Septimaeus
I think you can also register 10 years in advance, or maybe more depending on the registrar, which would cover all other potential snafus like expired card info.
Three sheets to the wind
I’m curious about this. If demonstrable, it seems many Canadians could sue.
What is the typical user workflow? For example:
- An embedded Adobe applet (e.g. fill, sign, and submit on the government website)
- Token-based API (e.g. redirect or spawn child window/tab, user fills and signs on adobe site, user returned to government site)
- Something else (e.g. upload button with server-side validation for digital signing)
Edit: looked into this a bit. Did you receive an error message like the following?
This document does not allow you to save any changes you have made to it unless you are using Adobe Acrobat Standard DC or Adobe Acrobat Pro DC
(Regardless it’s totally shitty that government websites recommend a specific company’s software, especially Adobe. I’m just trying to figure out if they actually force citizens to pay a private company.)
Estate tax reform and/or UBI
Ah! Been there. Allocating lanes on small systems always seems to have more trial and error than I expect.
And here’s that x4 SFP+ card: https://www.trendnet.com/products/10g-sfp-pcie-adapter/10-gigabit-pcie-sfp-network-adapter-TEG-10GECSFP-v2
Is it unwarranted? Have Chinese tech companies turned a new leaf in their collective InfoSec practices?
Conversely, has Intel had a history of consumer privacy violations?