* Posts by tiggity

3361 publicly visible posts • joined 2 Oct 2015

TalkTalk once told GCHQ: Cyberattack? We'd act fast – to get sport streams back up

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Talk Talk Victim

If I had all teh doors and windows wide open in my property whilst I was out and I was then burgled I might feel like a victim but I would not be as far as insurance company (or anyone with half a brain cell) was concerned.

If you are a major ISP then shoddy security that a few script kiddies can break is not being a victim it is being inept (ignoring security as a niggly cost expense). If they had good security and someone used a zero day to breach them, or some very sophisticated social engineering then they could be more like victims,

Sport priority says it all though & reveals exactly why the were hacked so easily.

Google's pay-to-play 'remedy' is warming Eurocrats' hearts

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Stop

How about..

FoundEm & all the other price comparison sites develop their own search engine and make it better than Google (given that Google search is a lot worse than it used to be, it's a far easier target than a few years ago).

If I got to Google I expect Google related content to feature heavily (e.g. search for bricks & mortar shop & Google maps showing me location map)

Similarly on Bing I expect MS content (so Bing maps for locations)

There is plenty of proper bad for customer Google monopoly stuff for EU to get worked up about - e.g. not being able to remove vendor / carrier crud from android phone without rooting (& rooting then means some apps refuse to run, so if you need those apps stuck with crud), Google not forcing out security patches for android etc. (and security patches only being produced for a relatively short time for those who do not treat phones as disposable oft replaced kit)

Why pick on something pointless - maybe because only muppets care about price comparison sites and muppets are making these sort of decisions

White House staffers jabbed with probe over private email use

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Re: Getting a whole lot done?

280 chars or fewer on the way apparently

Why Uber isn't the poster child for capitalism you wanted

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Tangentially

Mr. O throw away line:

"Few would now argue that having just one mobile phone operator per country would be a good idea."

Well, if it was service driven - all profit spent on ensuring 100% coverage, good signal, high data rates, then I would be happy.

But that's mindset for you.(not instantly thinking worts case of a monopoly)

I think public service mobile single provider would be good (but monopoly price gouging shoddy for the shareholders service would not be - instead in UK we have serveral of them, & its signal lottery or get financial hammering for data roaming. I have 2 sims (different providers) just because so often zero signal on one of them (sadly all too often zero signal on both does happen)

The power JavaScript: 'Gandalf of JS' Wirfs-Brock on ECMAscript 2017

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Re: Such advanced features

You forgot its main use is breaking web sites - "web devs" - you do not need JS to display test, process a link click - your site should do that with JS enabled

And the extra delay in loading in all those huge frameworks just to do a bit of DOM twiddling, and (high) chance of some broken JS taht hogs memory and cripples performance.

There is very little need for lots of web site JS

And with JS enabled always the lottery of seeing what malware randonm ad js is trying to chuck at you.

Shock! Hackers for medieval caliphate are terrible coders

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Re: Hormones?

Huge non benefits of conscription for those who were killed

e.g. Conscription in UK was in place for (what turned out to be totally pointless) Korean War.

I know someone who fought in it (conscripted) and lost a great many of their unit (friends) in night time attack on their camp

Cops shut 28k sites flogging knock-off footie kits and other tat

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The average person

Will struggle to know a site is obviously doddgy.

Https .. well, certs are easy to get, so not really a sign of "legit"

As for pop up warnings ...

Have they ever seen the (almost everywhere) Verified by Visa stuff many "legit" sites use (& I don't touch with a bargepole). Requires third party web site js references for payment (did when I last looked at the monstrosity) i.e. just the sort of thing a dodgy site might use.

Non use of VbV is only reason I occasionally use Amazon for emergency purchases (prefer not to use them due to tax dodges & treating staff badly) - being out in the sticks sometimes online is only way to get certain stuff unless wait a month for the free time to visit the niche bricks &mortar store miles and miles away (not an option for "emergency" purchases).

