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Part of the JavaScript code that was attached to an e-mail as a fake invoice in a zip file.
Once the user opens the malicious zip file the JavaScript code is executed and the ransomware software is downloaded from an infected website.
When the ransomware software is running it will encrypt all files that match particular extensions.
After encryption, a message (displayed on the user's desktop) instructs them to download the Tor browser and visit a specific criminal-operated Web site for further information.
Read more: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ransomware
Photo credit: Elena Olivo
Copyright: NYU Photo Bureau
The Fall 2010 Student Hackathon brought in hundreds of students from 30 universities to NYU's Courant Institute for 24 hours of creative hacking on New York City startups' APIs.
Selected startups presented their technologies at the beginning of the event, and students formed groups to brainstorm and begin coding on their ideas. Many students worked into the night, foregoing sleep to fulfill their visions.
On Sunday afternoon students presented their projects to an audience including a judging panel, which selected the final winners.
hackNY hosts hackathons one each semester, as well as a Summer Fellows Program, which pairs quantitative and computational students with startups which can demonstrate a strong mentoring environment, a problem for a student to work on, a person to mentor them, and a place for them to work. Startups selected to host a student are expected to compensate student Fellows. Students enjoy free housing together and a pedagogical lecture series to introduce them to the ins and outs of joining and founding a startup.
For more information on hackNY's initiatives, please visit www.hackNY.org and follow us on twitter @hackNY
Photo credit: Elena Olivo
Copyright: NYU Photo Bureau
The Fall 2010 Student Hackathon brought in hundreds of students from 30 universities to NYU's Courant Institute for 24 hours of creative hacking on New York City startups' APIs.
Selected startups presented their technologies at the beginning of the event, and students formed groups to brainstorm and begin coding on their ideas. Many students worked into the night, foregoing sleep to fulfill their visions.
On Sunday afternoon students presented their projects to an audience including a judging panel, which selected the final winners.
hackNY hosts hackathons one each semester, as well as a Summer Fellows Program, which pairs quantitative and computational students with startups which can demonstrate a strong mentoring environment, a problem for a student to work on, a person to mentor them, and a place for them to work. Startups selected to host a student are expected to compensate student Fellows. Students enjoy free housing together and a pedagogical lecture series to introduce them to the ins and outs of joining and founding a startup.
For more information on hackNY's initiatives, please visit www.hackNY.org and follow us on twitter @hackNY
Health Program for Children focusing on Nutrition, Eye and Dental.
Write a mail to us : support@trinitycarefoundation.org
Title: Space Shuttle Program
Catalog #: 08_01033
Date: 1981-2010
Additional Information: North American Rockwell Two Stage Winged Space Shuttle
Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum Archive
Catalog #: 08_00926
Title: Space Shuttle Program
Date: 1981-2010
Additional Information: Space Shuttle Mock up
Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum Archive
The Indiana National Guard was visited by Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of the Slovak Republic Lt. Gen. Peter Vojtek during the first week of July in support of the State Partnership Program, a Department of Defense program managed by the National Guard that links states with allied nations to enhance partnership capabilities. The Indiana National Guard has been working with the Slovak Republic for almost 20 years now. July 3, 2013, Vojtek had the opportunity to fire a practice round out of an M119 howitzer while visiting 1st Battalion, 163rd Field Artillery in Evansville, Ind. (Photo by Sgt. 1st Class Matt Scotten)
More information about the State Partnership Program: owl.li/mKZnf
Catalog #: 08_00923
Title: Space Shuttle Program
Date: 1981-2010
Additional Information: Space Shuttle Mock up
Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum Archive
Sandia Radiological Assistance Program (RAP) members, from left to right, Kevin Rolfe, Chris Williams and Gary Baldonado scan a football stadium before a game. Sandia's RAP team provides a very special kind of security at large public events: preventive detection of radiological or nuclear materials. The team members are also first responders for large and small accidents involving radiological material around the Southwest, as well as train other first responders domestically and abroad. Sandia's team is just one of several Department of Energy (DOE)/National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) teams in nine U.S. regions.
Learn more at bit.ly/2ky9YKV.
Photo by Randy Montoya.
Photo credit: Elena Olivo
Copyright: NYU Photo Bureau
The Fall 2010 Student Hackathon brought in hundreds of students from 30 universities to NYU's Courant Institute for 24 hours of creative hacking on New York City startups' APIs.
Selected startups presented their technologies at the beginning of the event, and students formed groups to brainstorm and begin coding on their ideas. Many students worked into the night, foregoing sleep to fulfill their visions.
On Sunday afternoon students presented their projects to an audience including a judging panel, which selected the final winners.
hackNY hosts hackathons one each semester, as well as a Summer Fellows Program, which pairs quantitative and computational students with startups which can demonstrate a strong mentoring environment, a problem for a student to work on, a person to mentor them, and a place for them to work. Startups selected to host a student are expected to compensate student Fellows. Students enjoy free housing together and a pedagogical lecture series to introduce them to the ins and outs of joining and founding a startup.
