Hi, we were in the neighborhood and heard from some reliable sources that you were packing some sweet gear, so we decided to pay your house a visit while you're away.
It would be a shame if these storage drives of yours were the only places you had your irreplaceable data and projects you were working on, because those files on the drives are gonna be wiped clean by the time you get back.
Hopefully you were thinking ahead and decided to keep those files backed up in the cloud, no?
Yes
>>61017840
you should know damn well I never leave the house and I have like 2 loaded guns near me at all times
if a burglar wants to unmount my file server and backup server, and haul them out to his car, when a 4k 60" tv is in the next room, sure.
Hi /g/, what are some cool software ideas you've thought about making?
>>61017819
Where have you been? You should resume deerposting on /bant/.
an app that detects when you're answering a call and then heats the battery to make it explode
>>61017819
An embedded network of programming languages that provides user friendly solutions for information and data usage instances utilizing backend structures and abstract virtualization methods through graphical interfaces
>The new "textalyzer" technology is modeled after the Breathalyzer, and would determine if you had been using your phone illegally on the road.
>He says a police officer just goes to the driver and attaches a cord to connect the device to the phone. The driver doesn't even have to let go of the device.
>"They can simply just tap one button ... and it will process, about 90 seconds or so, and it will show what the last activities were — again that could be a text message and so on — with a time stamp," Papathanasiou says.
>The device would display a summary of what apps on the phone were open and in use, he says, as well as screen taps and swipes. "For example, if it was a WhatsApp message, or a call, it will indicate what the source was, the time stamp, and then what the direction of the communication was — so if it was an outgoing call versus an incoming call."
Am I safe on Lineage?
This is actually disgusting.
My phone is encrypted
>>61017801
Don't text and drive you fucking subhuman.
I turn a switch in my car, it sends power to my relay which switches power to the blower motor. Why?
Why not just turn the switch and have power go directly to the blower motor from the switch?
The switch has a low current rating, the relay has a high current rating. It means the key switch doesn't need to be rated for a thousand amps.
Less amps going through the switch
it means not much power goes through the switch.
something like a starter motor draws an absolute shitload of current and running several hundred amps through a wire to a switch, through a very heavy duty switch, then back to the motor needs a lot more wire than a tiny switch into a relay
What is Ekansovi?
>15KB of obfuscated Javascript in every thread on 4chan (not being loaded from a 3rd party website)
>Unironically uses XOR for its string encryption
>Sets up a websocket connection to a.ekansovi.com/wsp
>Something to do with ice servers / stun servers.
Source with unencrypted strings: https://pastebin.com/C0Mj6vHL
>>61017643
It's just a tracking pixel and you're basically retarded.
>>61018019
you realize websockets and tracking pixels are two entirely different things right?
e() is only 11 lines of 550.
>>61017643
So what I don't understand is that it seems to be ad related trickery to get around common adblockers, but where are the ads?
How come Android is so great but desktop Linux is such a piece of shit?
>>61017535
One of them is largely controlled by Google and other companies that need to make actual money, the other is made by enthusiasts with too much spare time on their hands.
>>61017535
>>61017569
t. Google shills.
>>61017569
So basically one is a real product while the other is just a hobby OS. Gotcha. Well why doesn't fucking Red Hat or Canonical fix this shit? Can you imagine how much "support" would be irrelevant if the thing just fucking worked?
My PayPal was hacked into and my money was sent to some random dude. So basically I was stolen from. Does anyone know how to resolve it or get my money back?
contact paypal support
>>61017485
how long will it take them to get back to me?
>>61017461
Contact paypal support, they are generally pretty good. Also contact your bank.
In the future use a password manager for stronger passwords!
st
I dunno man, the iPhone "8"/Decade Edition/Anniversary Edition for this September looks like pure, kino-sex.
If iPhones are so insecure and "botnet", then why does Vladimir Putin use one despite being a highly valuable target for surveillance by dozens of countries?