Though Amazon needs using with care, plenty of scammers on there, hijacking real, legit small business selling "3rd party" accounts and flogging amazing deals from those accounts whihj obv have good feedback etc. (typically around same time as Amazon running promotions so people expecting a few too good to be true offers, & Amazon always slow to react to those scams)

Insteon and Wink home hubs appear to have a problem with encryption

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flicking

Flicking lights on and off can reduce their lifespan quite a lot (susceptibility varies depending on "bulb" type) so an extra potential cost / irritation.

Plus lights on when not wanted on = extra cost of electricity.

I like my "dumb" lights & switches

Ah, good ol' Windows update cycles... Wait, before anything else, check your hardware

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Re: Toshiba C50-A will not run creators update!

Where and when was it purchased?

If in UK, various consumer laws apply, although they are a bit lacking in clarity in the area of enforced OS downloads (lots of stuff on digital downloads though and could apply some of those) - so can get scenario where you can get refund / replacement irrespective of warranty.

Chatbots: A load of hype or fancy lifehack for the lazy IT person?

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cunning linguists

Will have fun by switching language each sentence they deal with the chat bots, or just trying obscure languages. At what point is it not financially worth the company producing a chatbot "fluent" in a language?

in UK (i.e. trade off of "training" in the language vs peopel using that language to interact)

Welsh - given some of the equal language laws in Wales, depending how interpreted, they would probably have to support this, which could cause them hassle.

Gaeleic - fun, as a whole set of variants, Manx Gaelic bot anyone?

Cornish - on the rise, but low numbers of really fluent speakers

.. but general slang / bad use of English will be awkward enough for bots (to/too there/their etc misuse (or often people not bothered on spelling as know the context is understood by a meatbag) as careless typing takes a lot more contextual analysis

UK Prime Minister calls on internet big beasts to 'auto-takedown' terror pages within 2 HOURS

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Solution

"Social Media" companies such s FaceBook, YouTube, Titter etc. send all newly published content to Theresas secret squirrel top terrosist content detection department. Her super team siftware (delibearte typo) magically identifies *all* the terrorists content within less than 2 hours.

Said terrorist content is then assessed independently by objective people to see if it actually is terrorist as a single false positive would be a total fail.

If it subsequently turns out any terrorist material was missed by the TM super team software, then a fail again.

If it turns out that it was not all automated and a bit of human decision making was needed, again instant fail (after all, this AI lark is so easy peasy Teresy..)

If the TM super team software can, over the course of a year manage zero fails... then they could maybe think about asking tech companies to do the same (after all it would be easy, they could just give tech companies their super tech)

Until that occurs, TM is best keeping her fantasies to herself

EU watchdog: Govt bods are seeking 'legal knockouts' to dodge transparency

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Data access

Or when data API is made available for public data you have to access it through ludicrously niche methods such as SPARQL (instead of something far more commonly used, but not trendy, such as bog standard SQL)

.. Stares at lots of "open" UK data where access methods seems to have been defined by a set of SPARQL fanboiz/girlz rather than thinking what could be easily used by lots of IT literate people with minimal effort.

Caveat, yes I know there are lots of good things about SPARQL, but learning curve will deter lots of IT bods who might have had a quick casual "out of interest" play with the data & revealed something tasty if it was readily available using their existing skill set - you have to be a lot more dedicated to investigating the data to learn new query languages (especially when code tools for SPARQL are not exactly pushed by the big vendors e.g. MS are a big player in SQL so have a vested interest in NOT providing good SPARQL tools)

Manchester plod still running 1,500 Windows XP machines

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"The remaining XP machines are still in place due to complex technical requirements from a small number of externally provided highly specialised applications"

My best guess is some dismal web app that is heavily dependent on some of the non standard idiosyncrasies of IE6 (less likely would be driver issues as number of machines way too high for any hardware related driver, and for most other issues compatibility mode on Win 7 would fix teh issue)

Though I have sympathy with GMP, I do not like planned obsolescence by stopping security patches (which is what we get from all the Software vendors, be it Apple or MS on desktop or Apple and Google on mobile, and in between makers of software e.g. Firefox that only support more recent Mac OS versions) and thus ensuring a costly purchase of new hardware and software when the old system "did the job"

I run plenty of archaic low spec hardware - it just ends up having its original OS replaced by a lightweight Linux so I can choose to add key security patches

Google Cloud's API knows the sort of thing you like to look at

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fun

Although, what they know of you depends on what you do, so you are stuffed if you reveal lots of genuine details of your life /opinions / interests on FaceBook, Twitter etc.

