Message from @Tero
Discord ID: 615505545104719882
Just have a button that sends your location to a trusted number
The avast app let you send your position through texts instead of using 4g
And you could control the phone, send calls, listen to the mic or ring an alarm on the phone from another secure number
All using texts if needed
is that a set of chairs on a wall
where your toilet have more cpu power then the nasa moon program
its like competition on the market works
Give the wild wild web back
😡 😡 😡
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RatbYqc0-jE
Looks like a neat series
which language
Java
buttons on the left look java-y
yeah they are a pretty good giveaway
typical swing type
I could tell from the buttons 🤣
there's literally this place on C called "Program Files", where you put installed programs
@Tero probably using some kind of framework like electron or something
Or was
🤷
I don't think Microsoft knows how their stuff works anymore
```AppData\Roaming is designed for use in what I’ll call a corporate environment, though any widespread deployment of Windows in a large environment could be configured to make use of it.
In these scenarios the idea is that your Windows account isn’t an account on a specific machine, but rather an account in your company’s overall IT infrastructure or “Domain”. In theory, then, you could log in to any machine connected to your corporate network on which you have permission with your single corporate Windows account.
And when you did so, the data that applications had placed in AppData\Roaming would follow you to the machine you logged in on. It would “roam” to whatever machine you happened to use.
```
yes
but like, i would imagine the things you would want there would be things like browser profiles, extensions, things like this
i.e. app data, as it says
not program files
You need admin access to install there
kek
```One of the benefits of installing to Program Files is that is exactly where the user expects it to go.
The biggest downside is that the user needs administrative privileges, which isn't always required by the program.```