I'm planning to leave LastPass because of the concerns, but as long as I have my phone or an Internet connection, both of which are true almost all of the time, I have access to all of my passwords.
How does it get more portable than that?
I'm planning to leave LastPass because of the concerns, but as long as I have my phone or an Internet connection, both of which are true almost all of the time, I have access to all of my passwords.
How does it get more portable than that?
I auto pay all of my credit cards, been doing so for at least a decade, probably even significantly longer, and not once has it failed.
Remember when you could type a vague plot of a film you’d heard about into Google and it’d be the first result?
I honestly don't remember this at all. I remember priding myself on my "google-fu" and how to search it to get what i, or other people, needed. Which usually required understanding the precise language that you would need to use, not something vague. But over the years it's gotten harder and harder, and now I get frustrated with how hard it has become to find something useful. I've had to go back to finding places I trust for information and looking through them.
Although, ironically, I can do what you're talking about with ai now.
Hate to break it to the OP, but keeping myself cleanly shaved has helped a lot with keeping it off the face. I still get it occasionally on my sternum like you.
In my suburbs, if there were enough of us around, there was someone who knew the local cab company's number too. Although that was also not great late at night. The issue is that when you are not from the area and don't have someone who knows the number. This is what Uber (mostly) fixed.
How old are you? Did you spend any time in the pre Uber days trying to get a cab? Wrong part of NYC? Good luck. Out in the suburbs and you don't know a local cab company's number? Lol never going to happen.
The electronic payment system is not what made it such a big improvement. It's the ability to instantly call a cab almost anywhere, at any time, with no knowledge of anything local. It's the connection between the drivers and the passengers that was the big leap.
The only thing those businesses were ever missing was a good online presence and/or a smartphone app.
Which is, of course, no small thing and the thing that makes uber/lyft thousands of times better than the car service model.
Holy shit, why not just read the article? This is exactly what the interview is about.
Why do people read the comments, but not the articles? I don't get it.
Kind of a dumb point. I suspect you didn't really have much experience using taxis pre-uber. This is all about trying to replace the uber/lyft model with a similar thing, but where most of the profits go to the drivers and not uber/lyft.
I haven't taught my kids. . .yet.
However, they know that if they can't find something they want to watch, they just have to ask me and I'll get it from them. . .and that (sarcastically) "daddy is just borrowing it from the internet" so I think know what's going on.
I always thought that facebook got a bad rap. I mean, it was stupid, but I always enjoyed it because I could catch up with old friends, who might not be actively in my life at the time, and for that it was special.
However, sometime recently (as in years, I guess) as people have left or become more private, my feed has slowly been taken over by suggested content. It's always pushed front and center. Literally unavoidable because there is no setting to say "don't suggest anything to me." and no matter how often you hide shit, they'll just keep feeding more. I've all but completely abandoned using facebook now...I just go on to check my local buy nothing group, or post things myself. Occasionally I go to see what stupid shit my previous good friend, who got totally sucked into Trump world, is saying.
LastPass does the same, afaik. I was specifically talking about the portable aspect.