But if you do not (or consistently cultivate an online persona that is very unlike the real you) then you put a spanner in the works.

.. maybe do the same trick as with loyalty cards (keep swapping them between friends so that lots of people use them and so products purchased make no sense (if you pick a decent demographic of people to shuffle between obv)) and have rotating guest authors on your Twitter, FaceBook (obv that needs you to not care in the slightest about what gets posted on them!)

Compsci degrees aren't returning on investment for coders – research

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Don't bother

Unless you love coding lots, don't bother looking for a dev job as the pay is dismal for hours / mental difficulty of the job and often unrealistic timescales .

Plenty of jobs requiring shorter hours, far less brain taxing and pay huge amounts more.

And for all those JS "coders", quick hint, when a user visits your over scripted web site with JavaScript disabled, they should still see content and be able to see and follow links: website JS should be for nice optional extra improvement, basic web site display / links should work with JS disabled (I don't want malware so my default for a new (so non white-listed site) is JS disabled)

Congress battles Silicon Valley over upcoming US sex trafficking law

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Out in the open

If Backpage is a known site for such activities then surely it's in the interests of law enforcement that such activities stay there "in plain sight", rather than go to a "dark" zone where finding out what is occurring and tracking the users is far more difficult than in a site "out in the open".

Law enforcement then have easily accessible information on potential crimes which they can investigate and, if they find trafficking has occurred, hopefully catch some criminals.

Surely if ads no longer on Backpage (& only avaialble via dark web), any potential evidence is harder to get at and far less crims caught

Behold, says robo-mall-cop maker: Our crime-busting dune buggy packed with spy gear

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Maybe

If they are so worried about trillion dollar negative impact of crime in the US and want to make US safer then maybe ....

Make criminal justice system and post release process more about rehabilitation, when ex cons struggle to get a legit job, afford accommodation then going back to crime often seems the only option

Decriminalize a few commonly used drugs (kudos at least part way there in some states) to stop people getting criminal record for "crimes" that are almost based on a coin toss e.g. alcohol = OK, weed = crim

Have to add (just to get a few commentards frothing) - do something about the US gun laws, in the UK it is harder to legally get guns and various types of gun very difficult / impossible to get for personal use (plus a whole lot of sensible rules on how they are carried in "public"). Unsurprisingly gun crime deaths are low - yes we get violent crome (e.g. knives) but its a damn sight harder for someone to kill lots of people with a knife, close up than with an automatic at distance

Now EE's challenging UK regulator's mobile spectrum proposals

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Bald men fighting over a comb

Spectrum auctions are all well and good but ...

I spend plenty of time in out of the way places (usually with zero mobile coverage - not even 999 possible) - which means eye wateringly expensive satellite phone needed in case of problems (if you have a nasty accident on a mountain in the middle of nowhere then being able to call for help v. useful)

Can we please enforce 100% (and decent quality signal not some micro fraction of a signal bar quality) coverage of the UK.

.. and non exorbitant roaming if a telco other than your own has the monopoly on the mast for that area.

The current scenario leads to big cities being well served (as lots of potential customers = lots of potential cash), but places with 1000X more sheep than people getting dismal / no coverage.

NASA Earthonauts emerge from eight-month isolation in simulated Mars visit

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Tracking

An odd thing about tracking to stop those who wanted to isolate themselves, fail to see the issue if "crew members" want to spend time alone: Presumably there will be plenty of social interaction doing tasks, communal meals etc. but someone who is happy in their own company and does not need to seek out intearction from others does not equate to someone isolating themselves because they fear they may have a big argument with someone else: If I was given a choice between an hour of inconsequential chit chat with someone I already saw plenty of & chatted to in course of work, or an hour with one of the many great works of literature still on my "to read" list, I would take the book every time.

EU's tech giant tax plan moves forward

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But surely US has relatively hard to avoid sales tax and so (at least some) revenue does get taxed, but not really teh equivalent here (VAT is a joke as too easy to exploit for big companies)

Google to kill Chrome autoplay madness

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I would argue specially on YouTube you do not want auto play, as YouTube has its default behaviour of going on to play another video after the one you have been watching is finished.

