illrigger

About

Username
illrigger
Joined
Visits
10
Last Active
Roles
member
Points
182
Badges
0
Posts
39
  • YouTubers test durability of Apple Watch Ultra in different ways

    To counter all of that, what would you say if the thing broke far easier than expected? People say the exact same thing every time JerryRigEverything does a bend test, and yet every so often you end up with an iPad that bends in half when almost no force is applied. I agree that hitting something with a sledgehammer is dumb, but it's not like these people haven't found things out that are important to know (like to never ever stick an iPad Pro into your backpack unsupported).
    williamlondon
  • Electric vehicle maker Polestar beats Tesla to Apple CarPlay

    Beats said:
    If the new CarPlay UI is an indication of what Apple Car could/would look like.

    DAMN.

    Polestar's current built-in OS is Android Auto (no phone connection needed, it's built from the ground up by Google), so you don't have to imagine very hard - it'll basically be the same as it is now but with an Apple UI instead of a Google one.
    williamlondonjony0
  • Hands on with 'iPhone 14' dummy units

    USB-C not for iPhone 14, yet, I fear?
    They won't be required to do it until 2024, so next year would be the earliest and they may hold out for a year after that.
    caladanianspock1234
  • GoDice review: Make game night more fun with these Bluetooth-enabled dice

    If you are playing an RPG over the internet, nobody wants to put up with your weird 3rd party app while everyone else is using a common standard like Roll20, Fantasy Grounds or Foundry VTT (even the most expensive of which you can get for less than the cost of these things plus the RPG shells). I get that rolling dice is nice, but if it doesn't work with what everyone else at the "table" is using, you may as well be rolling regular ones and reading off the results.
    williamlondon
  • Windows, Android malware still greatly outnumber those on Apple's platforms

    Ugh. What a load of clickbait BS. How many attack vectors are coming into any given platform doesn't matter nearly as much as how effective those vectors are, and the most successful ones are hitting every platform all at once.

    I do information security for a living, and I will tell you one very important thing: all it takes is one successful vector, and you are hosed. It doesn't matter how much more the other guys are getting attacked than you are, you still need to act as if you are constantly being attacked - because you really are. That means:
    • Get everything that talks to the Internet (hardware and software) up to date as quickly as you can as updates are released. That includes your router!
    • Replace that router that you "got a great deal on" back on Black Friday in 201x with a modern one that is well reviewed by a site that primarily/only reviews network stuff. If you are unsure, just get something from Asus that has at least 3.5 stars on Newegg.
    • Limit exposure from the outside as much as possible and turn off uPnP on your router.
    • Practice network isolation: keep equipment that doesn't need to be on the same network as your personal date on its own subnet, especially IoT stuff like lighting hubs and smart home gear that doesn't get updated often. 
    • If something you have connected to the Internet hasn't gotten an update in a year, consider replacing it entirely (once again, that includes your router!), and don't buy no-name stuff from Amazon, Wish, AliExpress, etc., and put it on your network with the your PCs. Getting "Linarsefft" smart bulbs because they are so cheap is a BAD idea - they will never get updated and will almost certainly have some sort of security flaw in them eventually.
    • Stop going to that site you know you shouldn't be going to. You know which one I am talking about - it's the one that you immediately thought of when you read that. Stop going to the rest of the ones you know are risky as well. Or, at the very least, build a VM, put it on its own network, and use that to go there instead.
    As a reader, you should be finding articles like this offensive to you. They play to your ego to make you feel superior so they can make a bit of money from your clicks, but they are actually giving you a false sense of security. You ARE being attacked constantly and relentlessly - your network is getting pinged hundreds of times a day from countries far and wide (and by that I mean mostly Russia), looking for their way in. Don't listen to anyone who tells you you aren't, and act accordingly to minimize the risk of them actually getting in.
    ctt_zhgatorguyFileMakerFellerwatto_cobra