Links for the week of 25 October 2008:
- Smithsonian Libraries : Digital Library - Webcasts, lectures
- Journal of Biological Engineering | Full text | Engineering BioBrick vectors from BioBrick parts - We define a biological part to be a natural nucleic acid sequence that encodes a definable biological function, and a standard biological part to be a biological part that has been refined in order to conform to one or more defined technical standards.
- Strange Culture, A new film by Lynn Hershman Leeson - The surreal nightmare of internationally-acclaimed artist and professor Steve Kurtz began when his wife Hope died in her sleep of heart failure. Police who responded to Kurtz�s 911 call deemed Kurtz�s art suspicious and called the FBI. Within hours the artist was detained as a suspected "bioterrorist" as dozens of federal agents in Hazmat suits sifted through his work and impounded his computers, manuscripts, books, his cat, and even his wife�s body.
- YouTube - Time-Lapse: Zebrafish Embryos Developing - Time-Lapse: Zebrafish Embryos Developing, first 24 hrs
- Microsoft vs. Google: The New Space Race? - MSFT and Google investing in large telescopes and open source astronomy
- Spy Pigeons Circle the World | Danger Room from Wired.com -
- Survival Communities - State Maps and Information for
Nuclear Survival
(with Intentional Communities list)
- Geophysicist Shares a Song of Earth’s Polarity : NPR - Geophysicist Shares a Song of Earth's Polarity
- Team records ‘music’ from stars - Scientists have recorded the sound of three stars similar to our Sun using France's Corot space telescope. A team writing in Science journal says the sounds have enabled them to get information about processes deep within stars for the first time.
- YouTube - Face Shift — Arthur Elsenaar, Remko Scha — 2005 -
- Electric Stimulus – today and tomorrow - Daito Manabe stimulates his facial muscles with small electric pulses, synced to music. The result is amazing, he now has to figure out how the hide the cables, then it would be an excellent music video.
- BCMA Medical Museum : Collections -
- Scientists make cat that glows in the dark - Telegraph - transgenic cat: The gene, which was added to Mr. Green Genes' DNA when he was created, has no effect on his health. "Created"…
- An Extremely Quick and Simple Introduction to the Vi Text Editor -
- ANSI Launches Guide to Help Calculate Cyber Security Risk - Desktop Security News Analysis - Dark Reading - In a nutshell, the guide advocates that organizations calculate cyber security risks and costs by asking questions of every organizational discipline that might be affected: legal, compliance, business operations, IT, external communications, crisis management, and risk management/insurance. The idea is to involve everyone who might be affected by a security breach and collect data on the potential risks and costs.
- Second International conference on image science of the Department for Image Science, Danube-University Krems - Never before the world of images has changed so fast and the way images are produced transformed so drastically like in the latest presence: Second Life, Micromovies, Flickr, Virtual Reality, You Tube, Visual Music, Scientific Visualisation, Google Earth etc. are keywords standing for a multitude of new possibilities for individual producing, projecting and distributing of visual material.
- Jeremy Mayer -Typewriter Sculpture, Illustration, Studio - Mayer has created a series of sculptures that capture the mysteriously delicate, yet sturdy, inner structures of living things using old typewriters.
- The United States Air Force Art Collection - The United States Air Force Art Collection documents the story of the Air Force through the universal language of art. The actions and deeds of Air Force men and women are recorded in paintings by eminent American artists in a way words alone could never tell. These paintings are both historical and educational and expose the military and the public to the role and diverse capabilities of the United States Air Force.
- Atlas of Cyberspace - The Atlas of Cyberspace, by Martin Dodge and Rob Kitchin, is the first comprehensive book to explore the spatial and visual nature of cyberspace and its infrastructure.
