Computer Thread

curious2garden

Well-Known Mod
Staff member
So… I pretty much took all of @BarnBuster 's advice and got all 3 credit reports and looked them over. Other than being buried in debt, both the wife's and mine looked fraud free. I then made an Experian account for my wife and added an Initial Fraud Alert to her credit reports. So basically if someone tries to get some credit in her name, the issuing company has to call her cell phone. Stupid shit. But I feel better than I did at lunch today when my wife first called me and told me this stupid shit.
Good, I'm glad you're making progress. I'm so afraid of having something like that happen. I keep everything on credit freeze.
 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
So… I pretty much took all of @BarnBuster 's advice and got all 3 credit reports and looked them over. Other than being buried in debt, both the wife's and mine looked fraud free. I then made an Experian account for my wife and added an Initial Fraud Alert to her credit reports. So basically if someone tries to get some credit in her name, the issuing company has to call her cell phone. Stupid shit. But I feel better than I did at lunch today when my wife first called me and told me this stupid shit.
Sounds like some good progress. The Experian account I have also has a "Dark Web Scan" feature. Very useful since that's probably where any info on your wife came from. There are a few services out there that do this scan. My main Hotmail email account is decades old and my phone is the same since 1979 and I also used (stupidly) the same password on many older accounts. Those first few deep scans were scary AF with all the info and sources that were revealed. Luckily(!) most of the related passwords were from dead accounts but still...
 

DarkWeb

Well-Known Member
Sounds like some good progress. The Experian account I have also has a "Dark Web Scan" feature. Very useful since that's probably where any info on your wife came from. There are a few services out there that do this scan. My main Hotmail email account is decades old and my phone is the same since 1979 and I also used (stupidly) the same password on many older accounts. Those first few deep scans were scary AF with all the info and sources that were revealed. Luckily(!) most of the related passwords were from dead accounts but still...

I'll check to see what I have for nudes bongsmilie
 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
This is a good time to remember that your folks and grandparents will/could be having the same problems and vulnerabilities with their online identity, credit reporting, the Internet. Please check in with them and kindly, gently see if they are having difficulties with any of this. It may require some detective work on your part as they may not be willing to admit they are having problems.

 

raratt

Well-Known Member
YAY! Not really computer related, HOWEVER, I bought a bluetooth audio receiver so I could stream from my phone to our amp. Took a little while to decipher the non existent directions but a little guessing thrown in and some luck I accomplished my goal. :hump::hump::hump:
 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
Here's a hack that works

been trying to log onto tracfoneforum.com. Perfectly legit site, worked fine for years. Couldn't get on no matter what I tried, something on my PC/software stopped access. Got varied errors:
PR_END_OF_FILE_ERROR
SEC_ERROR_EXPIRED_CERTIFICATE
NET::ERR_CERT_REVOKED

So anyway, the hack. On Chrome after the message is displayed, type thisisunsafe or badidea on your keyboard and hit enter. I got right in.

Edit: looks like this has been around for a while
 
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BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
This is usually my goto site for downloading any free software. I don't see a downside to this if you're looking for MS Office but it's not 365. I've been using Office 2003 since I retired cause I don't need all the bells and whistles of later versions and I can use the same license on multiple pc's. Got a new PC that I'm going to download this Office on so we'll see. I hate learning new shit now.

 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
Today in "Just About Anything Important in Modern Electronics" history:

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1947: John Bardeen and Walter Brattain, with support from colleague William Shockley, demonstrate the transistor at Bell Laboratories in Murray Hill, New Jersey.

Bell Labs publicly announced the first transistor at a press conference in New York on June 30, 1948.

It's been called the most important invention of the 20th century. The transistor, aka point-contact transistor, is a semiconductor device that can amplify or switch electrical signals. It was developed to replace vacuum tubes.

Vacuum tubes were bulky, unreliable and consumed too much power. So AT&T's research-and-development arm, Bell Labs, started a project to find an alternative.

For nearly a decade before the first transistor was developed, Shockley, a physicist at Bell Labs, worked on the theory of such a device. But Shockley couldn't build a working model. His first semiconductor amplifier had a "small cylinder coated thinly with silicon, mounted close to a small, metal plate."

So Shockley asked his colleagues, Bardeen and Brattain, to step in. One of the problems they noticed with Shockley's first attempt was condensation on the silicon. So they submerged it in water and suggested the initial prototype have a metal point "that would be pushed into the silicon surrounded by distilled water." At last there was amplification — but disappointingly, at a trivial level.

Following more experiments, germanium replaced silicon, which increased amplification by about 300 times.

A few more modifications later, Brattain had a gold metal point extended into the germanium. That resulted in better ability to modulate amplification at all frequencies.

The final design of a point-contact transistorhad two gold contacts lightly touching a germanium crystal that was on a metal plate connected to a voltage source. Also known as the "little plastic triangle," it became the first working solid-state amplifier.

Bardeen and Brattain demonstrated the transistor device to Bell Lab officials Dec. 23, 1947. Shockley was reported to have called it "a magnificent Christmas present." But Shockley himself was not present when it happened and was said to be bitter over losing out on that day.

He had his revenge, though. Shockley continued to work on the idea and refine it. In early 1948, he came up with the bipolar or junction transistor, a superior device that took over from the point-contact type.

The transistor went on to replace bulky vacuum tubes and mechanical relays. The invention revolutionized the world of electronics and became the basic building block upon which all modern computer technology rests.

Shockley, Bardeen and Brattain shared the 1956 Nobel Prize in Physics for the transistor, but the trio never worked together after the first few months of their initial creation of the transistor.

Shockley left Bell Labs and founded Shockley Semiconductor in Mountain View, California – one of the early high-tech companies in what would later become Silicon Valley.

Brattain remained a fellow at Bell Labs. Bardeen became a professor at the University of Illinois in 1951, and he shared a second Nobel Prize in Physics in 1972, for the first successful explanation of superconductivity.
 

curious2garden

Well-Known Mod
Staff member

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
Text to image AI. Free sign up but I haven't figured it out yet. don't think you get unlimited stuff for free.

edit: ok it is pretty cool

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