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most retail shops and liquor stores I visit are fine with you leaving an id in if they can see your photo and name clearly. TSA, police, and other more official capacities will require you to pull it all the way out. If you live or work at a military base I can see you needing to pull it out constantly. If it works

failure at science but victory in trolling. seriously though, why do we continue to give these people attention?

Vote: Sharkk money clip

looks like the ID window is too small which defeats the purpose of the feature.

you beat me to it. I used a simple rubber band for years and only recently moved to a money clip because I had too many times where the band broke and wanted something a tad classier. Just as ultra minimalistic and feels just as slim as the rubberband. Super duper cheap ($8) and light http://amzn.to/112W99Y

meh, I can wait another week or so until it's pushed OTA

I'm pretty sure they said the N4 would get the update. Probably will roll out shortly after the OTA for 5 & 7 are underway

nearly every day. i often use it in the morning to catch up on email and news while I'm making coffee and getting ready. I then use it periodically throughout the day for both personal and work related tasks. In the evening I'll use it to watch movies, play a game, or other random things. It saves a ton on my phone

yes. let yourself out and don't come back.

Play Newsstand/Android/Google

when I paid off the last of my credit card debt, I took that extra money and put it into a money market account for savings. Once that built up a 6 month rainy day fund, I took that extra money and dropped it into an IRA. Once I maxed out my IRA contributions for the year, I opened a personal trading account and

I had to look up the phrase "latchkey kid". I was one too but I'd never heard of it before. I don't know a single kid that wasn't. School ended at something like 3 but parents had to work until 5 or 5:30. They aren't making kids stay at school until 5 now are they? I've honestly never given this any thought in the

you beat me to challenging that statement. i'm going to ditto you.

I get your point. I mostly agree with you, but you can't ignore the fact that the housing market is a market too. It's influenced by many of the same pressures and tied to wall street even if we don't like it.

The NVIDIA K1 is an all in one processor, not a dedicated graphics chip. Shouldn't the headline read "CPU" instead?

The NVIDIA K1 is an all in one processor, not a dedicated graphics chip. Shouldn't the headline read "CPU" instead?

This a pretty disappointing article. You show how vulnerable your passwords and basically the only thing you can do about it only pertains to web service passwords. Why bother showing us the vulnerabilities of network passwords, outlook, etc if the on strategy you offer is don't let anyone touch your machine?

I think timgray and I are both on the same page. like i said, restricting access to the physical machine is a layer of security itself.

like i said, if it works for you great.

I was referring to just always leaving it installed on the computer at all times even when you are away from it. I suppose your second level of security is the lock on the door of the room where the computer lives. I personally wouldn't employ this as protocol, but hey if it works for you, why not.

wouldn't that defeat much of the purpose of 2-factor authentication?