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Scattered Spider: Three things the news doesn’t tell you So here’s three things that you might have missed — some you probably know already, and others that you might not be aware of if you haven’t been tracking Scattered Spider beyond the recent
Qualcomm fixes three Adreno GPU zero-days exploited in attacks Qualcomm has released security patches for three zero-day vulnerabilities in the Adreno Graphics Processing Unit (GPU) driver that impact dozens of chipsets and are actively exploited in targeted
What does three by and five by mean? - English Language Usage . . . It teaches the target language using English On a page of vocabulary and phrases, it lists the English terms "three by" and "five by" I can't understand the foreign translation, and there is no context from which to guess the meaning Are these voice procedures for use on a radio? What is the meaning? And is there also "one by", "two by", etc ?
Cisco warns of ISE and CCP flaws with public exploit code Cisco has released patches to address three vulnerabilities with public exploit code in its Identity Services Engine (ISE) and Customer Collaboration Platform (CCP) solutions
Why is it three score years and ten almost half the time and not . . . 3 Why is it 'three score years and ten' almost half the time and not always 'three score and ten years'? Note: I edited the question body and title in light of comments and answers pointing me to a Google phrase frequency chart which indicates that the two versions are used about equally often right now
etymology - What is the origin of the counting prefixes: uni-, bi- di . . . 22 Many English words use the prefixes uni-, bi- di-, tri-, quad- and so on to mean one, two, three, and four For example: A unicycle has one wheel, a bicycle two, and a tricycle three I presume these prefixes are either of Greek or Latin origin, but from what little I know of these two languages, neither uses these prefixes as their numbers