- Office of the National Counterintelligence Executive - truly bizarre set of posters, from the Office of the National Counterintelligence Executive. Using the words of Abraham Lincoln, George Washington, and George W. Bush, they remind our spies not to spill secrets — or switch to the other side. Recruiters from Beijing to Moscow to Tehran are, no doubt, cursing the poster-makers' cleverness, and their boundless Illustrator skill. Here are some samples:
- Hackermedia - is on the air! - hacking and security podcasts
- Pollster.com - 2008 Election Polls, Trends, Charts and Analysis -
- IEEE Spectrum: The Hunt for the Kill Switch - Are chip makers building electronic trapdoors in key military hardware? The Pentagon is making its biggest effort yet to find out
- YouTube - Miriam Makeba-Pata Pata(TV Record,S.Paulo,Brazil,1968) -
- Online Divorcee Jailed After Killing Virtual Hubby - NYTimes.com -
- Podcasts from the University of Oxford -
- Vintagetextile.com high style vintage clothing - Exquisite vintage clothing 1750-1980: Early Costume; 19th-20th century Couture; wearable designer fashion for the discriminating collector. Since 1998 exclusively on the internet, Vintage Textile has offered a wide selection of the best high-style clothing in all the major categories: Early, Victorian, Edwardian, 1920s, 1930s-1950s, 20th century Designer, Shawls/Textiles. We are proud to count major collectors and museums worldwide among our valued customers.
- YouTube - Exploding Whale -
- YouTube - Björk talking about her TV -
- YouTube - bjork talking about her TV -
- Sublime Frequencies produces music from Java Bali Sumatra Burma Morocco Thailand India Mali Syria Laos Cambodia and Nepal -
- The Ultimate Collection Of Useful Photoshop Actions | Developer’s Toolbox | Smashing Magazine -
- LASEC - The Security and Cryptography Laboratory (LASEC) was created at EPFL in 2000. It is part of the School of Computer and Communication Sciences (I&C). The main activities of LASEC are research and education on the security of communication and information systems, cryptography, and applications.
- Compromising Electromagnetic Emanations of Wired Keyboard - Martin Vuagnoux and Sylvain Pasini - Computer keyboards are often used to transmit sensitive information such as username/password (e.g. to log into computers, to do e-banking money transfer, etc.). A vulnerability on these devices will definitely kill the security of any computer or ATM.
Wired keyboards emit electromagnetic waves, because they contain eletronic components. These eletromagnetic radiation could reveal sensitive information such as keystrokes. Although Kuhn already tagged keyboards as risky, we did not find any experiment or evidence proving or refuting the practical feasibility to remotely eavesdrop keystrokes, especially on modern keyboards.
- Welcome to Virtual Vigilance.org - Operation Virtual Vigilance is concerned with securing America's borders. Cameras located along the border are operated by American citizens over the Internet. Suspicious activity is reported to the Border Patrol.
VirtualVigilance.org is hosted by American Border Patrol (a non-profit 501c3 corporation).
For background information, please click on "background."
The camera system is currently in operation and being viewed by a select core group of volunteers.
If you sign up as a "Virtual Volunteer" and you meet certain criteria, you will be contacted for training.
- DVN - Homepage - Access the world's largest collection of social science research data here by searching across or browsing through one of the virtual data archives (called "dataverses") listed below.
- Robert Marion LaFollette (1855-1925), speech in Senate, 1908 March 17 - [While the public's mind and the Hearst and the Pulitzer papers (and other papers) were preoccupied with the sex-life and murder of Stanford White, and the night of the "velvet swing"; while senators and congressmen interrupted their business to read the details of the "trial of the century" in the evening papers, there was some trouble in America]
Congressional Record — Senate
page 3434
1908 March 17
Senate bill 3023
AMENDMENT OF NATIONAL BANKING LAWS.
- 83 Beautiful Wordpress Themes You (Probably) Haven’t Seen | Smashing Magazine -
Links for the week of 17 October 2008:
- YouTube - Journey by a London Bus (1950) - in the event you needed a bit of a refresher, please take note of this
film, kindly produced by the colonial film board, on how to ride a
london bus
- The Things He Carried - The Atlantic (November 2008) - Airport security in America is a sham—“security theater” designed to make travelers feel better and catch stupid terrorists. Smart ones can get through security with fake boarding passes and all manner of prohibited items—as our correspondent did with ease.
- YouTube - RFID Implant in Hand Do It Yourself -
- Fast, Cheap and Sustainable: Ex-Pentagon Geek Plots Disaster Relief 2.0 | Danger Room from Wired.com - The project is called STAR-TIDES (Sustainable Technologies, Accelerated Research-Transportable Infrastructures for Development and Emergency Support). The acronym may be long, but the concept is simple: it is supposed to pull together cheap and effective solutions for humanitarian emergencies or post-war reconstruction.
