Fail: "Next Shipment ETA - End of September"
Fail: "Next Shipment ETA - End of September"
Thanks for the links, I have been reading the verge recently.
I understand that, but some proxies will - so depending on which it was, there is a chance it could happen. It's definitely not foolproof.
Very interesting, thank you!
Apple has sample code and tutorials here, are you familiar at all with programming? If not, you may want to do some basics in C (I think that's what they use?).
Haha - there you go!
That seems pretty reasonable, especially given the rationale.
Well this sure is awkward.
Depending on the proxy, a traceroute can still see the end user. Plus, the data transferred isn't encrypted and carries info with it (i.e. where it has to go). Just jumps around a lot.
Very much appreciated!
That's definitely reasonable.
Seems like these are getting less and less attention, which is sad since it's long been a favorite post of mine.
I hope to not take away excitement, since Surface does look pretty well implimented and I intend to go play with one this weekend. However, I couldn't bring myself to pull the trigger on RT.
Thank you sir!
Response 2: Keylogger, which should be legal since it's your personal computer. There are both software and hardware ones (plugged in-line with a keyboard).
Interesting. May I ask how you are so certain of that (I didn't read their official release stuff)? I would like to mention this to a friend since they have the same thoughts with some sort of info to show them (they're the skeptic type).
A lot of routers keep logs of traffic, you should be able to trace it off the IP's (some actually list the name). My office has Century Link (formerly Qwest) and I can look at the log of every site and URL we go through (small office).
So they aren't targeted products based off your browsing? It's only the books / products related to Ubuntu, as in the picture?
Looks like Canonical wants to make money selling your browsing/usage habits. I am curious where else in the OS it will gather and send info on your usages. (Although, with the current laws in many countries, they have to provide a way to disable it - it just may be very well hidden).
Couldn't agree more.