@5h17h34d: Sure, call it inaccurate, it is. Don't call it insecure, it's not.
@5h17h34d: Sure, call it inaccurate, it is. Don't call it insecure, it's not.
@Maave: Autohotkey is only included to make it a one-click affair, it's only automating what's built in - which is a named toolbar.
@Maave: The software streamlines it, it's all done without 3rd party software.
@Zinger314: Indeed, but if I can make it more difficult for the jerk who broke into my things, I'm quite happy to :P
@Zinger314: Your point? If the server housing the site is compromised, they have the salt, and just have to compute a rainbow table for it, then they'll have every password. I myself use a salt based on other given information because of this, but even so it's not infallible.
Of course, take this with a pinch of salt. This seems to be geared towards a dictionary attack with a bruteforce fallback, so if your attackers have their hands on, say, a copy of a database with your password in it, a rainbow table might be much, much faster.
@5h17h34d: Because it's not sending any information out, encrypted or not? If you're going to be oversuspicious, at least check the javascript first.
@sdn: Take a peek at the source and you can see it's entirely implemented in javascript and never sends out any information.
A Quadrillion years. Not half bad.
Good, there's nothing that annoys me more than unskippable ads. No, I'm not going to buy your product, I have no need for it | something else to perform the same task, so me watching the ad is worthless. I don't mind it being there, youtube must be an incredible money pit, but I do mind being forced so sit through a…
@pescadito: I recently looked for something like this, couldn't find anything. I did end up writing my own, but took it in a different direction to this
Yep, this can work wonders when something goes wrong with your browser cache, otherwise it doesn't do much. But that cache is very breakable :(
I thought that, but then I started questioning what the present even was, and how any decision I could make would actually have been done my past me, who I can blame for all my problems. Future me is a jerk who's not going to do anything, but present me is pretty much perfect :(
@Terry: "I built a laser, and it did what lasers do! I'm suing!"
@ilovetofu: I believe bootcamp supports win7 now, but I could be wrong.
@Prairie Moon: Indeed, while I feel people should be dropping XP as quickly as is reasonably possible, laughing at somebody just for using it is so... silly.
@Prairie Moon: I don't see anybody being particularly offensive, unless it's been deleted. XP, as an OS, needs to go away, it doesn't support a lot of new technologies like 4k sector hard drives, its security features are a joke, it's memory management is significantly worse than newer iterations of the OS, caching in…
Well, it's all very consistent and aesthetically pleasing, so can't fault it on that. I've always been wary of too much customising, extra applications just stop "fitting in". The extent of my customisations now are basically just removing the window chrome, embedding a to-do list in my desktop, and a bar on the top…
@LeftClicker: Indeed, however Gina's required Cygwin to run on Windows, wheras Python is both more likely to be installed, and a lot more easy to create standalone applications with, and did not support tag trees.