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Worth repeating: Never tie your personal phone to your work stuff.

Worth repeating as well: Never tie your work stuff to Apple.

This is my experience also, when trying chatgpt to purchase.

I had the casio and loved it. But I now have a garmin instinct 3 solar and wow! Love it even more for tracking sleep and activity. But no notifications of any kind, nor any maps to try to squint and read. Just some more numbers I occasionally want and great battery life!

It sounds like a great policy. Good news is that you can choose to be on time or pay the penalty or choose another provider who hasn't decided to implement this...yet.

I'm shocked by your question. I honestly would like to hear why you think this should not be acceptable. Why should they continue working overtime and cut into their own personal/family time because of the parent's failure?


Agree. When someone leaves a company, rarely is the impact that tangible, besides the emotions or perceived feelings of loss. We're all replaceable.


1Password also thinks site1.example.com and site2.example.com are the same.


This is adjustable - sorry for UI in French - https://imgur.com/a/Rn046lL

For a password saved from foo.contoso.com:

First option - "Fill anywhere on site" - this means it will fill on foo.contoso.com and bar.contoso.com

Second option - "Fill only on the specified hostname" - will only fill on foo.contoso.com

Third option "Never fill" - written on the tin.


it's possible to make entries autofill only for the specific subdomain. But otherwise, you're correct.


It's possible to make them autofill, yes, but it's the dialog that asks you if you want to update the password stored for example.com after you autofill, that's the gotcha. That one will set the password for every *.example.com password you have stored, to the one you just used.

edit: Ooops, just realised you were responding about 1Password, sorry.


My family members struggle to use 1Password. This breaks it for them, as I can't really defend 1Password over Apple/Google password managers anymore.


In a world where everything is increasing in prices and salaries aren't keeping pace, you might be able to see it if you imagine what life was like making much less money.

1Password, like other subscriptions, becomes something for the middle class and up, not for the masses.

Vendor solutions become the only option.


YNAB has done something similar apparently, and things like actual budget are stepping up to take the slack.


To author:

The phrase:

“sends verification emails without a Message-ID header — a recommendation of RFC 5322 since 2008”

can be misread as though RFC 5322 recommends not including a Message-ID.


I honestly thought this has always been the case.


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