Same here, I was getting frustrated thinking, I had to root my phone or smth. and then a simple force close helped.
Same here, I was getting frustrated thinking, I had to root my phone or smth. and then a simple force close helped.
… Thanks. This looks super useful.
Edit: After posting I realized.that this sounds super sarcastic, which it wasn’t. This does look useful and I was already looking for smth. like that.
Although I mainly use InvokeAI
As a software developer who only has business customers, let me tell you the following:
No matter how foolproof your system might seem. It never truly is. There is always some idiot (sometimes with a degree) who just can’t understand/use it.
But they could still try and mostly succeed. They just don’t want to.
Okay,so you are talking professional equipment with software patches to be applied by professionals.
The article (and also the comments as I understood them) was about end users updating software themselves. Those are two very different things.
Yes, we also only update needed patches on systems we handle, but as an end user I do not check all updates that I apply on my private PC.
Why would I?
Oh yes, why would I apply a security patch for Bluetooth which I don’t even use, on my life-supporting device which someone else could connect to via Bluetooth without me knowing or noticing?
What you are saying is far from reality. Most patches only state vague stuff like “security” or “Bluetooth”.
How would you know, what those mean? Bluetooth could be “Hey, you can now monitor even more with your app” or “fixed some big holes in the chips security which made it hack able via Bluetooth”.
The incognito mode start page literally tells you this. I do not know, how this is news.