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Hp pouch and Strap Pouch NOT included. Hacker strap allows you to add accessories onto it with ease.
thomashawk.com/2007/01/top-10-hacks-on-flickr.html
3. The number three hack for Flickr is a greasemonkey one called Flickr Multi Group Sender. It was developed by Steeev (who does some of the best Flickr development work around) One of the problems with Flickr's add to group function is that it is painfully and woefully slow. I'm not sure if this is because Flickr is trying to load up little mini thumbnail icons for every group or if it's something to do with how you access their database but it's weak sauce. But multi group sender makes this much easier. Multi group sender allows the add to groups function for photos on flickr super fast. You can also add to multiple groups at once by simply holding down the control key... opps, I mean command key (I keep forgetting I'm on a Mac).. and selecting another group. Careful with adding your photos to too many groups though. Adding your photo to more than about 10 groups gets you dinged in interestingness.
If you like these Flickr hacks feel free to digg them here.
Using a second arduino as a graphics card generating B/W video out (PAL or NTSC) thanks to the amazing Batsocks code as used in the TellyMate shield. (See recent blog post.)
This makes me very, very happy! Apart from the duinos there are only FOUR components in there -- 2 diodes and 2 resistors.
Geek on...
Poster design for the forthcoming Multipack Hack day.
Background texture and graphic by yours truly, typeset by Paul Robert Lloyd
More details on the a.green:focus blog
My sister made this for me several years ago and I found it while cleaning out my basement storage unit.
Hacker Barbie has her geek books (on shelf above her head), and I have my geek books in the background of this photo.
Added a lanyard to my fitbit so I won't lose it when it slides out of my pocket, using Sugru, a piece of an old keychain, and the lanyard from an old pedometer.
Added a lanyard to my fitbit so I won't lose it when it slides out of my pocket, using Sugru, a piece of an old keychain, and the lanyard from an old pedometer.
Markus was trying to set up something for me and saw my source code is filled with viagra links...
This scroll down a LOT longer... Will take it down soon, but amusing for now.
I have no idea how that could happen??!!
No, I don't have a second business...
Si ya metimos miedo cuando hablamos de que los hackers pueden usar tus auriculares para sacar información, ahora vamos a darte un poco de tranquilidad. Porque el futuro pinta mal para los piratas informáticos, en gran parte gracias a la física cuántica.
Gracias por la física cuántica, Alber...
staff5.com/la-fisica-cuantica-augura-internet-prueba-hack...
Please, Folks, if anyone contacts you with an "urgent" message asking you to email them, you need to be super careful and check their stream and profile. Most will have no pics available, or only a profile pic they think is attractive. These folks are hoping you will contact them by email and they can somehow access your computers and hijack all your banking info! It's even worse when you use a smart phone, since they can access all your contacts, too!
Years ago, before they were even as good at this as they are now, I was hacked by a Nigerian. Just chatting on the site made it possible for him to take over my computer! I don't know how it works, but all I know is it was pretty quick and would have been painful had I been doing online banking and such back then! I would try to log onto my computer, would enter my password, and watch it change before my eyes from a 7 digit to a 16 digit one! The hacker was remote controlling it! I had to have it wiped at a computer shop. Had that happened with a bunch of photos and programs, I could have lost everything. Fortunately, it was in the early days of my computer use, and I didn't really use it for much other than going on a few sites and surfing the web.
Flickrmail is a good thing. Use it! If you don't know if you can trust someone, it's a whole lot safer than giving out your email. I understand that yahoo is one of the worst for hackers, too, so if you use Yahoo chat or email, you might want to switch to gmail or something. Be careful whose emails you open, and play it safe. Block people who try to get you to email them, and let everyone know who they are! Let's drive the bad guys off Flickr!
This was an exciting discovery. The cottage we were staying in had a big old classic radio, which was labeled "Hacker".
Hooded hacker/cybercriminal looking at a computer screen. For attribution please link to www.comparitech.com/
Thanks to Matt Hacker for the initial start with the engines and the wings. Everything else, I figured out on my own. You have no idea how much I obsessed over this. The work was incredible. This might just be the most complex work of mine yet.
After the success of the Ho 229 in 1945, the Horten brothers made a few changes and a successor was chosen. Again Gotha was chosen to be the manufacturer, but the men and women of the Imperial Air Service still simply call the 329 the "Horten," or sometimes the "Fledermaus" ("bat"). A fighter armed with two 30mm cannon in the nose area, it has mostly achieved the initial "3 x 1000" requirement set by the RLM in 1945- it can travel nearly a thousand miles before needing to refuel, has a top speed of 620mph and about 2,000 lbs of bombs (at max, can carry two 1,000 lb bombs externally.) In addition to all this, Walter and Reimar Horten improved upon their initial charcoal-sawdust wood glue and have coated the entire aircraft in a radar-absorbing epoxy. RCS tests show a return 50% smaller than that of a Bf-109, a 10% improvement. When flying low and fast, this aircraft, while not invisible, can be very difficult to detect on radar and severely hamper the response time of enemy air defenses. The Kaiserliches Luftstreitkräfte (Imperial German Air Service) officially adopted the aircraft in 1946 as an air dominance fighter, interceptor, night fighter, and tactical bomber.
More variants coming soon!
thomashawk.com/2007/01/top-10-hacks-on-flickr.html
2. The number two hack for Flickr is a newer one and was released earlier this month by Intel's Eric Appel and is called SmartSetr. One of the annoying things about Flickr is that when you want to create a set you must do it manually. Even with batch tools this gets tedious and having to add every new photo to a set every single time sucks. So Eric developed SmartSetr. SmartSetr allows you the ability to build sets that are organized around the concepts of tags, dates, and other metadata associated with a photo.
If, for instance, you want to build a set called Neon Days and Neon Nights (like I did) that holds all of your photos of neon signs, by building a SmartSet you can simply tell flickr to add any photo tagged neon to this set. Although SmartSetr isn't dynamic, Eric refreshes your sets for you once a day and things get updated. It's also really cool that you can organize your set by interestingness, so that your best photos show up first in the set -- something you can't do on Flickr. More from Eric directly.
If you like these Flickr hacks feel free to digg them here.
This hack is for people who is difficult to obtain grid ruled index cards.
0. What you need is only a highlighter with 5mm width. We don't need ruler, you can measure using pen's head.
1. Slide index cards's top so that easy to line.
2. Leave one pen head width as margin.
3. Then put four lines with approximately 1 mm spacing.
That's all. You may finish in 20 seconds.
Now you can use tag with blank or ruled index cards! :)