This hit an older relative of mine who had to leave the house at short notice to deal with family crisis and so accidentally left their PC on YouTube for most off the day ..and burned through a huge chunk of their monthly data allowance in one day.

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Re: Autoplay

Firefox mobile on android is OK.

Proper autoplay block and decent add ons for script & ad defence / block.

I use Firefox as my default on android quite happily

Chrome to label FTP sites insecure

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How about

An insecure warning for all sites that use JavaScript?

A lot more risk of attempted virus / trojan installs from "rogue" JS on sites not labelled as "insecure" than from FTP site that Google flags insecure

Web crash and pricing errors hit Argos

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Have they altered their password requirements?

I was going to buy something from them online a whiel ago, until it got to the point of "joining" - it specified various password criteria ..

.. only allowed me to enter something way below anything I would regard as a decent complexity password (IIRC a very small max chars limit, various low limits on number of non a-z / digits allowed ) - so I did not bother & went to a nearby "bricks & mortar" shop for the sake of a couple of quid extra in price.

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lots of people trying website early doors

.. as news had rapidly spread of dodgy cheap prices and so always a few punters hoping to get lucky and get something dirt cheap due to web site / backend bug.

Sony remembers it once made a great little phone

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skimpy RAM for flagship

If trying to be flagship (albeit compact) then 4Gb RAM is not ideal future proofing given that apps seem to get more and more memory hungry, 6 or 8 would be more "flagship"

..though as I expect an eye watering price based on non UK price figures, RAM is fairly irrelevant as I won't be buying it!

Prejudiced humans = prejudiced algorithms, and it's not an easy fix

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Given this "no discrimination on these characteristics" rule has been in effect since 1990 in UK , and (a long time after that date) the police refused to come to my location when a crime was reported late at night as (paraphrase as I cannot remember exact words) "that area was too dangerous to visit late at night, we only attend there at night if someones life is at risk"

That area was predominately non "white", so can residents / ex-residents of there sue the relevant UK police force for their racial discrimination?

.. irrespective of the inferred prejudice it was a ******* dangerous area to live, but those of us who lived there did not have the luxury of keeping away when it was darkt.

Stephen King's scary movie reboot provokes tears from 'legit clowns'

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Re: Survey

It takes minimal imagination to dream up an image of a type of clown & outfit I would like ...

We're not the 'world leader' in electric cars, Nissan insists

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Meanwhile

ASA happily allow adverts for "video" games, with microscopic writing mentioning that (most) of the footage shown is not actual in game footage (but instead something that looks far better). I know people with grumpy kids after buying games that had far worse graphics than the (fake) clips seen on TV adverts (though I have minimal sympathy for those parents as kids were substantially below the age those games were aimed at).

I must say that ((as a UK person) for "real world" (i.e. you do not need to be nearly millionaire level to afford unlike Teslas) electric cars I instinctive think Nissan (specifically the leaf) as that's the leccy car I see far and away the most of (albeit not huge numbers, just far more than the competition)

Japanese sat tech sinks Sea Shepherd anti-whaling activists' hopes

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Get Kim on it

The Sea Shepherd folk need to have a word with mad NORK Kim, get him to track the Japanese whalers and use their coordinates as target for another test missile firing.

NB This post not to be taken with any degree of seriousness!

tiggity Silver badge

Re: De gustibus non est disputandum

Depends what you mean by sustainable..

Whale numbers (across majority of species, for some species not enough data to know) are a tiny fraction of what they were centuries ago (as far as best estimates go, ironically lots of the information comes from records of whaling vessels).

So, given that the whale population is much, much less than it should be then many people would disagree with any concept of sustainable hunting.

Mazda and Toyota join forces on Linux-based connected car platform

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The explosion of electronic junk gets worse and worse.

e.g. I used to be able to adjust the car clock via a simple manual device on the dashboard.

