Beth Riesgraf and Aldis Hodge as Parker & Hardison in LEVERAGE: REDEMPTION (2021—)

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@forapenny-forapound
Beth Riesgraf and Aldis Hodge as Parker & Hardison in LEVERAGE: REDEMPTION (2021—)
i think i tend to forget how good boredom is for creativity because we're all so addicted to numbing ourselves with screens and stimulation. but standing in the shower or going for a walk with no music or just sitting in your bedroom without being allowed to touch any screens & all of a sudden i have multiple new projects to start, a solution to a months-long plot problem & 4 new original characters
Beyond lockpicking: learn about the class-breaks for doors, locks, hinges and other physical security measures
Deviant Ollam is runs a physical security penetration testing company called The Core Group; in a flat-out amazing, riveting presentation from the 2017 Wild West Hackin’ Fest, Ollam – a master lockpicker – describes how lockpicking is a last resort for the desperate, while the wily and knowledgeable gain access by attacking doors and locks with tools that quickly and undetectably open them.
Ollam’s techniques are just laugh-out-loud fantastic to watch: from removing the pins in hinges and lifting doors away from their high-security locks to sliding cheap tools between doors or under them to turn thumb-levers, bypass latches, and turn handles. My favorite were the easy-exit sensors that can be tricked into opening a pair of doors by blowing vape smoke (or squirting water, or releasing a balloon) through the crack down their middle.
But more than anything, Ollam’s lecture reminds me of the ground truth that anyone who learns lockpicking comes to: physical security is a predatory scam in which shoddy products are passed off onto naive consumers who have no idea how unfit for purpose they are.
When locksport began, locksmiths were outraged that their long-held “secret” ways of bypassing, tricking and confounding locks had entered the public domain – they accused the information security community of putting the public at risk by publishing the weaknesses in their products (infosec geeks also get accused of this every time they point out the weaknesses in digital products, of course).
But the reality is that “bad guys” know about (and exploit) these vulnerabilities already. The only people in the dark about them are the suckers who buy them and rely on them.
So when Ollam reveals that thousands of American cop cars, fleet cars, and taxis can all be unlocked and started using a shared key that you can literally buy for a few bucks at Home Depot, or that most elevators can be bypassed with a similarly widely available key, or that most file cabinets and other small locks can be opened with a third key, or that most digital entry systems can be bypassed in seconds with a paperclip (or another common physical key), he’s doing important (and hilarious!) work.
He’s such an engaging speaker and the subject matter is nothing short of fantastic. There are a hundred heist novels in this talk alone. It’s definitely my must-watch for the week.
https://boingboing.net/2019/06/14/fools-paradise-lost.html
Here are some of his recent talks on youtube to watch or put on in the background:
Through the eyes of a thief (2023)
Elevator Hacking - From the Pit to the Penthouse (2022)
I'm desperate for Leverage: Redemption to do some kind of rodeo scam, entirely for the purpose of getting Eliot back on a horse and showing off some tricks (that Christian Kane would inevitably insist on learning and doing himself)
ICU Materials part 1
After 4 years of volunteering in the ICU of the local hospital for respiratory diseases I’ve finally started to really understand a lot of the diagnostic procedures and the meaning of their results.
So I’ve decided to share with you some of the materials I use to study the ICU Stuff:
ABG interpretation
https://abg.ninja/abg - The site gives you a results from ABG analysis and you have to make a reading of them, then it show you if you are correct or wrong and gives you a full description why. On this site there some other very nice medical quzzes as well - Glasgow coma scale, Cranial Nerves, Basic ECG etc.
Lung function tests
http://www.ums.ac.uk/umj080/080(2)084.pdf
http://www.ics.gencat.cat/3clics/guies/184/img/–americanfamilyphysician.pdf In these PDFs the basic aproach to spirometry is described, everything you need to know when you stumble across spirometry results.
Coagulation tests
http://thrombosiscanada.ca/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/Bloody_Easy_Coag_2013.pdf
http://www.pathology.vcu.edu/clinical/coag/Lab%20Hemostasis.pdf Very consise and well writen guidelines for coagulation tests interpretations.
