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lyne
noun
Obsolete form of linen
Exact(29)
Then the vapor wafts through a gently descending pipe known as a lyne arm, and through a series of cooling condensers, which turn the vapor back into liquid.
Recent research from Sophos, in which Lyne travelled around various UK cities on a bicycle to test router security, found in some some areas more than a third had bad security practices.
Between 5% and 9% used the "incredibly ancient" Wired Equivalent Privacy WEPprotocolcol, which was supposed to protect people's data moving around routers, but has known vulnerabilities and should not be used anywhere, Lyne said.
"In addition to the security fixes advocated here we also need to see a fundamentally better way of handling open wireless networks," Lyne added.
"These [router] manufacturers need to learn to take security seriously … and more importantly need to design their equipment to be updated given the extended length of service most people tend to subject the equipment too," Lyne told the Guardian.
Lyne added that: "So far there has not been a concerted effort from the attacker community to compromise such devices.
Similar(31)
Particularly in Labour-held areas, there is often little sign that an election is about to take place".People don't want to parade their political preferences any more," says David Heyes, who is defending his seat in Ashton-under-Lyne.
With no "bank of mum and dad" to fall back on I quickly came to understand the value of the NHS and the welfare state.As for Boris, my sons, aged 15 and 24, love him because he makes them laugh.Mike Pavasovic Ashton-under-Lyne, Lancashire SIR – Regarding your lead illustration, I wonder how many among Britain's liberal youth even know who William Gladstone, John Stuart Mill and Adam Smith were.
Close to the upland margin lies a ring of large towns, which were traditionally the major centres of the cotton-spinning industry Bolton, Bury, and Rochdale to the north and Oldham, Ashton-under-Lyne, and Stockport to the east.
February 4, 1749 Ashton-under-Lyne, England March 1, 1829 London, England Thomas Earnshaw, (born Feb. 4, 1749, Ashton-under-Lyne, Lancashire, Eng. died March 1 , 1829 London) English watchmaker, the first to simplify and economize in producing chronometers so as to make them available to the general public.
The parts of Tameside west of the River Tame, such as Ashton-under-Lyne (the metropolitan borough's administrative centre), Audenshaw, and Denton, are in the historic county of Lancashire, while those to the east, including Stalybridge, Dukinfield, and Hyde, belong to the historic county of Cheshire.
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