Mmsys.cpl is the only way for me
Mmsys.cpl is the only way for me
I’ll bet the NSA or others were using it and didn’t want it broken, maybe
Nice catch! Thanks for calming things down
I think that’s the idea - I love how this is a double entendre for those that know…
This is a great summary I’m going to make use of
I was just trying to point out that you implied a file deletion is what’s causing this, and Linux wouldn’t crash. This fault is fixed by deleting a file, ironically
Have you read anything about this? A file deletion is the workaround for affected hosts, silly!
It’s funny that the sheer idea or frequency of the word is distasteful enough to build this.
Thanks, that brings done useful context here
I’ve been wondering about this a little, if the exposure is greater than just increased spam and phishing risk (due to PII info being breached).
If they’ve got hashed credit card details and the last 4 digits, could they fire guesses at the hashes (just like l0phtcrack for CCs instead of windows SAM databases)?
How much risk is there to people’s personal funds via their credit cards?
So, there’s this thing called Java…
Cracking insight - well done!
I just hope my inappropriate use of a comma was upsetting
I’d like to think I made it to the adjective comparison, but it became demented word salad very quickly
Holy shit, man! I don’t want to take away from your super power, but does anyone actually understand you?
…my memory was that this only worked after the routine had been trained on your typing idiosyncrasies
Now that o can get behind - keep up, dad!
It’s extra funny that the PR drone MS have wheeled out has the last name Faehl - how’s that pronounced, I wonder… Could it be fail?
Fitting really…
Personally, I’m deeply entwined in the MS product stackpillar of turds and I hate it. They appeared to gave made an honest effort after the trustworthy computing initiative, but that has clearly been eroded…
Why they’ve got everyone’s trust, I just can’t understand. Convenience trumps everything else, I guess…
That makes complete sense - if you’ve got something ‘needy’, as soon as it’s queuing up, I imagine it snowballs, too…
10-20 times the core count is crazy, but I guess it’s had a lot of development effort into parallelizing it’s execution, which of course goes against what your use case is :)
Knowing Aussies, the comments on this posting would be a great read.