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“I've done this long enough to know what far away looks like. “The public, Minnesotans want us to get this, and I will still contend we're very, very close,” Walz said Tuesday. “If folks are committed to working towards achieving the goals for the people in the state of Minnesota, we can get it done,” Hortman said in an interview. House Speaker Melissa Hortman, DFL-Brooklyn Park, said there has been incremental progress in the areas of dispute, including around transportation and education. There have been few signs of actual progress since the regular session adjourned weeks ago with much unfinished.Ĭommittee chairs and agency commissioners were previously instructed to resume conversations and report back to the governor and legislative leaders.
Top state leaders are set to meet again Thursday afternoon about the possibility of a special session to advance stalled tax and budget bills. The big stuff remains stuck with everything intertwined.
Such on-the-fly discussions are occurring with some frequency these days as Walz conducts ceremonial bill signings for the smaller-reach legislation that did pass in May. “If you guys would come back today, I’d call you back,” Walz said. Neither endeavor will see more money if the Legislature remains deadlocked and unwilling to reach a special session agreement, the governor added. “Nursing homes and group homes might not.” Abeler, R-Anoka, told Walz that nursing homes are in more dire condition than child care facilities and need to be shored up first.
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In their brief exchange, the DFL governor and Republican legislator concentrated on a $1 billion package for health and human services that is hung up over how to divide the money. They applauded the political teamwork that helped the project along and had a sidebar discussion about how to break other logjams at the Capitol. Jim Abeler paused a tour this week of a psychiatric hospital floor being built at Children’s Minnesota. Speaking of USB-C power, it’s officially set for a big boost soon: the first 240W USB-C PD cables recently broke cover, and we’re eagerly awaiting the chargers, laptops and external batteries that might go with them.Clad in hard hats and face masks, Gov. “Inappropriate power” was one of the issues that the USB-IF’s idea was trying to combat. Perhaps it’ll be a more realistic solution than the one the USB Implementers’ Forum launched in 2019 ( pdf), which required companies adopt an “USB Type-C Authentication Program” that gave each USB device an encrypted certificate to verify its identity and confirm its capabilities.Īpple’s solution might not necessarily stop “USB Killer” gadgets, however, which attempt to fry computers by overloading their USB ports with too much electricity. It sounds like it’s just an extra protection from potentially nefarious or non-compliant USB gadgets, both of which are real things and at least one of which has damaged MacBooks in the recent past. Apple isn’t trying to create a new certification here - you’re the one in control. Your MacBooks will still charge just fine, they’ll still connect to external displays, and you can turn the whole thing off if you don’t want to get bugged. I’ve read through a few times now, and I’m not seeing a obvious downside.
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New accessories attached prior to rebooting the Mac might enumerate and function, but won’t be remembered until connected to an unlocked Mac and explicitly approved.
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Approved devices can connect to a locked Mac for up to three days.Īccessories attached during software update from prior versions of macOS are allowed automatically. Configuring an accessibility Switch Control sets the policy to always allow accessory use. The initial configuration is Ask for new accessories. You can change the security configuration in System Settings > Security and Privacy > Security. Devices can still charge if you choose Don’t Allow. This doesn’t apply to power adapters, standalone displays, or connections to an approved hub.
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On portable Mac computers with Apple silicon, new USB and Thunderbolt accessories require user approval before the accessory can communicate with macOS for connections wired directly to the USB-C port.
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Here’s the full description of the feature from Apple’s release notes: It’ll make USB-C and Thunderbolt accessories explicitly ask for your permission before they can communicate with MacBooks powered by Apple’s M1 or M2 chips.
Are you the kind of person who’d hesitate to charge gadgets from a public charger - like the ones coming to the seat of your plane? Apple’s first beta of the just-announced macOS 13 Ventura includes a feature seemingly designed to address tampering fears.