Miscellaneous Tech News
-
@scottalanmiller Only us nerds.
-
@Danp Yeah thought the same thing
-
@scottalanmiller said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@Danp I'm pretty sure that it reminds everyone of that, haha.
Which means that leeloodallas or some variation thereof will move up a few ranks in the "bad password" lists that comes around every year or two.
-
-
15-inch, 4K OLED laptops are coming thanks to new displays from Samsung
Samsung could provide the new panel to OEMs for laptops launching this year.
Samsung's 15.6-inch display has a brightness range of 0.0005 to 600 nits, and its spectrum of 34 million colors is double that of similar, 15-inch LCD panels. Samsung claims that its panel can produce blacks that are 200 times darker than those of LCD panels, and whites will be more than twice as bright. These attributes contribute to the HDR capabilities of the panel, and the company claims that the panel passes VESA's new DisplayHDR TrueBlack standard.
-
VoIP.ms - New Feature: Phone Book Groups
The phone book groups feature is located under "DID Numbers" then under "Phone Book". You can now create unique groups that fit your needs (e.g. family, work or friends)! Groups can also be used in combination with our CallerID filtering feature. You could for instance route all your calls from your "family" group to your personal mobile.
-
Google planning changes to Chrome that could break ad blockers
The APIs that ad blockers depend on are also popular among malicious extensions.
Google is planning to change the way extensions integrate with its Chrome browser. The company says that the changes are necessary for and motivated by a desire to crack down on malicious extensions, which undermine users' privacy and security, as part of the company's continued efforts to make extensions safer. The move also means that popular ad blocking extensions such as uBlock Origin and uMatrix will, according to their developer, no longer work.
-
@mlnews said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Google planning changes to Chrome that could break ad blockers
The APIs that ad blockers depend on are also popular among malicious extensions.
Google is planning to change the way extensions integrate with its Chrome browser. The company says that the changes are necessary for and motivated by a desire to crack down on malicious extensions, which undermine users' privacy and security, as part of the company's continued efforts to make extensions safer. The move also means that popular ad blocking extensions such as uBlock Origin and uMatrix will, according to their developer, no longer work.
Cool cool I'm just gonna pihole everything. .
-
@DustinB3403 yeah, no ad blocker for me.
-
@mlnews said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Google planning changes to Chrome that could break ad blockers
The APIs that ad blockers depend on are also popular among malicious extensions.
Google is planning to change the way extensions integrate with its Chrome browser. The company says that the changes are necessary for and motivated by a desire to crack down on malicious extensions, which undermine users' privacy and security, as part of the company's continued efforts to make extensions safer. The move also means that popular ad blocking extensions such as uBlock Origin and uMatrix will, according to their developer, no longer work.
Looks like I won't be using chrome any more (very little use currently). Eat a dick, google.
-
@RojoLoco said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@mlnews said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Google planning changes to Chrome that could break ad blockers
The APIs that ad blockers depend on are also popular among malicious extensions.
Google is planning to change the way extensions integrate with its Chrome browser. The company says that the changes are necessary for and motivated by a desire to crack down on malicious extensions, which undermine users' privacy and security, as part of the company's continued efforts to make extensions safer. The move also means that popular ad blocking extensions such as uBlock Origin and uMatrix will, according to their developer, no longer work.
Looks like I won't be using chrome any more (very little use currently). Eat a dick, google.
What are you currently using now? Firefox? Other Chromium-based browsers?
-
@black3dynamite Opera mostly. I keep chrome and FF for sites that Opera doesn't like.
-
Hulu will make its basic plan cheaper as Netflix gets pricier
The company is positioning itself for a year of fiercer competition.
In February, Hulu will drop the price of its ad-supported, on-demand streaming service from $7.99 per month to $5.99, while also raising the base price of its live TV cable replacement service from $39.99 per month to $44.99, Deadline reports. Its ad-free on-demand service will stay at $11.99.
-
@mlnews said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Hulu will make its basic plan cheaper as Netflix gets pricier
The company is positioning itself for a year of fiercer competition.
In February, Hulu will drop the price of its ad-supported, on-demand streaming service from $7.99 per month to $5.99, while also raising the base price of its live TV cable replacement service from $39.99 per month to $44.99, Deadline reports. Its ad-free on-demand service will stay at $11.99.
Not a fan of Hulu.
-
@mlnews I use the Google Tv platform and its been decent. I haven't used anything else though so not much to base that on. Anything that is better than Google TV?
-
@Obsolesce said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@mlnews said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Hulu will make its basic plan cheaper as Netflix gets pricier
The company is positioning itself for a year of fiercer competition.
In February, Hulu will drop the price of its ad-supported, on-demand streaming service from $7.99 per month to $5.99, while also raising the base price of its live TV cable replacement service from $39.99 per month to $44.99, Deadline reports. Its ad-free on-demand service will stay at $11.99.
Not a fan of Hulu.
What don't you like?
-
@jmoore said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@mlnews I use the Google Tv platform and its been decent. I haven't used anything else though so not much to base that on. Anything that is better than Google TV?
Do you mean YouTube TV, or is there a separate service called Google TV?
-
@Obsolesce said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
@mlnews said in Miscellaneous Tech News:
Hulu will make its basic plan cheaper as Netflix gets pricier
The company is positioning itself for a year of fiercer competition.
In February, Hulu will drop the price of its ad-supported, on-demand streaming service from $7.99 per month to $5.99, while also raising the base price of its live TV cable replacement service from $39.99 per month to $44.99, Deadline reports. Its ad-free on-demand service will stay at $11.99.
Not a fan of Hulu.
Huh - I like it just fine.
-
@Obsolesce I second that, mostly for the fact that their "premium" tier that is supposed to be ad-free is most certainly not ad-free.
-
I don't love Hulu. Mostly, because they don't have digital surround on all but a few devices. Also, they don't have a true commercial-free option. It is limited ads for certain shows. Also, I believe they still have limit of 1 stream at a time, which is dumb. That being said, my gf's sister shares hers, so I can watch Seinfeld.