I'm honestly very surprised that site is still around. Like digg.
CosmicTurtle0
I remember the transition from plain-text emails to HTML emails. I fought tooth and nail to keep my email fully plain-text because it offered almost 70-80% storage savings. This was when email quotas were measured in megabytes.
Then Gmail came along and made HTML the standard email because they offered 2 GBs of space.
The rest is history.
Fwiw, AWS offers a one-time egress without charge in response to the EU order to allow people to switch cloud providers.
Once approved, we will provide credits for the data being migrated. We don’t require you to close your account or change your relationship with AWS in any way. You’re welcome to come back at any time. We will, of course, apply additional scrutiny if the same AWS account applies multiple times for free DTO.
So if you're going to do this for that one time you have to, probably not a big deal.
But if I were you, I'd be prepared to egress, kill the account, and then create a new account.
This doesn't work for me. Regional hub is 20 miles from me. Two day shipping is now just "free shipping over $35 and takes a week to arrive.
I agree with your other points though. Amazon isn't the cheapest option anymore. My local Walmart is actually better. I know Walmart is still a shit company but still...better in terms of getting what I need.
Beaches jellyfishes remind me of Lurker zurg units in StarCraft. My understanding is that jellyfishes tentacles will still shoot their barbs long after the main part has died.
Weird. Anytime I do that I get Rick rolled.
They obviously installed it in a laptop and closed the lid before they were finished.
The only company that can compete with YouTube is pornhub. People have been begging on their hands and knees for them to enter the hard space. It's fertile territory, with lots of the kinks worked out. I really hope they spank YouTube in the nuts and give it a go.
Your passkey is an encrypted message that authenticates you, the service you're trying to reach, and your computer.
If you go to a phishing site, the passkey won't even come up because the browser doesn't recognize the site. Granted a dumb user could still use their user/pass but ideally the user has MFA set up so they can't get far.
The goal of a passkey is to replace username and passwords entirely so that phishing becomes less common.
The main issue with passkeys is that unless you have something like a YubiKey or an authenticator (like bitwarden), the passkey is tied to the browser which means if the device gets lost you can't log in anymore.
Either with a pin or thumbprint
If you're entering a u/p along with a passkey, then it's MFA.
There are only a few sites I know of that do passkey correctly. CVS works wonderfully on my phone. Requires a username and then the passkey on my browser.
My company is working on a passkey only for login and it's really really slick.
You basically click "login" and then authenticate your passkey and you're in.
There are the small-medium business that use the standard slack EULA. Then there are fortune 100 businesses that negotiate their own licenses because they have the money and resources to do so.
My company has very specific BAAs with the major business apps and would be shocked if this even raises an eyebrow with them.