| The gag in Monty Python and the Holy Grail regarding knights pretending to ride horses while their porters banged coconuts together to simulate the sound of horse hooves was born of necessity: despite the script calling for real horses, the film’s budget was too small to afford them. | |
| Today's Tech Term
Routing Loop | |
| A Routing Loop is formed when an error occurs in a routing algorithm or there has been a router/line failure and the remaining routers in the network have not received notification of the problem yet. This causes packets to be continuously routed in an endless ‘circle’ until the problem has been corrected/fixed. | |
| What We're Reading from Around the Web | |
| | Chrome’s new user account switcher allows you to create multiple “profiles,” which you can use to log into multiple accounts at once on websites, use different groups of add-ons, and more. You can do something similar with Firefox’s Profile Manager. | |
| | The latest trend in the awful Windows ecosystem is pretty ridiculous — scammers have a fake version of the reputable AdwCleaner tool, which is a real tool for Windows experts. And this one pretends your computer is infected and tries to make you pay them to remove it. | |
| | Notifications in OS X are a relatively new feature but since their introduction in 2012 as part of Mountain Lion they’ve become almost indispensable, sporting their own settings panel and aptly-named Notification Center. Here’s how to make the most of both these features. | |
| | Facebook has a feature that analyzes photos uploaded by your friends using its facial recognition technology. If your face is recognized in a photo, your name is suggested to the friend who uploaded it so that friend can more easily tag you in the photo. | |
| | Google wants to get rid of browser plug-ins, but they’re bundling quite a few with Chrome itself. On a clean install, you’ll see at least five different browser plug-ins, from the Widevine Content Decryption Module to Native Client. | |
| | Wouldn’t it be great to have a smart TV? Well, not really. Smart TVs have a lot of problems. If you do have a smart TV, you’d be better off combining it with a cheap set-top box rather than actually using its smart features. | |
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