Yep sure did. I should of been more specific, the Amiga 3000 came with 2megs stock (a guess) that was just memory, opposite that memory were memory slots for Sram you purchased separately, it was the only ram that would fit. I put in 10 megs of Sram which disabled the stock memory. I ran a Cnet BBS from it, an 8 line chat board so not much else. I'd search the Sram every now and again just to see what was there.
Had a friend not sure what Amiga he had I thought a 500. It was what he did, he ripped music out of the ram. He'd load a game or whatever till he got to a point of his choosing, shut down, insert his floppy, boot back up and search the ram. I used Blood Money as an example due to it's copy protection, yet it couldn't keep. you out of the ram. He had quite the collection obtained just that way.
If you have physical access and the computer is on, you can already read the contents of RAM with some specialized hardware. That gives you access to pretty much everything.
The Amiga used Sram for memory. You could play say the game "Blood Money", turn off the system and then boot up with a disk with a program to view the memory.
Sram is in just about everywhere now, even Intel CPU's use it for it's speed and ability to maintain it's contents without being refreshed. You really can't tell what's it's being using in anymore.
I always turn off my system(s) for an extended period before I consider all it's memory flushed. Not for security as much as being sure a possible memory problem that showed up is really gone.
The chart is about incidence of cancers, not mutations.
Cancer is the result of exposition to inducer factors (that cause mutations), and promoter factors (that help tumor growth). This means you can find two groups where one will have more mutations, but less cancers.
The chart was taken from the link I posted first, and it's all about the environment and mutations it can cause. Very interesting read, I came across it many years ago. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/b... (the chart is listed in first paragraph as Table 23-1)
Indian food is well known to be an effective tumor growth inhibitor, hence I am not surprised to see low cancer levels for India.
Nagasaki Japan with a high incidence of stomach cancer - go figure.
If you live long enough you will get cancer, no matter your habits
Sure, we know death is a protection against cancer, but that does not answer the question. We are told smokers get 150 mutation a year, but how much does a non smoker get?
Guess you didn't see it, I sure can't. I followed up my post with a chart mentioning India wouldn't be a bad place to live.
The chart doesn't break it into smoking and non-smoking, but I'd use the general population as reading above replies many don't smoke anymore. Even the article can't give you the question you desire as FTA "which contribute to different extents in different cancers".
While DNA research has reached amazing levels, to contribute to many different cancers; one really can't do that much with, other than saying smoking is bad for you.
How many mutation does a non smoker get during a year? The comparison would be interesting.
If you live long enough you will get cancer, no matter your habits.
A certain irreducible background incidence of cancer is to be expected regardless of circumstances: mutations can never be absolutely avoided, because they are an inescapable consequence of fundamental limitations on the accuracy of DNA replication, as discussed in Chapter 5. If a human could live long enough, it is inevitable that at least one of his or her cells would eventually accumulate a set of mutations sufficient for cancer to develop.
Never happened. People have know to keep their boiler water clean for at least one and a half centuries. On the other side of the condensors it can even be sea water but that boiler water is kept clean. Nukes have the extra loop that exchanges heat with the boiler water - thus cooling water that goes through the cooling towers is the third loop. If anything from the first loop has made it into the third it's either a string of failures or a huge catastrophic event obvious to anyone within miles.
First reactors out here used Columbia river for the primary, then let it sit in big cooling pools before releasing it back to the river, there were two cooling pools. They have buried it all now, even the reactor I operated. http://www.hanford.gov/page.cf...
The bigger question is does anyone really believe a business does something for free? Or do they pass the costs around?
Show me one business for profit or non profit that works for free. You can't as they don't stick around very long.
Google, as an individual it's never cost me a dime and with the free programs like Google Earth, and showing me how to root my Motorola Xoom tablet and such, I have no problem with them collecting my searches.
Google has done so well that everybody is into data collection as AT&T shows. And why facebook isn't a place to visit, they collect everything, and Mark Zuckerberg has proved time and time again he can't be trusted.