For more information on hackNY's initiatives, please visit www.hackNY.org and follow us on twitter @hackNY
Catalog #: 08_00928
Title: Space Shuttle Program
Date: 1981-2010
Additional Information: Space Shuttle Mock up
Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum Archive
Health Programs by www.trinitycarefoundation.org/
Write a mail to us : support@trinitycarefoundation.org
4 March 2014. Tawila: A community volunteer measures Sahar Yousif, a 10-month-old child with malnutrition, in a food distribution center in the Rwanda camp for internally displaced people (IDP) in Tawila, North Darfur.
More than 8,000 women and children living in the camp benefit from two nutrition programs run by the World Food Programme (WFP) in the camp. One is Targeted Supplementary Feeding Programme, which is designed to treat moderate acute malnutrition among children under the age of five and pregnant and nursing women. The other is Integrated Blanket Supplementary Feeding Programme meant to prevent malnutrition among children under the age of three. Through both programs, women learn to prepare highly nutritious food by combining corn soya blend with sugar and oil or by using local ingredients such as lentils and cereals. The women also learn basic child care practices that prevent infection and sickness among their children.
Photo by Albert Gonzalez Farran, UNAMID.
Our goal is to help with the care and treatment of diabetes including diagnosing the symptoms. Being able to diagnose quickly is very important. We also aim to give the most useful information we can find, with as much help as possible..
Write a mail to us : support@trinitycarefoundation.org
trinitycarefoundation.org/preventive/outreach-health-prog...
www.trinitycarefoundation.org/ Health Screening and referral services can be initiated under Corporate Social Responsibility Programs India. Outreach Health programs are important tools for bringing health education and screening services directly to community members and serve to contribute to reducing health disparities.
U.S. Forest Service GTAC's Eric Rounds helps employees of the Central African Forest Satellite Observatory (OSFAC), a regional non-profit remote sensing firm, to complete exercises during a training on analyzing LIDAR data to estimate biomass carbon in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo.
(Forest Service Photo by Eva McNamara)
Sooo... I just finished working on a little electronics project to trigger Nikon cameras over its Infrared remote sequence. This board is designed to act as a programmable intervalometer, plain ol' manual remote, computer controlled remote, and access to an easily modifiable program with the ability to upload code over the serial port into usb. Whoa. That was a long sentence. Sorry.
Should I start maybe selling a kit for these? My dad said people might want these. I don't know... It would be good for learning soldering, but I really don't know if I can sell stuff... The prototype was about 25 dollars as I recall, but if I made more, they would be a lot cheaper. Especially for the board. The FTDI usb cable is another twenty. Would anybody want one? It might be possible to sell. EDIT: Well, there's 225 views which is much higher than most of my photos, and no comments, so I guess not. That's okay. Less work for me... (But you just wait to see what I do with it in the future.)
I'm gonna make a little web page for it, for access to code, board designs, etc, and I'll edit this little description soon. EDIT: Seriously... When I get the motivation. 'NOTHER EDIT: I made the little hacked together write-up: etharooni.polorix.net/NikonRemote.html
Well... That made it seem like it was a much bigger deal than it is. It's really not an amazing board, but as this is a photography community, some people might want one.
Please see the camera-wiki article on the Super Program (or outside North America, the Super A). These were joined by a new Pentax-A series of K mount lenses which enable the body to set an aperture automatically. A locking "A" position on the aperture ring is now provided.
Here Pentax joins the movement towards "multimode" exposure options which had begun with Canon's A-1. In particular programmed autoexposure and TTL flash control were becoming must-have features in the enthusiast SLR space.
Unfortunately this also marks a breakdown in what had been harmonious sharing of the K mount standard with Ricoh. They also introduced multimode program models, but the mount linkages enabling this are not compatible. In fact, a pin extending from the Ricoh lens flange can become trapped in the autofocus drive slot of later Pentax models and is quite difficult to get unstuck.
Taking soil samples in the carbon rich peatland forests of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. (Forest Service photo by Roni Ziade)
This image is from the Reedsburg Public Library's historic photo collection. Information about the entire collection can be found here: www.scls.lib.wi.us/ree/histphotos.htm
Educational or personal use of the image is permitted with appropriate citation. User must contact the Reedsburg Public Library for permission to publish or otherwise distribute the images.
The full-resolution version of this image may be purchased for $5 through the Reedsburg Public Library. Please print and fill out the following PDF form to order a photo:
Reedsburg Historic Photo Order Form.
Equipment used for a Carbon Capture program, which is developing novel solvents for better capturing CO2 from a coal powered power plant.
Terms of Use: Our images are freely and publicly available for use with the credit line, "Andrea Starr | Pacific Northwest National Laboratory"; Please use provided caption information for use in appropriate context.
Found in folder "Bumbershoot," Ephemera Collection (Record Series 9900-01), Seattle Municipal Archives