A huge one is $.90-.99 prices and sales. Just because an item is "clearanced" at 90% off doesn't make it a good deal. Also, a $2.95 item is not $2, it's $3.
A huge one is $.90-.99 prices and sales. Just because an item is "clearanced" at 90% off doesn't make it a good deal. Also, a $2.95 item is not $2, it's $3.
240Mhz LCDs are supposedly better for games though, and newer consoles support high resolutions, they also make great monitors since they are getting better at displaying fast changing graphics.
I never understood these length limits. If companies hash them like they should, length doesn't matter, a 500 char password hash is the same length as a 2 char password hash. All they need to do is make an escape function that filters out anything that could be used for a database attack and then just run it through…
Song lyrics from songs make great Windows passwords. Get about a 20-40 char line and just type that in. The spaces help a lot too and the shear length makes it much harder to hack.
Why not use Tor button, but switch the proxy address. It turns off all kinds of unsafe things like Javascript and also forces all DNS requests through the proxy.
Don't do that Gawker's /great/ new sites will not work at all without Javascript unless you get the special links that don't use it. (It has some PHP parameter in it)
@Anonymous is Incognito: On Windows you can use the attrib.exe command line tool.
I made one of these a while back, but used a cheap Walmart flashlight. It wouldn't unscrew on both ends so it was a pain getting the grooves out. Also, the bulb got hot and melted and reflector and it stopped working after about 30mins of use. I'd recommend buying a good quality flash light and picking up for 3.7v…
@twinsenw: At least one of these should help:
If anyone wants Dreamhost I can generate coupon codes =)
@monsterblues: If they support SFTP/SSH there's a good chance you can use rsync. If you're on Windows you'll need to install an rsync package or install cygwin to get it working.
For a file server with a RAID or other multi-disk setup it looks like you could actually get some decent savings off these.
@mrjeremiahross: You're not alone! I don't normally click on them when I'm visiting large sites like Lifehacker, but if I happen to find a small blog that doesn't have a lot of content or a large userbase I'll click a few ads while I'm browsing to help them out.
Well, it's not worse than Youtube operating at 90KB/s on a connection that can sustain 1.5MB/s without a problem just about any time per day. (It's been tested multiple through speed tests and multiple, simultaneous downloads)
This problem seems somewhat familiar...
@illegal3alien: Whoops, link failed
Hmm, second result seems to sum it up pretty well.
@Cochese 2.0: You don't want to store everything on the SSD. It'd be more cost effective to buy a 128GB SSD and save the old hard drive for your documents and media and only put Windows, apps, and games on the SSD.
@kyre: I think WebMD is also pretty good. If that's not it there's a similar site.