KillBillOG
About
- Username
- KillBillOG
- Joined
- Visits
- 32
- Last Active
- Roles
- member
- Points
- 86
- Badges
- 0
- Posts
- 32
Reactions
-
Apple Card's explosive growth blamed for Goldman Sachs troubles
-
Eve Aqua (3rd-gen) review: Upgrades all around for this Thread-enabled spigot
-
30 states working on digital drivers licenses, TSA will allow them soon
Some "front office staff" (otherwise known as insurance company employees) often have dated procedures and make faces when you say you don't have a card then claim they're not allowed to use electronic documents. You know the types, the ones that keep contactless payment terminals hidden 10 feet away from the patient trying to pay the co-pay-for-the-deductible-co-insurance or don't know how to enter in the charge amount into the terminal because they're "not allowed". Bring on the digital DL and maybe we'll get to pay the fees with ApplePay instead of some 1990's looking credit card screen with a 3.5% inconvenience fee and 1.5% technology charge, while they pay for the Brinks cash truck and the 50 people herding staff to pay with exact change—Nevada -
Tile CEO 'welcomes' AirTag competition from Apple's 'runaway monopoly train'
He’s done his company more damage than Apple, Tile was an OK product, used it since 2013, but my last one is in the trash. Runaway monopoly is a ridiculous statement and ignores the security and privacy that should be central to an OS company. Get lost Tile, I buy Apple precisely for being closer to a curated garden, I don’t need you to tell me I need a viper and trash filled swamp like Android—consumer choice was made not foisted. -
Some Mac software has made it all the way from 68K to M1 - here's why
-
Firefox joins Safari in controlling cross-site browser cookies
Well it would also be nice if places like banks (here's looking at you Salisbury Bank) government agencies etc didn't force you to turn on the insecure forms of cross site cookie "trafficking" to use "Bill Pay" because their developers are lazy, cheap or nefarious vendors that tell poorly informed management that such nasty cookies are "essential" when there are more secure methods. Maybe Apple/Mozilla could have a nicely written form letter you could send to "management" Customer Relations, legislators etc that states the argument to use secure methods and undercut those IT professionals that hold back thinks like prevention of privacy violating cross site cookies, stupid password requirements (no "-" or >8 but <13 ascii only etc) and of course preventing secure form and login automation (auto completion) -
Yale Assure Lock 2 works with HomeKit to secure homes
-
Facebook admits that iOS 14 privacy changes are working as intended