(posted on my G+ wall last week, but I thought it might be worth pasting over here also)
There’s something creepy about Google+. It’s not so much what is seen on the surface. You have the power to manage your own user profile, the people you add to your circles, and what you want see. What you don’t have control over are the circles you are placed into by everyone else.
As users become more familiar with Google+, they will begin to create more specialized circles. For example, a sampling of circles I have currently have configured are "friends, family, acquaintances, following, paraglider pilots, hackers, makers, the press, ceo’s." Someone else might have me classified in their circles under “pilot” or “robot hacker” or “exboyfriends” or “high school buddies”. Whenever someone adds you to a circle, they are essentially profiling you, and the more people who add you to their circles, the more detail the profile about you will become. This is not something visible to you nor I. It’s visible only to the wizard behind the curtain (Google) and whoever they wish (or are forced) to share this information.
In the near future, ads may be served which relate to you, yet have nothing to do with anything you ever posted or mentioned on the internet. Your Google+ friends have inadvertently ratted you out.
Last time we had a decent CME along with clear skies, I went outside and saw Aurora spread across the sky.. and this was located a 30 minute drive outside of New York City. Grabbed my Canon point and shoot camera and set it for 10 second exposure and this was the result:
Something that big and fragile will have to be launched in still air, but as the ground heats up in the afternoon, there will definitely be thermals popping off. Ridge lift is works down low, but will not likely be used in this mission (that would be cheating!). The thermals, however definitely will affect the flight. Up high (2000+ ft above the ground) there are often large patches of big lift and also sink (1000 feet per minute up or down is typical). The skill of the pilot's ability to read the ground and sky will play a large role in keeping the craft up in the air during the day. He will have to escape the sinking air and remain in the lift as long as possible. The night portion of the flight will probably the easy part - just coast around on battery until the 24 hr mark. The above information is common knowledge to all soaring pilots (which I am also myself). A few of my flying buddies have stayed up for 10 hours and flown 200+ miles on hang gliders - quite a feat accomplished without any motor or batteries. Given some decent pilot skill and the right weather conditions, the solar craft should have no problem accomplishing the task.
Same thing happened to theplanet.com last year. Transformer went boom, fire, etc. Backup generator was allegedly shut down as ordered by the fire department. This is happening so frequently, it should be included in the disaster planning and standard test scenarios.
I still have my POQET PC, which runs off 2 AA batteries and is smaller than the TRS100.
Was too cheap to buy the serial interface cable, so I found the dimensions, etched a PCB connector, dialed into the university network and accessed the internet via Lynx browser. Does that make it a netbook? Actually it was more like a net-palmtop.
There's no reason to use the forum software when they've locked the thread and are only using it to disseminate information. A Pentium one running lighttpd serving a static html page would be sufficient to handle the flood of requests.
Yep, and if they could just tap the batteries of all those vehicles sitting idle in rush hour traffic, they could power all the rails and the towns in NJ.
The question isn't "will our election get hacked?", but "how many times will our voting system get hacked?" It certainly brings "Capture the Flag" to a higher level!
Powered parachutes are a lot less twitchy. They could also compensate by using a smaller wing and more power for better control (at the expense of fuel consumption). I am skeptical about the 48 hr flight claim though, most powered paragliders these days can run for about 4 hrs max. Also, there's little that can stop these from being sucked up to 20,000ft and frozen into an ice cube if they fly too close to a cu-nimb cloud:)
GPS guided paragliders are nothing new. I remember visiting a small company at least 10 years ago that produced gps paragliders/parachutes which were used to autonomously guide supplies to designated drop zones. I don't remember the exact name of the company, but they also produced altimeters for skydivers.
The NSA probably doesn't have to mine the data through the web interface. They could tap the network router or obtain a secret warrant to directly access the database. A few years ago, I came into possession of the Orkut user database and wrote a few apps to datamine+visualize users and their links (some of you may remember the brief life of the Orkut Mapper at datawhorehouse.com). It revealed some rather interesting information. Hiding your real name doesn't offer much anonymity since your network of friends is a somewhat unique fingerprint. If you have a profile or several sites such as orkut, myspace, or friendster, the friends network is probably similar so they could be pattern matched to reveal your true identity.
If I was hiring some IT guy, I would first do a search to see if he was reading and posting messages on Slashdot during work hours, such as the guy above.
(posted on my G+ wall last week, but I thought it might be worth pasting over here also)
There’s something creepy about Google+. It’s not so much what is seen on the surface. You have the power to manage your own user profile, the people you add to your circles, and what you want see. What you don’t have control over are the circles you are placed into by everyone else.
As users become more familiar with Google+, they will begin to create more specialized circles. For example, a sampling of circles I have currently have configured are "friends, family, acquaintances, following, paraglider pilots, hackers, makers, the press, ceo’s." Someone else might have me classified in their circles under “pilot” or “robot hacker” or “exboyfriends” or “high school buddies”. Whenever someone adds you to a circle, they are essentially profiling you, and the more people who add you to their circles, the more detail the profile about you will become. This is not something visible to you nor I. It’s visible only to the wizard behind the curtain (Google) and whoever they wish (or are forced) to share this information.
