For desktops, i would say it was the 2nd gen of the core i series(2xxx, like the 2500k). For laptops, definitely the original retina macbook pro in 2012.
I'm still using that machine, i try out new stuff every few months. I still don't see the point. I load it down pretty heavily all the time and it still kicks right through it just like it did when i took it out of the box.
If it breaks, i'll just buy another similar one. They're not much over $500 now and it's an amazing amount of computer for that price even in 2018(19?). My only regret is not maxing out the ram and storage really, but that's on me.
I've never felt this way until now, i used to wish i could justify a new machine every year or two and often would. I think i didn't keep a laptop for over a year and a half until i got this one... But now i just don't care. I don't own a single machine with a newer cpu than this one, and my desktop still does great too with a 3770 and a couple SSDs.
It's always, always been terrible on android. It's to the point i almost think it's intentional for some "influencers use iOS" sort of reason. It works just as terribly on current flagship devices, and the picture quality is still horrible even compared to an iphone 5s
My snarky answer is use an MVNO that will both show up as the base carrier to any searching online/number lookups, and has completely useless clueless terrible support that either couldn't or wouldn't redirect like this.
Assuming you even have to use SMS, get some weird walmart mobile service that you can't even really call for support.
It's security through obscurity but they often literally wont let you port your number out without absurd gymnastics, the support people don't know how, their crappy web based management system the CSRs use doesn't have a button, etc.
This idea fails because it would would require the driver to report the mess while driving, which is illegal use of your phone in a lot of places. They'd need to come up with a big giant button to push or something, and even then it might run afoul of the law.
I've definitely heard of drivers getting cracked down on for "misuse" of phones, legit or not
This is still a huge target. I used to be in point of sale engineering, and the majority of the quality terminals the big OEMs(NCR and their sub brands, posiflex, etc) were pushing were running these for a LONG time past when you'd think C3 was "dead". Similar vendors i bumped into were pushing stuff with them in it still when i got out of that industry.
There are a LOT of machines out there which will be run essentially until they break down(and a lot are fanless, and will pretty much last until they can't be kept up to date). You have to remember, a lot of big chains(and banks!) paid for extended XP support and then extended-extended XP in the form of windows POS.
This is a "every terminal in a huge fast food chain gets owned and no one finds out for years" sort of vulnerability. This is the first step to something like the target breach all over again.
>This is a "every terminal in a huge fast food chain gets owned and no one finds out for years" sort of vulnerability. This is the first step to something like the target breach all over again.
Utter nonsense, this bug will not lead to RCE.
You might be able to implement a fancy rootkit with this, but that's all. Advanced rootkit tech is neither necessary nor particularly helpful for these sorts of breaches.
Points 4 and 8 also combine here. The new "green" garbage trucks the vendor in my city has begun using are so INCREDIBLY loud. Even just the engine noise from them. The PTO and gearbox noise is just atrocious, tons of turbo noise, tons of just weird mid frequency resonant whining. They're some of the loudest trucks i've ever heard, and are basically as loud as monster trucks or straight pipe hot rods. I'm completely not exaggerating that they're multiple harley davidson loud, and at a more annoying frequency.
I've gotten like stabbing ear pain from being near one of these accelerating hard.
The solution here is inverter drive appliances. I had a cheapo but great thrift store inverter microwave. My cheapo junk 3000w inverter could run it off a few hundred Ah of batteries without issue, still spitting out clean power on the other outlets. A regular microwave(with a lower run wattage in theory, by about 1/3rd) would instantly blow the thing up and set off its obnoxious alarm.
With some carefully selected appliances you would probably be fine. This stuff used to be super pricey, but now even the cheaper brands are putting out inverter drive ACs for example. Not window units, but mini splits and home systems
Really, if you build from the ground up, or, if you are skilled enough to engineer it, this is a lowish burden if not a no brainer.
If you are a prepper, with your existing lifestyle and think a genset will give you tide-over-until-the-zombies-die, I think you need to think harder: a genny won't work, if you don't pre-design the load for it. Lots of things you own right now probably won't be very happy with unstable volts, and lots of things you own right now will suck hard on the generator, making it surge.
So yes. you can design for it. But a typical home solar setup (which is what the article was about) is not going to just work, offline, with your generator. It takes more work.
I'm still using that machine, i try out new stuff every few months. I still don't see the point. I load it down pretty heavily all the time and it still kicks right through it just like it did when i took it out of the box.
If it breaks, i'll just buy another similar one. They're not much over $500 now and it's an amazing amount of computer for that price even in 2018(19?). My only regret is not maxing out the ram and storage really, but that's on me.
I've never felt this way until now, i used to wish i could justify a new machine every year or two and often would. I think i didn't keep a laptop for over a year and a half until i got this one... But now i just don't care. I don't own a single machine with a newer cpu than this one, and my desktop still does great too with a 3770 and a couple SSDs.