iOS shows the voicemail transcript in realtime as they’re leaving the message.
iOS shows the voicemail transcript in realtime as they’re leaving the message.
Honestly this sounds like user error. From one of the links in the article:
As the journalist and Apple Store staff tested, if you insert the wrong passcode for 1 to 5 times, there will only be red notifications saying the passcode is wrong, and you needn’t wait to give it another try.
For the 6th time you insert a wrong passcode, it will report, “iPhone is disabled, try again in 1 minute”. And the phone will be locked, and you won’t be able to insert passcode again until 1 minute later.
For the 7th time, the iPhone will show, “iPhone is disabled, try again in 5 minutes”.
For the 8th time, the iPhone will be locked for 15 minutes, and for the 9th time, it will be locked for 60 minutes to insert passcode again.
If you insert the wrong passcode for 10th time, the iPhone will be disabled and you will have to connect it to iTunes to unlock.
Apparently if you jailbreak the iPhone the delays aren’t set correctly (or at least that was the case 10 years ago)?
On top of that, the user couldn’t just wipe the phone because they didn’t want to lose a video that wasn’t backed up anywhere else.
widely distributed them. Many of them went to civilians for legitimate purposes.
Source?
There are many sources because it’s been widely reported. Here’s one: reuters.
It’s been widely reported, here’s a reuters source.
Seems unlikely considering only pagers belonging to Hezbollah had the explosives added.
Eh, theorists just work in units where they’re all 1 anyway. And experimentalists round to to the nearest order of magnitude lol
The volumetric energy density is 60% of lithium ion batteries, but the energy density per kg is more like 75% since the batteries are lighter. Assuming that scales to the ev range, that’s probably sufficient for a lot of use cases.
I have one of these. The sous vide cooker itself is very nice and easy to use, I’d highly recommend it. The app is a bit clunky and not necessary to use the device. I certainly wouldn’t pay $2 a month for it.
The app lets you set a temperature and cook time, but you can also do this using the buttons on the cooker. Sometimes the WiFi pairing is finicky, so honestly I skip the app half the time. The app also lets you view and write recipes. I guess the big advantage is you can click “start cooking” and it automatically sets the device temp and time, but doing it manually isn’t much harder. I’m also not wowed by the in-app recipe selection, and generally just get recipes from the internet.
That’s too straightforward - this is google after all.
There’ll be a new product that integrates this feature and they’ll call it Google Slides, while rebranding the old “Slides” as Google Presentations. Then in a few years they’ll kill off the new Google Slides, leaving only Google Presentations and tons of confused users.
Also good parents don’t let tweens have unsupervised access to a handgun…