

Would be great in Intune allowed using the admx.


Would be great in Intune allowed using the admx.


It would be really funny if it wasn’t so sad.


Framing it as a checkmarx supply chain incident is also disingenious when it was a supply chain attack via bitwarden targeted at bitwarden users.


You could use gyroid infill. It is more tolerant to flow as there are no crossings.


So Micron plans to get about 2k$ per autonomous car? I don’t think so.
Can I plug it in at home when it’s not in use and use the RAM for my PC?


If it’s in corners only tune Pressure Advance, but as this is on the first layer it’s probably only the first layer, which is generally different from subsequent layers. Check the same thing on a higher layer to make sure that there really is a problem.


Oh wow. TL;DR They found out that, if you can do mitm on a TLS connection with valid certificates, you can impersonate the TLS secured service! I don’t get from the article what the novelty is.


So they’re going to deliver sysmon.exe as a windows optional feature. There’s nothing native to it. No config management via GPO or CSP or similar. Nothing. Just replacing the scheduled task/powershell script downloading exe and config by one enabling the feature and downloading the config.
You can set the minimum extrusion width to a small value (20-25%) for better fill. You could also use classic mode with gap fill. You can use ironing for both to improve the results.
Does your slicer have Arachne slicing mode? It will use variable extrusion width which will help to prevent most of those gaps.


“The company currently exports Model 3 vehicles from Shanghai to the EU, while it produces the Model Y in Berlin.”
It’s right there in the article if anyone would care to read it.


Your first step will be learning to dry it and keep it dry. I can recommend a scale that can resolve to at least 0.1g so you can measure the weight loss while drying. This will help in seeing when it’s sufficiently dry (put it in dryer and weigh it every hour) and if it took moisture again.


There are so many VPN providers selling your data, being operated by the feds, operated by cybercriminals etc. it really doesn’t matter just as said in 8.
We better should’ve stayed at 640kB.


Room-scale DnD dungeons anyone?
It looks like there are multiple layers printed without feeding filament, which causes these frays to build up. Could it be that the filament clogs after this layer? Or do you see that filament still properly feeds later? This could happen for example due to heat creep and the filament getting too warm/soft in the extruder to properly feed or you trying to feed too fast.


Yes I know. We do simulations but we only measure who reports them and provide training how to report them (In the mail itself). No shaming for user who click them and no additional training on how to look at details.
It makes no sense training the user in looking at for example the links if all the big vendors use suspicious links anyway. For example the phishers use OneNote shares to phish, but those are hosted on Microsoft which by itself is legitimate. The only way a user really is able to recognize a phish is if it is unsolicited (report the mail as spam) or if it looks legit but asks for credentials (report it, we use SSO everywhere possible and you should never be asked for credentials for one of our platforms). We cannot do this for all vendors however and the users are encouraged and trained on using Passkeys or Autofill by the company provided password manager so that they get suspicious when no autofill is possible, then they can report the mail.
It’s not always possible to recognize phishing from the get go and security is better suited to investigate than rando from the logistics department.


Yes but the only relevant metric is how many reported it. Doesn’t matter if they delete, read, click or enter data. We’re only interested in the information that a phish got through our security controls (=we failed our users), so we can investigate (and clean up if needed) the impacted mailboxes and accounts.
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