No, it will not. It's:
No, it will not. It's:
Fantastic point. Fingerprints should never be used in combination with encryption, though, for this reason and many others. Anything that exists in the physical world can be copied (fingerprints, keys, etc.). Things that exist solely in your mind cannot. That's why passwords (preferably, long passphrases) will be…
It's funny. It was big news when the fingerprint scanner was "cracked", and people laughed. As if they had somehow expected Apple to invent some new kind of fingerprint technology that was uncrackable, and instead of using it internally or selling it to one of the world's governments, banks, or other organizations…
Just wanted to chime in and completely agree with everything you said.
Regardless of which dimension you're not "normal" in, even if you can find clothes that aren't too short/tight, I think the key is proper tailoring. That's basically what this video talks about, but it's pretty obvious when you think about it: No matter what size you are, how can clothes off the rack fit every…
No, they don't. They live off of $6k/year plus tens of thousands of dollars in taxpayer funded programs. Some of which would likely be impacted by the $1M, some of which wouldn't, depending on their state of residence.
If you're concerned about cloud storage security, you should encrypt your backup locally. Then it doesn't matter how strong the encryption is on your cloud storage provider, or who can access that data, because it'll be encrypted and you'll be the only person with the key. Your job becomes much easier, then, you…
Totally agree. If someone is going to do just one thing to secure their online life, enabling two-factor authentication on their e-mail account should be that thing. If your e-mail is compromised, most other services that you use will be, too. At least if your social networking account, for instance, is…
It's a tough spot. It doesn't help you, but the real issue is a societal one. It is absolutely absurd that students are graduating college in so much debt. 25% of your salary is simply too much debt. The only upside is that you're in debt now, when you can pay it off and still save. So, save what you can, and…
This is a pretty balanced view of the situation. My only issue is with this line:
Haha oh, Amazon. And Newegg! And TigerDirect back in those days!
Yeah, seriously. No more thinkgeek.com binges for me! haha
Yeah, it's pretty sweet, right? Now I have to pay rent and stuff like an adult!
Certainly. The author says she traveled as an "international hobo", so it sounds like she may have been a bit thrifty. I certainly wouldn't recommend it for everyone, because that gap from college to the workforce may make it difficult to get that first job, depending on the industry you're in, but it's certainly…
Yup. Exactly. It may not be the smartest move to drain your savings so early in life, but hey, to each his (or her) own.
Considering that I lived at home (no rent) and most of my tuition was paid for by an academic scholarship, I didn't have many expenses, so that put me in a great position to save. I forget now what I had saved coming out of college, but I likely would have spent it all if I traveled the world for the following year…
Probably... Work? I worked through college and graduated on time, so at 22 I could have traveled if I wanted to.
Just wanted to toss in here that I *only* buy iTunes gift cards when they're on sale. You can regularly get 20% off. Office Max just ran this deal, but Best Buy runs it fairly frequently. I always keep my iTunes account loaded using gift cards that I purchased using this discount, so every time I go to buy an album…
I'm glad I stayed with you until the end. This made my day.