Now its hidden via umpteen layers of electronic menu that require weird combinations of pressing various indicators and push buttons on them, and so "intuitive" that read of manual required to change most things, so end result is I just don't bother and onboard time just drifts further away from the correct time

If I want to listen to the radio then I prefer a dedicated (& replaceable) hardware "radio unit" (with the benefit of local traffic news cutting in when I'm on long journeys)

As for non radio music, hardware "radio unit" will typically play CD / allow MP£ player to be used as input so no apps needed.

As for Sat Nav, cheaper to buy a dedicated Sat Nav with free lifetime map updates (or use freebie mobile phone app with maps loaded in advance so no connectivity needed) than pay manufactuers huge markup for map updates on their inbuilt Sat Nav.

I cannot be alone in wanting a basic car, where dross like this is *only* available as an optional extra, if you want to fritter away cash on "improving" a base model car, then maybe better shock absorbers, better brakes, proximity sensors or similar kit that actually makes the driving / parking experience better, rather than app tat.

Ad blocking basically doesn't exist on mobile

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Re: Doesn't exist.. my ass..

Though you need root privs to do the mobe equivalent of editing hosts file to "kill" various ad serving domains- lots of us like to fix some ad issues at that level, as then it's less relevant what browser you use,

'Driverless' lorry platoons will soon be on a motorway near you

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"While the initial image this news prompts is probably that of a platoon of networked lorries doing 55.9mph up a single-carriageway hill"

My first image was platoon doing 55 MPH on M-Way, been (eventually) overtaken by other singleton lorries doing 55.00001 MPH (or whatever, that is just marginally faster sp the overtake lasts what seems like an eternity)

.. and everyone else wanting to go at a speed beyond 55 stuck in outside lane, burt that getting so congested that speed there drops to almost the same

.

Reality strikes Dixons Carphone's profits after laughing off Brexit threat

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No surprise there

Explain to me again how the clueless CEOs of such companies even pretend to justify their ludicrously huge salaries when they cannot predict obvious effects of events that will impact their market

Science fiction great Brian Aldiss, 92, dies at his Oxford home

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SF History

And of course Aldiss wrote some very good non fiction works on the history of SF, he was keen on studying the genre he (mainly) wrote.

OnePlus cash equals 5: Rebel flagship joins upmarket Android crew

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meh

I will stick with my el cheapo (massively sub 200 quid) dual SIM phone I have had a while, removeable battery, its 6GB RAM, only 16GB stoarge but has (additional, not a dual use SIM slot) SD card slot to top up the storage.

It's good enough, not the greatest camera but I have several proper cameras I take places when I'm expecting to do some photography so only use of phone camera is a quick snap of something unexpected when out & about.

Fail to understand the mania for camera quality on a phone, even the best camera phones are dismal compared to low end cameras because physics - a proper size lens (i.e. not a phone tiny lens) makes a huge difference to image quality. My very old Canon DSLR (so archaic electronics compared to modern stuff) will (foreseeable future) always destroy phone camera picture quality due to having decent size and quality lenses.

Same with screen resolution, it's a small screen, you soon hit diminishing returns on pixel numbers (and as the review mentioned, extra pixels eat battery) - little justification for some of the pixel counts on phones

Three: No fixed date yet for 4G services abroad

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re @pleb comment

"The operator was the first to pre-empt EU regulation with its "Feel at Home" deals, which abolished roaming premiums for Three UK subscribers visiting 19 countries."

Except taht "Feel at Home" was not open to all, if you had an existing subscription it was not added, you had to get a "new" subscription (I have kept my long standing el cheapo SIM only 3 "all you can eat"subscription because to change it to one that supports "Feel at Home" would have increased my monthly payments massively, and since my dual SIM phones are unlocked I can just slap in a "local" SIM in second SIM socket if I go abroad and set that as main SIM temporarily)

Slapping crap bosses just got cheaper: Blighty's Supreme Court nixes tribunal fees

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Re: "graph shows how much access to justice was damaged"

As in it's a court of law not a court of justice?