- Plug Pulled on Hamas’ YouTube Ripoff - A few weeks ago, Western intelligence officials discovered that the Palestinian jihadist group Hamas had set up a video-sharing site — to spread propaganda and to train would-be terrorists. Now, that radical Islamic answer to YouTube is offline. And jihadists are blaming the FBI for the takedown.
- A DNA Database for Counterterrorism - DNA samples of thousands of suspected terrorists from Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere have been collected and preserved in a little-known U.S. government database that is intended for forensic intelligence and counterterrorism purposes.
- Designing a Malicious Processor - Hidden malicious circuits provide an attacker with a stealthy attack vector. As they occupy a layer below the entire software stack, malicious circuits can bypass traditional defensive techniques. Yet current work on trojan circuits considers only simple attacks against the hardware itself, and straightforward defenses. More complex designs that attack the software are unexplored, as are the countermeasures an attacker may take to bypass proposed defenses.
- U.S. Cockpits - cockpit images
- everystockphoto - searching free photos -
- Free Stock Photos at freerangestock.com - Totally Free Stock Photography and Textures! -
- http://www.morguefile.com/archive/ -
- Cheat Sheets for Front-end Web Developers - Six Revisions -
- stock.xchng - the leading free stock photography site -
- Liam’s Pictures from Old Books -
- ITA Software: Trip Planner - airplane ticket service used by many travel agents
- Collect Russia Collect Russia Soviet Russian - various military artifacts
- Bloomberg.com: Bloomberg Podcasts - Lapham’s Quarterly Editor Puts Events in Context
- BLAST: Basic Local Alignment Search Tool - dna sequence search engine
- Turbo-charged wireless hacks threaten networks • The Register - “Brute force decryption of the WPA and WPA2 systems using parallel processing has been on the theoretical possibilities horizon for some time - and presumably employed by relevant government agencies in extreme situations - but the use of the latest NVidia cards to speedup decryption on a standard PC is worrying.”
Links for the week of 11 October 2008:
- Kent’s Imperative: Intelligence and financial crisis, historical edition - “The system of mutual espionage and rivalry which exists amongst joint-stock banks is another source of security to the public. That a system of espionage exists upon every joint-stock bank, at least in Scotland. by their sister banks, who exchange notes and checks with them, must be admitted, after what took place with regard to a joint-stock bank establishment in the west of Scotland.
- 20 Useful Visualization Libraries : A Beautiful WWW -
- YouTube - Broadcast Yourself. - Catch up on your Favorite MacGyver Moments. Watch Full Episodes Now!
- Welcome to the Chemical-Biological Warfare Exposures Site - The Department of Defense (DoD) and the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) play distinct roles in dealing with chemical and biological (CB) exposures. DoD identifies and validates veteran’s exposure to CB agents (What was he exposed to? When and Where was he exposed?) and provides the names of these individuals along with their exposure information to the VA. The VA then notifies individuals of their potential exposure, provides treatment, if necessary, for these individuals and adjudicates any claim for compensation.
- BibliOdyssey: Early Microscopes -
- U.S. Geological Survey Photographic Library -
- Browse the Artifacts of Geek History in Jay Walker’s Library -
- Antonie Pannekoek - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Pannekoek studied mathematics and physics in Leiden from 1891. Even before he went to college he was interested in astronomy and studied the variability of Polaris. He published his first article, On the Necessity of Further Researches on the Milky Way, as a student. Some years after he had finished his study he started work at the Leidse Sterrewacht (Leiden observatory), where he wrote his thesis.After reading Edward Bellamy’s Equality, Pannekoek became a convinced socialist and started studying Karl Marx’s theories.
- How I became a soldier in the Georgia-Russia cyberwar. - By Evgeny Morozov - Slate Magazine - My experiment also might shed some light on why the recent cyberwar has been so hard to pin down and why no group in particular has claimed responsibility. Paranoid that the Kremlin’s hand is everywhere, we risk underestimating the great patriotic rage of many ordinary Russians, who, having been fed too much government propaganda in the last few days, are convinced that they need to crash Georgian Web sites. Many Russians undoubtedly went online to learn how to make mischief, as I did. Within an hour, they, too, could become cyberwarriors.
