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I feel your pain... "the secure password paradox" - when a password is so secure that you can't remember it, so you write it down and thus make it less secure...My day-job is software. We take a lot of trouble over security ... BUT!
I tend to remember the pattern more than the number to be honest. I suspect if the numbers were set out differently I wouldn't notice at first.There's a lot of great 4 digit numbers. 1066, 1492, 1665, 1812, 1418, 1939, 4711, 2512, 2001 etc I used to reset the alarm code whenever an employee left and tried to make it easy to remember the new one. Every other or every third digit of a phone number, or an old house number XY(X+!)(Y+1) f'r instance if making it more complicated.
There's a lot of great 4 digit numbers. 1066, 1492, 1665, 1812, 1418, 1939, 4711, 2512, 2001 etc I used to reset the alarm code whenever an employee left and tried to make it easy to remember the new one. Every other or every third digit of a phone number, or an old house number XY(X+!)(Y+1) f'r instance if making it more complicated.
when a password is so secure that you can't remember it, so you write it down and thus make it less secure...
There's a lot of great 4 digit numbers
my solution to that is to write down the pattern n not the actual passI feel your pain... "the secure password paradox" - when a password is so secure that you can't remember it, so you write it down and thus make it less secure...
Dante gasped when I scored two dozen decodes that <s>my solution to that is to write down the pattern n not the actual pass
say pass is Hello2024, i'd write down Xxxxx####, still less secure but at least ur not giving away the pass...
Android jumped from 4.29.0 to 4.29.5 this evening. Still no mention of Motion data access or anything, maybe it's only been implemented for iOS at the minuteI feel your pain... "the secure password paradox" - when a password is so secure that you can't remember it, so you write it down and thus make it less secure...
So I do see the desire to use something easily memorable. I have set it now anyway... still waiting to move on from 4.29.0 on 'droid though
Android jumped from 4.29.0 to 4.29.5 this evening. Still no mention of Motion data access or anything, maybe it's only been implemented for iOS at the minute
That's interesting because at no point has the app itself asked me to allow that, nor does it have Physical Activity permissions (that may be something else) but it's definitely there under other permissions in the play store like you say.
Weird article, clearly no one checked it even made sense before publishingSpotted an interesting Freedom of Info request to DVLA about stolen EVs with model-specific breakdown for Tesla:
2023
KIA: 290
HYUNDAI: 187
NISSAN: 91
BMW: 38
MG: 35
AUDI: 32
TESLA: 29
Kia Niro: 199
Hyundai Ioniq 5: 96
Kia EV6: 91
Nissan Leaf: 88
Jaguar I-PACE: 45
Tesla Model Y: 11
Tesla Model 3: 10
Tesla Model S: 7
Tesla Model X: 1
2022
Kia Niro: 36
Amusing given undercover Kia Niro EV police car illuminating its flashing blue LEDs behind during my drive in.
I think you are missing the point.Weird article, clearly no one checked it even made sense before publishing
"Despite the Tesla Model Y and Tesla Model 3 being the top two best-selling electric vehicles in the UK last year, it Tesla ranked only eighth overall, trailing behind competitors such as BMW, Audi, and MG."
Words don't make sense, and surely having fewer vehicles sold is leading not trailing.
It would be most significant for those numbers to be linked to the total numbers of cars on the road for each model... I would expect that would make the difference between Tesla and other models even greater.Spotted an interesting Freedom of Info request to DVLA about stolen EVs with model-specific breakdown for Tesla:
2023
KIA: 290
HYUNDAI: 187
NISSAN: 91
BMW: 38
MG: 35
AUDI: 32
TESLA: 29
Kia Niro: 199
Hyundai Ioniq 5: 96
Kia EV6: 91
Nissan Leaf: 88
Jaguar I-PACE: 45
Tesla Model Y: 11
Tesla Model 3: 10
Tesla Model S: 7
Tesla Model X: 1
2022
Kia Niro: 36
Amusing given undercover Kia Niro EV police car illuminating its flashing blue LEDs behind during my drive in.
p2d works. yes. but it is used by extreme minority of owners i would prsumeThe Y is a quarter of the thefts of the next above it, the ipace.
P2D works.. now someone tell the insurance companies that & give us a discount for using it