There used to be a paperclip named Clippy, who lived in Microsoft Word... has something happened to Clippy?
Have you kidnapped Clippy? Have you seen this paperclip? Plaese stop kidnapping paperclips!!! It`s not an acceptable thing to do.
Quote:
How do i change the nationality in my profile to germany
There used to be a paperclip named Clippy, who lived in Microsoft Word... has something happened to Clippy?
Have you kidnapped Clippy? Have you seen this paperclip? Plaese stop kidnapping paperclips!!! It`s not an acceptable thing to do.
[quote][i]How do i change the nationality in my profile to germany[/i][/quote]
And in the web-browsing advice column, make sure whenever you use a public computer
(at the computer lab, library, school, etc.) change all the "website privacy settings"
on the internet explorer or world-wide-web browser, to a safe mode or a pseudo-safety
setting. My suggestion is scroll through and find the options to allow or to disallow
websites to access your location, your USB devices, your MIDI devices, your clipboard
and/or your files, your motion sensors, etc. And disable all those settings so that
those are not allowed anymore. That will tell the website NOT to steal your information
automatically. With the setting to allow those automatically, it will mean the website
*is* allowed to get vital personal information from that computer while you are using it.
And that is not an activity that I believe would be safe for people who play jazz. They
could easily manipulate that setting in order to install cryptocurrency mining operations
in the midst of what you are doing, based on the false premise of your naïveity -- and we
don`t want to have to resort to lurking in IRC again just to avoid cryptocurrency mining.
Code:
"Go back to IRC"
This warning message might sound like fearmongering or alarmist rhetoric, but it`s still
a serious recommendation. A lot of people sometimes play jazz with an internet browsing
program open, and sometimes that means there can be files stored on the caché of the
internet browser "AS WELL" as in the caché of the jazz game or programme. And there *is*
a realistic percentage chance of some of those files being maliciously designed with the
intent of sacrificing YOU in order to mine cryptocurrency from the computer. That is also
why I furthermore suggest don`t allow any files to be retained in the caché of the programs
on the computer unless they are verifyed to be both "safe" in terms of being free from
the potential for exploitable security vulnerabilitys AND being proven that they were NOT
designed with malicious intent, be it that the intent was to mine cryptocurrency, to waste
the inherent resources of that computer itself for illegitimate 3rd-party purposes, etc.
=->Alsø the 1.1x custom playback rate setting on basketball videos is superb
[quote]Web Browsing Advisory[/quote]
And in the web-browsing advice column, make sure whenever you use a public computer
(at the computer lab, library, school, etc.) change all the "website privacy settings"
on the internet explorer or world-wide-web browser, to a safe mode or a pseudo-safety
setting. My suggestion is scroll through and find the options to allow or to disallow
websites to access your location, your USB devices, your MIDI devices, your clipboard
and/or your files, your motion sensors, etc. And disable all those settings so that
those are not allowed anymore. That will tell the website NOT to steal your information
automatically. With the setting to allow those automatically, it will mean the website
*is* allowed to get vital personal information from that computer while you are using it.
And that is not an activity that I believe would be safe for people who play jazz. They
could easily manipulate that setting in order to install cryptocurrency mining operations
in the midst of what you are doing, based on the false premise of your naïveity -- and we
don`t want to have to resort to lurking in IRC again just to avoid cryptocurrency mining.
[code]"Go back to IRC"[/code]
This warning message might sound like fearmongering or alarmist rhetoric, but it`s still
a serious recommendation. A lot of people sometimes play jazz with an internet browsing
program open, and sometimes that means there can be files stored on the caché of the
internet browser "AS WELL" as in the caché of the jazz game or programme. And there *is*
a realistic percentage chance of some of those files being maliciously designed with the
intent of sacrificing YOU in order to mine cryptocurrency from the computer. That is also
why I furthermore suggest don`t allow any files to be retained in the caché of the programs
on the computer unless they are verifyed to be both "safe" in terms of being free from
the potential for exploitable security vulnerabilitys AND being proven that they were NOT
designed with malicious intent, be it that the intent was to mine cryptocurrency, to waste
the inherent resources of that computer itself for illegitimate 3rd-party purposes, etc.
[i][s]=->Als[/s]ø the [b]1.1x[/b] custom playback rate setting on basketball videos is superb[/i]