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sapporobaby Posts: > 500

Quote:
On 2005-08-03 22:39:24, thoroughfare wrote:
I'm not suggesting encryption or anything, just a lock on the phone so that someone *casually* browsing my phone couldn't find anything valuable. It *wouldn't* need implementing at the filesystem level. Even a pin-locked keylock would be great.

Matt


Have you mentioned this to SE to see if this is such a simple solution as other here have stated? I know that SE is actively listening to suggestions to make their products better. I also know that your idea is not new but for some reason, SE does not consider it a "viable" feature. No idea why, but you can always ask again.
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Posted: 2005-08-03 23:20:56
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KrisUK Posts: 216

Quote:
On 2005-08-03 18:51:34, defensive wrote:
Quote:
On 2005-08-03 15:02:49, KrisUK wrote:
Not everyone has NTFS. FAT32 is a popular one for Windows.


Your not being serious are you? FAT32 is years ols No-one uses that anymore, please tell me your not? WOW seriously why use FAT32 over NTFS?

Chris



What are you talking about? NTFS is even older than FAT32. NTFS was introduced with Windows NT in like 1993 and FAT32 didn't come until Windows 95. You must mean FAT16.

I'm on NTFS but there's still quite a lot on FAT32. FAT32 is still used because it runs more efficiently on smaller volumes and is generally a bit quicker.
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Posted: 2005-08-04 00:24:38
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sapporobaby Posts: > 500

Quote:
On 2005-08-04 00:24:38, KrisUK wrote:
Quote:
On 2005-08-03 18:51:34, defensive wrote:
Quote:
On 2005-08-03 15:02:49, KrisUK wrote:
Not everyone has NTFS. FAT32 is a popular one for Windows.


Your not being serious are you? FAT32 is years ols No-one uses that anymore, please tell me your not? WOW seriously why use FAT32 over NTFS?

Chris



What are you talking about? NTFS is even older than FAT32. NTFS was introduced with Windows NT in like 1993 and FAT32 didn't come until Windows 95. You must mean FAT16.

I'm on NTFS but there's still quite a lot on FAT32. FAT32 is still used because it runs more efficiently on smaller volumes and is generally a bit quicker.


Two words: Mac Rules!!!!!
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Posted: 2005-08-04 01:20:23
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thoroughfare Posts: 26

Er, no, Reiser4 rules. But this is way OT.

Matt
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Posted: 2005-08-04 02:15:58
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sapporobaby Posts: > 500

@Through....

Reiser4 is a computer file system, a new "from scratch" version of the ReiserFS file system, developed by Namesys and sponsored by DARPA as well as Linspire.
As of June 2005, Reiser4 still has not been merged into the mainline Linux kernel and consequently is not supported on many Linux distributions; however, its predecessor has been much more widely adopted.

I would say that Reiser4 has quite a ways to go before it rules anything.

My prior comment still stands.
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Posted: 2005-08-04 02:47:37
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thoroughfare Posts: 26

sapporobaby: R4 isn't the most stable of filesystems, but it's damn fast. I've never experienced a problem with it yet.

Matt
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Posted: 2005-08-04 03:03:46
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sapporobaby Posts: > 500

Quote:
On 2005-08-04 03:03:46, thoroughfare wrote:
sapporobaby: R4 isn't the most stable of filesystems, but it's damn fast. I've never experienced a problem with it yet.

Matt


Dude, it was a joke and I am talking about the entire OS. Maybe I should have said, "Mac OS X 10.4.2 rules".
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Posted: 2005-08-04 03:15:01
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babis Posts: 176

Quote:
On 2005-08-03 19:07:10, thoroughfare wrote:

Also my old Siemens M65 at least had a pin-locked keylock option.

Matt


LOL

Did you notice the topic's title?

[ This Message was edited by: babis on 2005-08-04 12:01 ]
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Posted: 2005-08-04 12:58:21
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batesie Posts: > 500

THE SOLUTION

have a spare memory card, one for general use and one for personal items and keep it under the battery/in your wallet
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Posted: 2005-08-04 13:05:22
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thoroughfare Posts: 26

Babis: Erm, I started the thread If you re-read my first post, a pin-locked keylock would be just as useful

Matt
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Posted: 2005-08-04 13:49:39
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