chriseckeard
Chris Eckeard
chriseckeard

More like a normal NASIOC for sale post.

So it’s a RWD conversion? That explains quite a bit, actually. I was wondering how it managed to drift like that on pavement with AWD.

I would buy one just for the ability to say “computer, ____” I’d feel like I’m in Star Trek.

long live the ridgeline. the truck that fits 90 percent of the populations needs

As a FR-S owner, the car has a parcel shelf that is shaped like seats - also it has seat belts for some reason. I’m 6'2 and where I sit I can’t get my pinky finger between the front and rear seat. If I was shorter, okay, you could bring the seat forward for a toddler to sit.

One who needs back seats.

Obligatory:

I hesitate to label myself an expert, but as somebody who has been in infosec for over two decades I can tell you that anti-virus software isn’t in the top 5 because there are least 5 things that are more important, and not because people like myself don’t use it. There are still a lot of things that it can stop. If

LastPass was “hacked” in that some encrypted master passwords were stolen. However, for this to be useful to the hacker they would have to decrypt the master passwords (not a small/quick feat) and then they could try to sign in to LastPass to retrieve a user’s other passwords. If the LastPass user had 2 factor auth

We’ve addressed this before. In short: using a password manager is still more secure than using the same or similar passwords for everything. Especially if you’re using two-factor authentication on all accounts that support it, including LastPass—which, as the chart points out, you should!

The security incident only got email address, password hashes and password reminders, not the encrypted passwords or the encrypted vaults. If you use two-factor it still would have done no good if they did get your vault and password. The fix after they noticed the anomoly is to just change your password and that