| Researchers at the University of Twente in the Netherlands conducted a study focused on the decision making skills of people with empty or full bladders and found that those with fuller bladders made faster decisions and were better at delaying rewards to increase future gain; how this research may or may not relate to purchasing a new car or picking where to go to dinner is an exercise left to the reader. | |
| Today's Tech Term
Screen Pop | |
| A Screen Pop is a display of all relevant caller and account information that appears on-screen for an agent to view when an individual contacts a company’s call center. Database information can be matched to the caller via methods such as Caller ID, voice response, or an automatic call distributor (ACD). | |
| What We're Reading from Around the Web | |
| | You can hide files on any operating system, but hidden files can be accessed by anyone with access to your PC or its storage. Encryption actually protects your files, preventing people from accessing them without your encryption key. | |
| | When you are just starting to learn about networks and how IP addresses work, it can all seem a bit overwhelming, but with a little bit of study you can understand how it all comes together. Today’s SuperUser Q&A post helps a confused reader learn about how IP addresses work for his Wi-Fi network. | |
| | If you lose your Android device, it's not likely you'll get it back. However, there are some kind souls out there who will try to return it, but if the device is locked, they won't know how to reach you. | |
| | If you’ve noticed hotspots in your digital photos, areas where a stuck pixel in the camera’s sensor has rendered very bright spots of color that don’t belong in the image, you’re not alone. It’s an incredibly common phenomenon, but that doesn’t mean you have to put up with it. Read on as we discuss what distinguishes stuck pixels from other sensor defects and problems, how to identify it, and how to fix it both in-camera and out. | |
| | In 2005, Linus Torvalds said, “I don’t use GNOME, because in striving to be simple, it has long since reached the point where it simply doesn’t do what I need it to do.” GNOME’s developers have continued removing options. | |
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