- Big Brother Is Listening - The Atlantic (April 2006) - The NSA has the ability to eavesdrop on your communications—landlines, cell phones, e-mails, BlackBerry messages, Internet searches, and more—with ease. What happens when the technology of espionage outstrips the law’s ability to protect ordinary citizens from it?by James Bamford
- Defense Tech: JIMMY CARTER: SUPER SPY? - The rumors are that the Navy’s newest nuclear sub, the USS Jimmy Carter, has been designed for spywork, with a “special capability… to tap undersea cables and eavesdrop on the communications passing through them,” according to the AP.
- Sense Networks - How many people are going out at night? Locally or to
destinations? By income level? Did the financial district come
in early this morning?
- Curt Herzstark and his Pocket Calculator CURTA -
- Leyden jar - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - The Leyden jar is a simple device that “stores” static electricity in large amounts. It was invented in 1745 by Pieter van Musschenbroek (1692–1761), in Leiden, The Netherlands. It was the original form of the capacitor. The Leyden jar was used to conduct many early experiments in electricity, and its discovery was of fundamental importance in the study of electricity.
- India’s first virtual porn star. | MetaFilter - Savita Bhabhi is India’s First Virtual Pornstar (NSFW). A sexy, buxom, and lusty almond-eyed femme fatale, Savita, bearing the title ‘bhabhi’ which means ’sister-in-law’ indicating that she’s married, is the quintessential Indian male porn fantasy ‘toon. Launched in March this year, the web site has proven to be a hit, incorporating South Asian themes such as sleeping with the servant boy; with a cousin; and, of course, the boys playing cricket next door.
- Personal History: The Madness of Spies: Reporting & Essays: The New Yorker - The Madness of Spies A Secret Service secret by John Le Carré
- Colliding-beam accelerators — will they reveal the ultimate particles? -
- Quantum Hacking group - Quantum cryptography is a method of secure communication using qubits. Such communication can be proved by the rules of quantum mechanics to be, in theory, completely secure. That is, any attempt of eavesdropping will be caught. We consider practical implementations of quantum cryptography. First, we play the role of an eavesdropper and try to hack a variety of quantum cryptosystems by taking advantage of non-ideal behavior of the equipment. Then, we suggest countermeasures, either practically by modifying the setups, or theoretically by modifying the way of communicating. This makes future cryptosystems harder to crack, ultimately approaching the goal of absolute security.
Links for the week of 5 October 2008:
- The Tilt-Shift Miniature Fake Technique in Photoshop CS: A Simple How-To -
- 23 Personal Tools to Learn More About Yourself | FlowingData - Applications spring up every month that let people track, monitor, and analyze their habits and behaviors in hopes of gaining a better understanding about themselves and their surroundings.
- Leif Bloomquist’s Commodore 64 Telnet BBS - n a moment of nostalgic geekiness, I decided to set up a Bulletin Board System (BBS) on my Commodore 64 again - after 15 years! However, I wanted to avoid long distance charges for any callers, and the need for a second phone line.
- Privoxy Frequently Asked Questions - Privoxy is a non-caching web proxy with advanced filtering capabilities for enhancing privacy, modifying web page data, managing HTTP cookies, controlling access, and removing ads, banners, pop-ups and other obnoxious Internet junk. Privoxy has a flexible configuration and can be customized to suit individual needs and tastes. Privoxy has application for both stand-alone systems and multi-user networks.
- Darik’s Boot And Nuke | Hard Drive Disk Wipe - Darik’s Boot and Nuke (”DBAN”) is a self-contained boot disk that securely wipes the hard disks of most computers. DBAN will automatically and completely delete the contents of any hard disk that it can detect, which makes it an appropriate utility for bulk or emergency data destruction.
- Mystery surrounds hijacked Iranian ship - The Long War Journal - Within days, pirates who had boarded the ship developed strange health complications, skin burns and loss of hair. Independent sources tell The Long War Journal that a number of pirates have also died.
