theflyingfish
TheFlyingFish
theflyingfish

I have cleverly solved this age-old dilemma by not eating breakfast, so I can brush when I wake up and go make it all the way to lunch (or, more often, to my midmorning coffee break) with that minty freshness intact.

The article doesn’t say how the passwords were stored. True, if they were stored properly (hashed + salted with a good hashing algorithm at an appropriate difficulty) then I’d agree you probably don’t need to change your password, but there’s no guarantee of that. Remember the Adobe breach, where 135 million passwords

"I bought this and didn't like it" is a very different complaint from "I never bought this at all." In the first case, you've played the game, so you did actually receive what you paid for. Whether or not it was any good was your lookout. Asking for your money back on it is like buying a box of Twinkies, eating

Not gonna lie: When I first read this headline I thought you were referring to validation codes (like for two-factor authentication), and thought "WTF?! Why do they use the same codes more than once? And why is Lifehacker telling us?"

Oh, is THAT why that kept happening? Damn, wish I'd known about that before I switched away from Sprint.

Not when the Gregory Brothers are using it.

That's the great thing about it: it's easy enough to pick up that most people can get into it quite easily, but admits of enough skill that it can get pretty competitive. I need to find a recreational frisbee league or something around where I live.

Ultimate Frisbee is so much fun.

EDIT: (wish I could delete comments after 15 minutes) Never mind. I should remember to scroll down next time.

You mentioned the Nexus 6. Is there any official word on this yet, or is it still in the faint rumors + assumptions phase?

the ability to paste a directory into the Command Prompt with Ctrl+V

I'm so conflicted on this. I don't need a kitchenaid right now, but I don't know if it will ever be this good of a deal again...

I'm so conflicted on this. I don't need a kitchenaid right now, but I don't know if it will ever be this good of a deal again...

Myth #3: MAC Filtering and Disabling SSID Broadcast Is Enough Protection For My Wi-Fi Network

Yeah, which is why it's probably better to find some standalone pseudorandom key generating algorithm somewhere and use that instead. Hey, idea: make it an Android app. Hmmm... only problem is it would be a pain to type the 20-character completely random string every time you wanted to log into somewhere.

I do that too. The only reason I can imagine that this would be better is that it uses the elastic to compress the socks a little more, but honestly - once my suitcase is full of the other 49 lbs of my stuff, those socks are gonna be pretty damn compressed anyway.

Yeah, I kind of agree. I liked the whole anti-skeuomorphic direction that graphic design was taking for a while, but now I feel that it's gone too far and needs to start swinging back. Metro is the worst offender, but Google seems to be getting close.

It takes you two minutes to type one sentence?

Lastpass? It's accessible online, so I can usually use it if I'm not on my main PC. And they do secure one-time passwords if you're worried about logging in from an unknown machine.