Conversely why do we act horrified that someone in the past didn’t act according to standards that only exist today and pressures that don’t.
Conversely why do we act horrified that someone in the past didn’t act according to standards that only exist today and pressures that don’t.
My wife does this with index cards. I have to try to figure out what she wrote down (1? l?) and she crosses out an old one and writes the new one in a random spot so I have to study the card to find the live pw.
I’d be open to using a pw manager then I read the comments here and everyone is suggesting different apps, arguing over how inconvenient one or the other it, various issues, etc. It doesn’t make me feel like taking action if everything feels sketchy.
I wonder if they somehow think they will be able to manage it.
And the EU has forced us to answer that goddamn “do you accept cookies?” question on every frigging website. How many people just click “accept all” to get on with things?
I just occasionally wipe everything. I have to reenter passwords and such but it isn’t a big deal.
No certs and degree isn’t in CS. I just have lots of experience.
My pathway was basically:
I don’t know why people get into meth and crack in the first place. They’ve heard all the stories and likely know people messed up badly from it already. “Hmmm, this is the drug for me!”
I think his point in this case is you own the physical item but not the information on it. If not then I could buy some musician’s cd then I could say “Now I own their music” and start selling copies of their cd, publishing it, stealing their rights to it, etc. I think we can all agree that would be bad.
My date went to smoke pot with the band we were seeing (small nightclub)