(Shameless Billy Bragg reference)

Got some pom-poms handy? UK.gov seeks a geography cheerleader

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Not much skill needed

Given how UK gov splashes its cash, the key geography take home message will be quite simple:

Inside the M25 - have loads of money

Outside the M25 - **** off oiks (unless you are a few Orange seats)

Currys PC World rapped after Knowhow Cloud ad ruled to be 'misleading'

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Lawyered up

The aggrieved individual would be better off lawyering up (Currys / PCW deserve it for blatant mis-selling if restore is a massive PITA), ASA is the definition of toothless

Southern awarded yet another 'most moaned about rail firm' gong

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random luck

"We consult more than 50000 passengers a year"

"Passenger opinions of train services are collected twice a year from a representative sample of journeys..."

So, might not be 50000 unique passengers, and with all surveys, depends who can be bothered to fill in and return them

Disclaimer, I & partner have commuted for many years (we travel to different destinations & typically at different times), neither of us have ever been asked to fill in a survey

House fire, walk with me: Kodipocalypse now includes conflagration

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Scare stories

Lots of power supply "plugs" from major vendors have no earth, just 2 wires, Can we expect warnings on various gadgets by big consumer names? Of more relevance would be were the products NOT double insulated or SELV (2 main reasons not to have an earth with CE) - if that was the case then it's an issue, but otherwise, fairly standard. I would guess, with most Kodi devices being low power, low voltage that no earth allowable due to SELV

US vending machine firm plans employee chip implant scheme

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Why implanted?

Plenty of RFID bracelet / wristband things out there, a lot less intrusive, no surgery involved, e.g. Barclaycard pushing their bPay solution (as mentioned on el Reg in the past)

The tags they add to animals leave quite a noticeable lump under the skin, so why bother (unless you like to cultivate knobbly extremities). Bear in mind your hand, wrist area is heavily supplied with nerves, blood vessels, not my top choice for implant site, as even though (you would hope), injecting the implant would not sever any of these, the compressive effects of the implant may not be great (human nerves are surprisingly susceptible to issues induced by low level pressure )

Expect the Note 8 to break the bank (and your wallet)

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Did they miss the austerity memo?

If I had a spare grand, I can list plenty of things / experiences I would like to spend it on / put it towards.

Oddly enough, blowing almost all of it just on a phone, is not on my list of things to do with such an amount of cash

UK government's war on e-cigs is over

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No vaping in the workplace please

Some of the vape clouds make me (a non smoker, non vaper) cough / struggle to breathe when I inhale them (hard not to when walking past someone on teh street) even more than "real" cigarette smoke does.

Really do not want vape fumes in workplace making me cough, struggle to breathe - people who want to vape can go outside, just like they do now.

Another Brexit cliff edge: UK.gov warned over data flows to EU

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Re: "The potential downside of not getting this right is very serious,"

GDP growth (or lack of) is not the only issue. Already, since the brexit vote, pound is at a dismal exchange rate.lots of products are far more expensive (though fiddled inflation figures do not show it, but my weekly "essentials" shops, which are fairly consistent in their content, keep spiralling up and up in cost way beyond quoted inflation rate ), so the buying power of the pound in your pocket is hit, couple that with (for most people) below inflation wage rises. so, even if net tiny GDP growth, lots of people will suffer financially, and there will be less "decent" jobs (plenty of evidence of companies relocating, where most of the jobs "lost" are not minimum wage).

Then all the (negative) health effects as the govt remove various EU environmental protections and the festering noxious substance laden waterways and beaches of back in the day become common again) - UK gov tries it's best to ignore enviro laws when we are in the EU, just imagine when we leave..

Nearly three-quarters of convicted TV Licence non-payers are women

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Re: See me...

And that magistates do not have any great legal skills / knowledge (usually). Most of them (not all, before someone whinges) just seem to be fascist tin pot dictator types - T. May reminds me of a typical magistrate.

UK.gov snaps on rubber gloves, prepares for mandatory porn checks

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Re: 1984

In 1984 they were told they subject to surveillance - e.g. via the telescreens although supposedly not all the time, the behavior control idea was they never knew when surveillance was on or off. Though a lot of the surveillance ideas were based on grass your neighbour

Ashley Madison throws $11.2m on the bed to mop up leak affair

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Established

"sibling site “Established Men”, which “connects ambitious and attractive young women with successful, generous men”,

Were all the gold-digger related names taken?