When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.
Rescue cats often do this. It's compensation for when food gets scarce. You do like concealer404 said, and it won't take long for the new guy to figure it out. Once he knows food is going to be coming every day, and at reasonably fixed times, the gorging will stop.
Nearly all of my cats (who are ALL rescue/shelter cats) have done this. I have never had to mess with feeding times for more than a couple weeks at most.
You can use both sides of the napkin, but an envelope usually has writing on the front. feel me?
Originally Posted by Joe Perez
I have a Google Doc which is my shopping list, and as I think about recipes I'd like to do in the coming days, items go onto that list.
I know you have a system, but google has a service called "keep" that is specifically for keeping lists of things and with checkboxes. You can also collaborate on that list. You USED to be able to add to it by voice but Google fucked that up and now list items go to google express or shopping or whatever service they are failing with.
Anyway, you can slap the shopping list as a widget on your home screen and get some **** done. available at keep.google.com or the google keep app.
But we do also use google sheets as our meal planner tool. it's updated most weeks with a nearly-full dinner plan for the week. It's currently about 1029 lines long.
The interface for google spreadsheets kinda sucks on moble whereas keep is so simple and clutter-free that it is quite intuitive to use and leave open at the store while I shop.
You can use both sides of the napkin, but an envelope usually has writing on the front. feel me?
Originally Posted by y8s
I know you have a system, but google has a service called "keep" that is specifically for keeping lists of things and with checkboxes.
Is there anything Google doesn't have an app for?
Interesting sidenote: when I went looking for that meme above, I accidentally opened Google Images in a new tab, rather than DuckDuckGo, which is what I normally use.
Google must have noticed that I recently started using the DuckDuckGo Privacy Essentials browser plugin, because it prompted me to do a "Google Privacy Checkup."
While there's nothing that I really need to hide about my online activities (well, nothing that doesn't go through PIA on a completely sandboxed machine), I am a little weirded out when I search for something on Amazon, and the next day I'm seeing "sponsored content" for that thing or related things on other sites. That seems to have stopped happening since I started using the DDG extension.
The one that really freaked me out, though, was when I noticed that I was seeing ads for things that I had said aloud while speaking to another person. Not stuff I said while talking on the phone, mind you, just normal everyday conversation while my phone was clipped to my belt. Took a while to figure out how to turn that feature off.
Took a while to figure out how to turn that feature off.
Please share how you did that.
I was talking about kitchen remodeling - at home, in the living room, and in pretty broad terms - with my wife, and started getting emails on remodeling deals and packages from national chains within a few hours.
Have you tried asking your wiretap for a good pancake recipe?
Speaking of apps (i like Keep for general household things), i need something to keep things organized/on my radar at work, unfortunately across like.... 10-12 access points.
PC is Windows 10, i do not have admin control and cannot download 3rd party software. Is going through the painful process of learning OneNote really the way to go here? It's not sustainable long term to track followups in Notepad when i'm receiving 150-200 emails a day.
Click on "Manage Activity" (from the screen above) to see all the stuff it's recorded and entered into your history. I don't have a screen to show you (mine's all deleted) but it was really astonishing. Random sentences which I had spoken aloud over the past few years while my phone was holstered. Weird stuff, like me sitting in a chair in one of the control rooms, talking to another engineer about something (I can't remember what it was), and the next day I saw an ad for that exact thing. After that happened a few times I started digging, and found that yes, my phone was always listening to me and sending everything I (or anyone around me) said to Google, where it was parsed, the "important" parts selected, and that info stored as part of my history.
I'm sure I probably agreed to it as part of some EULA or another, but man, they did not go out of their way to publicize that fact.
Anyway, from that screen, here's how you clear the data:
No idea if this ACTUALLY clears the data, or just hides it from you.
Anyway, you can also go through the other categories to see how Google records your location history, your search history, your App & Device history, etc. It's a shockingly large and specific amount of data, which is why police love Google (and also Apple.)
I did notice an interesting thing about voice and audio activity:
I obviously live in Turkey, and speak in Turkish during most of my waking hours.
English is the default language on all devices I own and/or use, because Turkish translation of any operation system on any device is gibberish.
My phone apparently recorded pieces of a few English conversations and Google maps commands. There are just a couple of Turkish phrases there, and the reason is Google thought I was saying something in English.
