Ahh yes the wanton disrespect of RFC email addresses across the internet buggers that up. I do a Cerebus and I’ve got an email alias for each account I create. It’s all in keepass so I don’t give a crap . I use the last 8 characters from a GUID for each one. Not automated as it wasn’t worth it.
Still trying to not buy an IC-7300. Come on people you are enablers. Do your jobs!
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I have washed it with windows cleaning fluid
the both bulbs are interesting
I have washed it with windows cleaning fluid
the both bulbs are interesting
The flip side to that scheme is that it's relatively easy to guess what the 'add part' is and so if a malicious party has obtained a legitimate 'base part' it's trivial for them to automate trying alternative 'add parts' on the most lucrative targets to find a valid combination by brute force. The random user part is impractical to brute force (the scheme I use has ~ 44 bits of entropy) but requires you to have access to a mail server where you can add as many user parts as you like to an email domain without (significant) additional costs to oneself.
Although all the above is true, I don't regard it as a significant weakness in your scheme. I tend myself to regard the random email address as 'security by obscurity' and really use it for the purposes of 'traitor tracing'. It's having a unique, random password per site that gives me some comfort. As you say, broken implementations that don't follow RFC822 et seq are the pain point for your scheme, and they are, from experience, so common that it's a serious drawback.
The flip side to that scheme is that it's relatively easy to guess what the 'add part' is and so if a malicious party has obtained a legitimate 'base part' it's trivial for them to automate trying alternative 'add parts' on the most lucrative targets to find a valid combination by brute force. The random user part is impractical to brute force (the scheme I use has ~ 44 bits of entropy) but requires you to have access to a mail server where you can add as many user parts as you like to an email domain without (significant) additional costs to oneself.
Although all the above is true, I don't regard it as a significant weakness in your scheme. I tend myself to regard the random email address as 'security by obscurity' and really use it for the purposes of 'traitor tracing'. It's having a unique, random password per site that gives me some comfort. As you say, broken implementations that don't follow RFC822 et seq are the pain point for your scheme, and they are, from experience, so common that it's a serious drawback.I've abused the catch all functionality before to generate as many unique addresses as is needed without having actual mailboxes or even aliases attached to them. It saves a bit of work and you can use cheaper hosting schemes if you don't run a mailserver yourself.
Ahh yes the wanton disrespect of RFC email addresses across the internet buggers that up. I do a Cerebus and I’ve got an email alias for each account I create. It’s all in keepass so I don’t give a crap . I use the last 8 characters from a GUID for each one. Not automated as it wasn’t worth it.
Still trying to not buy an IC-7300. Come on people you are enablers. Do your jobs!I like the IC-7300 a nice SDR with a brilliant display and is fully customisable, go on you know you want it don't you so what are you waiting for.....
There you go, I sorted it for you
What catch all functionality? Can you expand a bit, please, since you hint at something which might be easy and general purpose.
Ahh yes the wanton disrespect of RFC email addresses across the internet buggers that up. I do a Cerebus and I’ve got an email alias for each account I create. It’s all in keepass so I don’t give a crap . I use the last 8 characters from a GUID for each one. Not automated as it wasn’t worth it.
Still trying to not buy an IC-7300. Come on people you are enablers. Do your jobs!I like the IC-7300 a nice SDR with a brilliant display and is fully customisable, go on you know you want it don't you so what are you waiting for.....
There you go, I sorted it for you
That's what I like to hear! Taking some deep breaths and a run up. ML&S have some in stock
I have washed it with windows cleaning fluid
the both bulbs are interestingI think that those bulbs might be part of a feedback circuit, I remember reading about bulbs being used for purpose somewhere.
Yeah it is. Have had to put it off for a couple of days. Just found the sodding fridge has conked out . Literally 2 hours after a week of shopping arrived FFS.
Yeah it is. Have had to put it off for a couple of days. Just found the sodding fridge has conked out . Literally 2 hours after a week of shopping arrived FFS.
I have washed it with windows cleaning fluid
the both bulbs are interestingI think that those bulbs might be part of a feedback circuit, I remember reading about bulbs being used for purpose somewhere.ALC as rendered by HP's original 200A oscillator, I'll wager.
mnem
*dwagon on the loose in the Great White North*
Yeah it is. Have had to put it off for a couple of days. Just found the sodding fridge has conked out . Literally 2 hours after a week of shopping arrived FFS.
Hmm, you seem to have the knack for domestic appliances dying on your watch. However, I won't taunt you like I did with my menus of roast and baked things when your oven went west. I'll just grab a cold beer, lean back and watch everybody else taunt you...
Yeah it is. Have had to put it off for a couple of days. Just found the sodding fridge has conked out . Literally 2 hours after a week of shopping arrived FFS.Could be worse. You could have found out tomorrow.
Glad to see another Firefox user. Chrome is such an asshole of a browser.
Long-time Firefox user here, too. I have other browsers installed for testing, etc., but FF is my daily driver.
My browser history: NCSA Mosaic > Netscape Navigator > Netscape Communicator > Mozilla Application Suite/SeaMonkey > Mozilla Firefox
I also used Waterfox for a couple of years during the Quantum/extensions fiasco so I could keep using existing add-ons.Same here - except dual-based with IE. One can say many things against MS and IE, but their Favorites storage is transparent and stable over the versions. Came also from Netscape to Mozilla.
Yeah it is. Have had to put it off for a couple of days. Just found the sodding fridge has conked out . Literally 2 hours after a week of shopping arrived FFS.
I noticed a design in AoE 3e which was quite interesting. They used a crap square oscillator running at 10x the frequency desired and rammed it through a switched capacitor filter. Very neat. I might build one.
Indeed. Turns out most of the stuff didn't need to be refrigerated that was in there. I'll stick the meaty things in the freezer (fortunately separate) and deal with it tomorrow!
Yeah it is. Have had to put it off for a couple of days. Just found the sodding fridge has conked out . Literally 2 hours after a week of shopping arrived FFS.
My fridge is >30 years old, as is my dishwasher. I've had them from new. No, they weren't particularly expensive examples.
My freezer is >25years old, and cost £10 second hand.
Car is 15years/0.11Mmiles old, gets serviced twice a decade whether it needs it or not.
So, WTF is going on under the flightpath into Heathrow? Alternatively, since I used Which?'s reports as the basis for most of those choices, I consider that subscription a bargain