👋 A few friends in the U.S. have recently asked me how to get into cybersecurity, where to start, whether to go for a degree or certification, where to find work, etc. If you have any ideas or resources on this topic that I can pass along, please share them here.
Lewis Carroll invented the nyctograph so he could write at night, in the dark, without lighting a candle First, a stencil of many squares let him write each letter Then, a special encoded "font" that only uses the outside edges of the squares let him write perfectly neatly
In case you've ever struggled with recursion, the structure that my teacher taught me forever ago that has alway led me right: You want to do three things, always, in a specific order: * Terminate (check to see if you're done, and just return) * Iterate (increment/change some val) * Recurse
Oh, this lipstick shade? Thanks it's actually just sauce from samyang buldak artificial spicy chicken flavor ramen
I got envious of seeing someone’s KBDCraft Lego keyboard kit, so I made my own! The PCB is from an Inland MK-47. By chance, it fits nicely into a Lego chassis. I whipped up some stand offs that snap to the Lego, and off I went! I want to do a second pass someday, but I’m satisfied for now. :3
"Telnet service is enabled when the WAN port is plugged in, allowing remote access with hard-coded credentials." www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/securit... How is this not considered a backdoor? D-Link, the company who has been producing devices since the 80's has somehow made the same mistake.
D-Link has fixed critical vulnerabilities in three popular wireless router models that allow remote attackers to execute arbitrary code or access the devices using hardcoded credentials.
I *really* want a flip-dot display but they're expensive and kind of inaccessible. Now I'm wondering if printed coils on a PCB would fit into the original design.