Enrol in a sentence as a verb

If not, they can enrol a hash of the bootloader.

The easiest way to handle this would be to enrol keys on initial OS boot.

If the distribution ships a signing key, they can enrol the public key.

Even if you do not want to enrol, this type of end-to-end deployment video should be released soon.

A temp way around this is to enrol in a university for one credit, and then drop out shortly after.

He was not able to use the moulded version of his finger to access Touch ID. Instead he had to "enrol" his fake finger as a new finger, and from that point was able to unlock the phone.

Well, Apple requires you to enrol in the $99/year 'developer program' to be able to submit applications.

As a student who is hoping to study Computer Science in a years time, I hope that the university I enrol at encourages such projects!

Fedora is willing to use Microsoft's signing service for x86 because users will be able to disable the feature or enrol their own keys.

As a foreigner I'm aware of the neighbor/neighbour distinction, but I would definitely consider 'enrol' an error.

However, I almost got the impression that 79 students weren't as 'stupid' to enrol in Academia because of the prospects, only the 'women' was.

Smaller distributions or end-users who want to use their own modified bootloader or kernel can enrol their key in a single step and not worry about it in future.

Apple can control the transport infrastructure, but they cannot enrol new devices into the cryptographic session without the user being involved.

If that happens, it suggests that some students may be making decisions about the courses in which they enrol based principally on factors other than their interests, abilities and future career paths, or without critical thought.

Enrol definitions

verb

register formally as a participant or member; "The party recruited many new members"

See also: enroll inscribe enter recruit