I've used it, I always use the <Apple>+<Space> thingy to launch stuff.
285
Living Room / Re: Trying to Create a New Logo
« Last post by f0dder on September 16, 2015, 03:39 PM »
I kinda like it as an avatar, but IMHO it's too detailed to use as a logo - that's personal taste, of course, but I definitely prefer simple, stylized logos.

At any rate, definitely do something about the cropped drop shadow, that's going to be a problem for any place the logo won't have a border around it. And the hat looks flat :)
286
General Software Discussion / Re: Raymond.cc roundup of ad blocking extensions
« Last post by f0dder on September 16, 2015, 03:30 PM »
^ yeah, fair enough.
I got the impression he regretted afterwards - but maybe that was just trying to make good after the backlash.
He might have, I didn't look back after reverting to Origin :)
287
Living Room / Re: New Computer
« Last post by f0dder on September 16, 2015, 02:50 PM »
Hey, y'all wanna just put in a two-paragraph explanation of what this even means so non-techies like me can pretend to know what this even means?
Raid5 is a RAID mode using parity. TL;DR is "requires at least three disks, can survive death of one single disk".

It's a mode that never made terribly much sense to me, given the amount of horror stories I've heard of a second drive dying while you're trying to rebuild your array after one disk failed - the rebuilding process is pretty disk intensive.

For a volume as small as 1TB, I'd personally just run a mirror with two disks - or heck, if the data was important enough, three disks :)
288
General Software Discussion / Re: Raymond.cc roundup of ad blocking extensions
« Last post by f0dder on September 16, 2015, 02:42 PM »
Re the feud or whatever went on, at the time I did look into it a bit, and it seemed to be more about messy misunderstandings and all that can bring, rather than any kind of nastiness - so I didnt feel I *should* support one or the other.
Not only removing references to the original author, but phrasing the text as if you're the original author, and putting up big donate buttons... that's a bit more than just "misunderstandings", it's dicky.
289
Living Room / Re: The End of my Macbook Pro Experiment
« Last post by f0dder on September 16, 2015, 02:38 PM »
I've been using an Apple PC yes, it's a PC, not some mythological maaaaac with OSX as my work laptop since October last year.

It's way overpriced and I'd never cash out for one myself, but the hardware is pretty good. The screen is amazing, and the build quality is pretty good - it's ~1kg lighter than my old laptop, the way the lid lines up is nice, and the magsafe power cord is wonderful (shame on Apple for patenting something that obvious, bastards!). It's extremely silent most of the time, but if you put a bit of CPU+GPU stress on it, it gets veeeery hot and sounds like a jet engine.

There's a few nice things about OSX. Like, iTerm2 just works a bit better than conEmu or console2. Native *u*x shell just works better than CygWin or MingW - which is an advantage for the software development we do. Homebrew is great. I kinda like the whole app bundle simplicity over Windows installers.

But there's a lot of suckage as well. The kernel is less stable than Windows, for instance - they still seem to run too large parts of the graphics stack in kernel mode. I could reliable grey-screen kernelpanic the machine by trying to make a FireFox window overlap the laptop screen and an external monitor... something that fanboys obviously won't do, if for the simple reason that windows are clipped to a single monitor...  :huh: :huh: :huh:

The minimize/maximize/restore functionality sucks, there's no built-in shortcuts to move windows between monitors (even Windows has had that since, what, Vista in 2007?), it doesn't ship with a image editor (and there's nothing like Paint.NET available for free - either you have to suffer The GiMP, or you pay up), dialogs generally aren't very keyboard friendly, and there's extremely low "discoverability". If something isn't readily available from the dumbed-down menus and dialogs, you'll have to visit Google and drop down to a terminal.

Oh, and it creates these annoying .DS_Store files other dot-files all over the bloody place, which you can't turn off without resorting to OS-destabilizing hackery - just how arrogant is that? Especially considering that OSX only lets you mount NTFS volumes as read-only, but still infects the volumes with those dotfiles.

Un- and replugging external monitors is also quirky. For instance, it seems like the window manager doesn't flag windows as "maximized", just maximizes them... which has funny results when combined with the DPI scaling stuff ("retina", blargh, stop with the stupid marketing BS!). So I spent a couple of minutes moving & resizing windows around the laptop screen and two external monitors every morning.

That's off top of my head, from the comfort of my Windows workstation at home :)
290
Ugh, that massively sucks. Greedy bastards!

I really, really hope the developer outcry will make them change their minds.

(It's fine to have subscription as an option, but definitely not as a replacement for a permanent license!)
291
To further the divide between the Firefox and Pale Moon browsers, the Pale Moon team has decided to abandon the Gecko engine and develop their own, code-named Goanna. This holds numerous advantages for them moving forward. However, this is more code that they will solely be responsible for to ensure that no vulnerabilities crop up in the code.
What could possibly go wrong? It's not like as if a browser engine is one of the most complicated pieces of general software... ;)

Last, but certainly not least, is a change that may very well be a devastating blow for the browser. Mozilla has declared that extensions will no longer be supported by Firefox in the future and the browser will be moving to a model that exclusively supports Chrome add-ons.
I assume this only relates to extensions and not Add-ons, since I hadn't heard about it - and if that's the case, it's a good move. The NPAPI should have been dragged out back and buried many years ago. It's pretty darn unsecure, and has mostly been used as a malware infection vector for the last many years. Good riddance!

