Assume there are seven billion people on the planet. One of them knows the location of a specific hidden treasure. I know who it is and I ask you to guess who it is, but you have no possible way of knowing or even getting a hint about it.
You pick some random person. I then bring in another stranger and tell you that the person who knows where the hidden treasure is is either the random person you chose or the one I brought in.
At this point, there are only two possibilities:
1. You happened to randomly choose the right person on Earth and in my surprise, I had to pick some other random stranger to pretend they knew the secret.
2. You chose a total rando who has no idea what's going on and the person I brought in is in fact the one who knows where the treasure is
I recently discovered that on iOS, you can press on the scrollbar to get direct control of the scroll knob. That allows you to quickly jump to any part of the document without having to thumb scroll through it page by page.
They should be able to obtain a new certificate based on the same private/public key, in which case I don’t think any add-ons would need to be updated.
The problem with this approach is that the expired certificate is part of the add-on package files (META-INF/mozilla.rsa; DER encoded PKCS7), not something that you can just swap out on some server. You have to replace the certificate in the add-on packages with the new cert, even if the new one reuses the keys of the old one. At which point you need to ship new add-on package files to users anyway, so key reuse or not makes no difference anymore.
Yes, but unfortunately the executable bit would be preserved if the file was delivered by way of a .tar.gz bundle. A reasonable user expectation would be to double-click on the .tar.gz to unravel it and then double click on the pdf to open it.
But again, the PDF would just open with the same program it would have regardless of whether it's called via binfmt_misc or not.
Besides, a much easier vector for attack in your example would be to create a shell script called "budget.pdf" since you then need to make fewer assumptions about the target. And since Linux doesn't care about file extensions, it's perfectly fine having a shebang prefixed script with a .pdf extension.
Which is one of many reasons why common advise is not to blindly run any executables you've just imported into your system.
Right, in the US, you can deduct mortgage interest and property taxes to lower your taxable income.
There is a mortgage cap of around a million dollars where the deduction ends, which is only relevant in a small number of real estate markets like California, Seattle, New York, and so on.
Probably more like people wouldn’t go out to a cross-town bar or restaurant if they couldn’t take a taxi or lyft/uber to get there. For example, if mass transit is prohibitive (two buses at 1 am) and they don’t want to drive drunk.
Easy access to quick transportation is a general economic benefit for everyone. That’s not support for uber or lyft specifically, but if people can easily get around town, they’re more likely to make extra trips to bars, restaurants, shows, etc. where they may have otherwise considered just staying home.
The reality, in LA, is that if you're not going via Uber/Lyft, you're driving drunk. Not going is not even on the table. This is FOMO capital of the world.
Our elementary school has no bus and the trip there is about two miles, mostly down a street with fast traffic and poor walkability. The drop off process is at least 30 minutes each morning on average in my experience, even longer if there are multiple kids and they don't go to the same school.
The school isn't built like a sports arena, so traffic flow around it is fine throughout the rest of the day, but morning dropoff in particular is very congested because the volume of traffic spikes for a single 15 minute period each day.
Coupled with general morning rush hour traffic, this ripples out to long left-turn waits (no turning arrow), congestion, angry drivers trying to cut down residential streets, parking problems, and so on. Then depending on how far away you had to park, you have to walk that distance with young kids.
Pick up time is easier, especially with after school programs, because the spike is diffused out over a wider range of time.
That sounds unusually bad. I don't know in your specific case, but I see parents dropping young kids off as the same block as the school. Or even across the street if there are regular crossing guards which provides even more surface area.
I can only suggest this is the kind of thing that's generally fixable by a local community.
On my car, when I start the car with my phone attached via Bluetooth, it random shuffles by default. However, if I start the car with my phone attached via USB cable, it plays all the songs alphabetically. The actions available on the iOS music app are also different... when attached via Bluetooth, there are "Play Next" and "Play Later" options, where as when attached via USB, these options do not appear.
As a software engineer, I think the differences stem from whether the "now playing" playlist is being managed by the phone or by the car multimedia system. As a car driver, it's extremely annoying and I'm disappointed at how poorly it behaves.
The is because of the iPod. Car systems were built around the iPod and its accessory protocol. The iPhone supports it as well but it leads to these weird use cases where your phone is constrained by what the car thinks an iPod can and can’t do.
ah, ok - don't think I tried USB. Guess the radio of the car then takes control and tries to use the phone as an external drive, overriding the native music app.
I leave a flash drive with a bunch of MP3 files permanently plugged in to my Harley, although I usually play music from my iPhone via Bluetooth. When I turn the bike on, it starts playing from the flash drive wherever it left off (e.g. in the middle of a song). When I tell it to connect to my phone, it also starts playing wherever it left off. I can switch back and forth and it never "starts over" so I'm guessing it must be the vehicle that controls the playback?
When you make a mistake on a typewriter with no delete key and no white-out handy, you could back up to the beginning of the error and type "XXXXX" over everything and start anew on the following word or line.
Someone likely carried this forward as an indicator of a mistake (ie. "hacky") and then it stuck from there.
You pick some random person. I then bring in another stranger and tell you that the person who knows where the hidden treasure is is either the random person you chose or the one I brought in.
At this point, there are only two possibilities:
1. You happened to randomly choose the right person on Earth and in my surprise, I had to pick some other random stranger to pretend they knew the secret.
2. You chose a total rando who has no idea what's going on and the person I brought in is in fact the one who knows where the treasure is