0 minutes, 10 seconds
After we finally got our fancy squeeze bottles, we’ve been practicing making fancy pancakes. I’m still pretty rusty, but having fun! Here’s two abstract shapes and one other which you can likely (hopefully) tell what it is:
0 minutes, 10 seconds
After we finally got our fancy squeeze bottles, we’ve been practicing making fancy pancakes. I’m still pretty rusty, but having fun! Here’s two abstract shapes and one other which you can likely (hopefully) tell what it is:
0 minutes, 24 seconds
I got this slipped in my door the other day:
It’s lame. It uses fancy pants legal lingo to attempt to convince you that you’re in deep poop if you don’t send them money right away. I get postcards for car insurance too, but I forgot to save them. Next one I get I’ll update this post.
Doing a spot of research shows the problem is rampant. Doubly lame.
Source: markturner.net
Source oppositelock.jalopnik.com
0 minutes, 0 seconds
0 minutes, 30 seconds
I’m working on a chrome app. Maybe you are too! Maybe you want to do the old view-the-app-command-tab-back-to-editor-make-quick-tweak-save-command-tab-back-to-the-app-and-want-to-quickly-reload thang? Maybe you can’t reload your app quickly, like a good ol’ web page with “command + R” (or “ctrl + R” on windows)? Maybe you even saw that there’s a bug on file to fix this?
May I introduce the triple escape hack! If you add this snippet at the top of your app, all you need to do is hit the “esc” key 3 times and your app will reload:
var escCounter = 0; $(document).keyup(function(e) { if (e.keyCode == 27) { escCounter++ if (escCounter > 2){ chrome.runtime.reload() } } // esc });
Feel free to salt to taste with other key combos!
3 minutes, 45 seconds
I’m on the plane back home having just attended Hope X in NYC. What fun! I’ve attended other hacker conferences, and I found Hope to be comparable.
As prep for attending, I wondered if it would be OK to carry on my lock pick set (side note: I think there’s an overlap of hackers and gun fans). Since I’m not on social media, my friend posted to her network about carrying on picks. She’s friends with a lot of hacker-lock-pick types and we got back some great responses. Here’s a bunch of anecdotal, if not contradicting, advice if you’re considering doing the same:
other countries are much saner than TSA.
Spouse’s are going in the checked bag, but mostly because there are other more pointy things in the same kit this trip. Other times they have gone carry-on. Domestically, it’s “probably” ok if you aren’t already one of TSA’s special customers. I’m sure PreCheck doesn’t hurt, either.
TSA has their own special set of bullshit to deal with. Avoid when possible.
all I can say is that wearing them as jewelry works out fine. I don’t know that I’d want to carry them.
Lockpicks can be carried on if your not a jerk. I have flown with mine and up to 50 sets(pics did happen).
I carried mine through LAS last year. TSA found them-Nevada police told then to shut up
I have been carrying an extended serepick set in my wallet for years with zero issues.
I’ve never had any issues packing mine in carry-on bags. I think I’ve traveled to/from 3-4 DefCons, + trips to SFO/PDX/LAX YMMV
added a 8″ shovit tool to carryon and had no problem through 6 or so countries so far.
As to my own experience? I had zero problems flying from LAS -> JFK and from JFK -> LAS. Though, I will say I was *SUPER* bummed I didn’t have my backpack with picks on me when I saw world lock pick champion Jos Weyers at the lockpick village. I coulda bugged him about how to pick tubulars. Next time!
The conference itself was awesome. It had the mix of talks that were spectacular and ones that were so so. The complete list is below, but here’s some highlights:
Steepest Dissent: Small Scale Digital Fabrication
SecureDrop: A WikiLeaks in Every Newsroom
Keynote Address – Daniel Ellsberg
A Conversation with Edward Snowden
Usable Crypto: New Progress in Web Cryptography
Movie: “The Internet’s Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz”
Ethical Questions and Best Practices for Service Providers in the Post-Snowden Era
PRISM-Proof Email: Why Email Is Insecure and How We Are Fixing It