If they're getting rid of FireFox specific Add-ons, though, it's time for pitchforks and torches.
292
DC Gamer Club / Re: Windows 10 won't run games with commonly hated DRM platforms
« Last post by f0dder on September 16, 2015, 01:36 PM »
Thanks for that. I do have a few, such as Fable 3. I guess I'll have to figure something out if I ever want to play those again. . .
There's pretty easy solutions for that ;)

First thing I used to do after purchasing a game was finding a crack for it - with the CD drive I had back then, SecuROM and similar crap sometimes slowed down startup by around a minute or more.
293
General Software Discussion / Re: Raymond.cc roundup of ad blocking extensions
« Last post by f0dder on September 16, 2015, 01:33 PM »
^ FWIW I prefer the uBlock variation - the "origin" version started blocking whole webpages which I felt wasn't it's job:
https://www.donation....msg385536#msg385536
I don't mind that too much - I've only seen it blocking sourceforge, and that's kinda warranted given how dicky SF have been...

And I really don't want to use the non-Origin version, considering what a bastard the dude behind that is...

294
Living Room / Re: New Computer
« Last post by f0dder on September 16, 2015, 01:25 PM »
Nice, but "1TB Raid5"?

Why Raid5, especially for such a small volume?
295
General Software Discussion / Re: Is Windows 10 a trojan?
« Last post by f0dder on September 16, 2015, 01:15 PM »
So WUDO helps Microsoft save bandwidth, but it has little or no benefit for users if they leave the "PCs on the Internet" option checked.  If WUDO limited to PCs on an internal network works as it should (you'd have to trust Microsoft on that one), it could be helpful, but remember that it bypasses any internal controls or checks.
It can be an advantage if you're in a region that has slow routes to the Microsoft content servers. And there might be ISPs that remove throttling on traffic between it's own customers, even though they're not technically on a LAN...
296
General Software Discussion / Re: Windows 10 Privacy Concerns
« Last post by f0dder on August 12, 2015, 04:55 PM »
It's much ado over nothing.
No, it's not.

I haven't had time to look into the detail of most things, but enabling p2p updates as an opt-out is a big no-no. Yes, it's a good thing for the community as a whole, but it really isn't something an OS should impose on you, and it really sucks for people with metered plans. Yes, you can have an ethernet card and still be limited.

And the WiFi sense is just insane. Given how far MS has come the last 10 years in regards to taking security seriously, this is a big shock - there's some marketing and UX drones that have to be roasted slowly for this, and some upper middle management guys who need some proper old-fashioned viking-style torture for accepting the feature request - it's simply unacceptable.
297
Living Room / Re: New vulnerability found in older Intel processors
« Last post by f0dder on August 12, 2015, 04:47 PM »
I haven't had time to look properly at this, and the articles I've skimmed so far have been lacking, but...

1) SMM attacks are at least a decade old, and complicated to pull off - you need to write very specific code.
2) This exploit still needs ring0 access to pull off, right?
298
General Software Discussion / Re: Irfanview releases 64 bit Version
« Last post by f0dder on August 12, 2015, 04:42 PM »
So, what does the 64bit release bring to the table?

299
General Software Discussion / Re: Anyone running Firefox 40.0 stable release?
« Last post by f0dder on August 12, 2015, 04:37 PM »
I thought the thing about 32 bit software was it could not use up all your CPU :huh:
(edit// 4 cores)
32-bit software can't use up all your RAM if you have more than 4GB. (And maybe it was even limited to 2GB per application on 32-bit OSes?)
Depends on how the application was built - old 32bit Windows applications can only use 2GB (unless they're funky and AWEsome), whereas LARGEADDRESSAWARE linked applications can get really, really close to 4GB on a 64bit system, or 3GB on a 32bit system with that special boot option.
300
Living Room / Re: What books are you reading?
« Last post by f0dder on August 12, 2015, 03:51 PM »
I'm currently reading reamde. As other stuff by Neal Stephenson, it's pretty great, and even at page 380/1044 I'm not entirely sure exactly what the story is about, or how it's going to unfold - and that in a positive sense. It also features at least one shootout scene, which I'm not usually too big a fan of in books... but it's great in this one.

reamde.jpg
Richard Forthrast, a multi-millionaire marijuana smuggler, has parlayed his wealth into an empire by developing T'Rain, a billion-dollar online role-playing game with legions of fans around the world.

But T'Rain's success has also made it a target. Hackers have struck gold, unleashing REAMDE, a virus that encrypts all of a player's electronic files and holds them for ransom. They have also unwittingly triggered a deadly war beyond the boundaries of the game's virtual universe - and Richard is caught in the crossfire. Racing around the globe from the Pacific Northwest to China to the wilds of northern Idaho, Reamde traverses worlds virtual and real. Filled with unexpected twists and turns in which computer hackers and mobsters, entrepreneurs and religious fundamentalists face off in a battle for survival, Reamde is a brilliant refraction of the twenty-first century.
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