Going back to the latest example I provided a couple posts earlier (about kitchen remodeling), that conversation was in Turkish, and there is no record of it in voice and audio activity history.
This leads me to believe voice recording for commercial and whatever else reason goes far beyond what Google allows the individual users to see in their respective histories.
I friend of mine removes his phone battery when he sits down to talk business. I used to laugh at him, but he may have a point, after all.
While I'm still a huge Android fan, my opinion of Google overall has really soured over the past year as I've become more aware of all of the many ways that they are either performing or enabling mass-surveillance on a scale which George Orwell could never have imagined.
I no longer use Google for any search activity- I've totally switched to Duck Duck Go. I have the Duck Duck Privacy Essentials extension installed on all of my desktop browser, and I use their Android browser instead of Chrome on my mobile devices.
I haven't yet found good replacements for Google Docs or Google Sheets, both of which I use everyday for business purposes. I'm less worried about those, as it's all very dry, boring stuff like lists of IP addresses, lists of router inputs / outputs, our cable database, etc. Nothing exploitable (we're a 10.180 house). Thinking about possibly migrating that stuff over to DropBox.
Google Photos and Gmail are the really tough ones. I've not found anything even remotely as streamlined yet. I'm not really concerned by Photos (I haven't encountered any odd behavior from it), but it's obvious that the contents of emails which I send and receive are being scanned and used to steer marketing (Google even has a name for this: "content extraction"), and I have found no privacy settings related to that yet.
Is going through the painful process of learning OneNote really the way to go here? It's not sustainable long term to track followups in Notepad when i'm receiving 150-200 emails a day.
I don't find OneNote difficult, but I don't use it past essentially jotting down notes.
Have you tried Trello? We were previously using that to track projects. You can upload files, set reminders, due dates, etc. We now use Microsoft Planner which I don't like as much.
Originally Posted by Joe Perez
While I'm still a huge Android fan, my opinion of Google overall has really soured over the past year as I've become more aware of all of the many ways that they are either performing or enabling mass-surveillance on a scale which George Orwell could never have imagined.
Agreed. But I suspect Apple does it just as much. But I stick with the Google phones for now because I use GoogleFi. I bought my phone outright and pay ~$30/month for service. Some prices I see that people blow me away.
Originally Posted by Joe Perez
I no longer use Google for any search activity- I've totally switched to Duck Duck Go. I have the Duck Duck Privacy Essentials extension installed on all of my desktop browser, and I use their Android browser instead of Chrome on my mobile devices.
I may have to look into this extension, but no idea if it would impact signing into the various sites we have. I already have 3 different VPNs on my machine for different tasks. One for Oracle stuff, one for using our Virtual Machines, and another that provides a static IP so I can import our new help build every week to the developer portal.
I suspect they're close. Relatively few companies which have both access to large amounts of user data, and the means to monetize it, would choose not to do so.
It's sad how Google, which disrupted Microsoft 20 years ago, has become that which they once despised.
Originally Posted by z31maniac
I may have to look into this extension, but no idea if it would impact signing into the various sites we have. I already have 3 different VPNs on my machine for different tasks. One for Oracle stuff, one for using our Virtual Machines, and another that provides a static IP so I can import our new help build every week to the developer portal.
Do said VPNs launch from within a browser?
I use two VPNs; PIA for personal stuff on the sandbox machine, and Pulse Secure for work. Both are applications which run external to any browser, and are thus unaffected by a browser plugin / extension.
I use two VPNs; PIA for personal stuff on the sandbox machine, and Pulse Secure for work. Both are applications which run external to any browser, and are thus unaffected by a browser plugin / extension.
There is a Trello website, you don't have to use the app. It's what we did.
Or are you saying the website is blocked by your admin?
Unsure if it's blocked or not, but generally traveling outside of the company intranet is frowned upon and a great way to get a nastygram or two, and that's just annoyance i don't want to deal with.
Unsure if it's blocked or not, but generally traveling outside of the company intranet is frowned upon and a great way to get a nastygram or two, and that's just annoyance i don't want to deal with.
That's an unfortunate environment to deal with. We have admin rights to all our computer and frequently have "nonstandard" software installed on our machines. For example, the VPN I use for this "another that provides a static IP so I can import our new help build every week to the developer portal," is nonstandard and "not allowed" by IT.
The flip side is, there isn't an approved VPN from IT that would allow me to complete that task.