- Vote 2008 - The Takeaway - Track the Electoral College vote predictions - Aggregates many of the major media sources’, including Intrade, perdictions about each state. It does so in a nicely designed grid.
- SydLexia.com - Are You Afraid of the Dark: The Tale of the Pinball Wizard -
- Technology Review: Wireless at Fiber Speeds - the team was able to send a 10.6-gigabit-per-second signal between antennas 800 meters apart. And more recently, the researchers demonstrated a 20-gigabit-per-second signal in the lab
- AnandTech - The LCD Thread -
- SCADA - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - SCADA is the abbreviation for Supervisory Control And Data Acquisition. It generally refers to an industrial control system: a computer system monitoring and controlling a process. The process can be industrial, infrastructure or facility based
- Virtual Worlds Forum Europe, conference and expo, London, 6-8 October 2008 -
- English Russia » Moscow Zoo at 1920 -
- Monitoring System of Belgrade Water Supply - Belgrade water supply was founded 115 years ago and over the years, it constantly expanded its capacity, following the demographic and industrial city growth. During this period, the number of Belgrade citizens increased 25 times, while the quantity of fabricated water increased 110 times. The 90’s crisis stopped all the development projects. It most affected the application of modern solutions in areas of water monitoring, fabrication control, distribution and quality.
- The Atlas of the Real World - Telegraph - The Atlas of the Real World uses software to depict the nations of the world, not by their physical size, but by their demographic importance on a range of subjects. Here, we select a series of travel- and news-related maps.
- Pentagon Wants Cyberwar Range to ‘Replicate Human Behavior and Frailties’ (Updated) | Danger Room from Wired.com - Congress has ordered the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or Darpa, to put together a National Cyber Range, as part of a massive (and massively secret) $30 billion, government-wide effort better prep for battle online. The project is now considered a top priority for the Agency. And to make sure the facility is as true-to-life as possible, Darpa wants the contractors running the Range to be able to “replicate realistic human behavior on nodes,” a request for proposals, released today, reveals.
- Sustainable Cities: A new global database | Sustainable Cities - Sustainable Cities™ collects and disseminates knowledge on cases and initiatives from cities all over the world. You will find descriptions to create better public transport, to optimize waste management, to reduce energy consumption, to manage waste water better and use the cleaned water to create new recreational activities for citizens in cities, and many, many other initiatives.
- DoS attack reveals (yet another) crack in net’s core • The Register - The bug in the transmission control protocol (TCP) affords attackers a wealth of new ways to carry out denials of service on equipment at the heart of data centers and other sensitive points on the internet. The new class of attack is especially severe because it can be carried out using very little bandwidth and has the ability to paralyze a server or router even after the flood of malicious data has stopped.
- Pictured: Inside the £800m Dubai hotel boasting a £13,000-a-night suite and dolphins flown in from the South Pacific | Mail Online - It’s the latest word in Gulf excess - a sprawling £800million resort boasting a £13,000-a-night suite and dolphins flown in from the South Pacific, all atop a palm tree-shaped island.
- the hacker’s choice - THC - GSM CRACKERS & PASSPORT SPOOFERS ——- THC is a non-commercial group of computer experts focusing on practical and theoretical computer security. The group holds a broad expertise in analysis, design and development of security solutions, ranging from efficient network surveillance scanners to kernel modules for operating systems.
- Ning. Create your own social network for anything. - Name Your Social Network
- https://www.myaoc.org/eweb/DynamicPage.aspx?Site=CROWS2&WebKey=ecfde565-811d-4760-9d8a-f8f62135cacb - The name “Old Crows” emerged from the first large-scale use of Electronic Warfare during the WWII Battle of Britain and the US and allied bombing raids over Europe. The Allied Radar Countermeasure operators used the code name “Ravens” and employed receivers and transmitters to monitor and jam threat frequencies. Military jargon later changed “Ravens” to “Crows.”With origins in WWII, Electronic Warfare has been, and remains, a critical enabling capability in military operations in peace and war. With the evolution of digital/computer technology, Electronic Warfare (EW), Information Operations (IO), and related disciplines are increasingly necessary to achieve knowledge superiority, strategic and tactical dominance, and asset protection in both offensive and defensive operations. Information Operations include those actions taken to influence, effect, or defend information, information systems, and decision-making.
