Crouching biker, hidden teddy. An ISP in a fursuit. Hug magnet. Online, pretend teddy bear. Offline, fake dog. Frequently found on a motorbike. He/they.
@PicsDaGoat @VolfMech @Evilsquirrel123 Yep, that's my doggy Kelsey in pic number 4. He's old and doesn't get out very often now, but he's still mine. :>
@spandexraccoon But actually, having just looked I find there are 2 sites: https://t.co/4lpYKVaKKA and https://t.co/6MajlcrIne! Different companies maybe! One seems to start secure but go insecure when you navigate around it, the other starts insecure and goes secure when you navigate... weird.
@spandexraccoon (Oops, looks like you don't follow my other account so I'll repeat the reply here!) Looks like they don't have an http→https redirect set up. If you manually add the https:// that seems to work.
@BluDragonGal The one with the clipboard doesn't *look* scared and confused but I'll take your word for it. The one with the mask... an unusual look for a camp councelor, but I'm sure she's just looking out for the kids!
@HMRCcustomers Wanting to change accounting date from 5 April to 31 March: HS222 sec 20 says I can treat it as a change to 5 April - does that mean I can treat it as not being a change? Would I have a slightly short basis period, or an overlap, or basis period to 5 April? Thanks!
So is it even possible any more to buy a computer that doesn't have a potentially insecure, highly proprietary management controller integrated into the CPU which you can't disable without bricking the whole machine and which the vendor won't give you any access to whatsoever?
@chaz_6 Yeah, looks like there's practically nothing in the mainstream off the shelf area. What started (I think) with phones and their baseband processors has infected computers too. I think even AWS has had to build their own custom stuff (Graviton/Nitro) to get away from it. Oh well.