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These are the things you learn by walking around. Hack is a fixture outside the Cafe du Monde. His website is www.hackb.com/. If you google him, you will see how deeply ingrained the music culture is in New Orleans. He is a wonderful trumpeter and singer, but just one of so many here (or used to be here).
Hack was selling CDs. I did not buy this one. He said that a portion of the proceeds was going to rebuild his church destroyed by Katrina. Then he asked if I wanted to come to the church. I said, "no, I'm Jewish." He said, "shalom, brother." Then he showed me another CD in which he played with a Jewish guy named Bryon Gitkin. So I bought that one. And he said "mazel tov."
There is an article on the internet that says Hack is one of the few street musicians to have returned to New Orleans. The article says his house was battered, but he lives Uptown (actually very close to Tulane), and not in the 9th Ward. So while many houses here were damaged by the wind and rain, the parts of the neighborhood closest to the Mississippi River levee (away from Lake Pontchartrain and the 17th Street Canal) did not flood.
All around Perthshire's Cateran Trail, you will be able to experience arts & cultural activities & events which will inspire you to think about & celebrate our Common Wealth.
First DevCamp to bring hacks & hackers together to build iPad apps. May 22 at KQED. Photos by @Deifell
Rather than tear things apart during this month's 'Hack Session', the plan was to have participants work on some projects for the Innovation Lab. We ended up with a pretty young group of participants but went forward with the plans anyhow. These youngsters set out solving problems, designing parts and assembling items with only sporadic instructions. It was a little more chaotic than planned, but most everything came together in this gratifying evening.
Vlad loves him some cheesy comic books.
The 8th of 10 cards done for 5finity’s Hack/Slash sketch card set.
Available at 5Finity
Hack/Slash and Vlad created by Tim Seeley in 2004.
Published by Devil’s Due Publishing and Image Comics
© Tim Seeley
Sketch card
August 2o1o
j(ay)
Ethical Hacking, as name suggests, is an ethical way of working with technology to find out weaknesses of a system, taking it to the next level for further development. Hacking is never illegal; it is an action of using skills and advanced techniques on a target to gain information about a system and its surroundings, though it depends on the nature of the person who is performing the action. The main focus of the Ethical Hacking and IT Security course is to train the student into an interactive environment where the student will learn the skills of performing vulnerability assessment, pen-testing of systems and networks, patching the weaknesses, making reports of scanned vulnerabilities.