- CASOS: Home | CASOS - CASOS brings together computer science, dynamic network analysis and the empirical study of complex socio-technical systems. Computational and social network techniques are combined to develop a better understanding of the fundamental principles of organizing, coordinating, managing and destabilizing systems of intelligent adaptive agents (human and artificial) engaged in real tasks at the team, organizational or social level.
- CCSA - Cyber Conflict Studies Association - Welcome to the Cyber Conflict Studies Association (CCSA) website. CCSA is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization dedicated to promoting and leading a diversified research agenda in the field of cyber conflict.
- ModLab - ENTER TERMINATOR - This project introduces a new challenge problem: designing robotic systems to recover after disassembly from high-energy events and a first implemented solution of a simplified problem.
- Thwarting NSA Traffic Analysis -
- Darpa Budget -
- DARPA 2009 Budget - Danger Room -
- Pentagon’s Mind-Reading Computers Replicate | Danger Room from Wired.com - Augmented Cognition relies on the idea that people have more than one kind of working memory, and more than one kind of attention; there are separate slots in the mind for things written, things heard and things seen. By monitoring how taxed those areas of the brain are, it should be possible to change a computer’s display to compensate
- DARPA: Fake Brains, ASAP - According to DARPA’s recently-released budget, the Systems of Neuromorphic Adaptive Plastic Scalable Electronics (SyNAPSE) program isn’t set to being until the next fiscal year.
- Möbius transformations revealed - the beauty of Möbius transformations and shows how moving to a higher dimension reveals their essential unity.
- 2007 Science and Engineering Visualization Challenge - he articles linked on this page describe the accomplishments of the creative and gifted scientists, artists, and others who put the winning entries together
- Number of cell phone subscribers to hit 4 billion this year, UN says - The ITU emphasized the need to carefully interpret data. A 61 per cent penetration rate does not mean in reality that every other person in the world is using a mobile phone; rather, the statistics reflect the number of subscriptions, not people. Double counting could occur if people have multiple cellular subscriptions, while some could be sharing their phone with others.
- Friend or Foe? Crows Never Forget a Face, It Seems - NYTimes.com - Though Dr. Marzluff’s is the first formal study of human face recognition in wild birds, his preliminary findings confirm the suspicions of many other researchers who have observed similar abilities in crows, ravens, gulls and other species.
- Insomnia – Victorian style - Vol. 21, Part 10 ( October 2008) - We owe much to Charles Dickens’ insomnia. Sleepless, he would tread the streets of London and encounter the inspirations for many of his novels and conceive of the tortured minds of various characters. On returning to his northwards-pointing bed he would sleep exactly in the middle, placing his arms out and checking that his hands were equidistant from the bed’s edge. Away from home he would realign the bed accordingly, which is why he always carried a compass; and he had to be facing north before he could write, as this would foster his creativity.
- OpenSpime - OpenSpime is a project of WideTag, Inc., a technology infrastructure company providing innovative solutions for an Open Internet of Things.
Links for 28 September 2008:
- Estonian Ministry of Defence - Estonian Cyber Security Strategy - http://www.mod.gov.ee/static/sisu/files/Estonian_Cyber_Security_Strategy.pdf
- DARPA Mathematical Challenges - Federal Business Opportunities - DARPA is soliciting innovative research proposals in the area of DARPA Mathematical Challenges, with the goal of dramatically revolutionizing mathematics and thereby strengthening the scientific and technological capabilities of DoD.
- File2HD.com - Download any file from any site
- Cell ‘rebooting’ technique sidesteps risks : Nature News - Unlike other scientists who had previously made such ‘induced pluripotent stem cells’, or iPS cells, Hochedlinger’s team did not use a virus that integrates itself into a cell’s genome to ‘reboot’ the cells.
- Hackers Resurrect Notorious Attack Tool Kit - CSO Online - Security and Risk - Neosploit, the notorious hacker exploit kit that some thought had been retired months ago, has not only returned from the dead, but is responsible for a dramatic increase in attacks, a security researcher claimed today.
