Depends on the algorithm used to hash the pass and the way the attack works. I believe ighashgpu bruteforces it by generating all possible hashes and simply comparing them to the collected hashes. One password or a thousand - you only have to do it once. It's the same as using rainbow tables, without the need to have tons of storage. But again, it all depends on the algorithm.
Or try the free (as in beer) Voodoo Camera Tracker Lets you export pointclouds (not 3d models, as in the story) to a variety of formats, including Blender.
I've been using that since at least July for my personal weather site. The main reason that I taught myself SOAP was so that I could use NWS's forecasts instead of having to get the forecast some other way.
What's going to be news next? The Census Bureau releasing its parts of its Tiger/Line database to the public? I wonder how my weather site looks up the latitude and longitude for the user-inputted place names...
Any chance that you have tried Yellow Dog Linux 3? Everything worked out great on the first install, without tinkering on my PowerMac 7600. The same holds true for YDL 2.2 and 2.3 (at least from my experience).
Actually, couldn't you use Gimp's Map to Object -> Sphere thing to make it look like the object is spinning? You would have to make a square selection, map it to the sphere, save it as a layer, then move on to the next square selection. Though you'd have to somehow fix the distortion caused when stretching the image to map it to the sphere... You'd probably want to make yourself a script for Script-Fu to do it for you.
I'm surprised by how many people (Mac users and otherwise) haven't noticed how long MacOS has come with text to speech. It's been included since at least MacOS 7.5, maybe even 7.0 (I was using it on my trusty ol' IIci yesterday). You could use it via SimpleText or even have it speak the text of dialog boxes.
The quality of the voices could be better, but they do seem better than Festival.
But, I have to admit it is pretty fun to scare people who don't know about it. One of my friends told me that his mother gets scared if she doesn't click OK of Cancel in a dialog because "those voices are going to come."
Depends on the algorithm used to hash the pass and the way the attack works. I believe ighashgpu bruteforces it by generating all possible hashes and simply comparing them to the collected hashes. One password or a thousand - you only have to do it once. It's the same as using rainbow tables, without the need to have tons of storage. But again, it all depends on the algorithm.
With a system of pulleys?
Or try the free (as in beer) Voodoo Camera Tracker
Lets you export pointclouds (not 3d models, as in the story) to a variety of formats, including Blender.
I've been using that since at least July for my personal weather site. The main reason that I taught myself SOAP was so that I could use NWS's forecasts instead of having to get the forecast some other way.
What's going to be news next? The Census Bureau releasing its parts of its Tiger/Line database to the public? I wonder how my weather site looks up the latitude and longitude for the user-inputted place names...
History will be kind to me for I intend to write it.
They also provide the current conditions in XML feeds and you can get the forecast using SOAP.
Any chance that you have tried Yellow Dog Linux 3? Everything worked out great on the first install, without tinkering on my PowerMac 7600. The same holds true for YDL 2.2 and 2.3 (at least from my experience).
Actually, couldn't you use Gimp's Map to Object -> Sphere thing to make it look like the object is spinning? You would have to make a square selection, map it to the sphere, save it as a layer, then move on to the next square selection. Though you'd have to somehow fix the distortion caused when stretching the image to map it to the sphere...
You'd probably want to make yourself a script for Script-Fu to do it for you.
I'm surprised by how many people (Mac users and otherwise) haven't noticed how long MacOS has come with text to speech. It's been included since at least MacOS 7.5, maybe even 7.0 (I was using it on my trusty ol' IIci yesterday). You could use it via SimpleText or even have it speak the text of dialog boxes. The quality of the voices could be better, but they do seem better than Festival. But, I have to admit it is pretty fun to scare people who don't know about it. One of my friends told me that his mother gets scared if she doesn't click OK of Cancel in a dialog because "those voices are going to come."