KillBillOG
About
- Username
- KillBillOG
- Joined
- Visits
- 32
- Last Active
- Roles
- member
- Points
- 86
- Badges
- 0
- Posts
- 32
Reactions
-
Yale Assure Lock 2 works with HomeKit to secure homes
-
Eve Aqua (3rd-gen) review: Upgrades all around for this Thread-enabled spigot
-
Apple Card's explosive growth blamed for Goldman Sachs troubles
-
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) -
Apple Maps teams hiking around UK cities with camera-laden backpacks
bonobob said:AppleInsider said:
Apple started to use pedestrian-based data collection for Apple Maps in 2018, using a heavily customized backpack in San Francisco.
Actually Apple does incorporate that data into Maps, its just oddly deployed—much like Maps 3D. In Perth, Western Australia you can stroll down a pedestrian shopping arcade called, London Court, I linked to the walk around map. Pity Apple doesn't employ people in who use mobility devices so we can also get "accessible" routes and not just able body walkers.