- Somali Pirates Seize Ship With Tanks - NYTimes.com - A Ukrainian ship captured by Somali pirates en route to Somalia is carrying at least 30 tanks, a regional maritime organisation said on Friday.
- NICK VEASEY | X-RAY PHOTOGRAPHER | X-RAY PHOTOS / PHOTOGRAPHY / FILM / ABSTRACT / ART - Nick Veasey uses x-ray technology to create mesmerizing and intriguing art.
- How-To: Web server on a business card - This mini web server is slightly smaller than a business card. There are a lot of tiny one-board servers out there, but this is probably the smallest you can etch and solder at home. Unlike many embedded web servers, files are stored on a PC-readable SD card, not in a difficult-to-write EEPROM. Read on for the web server design, or catch up on PIC 24F basics in the previous article
- Flickr: PCA 01’s Photostream - 1960s service man snap shots from middle east
- Mary-Kate Olsen Videos | The Olsen Twins In Paris — EXCLUSIVE!!! - A video repository of paparazzi stalking various celebrities. Very mundane, cutting floor genre stuff.
- Library to share 14th-century royal cookbook online - Collection of recipes compiled by King Richard II’s cooks among several works being digitised for viewing on internet
- World’s electrical grids open to attack • The Register - A serious vulnerability has been found in yet another computerized control system that runs some of the world’s most critical infrastructure, this time in a product sold by a vendor known as the ABB Group.
- The Sculpture of Brose Partington - page one - A kinetic sculpture artist
- Video: Solar Sunrise, the Best FBI-Produced Hacker Flick Ever | Threat Level from Wired.com - The 1999 movie accurately details how U.S. officials suspected Iraq in a series of breaches of Defense Department computers around the United States, even as it shows the perpetrators for what they were: a bored Israeli teenager and some California juveniles having fun.
- FORA.tv - The world of ideas and knowledge—all drawn from the live-event speeches, discussions, interviews and debates going on everywhere all the time at the world’s leading conferences, ideas festivals, think tanks and other major centers of thought and discourse.
Links for 21 September 2008:
- Chinese hacker “Milk Rebellion” - As the scandal over melamine laced food products widens, Chinese hackers seem to be taking up the cause to punish guilty corporations.
- Five Thoughts On The Popularity Of Steampunk - On the most basic, most appealing social level, steampunk is a way to masculinize romance. That is to say: Steampunk takes something stereotypically feminine that most boys hate — Victorian lace and frills and tea and crumpets — and says, “Hey, how about some robots with that?” It’s like the Dance Dance Revolution of nerd culture: now we all have something we can play together!
- 20 Most Incredible Desert Oases [pics] | Environmental Graffiti - 20 Most Incredible Desert Oases [pics]
- DARPA Archives - Past DARPA Programs
- Verner Panton -
- Printing a Book - Video runs through entire production process of book printing. Produced by Encyclopedia Britannica in 1947
- Revision3 - MediaDefender, a copyright hitsquad attacks, Revision 3
- Video of a guy who makes his own vacuum tubes - Boing Boing -
- Main Page - IGEM07 - 4 teams from around the world spent their summer engineering novel biological machines using and creating BioBrick standard biological parts
- Oil Rocks - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - The Oil Rocks lies 45-50 km offshore on the Caspian Sea and extracts oil from the shallow water portion of the Absheron geological trend. The most distinctive feature of the Oil Rocks is that it is actually a functional city with a population of about 5,000 and over 200 km of streets built on piles of dirt and landfill. Most of the inhabitants work on shifts; a week on Oil Rocks followed by a week on the shore. The small city includes shops, school and a library. After almost 60 years the Oil Rocks is still quite unusual as Azerbaijan’s first and largest oil platform.The facility is poorly maintained, with miles of roads now submerged beneath the sea. Around some worker’s dormitories, the waterline now stands at the second-floor windows.
- Grytviken - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia -
- STATEWATCH - monitoring the state and civil liberties in Europe -
- U.N. agency eyes curbs on Internet anonymity | Politics and Law - CNET News - A United Nations agency is quietly drafting technical standards, proposed by the Chinese government, to define methods of tracing the original source of Internet communications and potentially curbing the ability of users to remain anonymous.The U.S. National Security Agency is also participating in the “IP Traceback” drafting group, named Q6/17, which is meeting next week in Geneva to work on the traceback proposal. Members of Q6/17 have declined to release key documents, and meetings are closed to the public.