In the near future, ads may be served which relate to you, yet have nothing to do with anything you ever posted or mentioned on the internet. Your Google+ friends have inadvertently ratted you out.
So, who is really in control of your profile?
Last time we had a decent CME along with clear skies, I went outside and saw Aurora spread across the sky .. and this was located a 30 minute drive outside of New York City. Grabbed my Canon point and shoot camera and set it for 10 second exposure and this was the result:
http://photo.omnistep.com/aurora11072004/
I heard they were seen as far south as the Carolina's.
Something that big and fragile will have to be launched in still air, but as the ground heats up in the afternoon, there will definitely be thermals popping off. Ridge lift is works down low, but will not likely be used in this mission (that would be cheating!). The thermals, however definitely will affect the flight. Up high (2000+ ft above the ground) there are often large patches of big lift and also sink (1000 feet per minute up or down is typical). The skill of the pilot's ability to read the ground and sky will play a large role in keeping the craft up in the air during the day. He will have to escape the sinking air and remain in the lift as long as possible. The night portion of the flight will probably the easy part - just coast around on battery until the 24 hr mark. The above information is common knowledge to all soaring pilots (which I am also myself). A few of my flying buddies have stayed up for 10 hours and flown 200+ miles on hang gliders - quite a feat accomplished without any motor or batteries. Given some decent pilot skill and the right weather conditions, the solar craft should have no problem accomplishing the task.
I have found the chat to only freeze up when there are multiple FB windows open.
Same thing happened to theplanet.com last year. Transformer went boom, fire, etc. Backup generator was allegedly shut down as ordered by the fire department. This is happening so frequently, it should be included in the disaster planning and standard test scenarios.
How about a nice game of chess?
I still have my POQET PC, which runs off 2 AA batteries and is smaller than the TRS100.
Was too cheap to buy the serial interface cable, so I found the dimensions, etched a PCB connector, dialed into the university network and accessed the internet via Lynx browser. Does that make it a netbook? Actually it was more like a net-palmtop.
http://www.digibarn.com/collections/systems/poqet-pc/index.html
That's right.
"The odds are good, but the goods are odd."
~ said by girls in engineering schools.
oops. wrong link before. This is the launching VLC one: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N_fI9eA8f7c&NR=1
There's no reason to use the forum software when they've locked the thread and are only using it to disseminate information. A Pentium one running lighttpd serving a static html page would be sufficient to handle the flood of requests.
Now the next (il?)logical step for the military would be to deploy and test a missile that can shoot down a missile headed for a satellite.
Yep, and if they could just tap the batteries of all those vehicles sitting idle in rush hour traffic, they could power all the rails and the towns in NJ.
The question isn't "will our election get hacked?", but "how many times will our voting system get hacked?" It certainly brings "Capture the Flag" to a higher level!
Powered parachutes are a lot less twitchy. They could also compensate by using a smaller wing and more power for better control (at the expense of fuel consumption). I am skeptical about the 48 hr flight claim though, most powered paragliders these days can run for about 4 hrs max. Also, there's little that can stop these from being sucked up to 20,000ft and frozen into an ice cube if they fly too close to a cu-nimb cloud :)
GPS guided paragliders are nothing new. I remember visiting a small company at least 10 years ago that produced gps paragliders/parachutes which were used to autonomously guide supplies to designated drop zones. I don't remember the exact name of the company, but they also produced altimeters for skydivers.
I can just see the headlines now:
Girl wearing sequined top goes to movie theater. Transforms into human disco ball.
The NSA probably doesn't have to mine the data through the web interface. They could tap the network router or obtain a secret warrant to directly access the database. A few years ago, I came into possession of the Orkut user database and wrote a few apps to datamine+visualize users and their links (some of you may remember the brief life of the Orkut Mapper at datawhorehouse.com). It revealed some rather interesting information. Hiding your real name doesn't offer much anonymity since your network of friends is a somewhat unique fingerprint. If you have a profile or several sites such as orkut, myspace, or friendster, the friends network is probably similar so they could be pattern matched to reveal your true identity.
I would like to see an army of robots armed with these: http://hardware.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/09/ 19/2121218&tid=158&tid=137 unleashed against the anti-sniper bots.
~kyoorius
I hope this anti-sniper robot doesn't get stuck doing triangles between the coffee table and the wall.
If I was hiring some IT guy, I would first do a search to see if he was reading and posting messages on Slashdot during work hours, such as the guy above.
Mine seems to be broken.
Is there an open source design available for the USB UIRT?
~kyoorius
I built a transparent aquarium screen a few years back.
j pg
http://www.techfreakz.org/fishmon/fishmonscreen1.
other misc pics:
http://www.techfreakz.org/fishmon/
The Betta fish kept attacking dark parts of the screen where it saw a reflection.
~kyoorius
Yep. Mine went down too.
or marble madness..
Anyone remember that toy called the "Go ball"?
Bowling anyone?