- The biggest cybersecurity and cyberattack stories of 2023
2023 was a big year for cybersecurity, with significant cyberattacks, data breaches, new threat groups emerging, and, of course, zero-day vulnerabilities Some stories, though, were more impactful
- “浮世三千,吾爱有三。日,月与卿。日为朝,月为暮,卿为朝朝暮暮”这句话的意思什么? - 知乎
I love three things in this world Sun, moon and you Sun for morning, moon for night, and you forever 翻译过来应该是 浮世三千,吾爱有三,日,月与卿,日为朝,月为暮,卿为朝朝暮暮。 还有另一种 世之万物,吾爱有三: 一为日,二为月,三为汝; 日出昼也,月升夜也,爱汝恒也。
- Scattered Spider: Three things the news doesn’t tell you
Scattered Spider isn't one group — it's an identity-first threat model evolving fast From vishing to AiTM phishing, they're exploiting MFA gaps to hijack the cloud Watch the Push Security
- writing style - Why do we have both the word three and the numeral 3 . . .
The number “345” has three digits, where the first digit is a “3” The number 345 has three digits, where the first digit is a 3 I leave as an exercise for the reader to decide whether mentions of the word number in this sentence should or could be better written saying numeral instead
- Why is it three score years and ten almost half the time and not . . .
The translators of the Authorized Version (KJV) must have decided to use the more poetic "three score years and ten" instead Meanwhile, the famous Gettysburg Address by Abraham Lincoln begins with: Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition
- meaning - What does three by and five by mean? - English Language . . .
I am studying a foreign language, but few good textbooks are available I was able to find a public domain language training manual for air force pilots published on-line It teaches the target language using English On a page of vocabulary and phrases, it lists the English terms "three by" and "five by"
- Why there are two different meanings for triweekly?
"Every three weeks" is the most unambiguous option The problem appears to be in the semantic nature of the prefixes which carry the double meanings: Tri: word-forming element meaning "three, having three, once every three," from Latin tres (neuter tria) or Greek treis, trias "three" Bi:
- Equivalent of both when referring to three or more items?
Interesting, thanks! Unfortunately that doesn't seem to me to be usable either, as "There are several recommendations I have to further improve the sites — all three to improve their profit, decrease their cost and improve their usability " sounds like the "three" counts the recommendations –
|