A security researcher who goes by the name Sabri Haddouche has revealed that he has found a way around the security of the iPhone that could crash it and m

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A security researcher who goes by the name Sabri Haddouche has revealed that he has found a way around the security of the iPhone that could crash it and m

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CSS/Chrome "bug": Jagged text
I've been working on the http://tymkrs.com/kits site for some time now and came across a funky text thing that I believe some others are dealing with. But just in case you're working on your website and you're getting some funky text, this is what I found to help!
Before:
It's all jagged, you're wondering what the heck is going on. Is it Windows specific? Chrome specific? Computer specific? And when googling the issue, you end up with two main solutions.
One - enable clear type on your computer, which makes everything look like you have doublevision or that things are kinda fuzzy:
It's like got some reddish shadow to it. You should try it just to see how @_@ it can make you. (I'm on XP) Right click on desktop, properties, appearance, effects, and under "use the following method to smooth edges of screen fonts" - choose clear type. It should enact near immediately.
So I backed up from that option as my eyes are bad enough!
Two - Change the css code portion "-webkit-text-stroke:" to 0.25px. Now default in my css stylesheet was 0.35 after which was a comment "/* Hack to fix thin text in Windows */"
So I changed it to 0.25px and it still looked funky. After some trial and error, I just said, what the heck, I'll put it to 0px:
And after that:
Bam. Ugly font be gone!
@atdiy/@tymkrs
Google Chrome 11 Will Include Speech to Text Technology
Google Chrome 11, which is scheduled to be released tomorrow, will offer users many bug fixes and many new features.
The most notable (and cool) of the new features incorporated in Chrome 11 is the speech to text technology, which we feel will very soon start replacing the keyboard for many users. Especially when the technology gets a little mote accurate.
Be careful venting your frustrations with modern technology when using the latest version of Google Chrome, released Wednesday.
Chrome 11 comes with the ability to convert your speech to text, which could prove to be a big boon to people who have difficulty with keyboards as well as providing on the go translations when used with Google Translate.
The new feature, based in HTML 5, requires a microphone icon embedded in the web page. Click the icon and then speak into the computer's mike, and the input records as text. The browser automatically inserts the text into the available form field.
At the time of writing, the microphone and voice-to-HTML feature appears to work only with English.
Other changes in Chrome 11 include the introduction of hardware accelerated 3D CSS, bug fixes in cloud print, a security update to the built-in version of Adobe Flash, and user agent string changes introduced to bring Chrome in line with user agent changes made in Firefox 4.
The jump from Chrome 11 beta to stable also includes 25 security changes, including 15 marked as high risk. These fixes cover potential risks such as URL bar spoofing during navigation errors, and numerous instances of stale pointers in PDF forms, sandboxing, and drop-down list handling.
techdevicereviews.org