domdelimar's comments

domdelimar | 12 years ago | on: Meet Coin (YC W13), a startup creating a universal credit card

I was thinking a fingerprint scanner is exactly what's missing on these devices (what I've seen so far, Coin, Echo & Wallaby), but this is also an interesting solution with iCache.

Too bad about what happened to it. (Actually just found out about iCache and what exactly happened and while I'm sad, I can't say I'm surprised.)

domdelimar | 12 years ago | on: Hackers.txt

I know posting this here may be "preaching to the choir", but it was still interesting read.

Do you have hackers.txt on your website(s)?

domdelimar | 12 years ago | on: Why We Can No Longer Trust Microsoft

If you upload a .zip file (don't know about the other formats) to Google Docs, it can access its content.

There are probably other services/tools, because technically, there's nothing stopping you from unzipping files in the cloud, or in web based software. It's just the matter of uploading something and then downloading the content after it's been unzipped on the remote server. So it's just more expensive in terms of network traffic.

The availability of the tools that do that, other than Google Docs, is another thing. Honestly wouldn't know, don't recall ever needing it before.

domdelimar | 13 years ago | on: Logging in to websites without a password at all

Yeah, it's not rocket science, obviously. It's computer science. :P

The way I see it, email is the simplest and cheapest way. Although I wouldn't like average Joe to casually login to their email account on public machines.

But then, chances are the email provider will have 2-way authentication, so it would be a bit more work to get to the account every time on a new, public machine, but I guess that wouldn't be that often and would be preferred to the current way of doing the same thing.

SMS creates cost which some sites couldn't bear and the app route creates greater cost of implementation (to be a true replacement - or should I say truly disruptive ;) - it would have to be cross-platform, IMHO).

domdelimar | 13 years ago | on: Logging in to websites without a password at all

Ok, if there's a concern about still having to use some password for the email account, maybe the right way to go would be to build apps for all platforms. It would be like the Google's two-way authentication, only simpler? Am I missing something? I'm missing something crucial, aren't I? ;)

domdelimar | 13 years ago | on: Logging in to websites without a password at all

Considering the price of an SMS (which also differs from place to place), why does the temporary password have to arrive by SMS? Why not by email, since user's already online, obviously?

But given the novelty of this approach (although I'm pretty sure I read about it somewhere already, I don't know of any real-world implementation), it should definitely be used alongside optional passwords, for those who want that. At least until the rest of the web catches on...

domdelimar | 13 years ago | on: Show HN: Share, rediscover and keep track of all the gems you find on HN

I'm a Firefox user so I couldn't try it and went on to read the comments instead, especially since the linked website didn't explain anything.

It may be interesting to you that I didn't really understand what this is doing until I read the following comment from citricsquid (http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4656462): "Yeah, I save lots and it's always the ones that I don't save that I want after the fact, heh :("

So, this extension allows to search through all the stuff user clicked on from HN? That's great!

If that's true, I'd change the title to this: "Share, rediscover and keep track of everything you find on HN" and also do a better job of describing what it's doing on the website.

P.S. Does it also search the content on all those pages linked from HN?

domdelimar | 13 years ago | on: Show HN: What's Your Browser's Age?

I just updated iceweasel/aurora (version string conveniently showing it's age is just below 3 days: 17.0~a2+20120928042009-1) and this tells me it's 25 days old.

I'm also on Linux (obviously) and it really seems strange Linux isn't even registering at all.

This is my UA string: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686; rv:17.0) Gecko/17.0 Firefox/17.0 Iceweasel/17.0a2

domdelimar | 13 years ago | on: Arch Linux Handbook for Kindle rejected by Amazon

INAL and I'm wondering, why can't Amazon redistribute it under the GPL?

Does GPL permit that anyone redistributes it or does GPL permit that Amazon does it the way they would like to do it?

What exactly is stopping Amazon from distributing GPLed content?

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