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So, even if I were to use one from the list, a hacker might still need 500 tries to crack it
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Another case of the viral web & online protests
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Interesting suggestions – should make for a nice change in perspective
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The defining post for the internet OS. Quite an exhaustive one at that.
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A thermal map of the satellite that resembles pacman
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Wonder how all the data will be used
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The detailed document is also embedded from scribd – http://www.scribd.com/doc/29115406
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Interesting online application to build up reference points\scales for numbers
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Companion site for the book of the same name.
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A video of the entire flight is also available. Nice for sightseeing.
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So now we can really say ow.. ow.. ow…
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… or into an ad watching extravaganza
Month: March 2010
links for 2010-03-29
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There you go: 'Scientists have finally confirmed what the rest of us have suspected for years: Bacon, cheesecake, and other delicious yet fattening foods may be addictive.'
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A real legend & possible one of the greatest before Bradman
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Also includes a greasemonkey script that works with Safari
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A livejournal community for vintage ads. Quite a collection. Mainly US ads though.
links for 2010-03-28
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How much is enough?
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Not all that extreme, but quite a few extraordinary shots
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Quite a list
links for 2010-03-26
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Gravity I suppose, not to forget the radiation.
'Scientists have found that if a nuclear weapon did blow an asteroid apart, it could reassemble itself in a very short period of time, continuing its path to death and destruction.' -
The original speech
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The Matrix… Are we there yet?
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Result of a competition apparently
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Quite a videos
Always read the fine print with Reliance: Case BIG Cinemas
I had the fortune to get hold of a couple of free ticket vouchers (3+1 offer) when a bunch of us went for the Avatar 3D show at IMAX (Wadala, Mumbai) in December. They were valid till 31st March 2010 & so 3 of us thought why not catch up on Alice in Wonderland 3D using those. Unfortunately, we chose to go to the R-City multiplex this time & here’s a summary of what happened:
- I go to the counter & ask for 3 tickets & give the person the two vouchers & the cash for the remainder ticket.
- He looks at the vouchers & informs me that they’re not valid in here as they don’t contain the R-City stamp & he shows me a sample voucher with such a stamp.
- I then ask to speak to the manager as the voucher seems to suggest that it should be valid at any BIG Cinemas.
- We speak to the manager & he kindly informs us that:
- Sorry, but the vouchers are valid only at the branch where they were issued. So, our barcode readers here won’t be able to process those vouchers. (So much for integrated systems & CRM)
- It was mainly a promotional strategy to increase the audience in each branch separately. (Duh!)
- We decide to watch it anyway & pay the sum for all the 3 tickets.
Lessons learnt
Have a look at the voucher first, interpret the barcode & the fine print too:
The clauses 1, 14 & 15 are particularly interesting. 1 is as vague as can be. Moreover clause 14 pretty much ensures that they can give you the boot any time. As for the movie, it was pretty decent, though the 3D effects were nowhere close to Avatar (sitting in the last row probably didn’t help, which was in spite of me asking for tickets towards the front – that’s another story).
All said & done, I do regret not having learnt to read barcode in my 18 years of education (school + engineering + management).
links for 2010-03-24
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Series of posts leading up to the picking of the worst company in America for the year. Wonder who'll win.
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Useful utility to help troubleshoot & repair OS installations. Available in both CD & USB versions.
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Software to track the activity of employees online. Wonder what this means for privacy.
via http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/social_sentry_track_employees_across_the_web.php
links for 2010-03-23
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Who'd have thought of applying carbon dating to wine
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Some really costly mistakes.
An example: 'In 2006, an broker for Mizuho Securities in Japan wanted to sell off a share of J-Com stock. The price he wanted? ¥610,000. So he entered it into the system and then noticed something slightly off. He realized that he told the system to sell 610,000 shares for ¥1 each.'
links for 2010-03-22
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So how much of it does actually happen?
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I still prefer my apps to be free
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'The discussion started innocuously enough, within Bug #532633 in light-themes (Ubuntu) on Launchpad, where the order of the window controls within the Light theme were requested to be re-arranged to be on the upper right side of any given window. Light, it seemed, now placed the buttons on the left side, similar to the Mac OS X interface. '
'It's critical to recognize that open source does not bring complete democracy to software development. It never did, and it never should. Ultimately, someone in the developer chain will have to make the tough calls.' -
I used the more mundane buses & autorickshaws & the likes
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Useful guide
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The changing face of online referrals
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Very interesting technology. Can turn out to be of immense value if it can be extended to organs.
links for 2010-03-20
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A handy list of tools not just for remote media streaming & control, but also for remote desktop usage
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The top 10 real life quotes from a magazine contest. Real gems.
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An interesting image creation tool in the form of flames
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A set of online tools for image & media editing
links for 2010-03-19
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Just a matter of scaling it up then
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A handy guide to use vmware to setup a virtual WinXP installation
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A handy tutorial with a humorous presentation
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Toothpicks can be really handy & so can the photoshop clone tool
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The puzzle: 'There are three guardians, A, B and C. Their names are Knight, Knave and Chaos. Knight always speaks truly, Knave always lies. Chaos tossed a coin this morning to decide whether today he would behave like Knight or like Knave.
Your task is simple: ask three yes-no questions, each of a single guardian, and determine which is Knight, which is Knave, and which is Chaos. There is, alas, a complication: the guardians understand English but will answer in the local language, in which “Da” means yes and “Ja” means no. Or possibly “Ja” means yes and “Da” means no – you cannot remember.'
There's apparently an entire page on wikipedia for the puzzle including a solution – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hardest_Logic_Puzzle_Ever -
NASA technology and macrophotography come together to produce a stunning set of images of the real alien ant farm.
A clear gel that holds up in zero gravity & during take off to make special ant farms for NASA