You do have a valid point; it's just Google is unique in the way they make their fortune, one is by sharing it with it's users, youtube for one. I have a 4 second video that has seen over 400K hits, the demographics are overwhelming with that many views and I can zero in on my target audience if I were into that.
but we made an exception for one so why not two in a row?
/. is a great place to get files and questionable material, as there's safety in numbers.
I have a game that my player wears a pirate hat, it was a thepiratebay post on./ and only that one version has the hat. It's one of a collection of games. I'm still sitting on JSTOR (Thank you Aaron Swartz), one day I'll get around to reading it.
I've always enjoyed/. for that ability. And yes I went looking for UFED 4PC, even if I never have a use for it.
This weekend I used Win10, everytime I wanted to view a PDF; Edge wanted to be the PDF viewer yet has no usable options for that function.
I was using the computer just to view PDF's, I had to select Open With: select Foxit (which came pre-installed) and 5+ requestor to make it the default PDF viewer, this everytime I opened a PDF.
It's an obtrusive sob that I'm sure threw itself into the hack.
I'm not talking about 3rd party ROMs like Cyanogenmod. That's why I said it can't be done "without rooting, etc.". Sure I can run a 3rd party ROM but then I lose VoLTE, that's the point.
The last 3 Andoids I've used are VoLTE capable and enabled running stock ROMs, and my last 2 iPhones (6 and 7) are as well (both capable and enabled). Let me select the mode I wish to use and be done with it. All I get as a benefit from allowing legacy air interfaces to be an option is decreased battery life as the phone monitors a network I have no interest in using (and if I do need/want it, I'll select it manually).
The only reason I want a rooted phone is to add a hosts file, ADB will allow this without the phone being rooted, and any other file (application) you want installed.
A note I keep handy, this is in reference to cell phones: I do believe in Linux systems, the real hosts file is in root/data/data/ >The system/etc/ hosts file is empty, aka a decoy of some sorts....? -XDA-Developers.com
I'm pretty sure I saw this exact same presentation at DEFCON a few months ago.
It's not like they hacked in to it, it was a gimme.
FTA "The 3GPP telco body that oversees LTE standards has known about the security shortcomings since at least 2006 when it issued a document describing Zhang’s forced handover attack, and accepts it as a risk. "
You could start by not giving IP addresses to kettles and toasters.
And if they do come with IP addresses just add them to your hosts file routed to local host - no joke that would be the first thing I would do, in my case a second hosts file can be located within the router. If a camera or the like, then to a specific IP address.
There's just me on my system I refer to as deaf, no other users. I ran journalctl to check my system out and came across this: Oct 21 05:24:28 deaf dbus-daemon[1119]: Unknown username "whoopsie" in message bus configuration file
No - even one more step removed. The water in the cooling loop never goes near the turbines or they corrode quickly. It's not steam, it's water, not even a lot hotter than a bath at that. The water in the cooling loop never becomes steam - the steam is on the other side of tubes in the condensor.
I would think just having one loop for the primary and power production would contaminate the entire area.
Steam some of the driest you'll come across is what drives the turbines, after that a method is required to recapture the water to send it back to cool the primary loop.
It's a different age, we didn't use the Columbia river for our secondary system like they did with the older reactors.
The Amiga used Sram for memory.
no it didnt
Yep sure did. I should of been more specific, the Amiga 3000 came with 2megs stock (a guess) that was just memory, opposite that memory were memory slots for Sram you purchased separately, it was the only ram that would fit. I put in 10 megs of Sram which disabled the stock memory. I ran a Cnet BBS from it, an 8 line chat board so not much else. I'd search the Sram every now and again just to see what was there.
Had a friend not sure what Amiga he had I thought a 500. It was what he did, he ripped music out of the ram. He'd load a game or whatever till he got to a point of his choosing, shut down, insert his floppy, boot back up and search the ram. I used Blood Money as an example due to it's copy protection, yet it couldn't keep. you out of the ram. He had quite the collection obtained just that way.
If you have physical access and the computer is on, you can already read the contents of RAM with some specialized hardware. That gives you access to pretty much everything.