- Tech sabotage during the Cold War - The result was the most monumental nonnuclear explosion and fire ever seen from space. At the White House, we received warning from our infrared satellites of some bizarre event in the middle of Soviet nowhere. NORAD feared a missile liftoff from a place where no rockets were known to be based. Or perhaps it was a detonation of a small nuclear device. The Air Force chief of intelligence rated it at 3 kilotons, but he was puzzled by the silence of the Vela satellites. They had detected no electromagnetic pulse, characteristic of nuclear detonations. Before these conflicting indicators could turn into an international crisis, Gus Weiss came down the hall to tell his fellow NSC staffers not to worry. It took him another 20 years to tell me why.
- What a Botnet Looks Like - CSO Online - Security and Risk - Researcher David Vorel mapped interconnected, bot-infected IP addresses and created this geometric representation; CSO contributor Scott Berinato annotated the map and added interactive controls so you can zoom in and explore botnets’ inner workings.
- Shadowserver Foundation - Main - HomePage - Established in 2004, The Shadowserver Foundation gathers intelligence on the darker side of the internet. We are comprised of volunteer security professionals from around the world. Our mission is to understand and help put a stop to high stakes cybercrime in the information age.
- Social Science Research Council (SSRC) Blogs - The Social Science Research Council is now developing a series of blogs, organized around various topics of interest and edited by experts in their respective fields. We hope the blogs will create new opportunities for discussion, debate, analysis, and networking among social scientists and interested readers.
- Moroccan hacker arrested for web virus launch (Magharebia.com) - The pair is believed to responsible for unleashing the worm that disrupted computer operations in mid-August at several large news organisations, including The Associated Press, ABC, CNN, and The New York Times.
- The BioBricks Foundation - Using BioBrick™ standard biological parts, a synthetic biologist or biological engineer can already, to some extent, program living organisms in the same way a computer scientist can program a computer.
- MayDay! MayDay! Ruskies reinvent cyber crime - Researchers have unearthed two previously undetected botnets that exhibit sophisticated new capabilities that could significantly advance the dark art of cyber crime.
- Tracking down the Ron Paul spam botnet | Channel Register - More specifically, he’s uncovered new information about “Reactor Mailer,” the sophisticated piece of spamware used by Ukrainians to send the Ron Paul messages to more than 162 million addresses.
- New technique sees into tissue at greater depth, resolution - By coupling a kicked-up version of microscopy with miniscule particles of gold, Duke University scientists are now able to peer so deep into living tissue that they can see molecules interacting.
- Slashdot | Best Reference Site For Each Programming Language? -
Links for 17 September 2008:
- Duchenne - Guillaume Benjamin Amand Duchenne was French neurologist, who was first to describe several nervous and muscular disorders and, in developing medical treatment for them, created electrodiagnosis and electrotherapy. He applied electrodes for recording the path that electricity took in a contracting muscle’s fibres. Duchenne investigated every major superficial muscle with his development and application of surface electrodes, which were used to measure abnormal and normal muscle action.
- Images from the Cultural Revolution 文化大革命图片库档 - These galleries with photographs cover various aspects of the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution 文化大革命 in China (generally dated 1966-1976).
- FFFFOUND! - image bookmarking
- GPS Spoofing - Jon used a desktop computer attached to a GPS satellite simulator to create a fake GPS signal. Portable GPS satellite simulators can fit in the trunk of a car, and are often used for testing. They are available as commercial off-the-shelf products.
- J. Craig Venter Institute: About / Overview - Today all these organizations have become one large multidisciplinary genomic-focused organization. With more than 400 scientists and staff, more than 250,000 square feet of laboratory space, and locations in Rockville, Maryland and La Jolla, California, the new JCVI is a world leader in genomic research.
- PARC Forum Archive - Many recent PARC Forum presentations are available below. Each title link includes an abstract and speaker bio, as well as streaming video and downloadable audio podcasts.