and useful at parties for those of us who don't like our picture being taken. I can see it now. Mom gets everyone to scrunch together for a group photo. And the emo son taps away at his iOS device and makes the camera not work. Mom looks at the camera exasperated "why does this thing never work for these group photos? I miss my old KodaChrome instamatic with cube flash".
Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."
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on the one hand, it is scary. but I'm waiting for the hacker patch so that such a feature does not work.
Very scary because governments could use it to stop people from recording protests or police misconduct. I mean, if you were the government you'd probably just use it preemptively, as another tool in your arsenal. And that's not cool.
But would the system have to be installed somewhere? So, it could be used in a club or concert venue building, but not a handheld or mobile blocker in a car or something.
But would the system have to be installed somewhere?
Who knows?
Apple just applied for (or was just granted) the patent for this, so I imagine a bunch of stuff is yet to be determined.
In vaguely related news, the U.S. Open (golf) is taking place not too far away and they've banned cell phones and other electronic devices completely. They've got ... metal detectors? ... to keep people from bringing anything in.
Oh, it's an anti-bootlegging device!
Am I losing my mind, or is Google not returning cached results anymore? I'm not getting the "Cached" link underneath the search results today. (Or "Similar," either, but that doesn't matter so much.)
t edit At least one other person noticed it: [link]
Okay, I see what they did -- it's moved over to the bottom of the big giant preview image that pops up when you click on the magnifying glass icon next to the result. That's not particularly intuitive.
Okay, but the problem is that the router keeps trying to dish the same IP address to 2 devices. I know it *shouldn't* happen, but it has been for months.
I set my router's DHCP to start at x.x.x.100 through x.x.x.200, which means that I can have up to 100 devices obtain ip automatically, but reserves x.x.x.2 through x.x.x.99 (and 201-254) for static IPs.
Seems to work for me, and if I have to I can change a device to DHCP quickly.