The Amiga used Sram for memory. You could play say the game "Blood Money", turn off the system and then boot up with a disk with a program to view the memory.
You could then grab the haunting music of the game or any other sound byte
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
Sram is in just about everywhere now, even Intel CPU's use it for it's speed and ability to maintain it's contents without being refreshed. You really can't tell what's it's being using in anymore.
I always turn off my system(s) for an extended period before I consider all it's memory flushed. Not for security as much as being sure a possible memory problem that showed up is really gone.
Even better flamebait :
'This text can hack your computer'
just by reading this text, your computer has been hacked!!
X5O!P%@AP[4\PZX54(P^)7CC)7}$EICAR-STANDARD-ANTIVIRUS-TEST-FILE!$H+H*
Tag.
or don't surf at all
Or need to download a very large file - the library fits that bill.
The chart is about incidence of cancers, not mutations.
Cancer is the result of exposition to inducer factors (that cause mutations), and promoter factors (that help tumor growth). This means you can find two groups where one will have more mutations, but less cancers.
The chart was taken from the link I posted first, and it's all about the environment and mutations it can cause. Very interesting read, I came across it many years ago. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/b... (the chart is listed in first paragraph as Table 23-1)
Indian food is well known to be an effective tumor growth inhibitor, hence I am not surprised to see low cancer levels for India.
Nagasaki Japan with a high incidence of stomach cancer - go figure.
If you live long enough you will get cancer, no matter your habits
Sure, we know death is a protection against cancer, but that does not answer the question. We are told smokers get 150 mutation a year, but how much does a non smoker get?
Guess you didn't see it, I sure can't. I followed up my post with a chart mentioning India wouldn't be a bad place to live.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/b...
The date of the chart, 1993 from works done in 1987 (how I read it - bottom of chart).
The chart doesn't break it into smoking and non-smoking, but I'd use the general population as reading above replies many don't smoke anymore. Even the article can't give you the question you desire as FTA "which contribute to different extents in different cancers".
While DNA research has reached amazing levels, to contribute to many different cancers; one really can't do that much with, other than saying smoking is bad for you.
But I'm behind them on this one.
If you live long enough you will get cancer
On the flip side it sure doesn't hurt to live in Poona/Nagpur India.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/b...
How many mutation does a non smoker get during a year? The comparison would be interesting.
If you live long enough you will get cancer, no matter your habits.
A certain irreducible background incidence of cancer is to be expected regardless of circumstances: mutations can never be absolutely avoided, because they are an inescapable consequence of fundamental limitations on the accuracy of DNA replication, as discussed in Chapter 5. If a human could live long enough, it is inevitable that at least one of his or her cells would eventually accumulate a set of mutations sufficient for cancer to develop.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bo...
and smoke the good stuff we do here: http://natsherman.com/
Tad spendy if they don't list prices and have an FAQ answering "'WHY DO I PAY MORE FOR YOUR CIGARETTES?"
http://www.az-smokes.com/ for those of us that don't need the glamour.
Never happened. People have know to keep their boiler water clean for at least one and a half centuries. On the other side of the condensors it can even be sea water but that boiler water is kept clean.
Nukes have the extra loop that exchanges heat with the boiler water - thus cooling water that goes through the cooling towers is the third loop. If anything from the first loop has made it into the third it's either a string of failures or a huge catastrophic event obvious to anyone within miles.
First reactors out here used Columbia river for the primary, then let it sit in big cooling pools before releasing it back to the river, there were two cooling pools.
They have buried it all now, even the reactor I operated. http://www.hanford.gov/page.cf...
From How the Universe works - season 1 - Galaxies: 25 min, 20 seconds into it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
The bigger question is does anyone really believe a business does something for free? Or do they pass the costs around?
Show me one business for profit or non profit that works for free. You can't as they don't stick around very long.
Google, as an individual it's never cost me a dime and with the free programs like Google Earth, and showing me how to root my Motorola Xoom tablet and such, I have no problem with them collecting my searches.