>>61017382
When even the US president fires the head of the FBI and threatens to fire the head of the NSA in order to spread his ass cheeks to Putin, I don't think Putin needs to worry about potentially being spied on.
He has the whole world in his hands, why would he care?
>>61017382
All smartphones are insecure and botnet so his choice doesn't matter much.
>>61017419
>Believing the US media
You know how I know you're a cuck?
So is socket TR4 going to last as long as AM4, or is AMD going to pull an Intel on it and change the socket every time a new threadripper line comes out?
>>61017121
I don't see why they would.
>>61017121
>AMD going to pull an Intel on it and change the socket every time a new threadripper line comes out?
This will only happen once they have a majority of market share
>>61017121
Ryzen acts more like an SoC than anything else so AMD can pretty much use TR4 indefinitely since the CPU is doing pretty much everything while the chipset is more or less a PCIE mux.
They may only change when some new shit comes out like DDR5 for some new PCI Express comes out
>Install Firefox 64 bit
>Sees this
What the fuck?
>>61017117
install chrome
>>61017326
>install Chrome
>a window pops up saying "Thanks for joining the botnet oyim goyim!"
Gee thanks for nothing faggot.
>>61017117
What's Firefox?
So lets get this right, end all the misinformation floating around.
Ryzen while not terrible still utterly failed to dent intel. Honestly any perceived reaction from intel was really unwarranted considering what ryzen brought.
Second while EPYC seems neat, it only got a small handful of companies supporting it, so expect maybe another 7-8% share for AMD optimistcially. I just cant see the enterprise market moving wawy from tried, tested true and reliable offerings from Intel.
Further R3s and mobile are no wheres in sight. At all. to this end Intel is still continuing to dominate the low and ultra low end with thier own i3 and Pentium brands.
So in short AMD really unloaded their magazine at Intel but really only managed a few grazing shots.
1/10
you tried
Ryzen ended i5 and i3, they haven't unseated i7, i9 or the budget meme Pentium.
The i5 and i3 are a huge market since not everyone can shell out for an i7.
>>61017017
it ended the HEDT i7 market
nobody wants to pay 600 dollars for an octacore. the 1700 is 300 fucking bucks and often goes on sale.
for gayming sure maybe use a regular i7, but the r5 works just fine for gaymes as is
ITT: the one program that keeps you from abandoning windows entirely.
Also ITT: help others find workable alternatives to their program of choice.
gaymurs need not respond.
League of Legends
>>61016939
THIS D E S U
Post IGN.
>>61016917
>Tuxguitar
Or be a real man and use a real scorewriter like MuseScore.
Hi /g/, first time posting here.
Can anybody recommend me a good RAT (Remote Access Trojan) that could bypass nowadays anti-malwares?
Thanks in advance guys.
pic related: it's me trying to hack things
You're literally a faggot.
>>61017423
How original
>>61016862
Betabot
Is there any point of using C over C++ nowadays? (Other than for some embedded devices that don't support newer standards I guess)
I never liked the OOP approach C++ provides, but I would gladly use C11 for some of my pet projects.
next page btw.
>need more manga about coding
Arguably, the best use case for C is in libraries, or at least the C ABI. It's a pain to get C++ libraries to be used with other languages, but C libraries are pretty trivial for FFIs. Granted, you can use C++ to do this, but if you're gonna extern "C" everything, you might as well just write in C.
>>61016788
>if you're gonna extern "C" everything
Not everything, just the exposed functions.
I don't know why /g/ pretends that making C++ extensions is somehow extremely difficult. I've implemented plenty of CPython extensions in C++ and I've extended Java code with JNI/C++ for over a decade.
It's fucking trivial, and no, it didn't require wrapping half the code in extern "C". I truly believe that the reason people continue to spout that bullshit about "hurr durr broken ABI" is because some poster read that somewhere on a blog in 2005 and others on /g/ are repeating it because they don't really know C++ and need to justify their ignorance.