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   PastimesAll Things Technology - Media and Know HOW


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To: Bob who wrote (1370)9/1/2023 3:47:05 PM
From: Don Green
1 Recommendation   of 1886
 
Thanks I saw and replied to the post

Message 34402723

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To: Bob who wrote (1370)9/1/2023 4:45:11 PM
From: Don Green
   of 1886
 
I usually use this color code 55AA88 but have tired my tweaks to try to improved the contrast

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To: Don Green who wrote (1372)9/1/2023 4:53:32 PM
From: Bob
   of 1886
 
Love the background color but hard to read the to and from people

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To: Bob who wrote (1373)9/1/2023 5:22:25 PM
From: Don Green
   of 1886
 
That is exactly the problem trying to tweak over and over to get it just right. I just don’t like the bright white color which is defaul and prefer the bark mode with all media. Much easier on the eyes.

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To: Don Green who wrote (1369)9/2/2023 6:38:59 AM
From: lumpygravy
1 Recommendation   of 1886
 
Page background color = FFFFFF

That must be the default since I've looked at Settings :-)

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From: S. maltophilia9/4/2023 3:11:39 PM
   of 1886
 
......Aptos is a nice and complete font family, but making it exclusively available to Microsoft 365 customers is pure Microsoft greed. Limiting primary font access is just another way for Redmond to push organizations to buy only “subscription” Office instead of using perpetual license Office 2021 or 2019. The company doesn’t seem care about the font-compatibility troubles that it’ll cause customers.

askwoody.com

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From: Don Green9/5/2023 9:39:56 AM
1 Recommendation   of 1886
 

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From: Don Green9/8/2023 8:38:33 PM
   of 1886
 
The 2022 Lastpass Security Breach Just Got Worse
Published 1 day ago
If you never changed your passwords the first time around, now is the time.

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It's been almost a year since LastPass, one of the most widely used password managers out there, suffered a catastrophic security breach that all but eroded confidence in the service — and the company's prestige with the tech community at large. While it was looking like the worst has already happened, it now appears the consequences are more far-reaching than we initially thought, thanks to a series of thefts that are pointing to the breach as the likely culprit.

WATCH

NEXT

Since the breach was disclosed, a series of cryptocurrency thefts have taken place over the months following the breach. These heists have targeted security-conscious people and have been documented by Taylor Monahan, the lead product manager of MetaMask (one of the top local cryptocurrency and NFT wallets, mostly used for the Ethereum blockchain). So far, the thefts have targeted over 150 people, which have been robbed of over $35 million worth of crypto. The root cause behind these thefts was mostly unknown, but now, Monahan mentioned that nearly all victims had previously used LastPass to store their seed phrase — a wallet's private key that can be used to gain access to the wallet.

Back when the breach was disclosed, it was known that hackers did gain access to encrypted password vaults in that breach, but according to LastPass, passwords and private information within those vaults were still encrypted and safe. Because of this, many people chose not to worry a lot about this — if hackers can't access the goods, then there's no need to change them.

If LastPass is indeed the culprit behind these crypto thefts, though, then it means malicious actors are indeed managing to decrypt the vaults and break into them, obtaining crypto credentials and any passwords contained there. And given how more than 25 million people had their supposedly secure vaults stolen, this would be extremely catastrophic news. For what it's worth, back when the breach was disclosed, it was followed by weeks of " oops, sorry, this might be worse than we thought," so we already knew that it was a disaster.

If you were a LastPass user affected by the breach, you should go ahead and immediately change any password you had stored within the service right now. In addition, you should make sure to take any appropriate measures for anything else that you have stored there — if you happen to have any cryptocurrency, you should move it to a different wallet.

Source: KrebsOnSecurity via Web3 is Going Just Great

About The Author

Arol is a tech journalist and news/feature writer at How-To Geek. He also writes at sister sites MakeUseOf and Android Police. Currently a Pharmacy student at the Central University of Venezuela, Arol has had a soft spot for everything tech-related since he was a child. When not writing, you'll either find him nose-deep into his textbooks or playing video games.

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From: S. maltophilia9/12/2023 10:17:24 PM
2 Recommendations   of 1886
 
A bogus travel guide that leaves you stranded is one thing, but a guide that gets you to eat hemlock is quite another.

Would You Trust AI to Help You Forage? Before you buy a plant field guide, make sure it wasn’t written by a computer. No, seriously.

atlasobscura.com

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From: Don Green9/13/2023 11:37:56 AM
2 Recommendations   of 1886
 
James Webb Telescope Spots Evidence of Plankton Living on Alien Ocean Planet

dg>>> able to spot molecule dimethyl sulfide on an earth-like planet 120 light-years away???

The molecule dimethyl sulfide naturally occurs from phytoplankton on Earth. Now the James Webb Space Telescope has detected the molecule's emissions on an exoplanet called K2-18 b.

Illustration of K2-18 b (Credits: Illustration: NASA, CSA, ESA, J. Olmsted (STScI), Science: N. Madhusudhan, Cambridge University)
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has spotted evidence of potential life on a hydrogen-rich ocean planet based 120 light-years away.

The planet is called K2-18 b and it orbits a dwarf star in the so-called “ habitable zone,” a distance where conditions might be right for life to exist. The space telescope recently analyzed the light emitted from the planet to discern its chemical composition.

According to NASA, the findings reveal the presence of “carbon-bearing molecules including methane and carbon dioxide,” which are all building blocks to life on our own planet. In addition, the telescope may have detected the presence of a molecule called dimethyl sulfide (DMS) in the planet’s atmosphere.

“On Earth, this is only produced by life. The bulk of the DMS in Earth’s atmosphere is emitted from phytoplankton in marine environments,” NASA noted.


(Credit: NASA)
The space agency will need to observe K2-18 b more to validate the findings. But if true, it could mean a plankton-like organism—which on Earth act as a crucial food source for other marine life—is present on the alien world.

However, K2-18 b is quite different from Earth. To start, it's about 8.6 times larger. The data from the James Webb Space telescope also suggests K2-18 b is a hydrogen-rich world covered with an ocean surface, making it a “Hycean exoplanet.” That said, it’s possible the planet’s surface is too hot for life, or for it to sustain a liquid ocean, NASA added.

“The planet's large size — with a radius 2.6 times the radius of Earth — means that the planet’s interior likely contains a large mantle of high-pressure ice, like Neptune, but with a thinner hydrogen-rich atmosphere and an ocean surface,” the space agency said. (In contrast, Earth's atmosphere is made up mostly of nitrogen and oxygen.)

The space telescope was able to discern the planet’s chemical composition by taking a spectrum, which involves dissecting the emitted light from K2-18 b’s atmosphere. Although other telescopes have taken spectrums of K2-18 b before, James Webb features more powerful sensors, which allowed astronomers to gather more data of the planet’s atmosphere.

"These results are the product of just two observations of K2-18 b, with many more on the way,” University of Cambridge astronomer Savvas Constantinou told NASA. “This means our work here is but an early demonstration of what Webb can observe in habitable-zone exoplanets.”

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