Google has done so well that everybody is into data collection as AT&T shows. And why facebook isn't a place to visit, they collect everything, and Mark Zuckerberg has proved time and time again he can't be trusted.
You do have a valid point; it's just Google is unique in the way they make their fortune, one is by sharing it with it's users, youtube for one. I have a 4 second video that has seen over 400K hits, the demographics are overwhelming with that many views and I can zero in on my target audience if I were into that.
I don't see links to 4PC and Touch firmwares above...
This might be the link http://www.mcsira.com/web/8888... but I'm not going to join a mailing list to download a file, nor click on a flash link.
I don't see links to 4PC and Touch firmwares above...
Click on the summery link then use your mouse to scroll the top section, but now one is met with a SALES INQUIRY.
http://www.cellebrite.com/Mobi...
but we made an exception for one so why not two in a row?
/. is a great place to get files and questionable material, as there's safety in numbers.
I have a game that my player wears a pirate hat, it was a thepiratebay post on ./ and only that one version has the hat. It's one of a collection of games. I'm still sitting on JSTOR (Thank you Aaron Swartz), one day I'll get around to reading it.
I've always enjoyed /. for that ability. And yes I went looking for UFED 4PC, even if I never have a use for it.
The only respect I've seen shown him is when he married an ugly women after he made his fortune.
You can always expect the unexpected from facebook.
This weekend I used Win10, everytime I wanted to view a PDF; Edge wanted to be the PDF viewer yet has no usable options for that function.
I was using the computer just to view PDF's, I had to select Open With: select Foxit (which came pre-installed) and 5+ requestor to make it the default PDF viewer, this everytime I opened a PDF.
It's an obtrusive sob that I'm sure threw itself into the hack.
I'm not talking about 3rd party ROMs like Cyanogenmod. That's why I said it can't be done "without rooting, etc.". Sure I can run a 3rd party ROM but then I lose VoLTE, that's the point.
The last 3 Andoids I've used are VoLTE capable and enabled running stock ROMs, and my last 2 iPhones (6 and 7) are as well (both capable and enabled). Let me select the mode I wish to use and be done with it. All I get as a benefit from allowing legacy air interfaces to be an option is decreased battery life as the phone monitors a network I have no interest in using (and if I do need/want it, I'll select it manually).
The only reason I want a rooted phone is to add a hosts file, ADB will allow this without the phone being rooted, and any other file (application) you want installed.
A note I keep handy, this is in reference to cell phones: I do believe in Linux systems, the real hosts file is in root/data/data/
>The system/etc/ hosts file is empty, aka a decoy of some sorts....? -XDA-Developers.com
I'm pretty sure I saw this exact same presentation at DEFCON a few months ago.
It's not like they hacked in to it, it was a gimme.
FTA "The 3GPP telco body that oversees LTE standards has known about the security shortcomings since at least 2006 when it issued a document describing Zhang’s forced handover attack, and accepts it as a risk. "
You could start by not giving IP addresses to kettles and toasters.
And if they do come with IP addresses just add them to your hosts file routed to local host - no joke that would be the first thing I would do, in my case a second hosts file can be located within the router. If a camera or the like, then to a specific IP address.
Not moisture from air, but actually turning free hydrogen and oxygen in the atmosphere into water.
Isn't that called a fuel cell?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
There's just me on my system I refer to as deaf, no other users. I ran journalctl to check my system out and came across this:
Oct 21 05:24:28 deaf dbus-daemon[1119]: Unknown username "whoopsie" in message bus configuration file
The only reason anybody is worried is the FUD mongers and ignorance.
Exactly! Thank you.
No - even one more step removed. The water in the cooling loop never goes near the turbines or they corrode quickly.
It's not steam, it's water, not even a lot hotter than a bath at that. The water in the cooling loop never becomes steam - the steam is on the other side of tubes in the condensor.
I would think just having one loop for the primary and power production would contaminate the entire area.
Steam some of the driest you'll come across is what drives the turbines, after that a method is required to recapture the water to send it back to cool the primary loop.
It's a different age, we didn't use the Columbia river for our secondary system like they did with the older reactors.