RedFive2012
RedFive2012
RedFive2012

PayPal and eBay support the use of VeriSign security tokens and the VeriSign VIP Access app (android/ios). PayPal even supports multiple tokens or app instances (i.e. my phone, my tablet, wife's tablet). I will admit, though, that PayPal's and eBay's mobile apps don't yet support 2FA; they make you enter your username

The real scam is the Visa gift cards, the ones that are supposed to work just like credit cards. The problem is that you can never use the full balance; if you have a purchase that exceeds the balance of the card, the purchase will fail even though the POS system would otherwise allow the use of multiple payment

My credit union activated 2-factor logins earlier this year. It sends a text message to one of the mobile phones I have configured on my account. Though I wish it would also integrate with Google Auth or VeriSign VIP Access. BTW, PayPal and eBay both can use VeriSign security tokens or their VIP Access app in addition

Don't even bother with holding the front power button for 4-6 seconds, or the hardware PSU switch (if yours even has one; mine doesn't). Just go straight for the power cord and yank it fast. That will also allow remaining power to drain as it continues to power memory and regulators for a few instants before the

Having just upgraded to Mavericks (10.9), I can attest to the fact that the VD-T issue is still a problem. My Hackbook apparently didn't have VD-T at all, so I never ran into the problem until I added a recent desktop to my stable, and at first was puzzled as to why my working 10.8.0 system failed when I updated to

Oh, yeah, and most of the cars you buy today with shiftable automatics (like the one pictured in the article)? They're automatics, not automated manuals. Which means torque converters and lower mileage.

But since the vast majority of automatics are truly automatics (and not automated manuals, double-clutch or otherwise), this doesn't mean much. Automatics still use torque converters, which always reduce mileage. And automatics are heavier than manuals, too, which reduces mileage further. Lock-up converters improve

It's not just VWs that use that tool. My '95 Taurus also needs that. It's not uncommon on cars with 4-wheel disc brakes; it helps with auto-adjusting the rear calipers for the parking/emergency brake.

I'd modify this slightly:

I lived in a house where the landlord was similarly "gifted". Whenever he would remove a 2-prong outlet to replace with a 3-prong, he would tie ground to neutral. I didn't realize the problem until one day when I happened to touch the bare shroud of a USB extension cord plugged into one of my computers. The machine

Pardon my French, but what the hell kind of beer are you drinking that has MSG, antifreeze, formaldehyde, and HFCS? (BTW, carageenan is a form of MSG derived from seaweed) I generally read labels on almost everything I eat and drink (MSG in its many forms triggers my wife's migraines), and on the rare occasions that I

There is also a 500MB file available there, if you want to get a better long-term-average picture. My connection peaked at 12.1MBps, averaged at 11.9MBps, meaning I got pretty much my full 100Mbps bandwidth (which is 12.5MBps), minus a bit of TCP & HTTP overhead. I'd love a way to do the reverse, though: upload a file

Both my VW's filler and the one on my wife's '95 Taurus are on the right.

Well, of course it does, because French.

I was thinking about the filler/muffler relationship as well. I haven't paid attention to all the cars I've ever driven (I used to work for a rental company, so that's not a small number), but all the ones I can remember do have the filler on the opposite side from the muffler and exhaust outlet. I don't know what

My '95 Altima's original engine was interference. I was lucky, though; the mechanic who replaced it found a pristine engine from another '95.

I had a 1st-gen '95 Nissan Altima, and it was designed with significant negative camber on the rear wheels. It had this feature called "super toe control", which acted as a passive 4-wheel-steering system which engaged under severe maneuvers, especially relatively tight turns at high speed. It had a rear tire wear

I once built my own PoE injector for an old 802.11a WAP which required 5V @ 4 amps (yeah, this thing was a massive current hog). I was mounting it on the wall in a location which didn't have a power socket handy. I powered it off of a 12V hard drive connection from my server, and found a power regulator for the far

As far as I know, yes it does.

You can go even further than that. Use curly braces and commas to create several subdirectories inside the same directory: mkdir -p /path/to/dir/{dir1,dir2,dir3...dir#}