Eh, I can’t judge. One of my favorite is the N64 Castlevania: Legacy of Darkness.
Eh, I can’t judge. One of my favorite is the N64 Castlevania: Legacy of Darkness.
I just started playing it! After all the hate people threw at this series i was shocked at how incredible the game looked. The character designs are amazing, and the game is a lot of fun (at least on the first levels that I played). I wish i could by a figure of that armored angel you fight in the first level. Super…
Of course it’s flawed but it’s still a better experience than the first LoS game.
You might be in the minority on that one. If you enjoyed it, more power to you. But it was pretty harshly savaged by critics and players.
LoS2 was a better game overall than LoS1.
Yeah they didn’t really factor in that ‘mod community’ is generally open-source by CREDIT MANDATORY where the paid publishing experience is generally closed source and credit is dictated by legal agreements with expiry dates.
To say that some people are “upset” about Steam’s recent decision to allow users to charge for mods would be like…
Absolutely agree. My pattern is also quite complicated, it's not a quick swipe at all. And I go back over the first swipe pattern (obviously using a different pattern). It's super quick for me to do (As I've adjusted to the pattern) and I change it up regularly. And anyone who plays games on the phone, no one is going…
While you’re right that PINs are more secure than patterns, #1 and #2 are nonsense (though you’d call them “bunsense”, judging by your comment history...). You CAN bypass part of the pattern grid and return to it later (such as 1-9-5), and you can turn off that green line. At least, on Android you can. IDK o GAF about…
Biometric (fingerprint and retina) is very insecure form of security of entry into a phone. A passcode in your mind is a lot securer than anything else you can use. I also encrypt my phone’s data and computer. I am a software engineer, and I am very aware that by posting something on social media, or googling…
So you’re one of those “give up my freedoms so I can have a shallow sense of safety” types?
If you’re at work, you just did.
It could be footage of the police breaking the law. They see you recording them and ask for your phone or for you to unlock it so they can delete it. You never know
My LG Tribute’s default lockscreen has an elegant solution to the grease marks problem. When I have it set to pattern unlock, there are no dots visible. You tap once, and the grid appears—but it’s only as big as about 60% of the available space. Each time you tap to unlock, the grid appears in a random location, so…
If you’re not-rooted (and don’t want to be, or can’t be,) there’s also separate emails apps, like Nine and Touchdown (I use Nine and prefer it,) that have their own PINs/passcodes that tell Exchange the system is secure...because it still is. It’s just now the app itself is secure, not necessarily the whole phone…
I use a PIN unlock on my phone, but pair it with an Android Wear watch, so it’s unlocked as long as I’m near my phone. It’s the perfect blend of security and convenience. I use a pattern unlock on my tablets, which I feel less comfortable about, but I hate remembering more numbers (or re-using them).
Your IT department already knows.
I personally use a tap pattern so while the see what i hit that have no clue what order :)
I think it depends on how complicated the pattern is and how often you use your phone. I have handed my phone to a number of people who have attempted to unlock it and they couldn’t do it. Factor in that I use slide typing and after a few attempts its going to obfuscate the prints and lock the person out for thirty…
If you unlock using a pattern then you probably do other actions after unlocking. That would mean there are fresher grease strokes than that of your pattern, no?