Legendary Silke
[I][B]You like dragons?[/B][/I]
- 5,925
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- 14
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- Seen Dec 23, 2021
I just like how these are set up separately from the main method, so I can have my laptop to be password-only, but my tablet is perfectly open to PIN unlocks.
Well a little trick I did was open up Photoshop and create a grid (similar to pattern unlocking on Android) and superimposed that on my image, with reduced transparency. Technically, it's cheating, but still ingenious at the same time.Picture passwords? That'd be something hard for me to remember if it was based on gestures, haha. No thanks, i'll stick with my word based entries.
I don't use Chrome at work because it lacks a setting to delete browsing history and clear the cache on exit. Sure it has Incognito mode, but sometimes I would forget to open in Incognito mode.
When I worked in an office and went on "personal sites" during calm times, I always made sure to go Incognito on Chrome before browsing. Even though the data was stored to my user folder only, I'd still prefer to not have my history saved.I don't use Chrome at work because it lacks a setting to delete browsing history and clear the cache on exit. Sure it has Incognito mode, but sometimes I would forget to open in Incognito mode. Opera also lacks this feature to an extent. It will clear the history for you, but it keeps cache. I use opera for Pandora since since I don't have to log in again.
For reference, you can force Chrome to open in incognito mode by default by adding -incognito to the shortcut's target.
TIL Taskbar links are stored in "%APPDATA%\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Quick Launch\User Pinned\TaskBar" But Chrome wasn't there, I went looking and found it in "%APPDATA%\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Quick Launch\User Pinned\ImplicitAppShortcuts\69639df789022856" Guessing that number is a UID of some sort, either user or application version. The shortcut also already had the argument: --profile-directory="Profile 1" but I went ahead and add the incognito argument as well.
How about printing at school? At my school, we have to use the library computers to print, because we use our school portal/email/Blackboard login to access files that we've sent to the printer, instead of just the printed work all coming out at once.I don't usually use public computers since I don't really have a need to under most circumstances.
A lot of institutions charge for printing, presumably to accumulate for costs for the toner cartridges. Are there just flat out fees, or do you get a certain amount of free prints per day?At my college, printing has become not free, and the professor of one of my classes initially told us we would have to print out discussion articles we were assigned, but he went back on that and let us just bring our papers to class and have us talk about them.
True, when I was at community college from 2009-2013, there was a balance that stated how many free pages I was able to print before I would start being charged. In fact, on my very last day before I finished my time there (well, at least before my last summer semester), there were so many pages I printed for an open book final I had in math that day, but not many of them I ended up needing.
Technically, students can have a total of 35 free prints, because of the ten free prints from the computer lab along side the 25 free prints from the library.25 free prints? Ouch. We get something in the neighborhood of $15 or $20 of free prints, at $0.10 a page. I think color is $0.25 a page though. I usually only use it in emergencies and whatnot though, otherwise, I'll print at home if given enough time.