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2:10 AM
Hmm
 
Eesh.
I hope that person loses the right to enter the US as a result O_o. Douche.
 
O_o
Why the hell?
 
2:49 AM
"One woman said she saves $17 on just one tank of gas by filling up in America." lol, as if Canada was not in America.
3
 
 
4 hours later…
6:56 AM
Hmm, is it intentional that the suggested edit activities in your profile no longer actually link to the suggested edit?
 
Where does this happen?
 
Oh I see. What's with the questions/132583/consecutive-days-tag-wiki, since when does that URL work for tag wikis? o.o
 
Tag wikis are just stored as posts, so that's always worked.
4
A: How to get TagWikis along with their corresponding Tags?

Tim StoneUntil the necessary data is added, if you're primarily interested in actually viewing the tag wiki on the site, you can use the [Post Link] magic column to generate a link that will take you to the correct tag wiki (whichever tag it happens to belong to).

@TimStone Aww, someone beat me to reporting it.
Hmm, the system seems to think that this suggestion isn't approved, even though clearly it was.
 
 
5 hours later…
12:28 PM
 
1:14 PM
So GitHub has this weird issue with Opera Mobile that causes it to hang in a very specific way
 
1:58 PM
1
Q: How to disable textbox depending on checkbox checked

SunnyCan anyone please tell me how to disable a textbox, if a checkbox is checked, and enable textbox if the checkbox is not checked?

/facepalm
 
 
2 hours later…
3:44 PM
Are cell communications securely encrypted? Or, bottom line, is it safe to transmit passwords, credit card info and the like from smartphone apps?
IT Security SE has a question on that topic, but it's kind of all over the place, and doesn't have great answers.
(For the purposes of simplification, assume the apps themselves are trustworthy and wifi is not involved.)
 
 
1 hour later…
4:51 PM
@PopularDemand It's safe if the application itself sends content over TLS or the like. While cell phone traffic isn't intended to be susceptible to third-party monitoring while in-transit, there are vulnerabilities that erode that layer of protection.
 
Is there a standard way to determine whether an app uses TLS?
 
Hmm, I don't know of a trivial way. If you connect your phone to a wifi network you control you could monitor the traffic the app is sending, I suppose. Can't say that I've ever tried to do that, though.
 
So for a general user, the answer is "some apps are safe, but you have no way of knowing if your app is one of them."
 
Sounds right to me, yeah.
 
Pops-Perturbing Pedantic Problem of the Day: see above
 
5:04 PM
The various app stores may have policies that help limit the chance that a given app is sending information like that insecurely, but I'm not familiar enough with that whole process to know if that's true.
 
Hm, apparently I never shared this:

What's SO?

Jun 6 '11 at 10:21, 30 minutes total – 3 messages, 2 users, 0 stars

Bookmarked Jun 6 '11 at 14:50 by Lord Torgamus

5
 
Hah
 
Also:
in Android on Stack Overflow Chat, 23 mins ago, by Tim
(tired of getting pinged for other Tim's)
 
Heh, I think that's why I ended up changing my name from just "Tim"
 
6:01 PM
how can such big error go unperceived for 1 hour? making +4 votes and one -1 in the way. He just literally pasted OP code O_o
 
 
5 hours later…
11:17 PM
Hmm
 

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