Chest radiology
https://lane.stanford.edu/portals/cvicu/HCP_Respiratory-Pulmoanry_Tab_2/Chest_X-rays.pdf
http://www.southsudanmedicaljournal.com/assets/files/Journals/vol_1_iss_2_may_08/how%20to%20read%20a%20cxr.pdf Basic guidelines for reading a Chest X-ray
Echography - Ultrasound Imaging
http://www.sah.org.au/assets/files/PDFs/For%20Doctors/2011-crit-care-us-heart.pdf
http://www.cardioegypt.com/cardioeg/ACSCA2014-Presentations/002001.pdf
http://www.annalsofintensivecare.com/content/pdf/2110-5820-4-1.pdf
http://www.cardiovascularultrasound.com/content/pdf/1476-7120-12-25.pdf
http://www.ccforum.com/content/pdf/cc5668.pdf Very simple and easy to understand presentations for the newbies(like me) in Ultrasound imaging. To be continued…
everyone should always be memorising poems. being able to recite a poem is a fun way to make everyone around you roll their eyes.
Content warning: abuse. Our culture’s view of domestic abuse lacks imagination. A quick Google image search for the term shows image after i
@bitchesgetriches
Eliot: I came ALL THIS WAY
Eliot: to SAVE YOU
Eliot: and now you want to go BACK INTO THE HELLISH SITUATION I JUST PULLED YOU OUT OF?!
Eliot:
Eliot: ugh fine
accurate
petition for tim to steal inherit more of jason's identities since he already got robin and red robin from him
Image Description: A screenshot from Kehlani's Next 2 U music video. "We tried to make a scroll honoring the names of thousands of deceased children. The list was so long that our fastest scroll at 3 minutes was illegible. The Link to the casualties is provided in the description through Al Jazeera. Please Take a moment to scroll at your own pace."
Here is a link to the mentioned list.
One out of every 100 children in Gaza has been killed by Israeli attacks since October 7.
I noticed today that the deadname of a client was clearly visible in their client file because it was their legal name, and flagged it for IT. I specifically flagged it as "Hey, if someone sees this and calls our client the wrong name, we'll lose them as a client." IT emailed me back immediately, and it's now invisible except on their contract with us, which the majority of us don't have direct access to, as opposed to their client file.
The reason I flagged it framing it as a loss is that what matters to most companies is money. If you can flag a bigoted practice as something that will lose customers, clients, or get them a lawsuit, that is significantly more likely to get taken care of quickly than trying to appeal to their better nature. I could have flagged it as "Hey, this is going to make our client really upset if they hear it.", which was my actual motivation for flagging it, but if I had, then it probably would have been taken care of in a few days or even weeks, not hours.
Always hit them with the profit argument for quick and decisive action.
Source
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Johannesburg, the capital of South Africa, has also been dancing along this knife's edge for a couple years.
The lesson there for people in cities that have yet to face these problems is that these scenarios often don't mean zero water, but scarce water with the lion's share going to the wealthy.
And what's more, water is critical to just about every facet of life. I don't know off hand about how much hydro power is used in Mexico but agriculture and industry can both slow down just due to a lack of access to water at all. That problem can be compounded in situations like Ecuador where low water levels also mean daily electricity shortages.
My tasks for the day could be like take a nap in the sun and I’m still like fuckkkkkkkk
Eurasian jays can remember incidental details of past events, which is characteristic of episodic memory in humans, according to a study pub
Eurasian jays can remember incidental details of past events, which is characteristic of episodic memory in humans, according to a study published May 15, 2024, in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by James Davies of the University of Cambridge, U.K., and colleagues. When remembering events, humans have the ability of "mental time travel," consciously reimagining past experiences and potentially recalling details that seemed unimportant at the time. Some researchers have suggested that this "episodic memory" is unique to humans. In this study, Davies and colleagues ran a memory experiment to test for episodic-like memory in seven Eurasian jays, birds that excel at remembering the location of stored food.
Continue Reading.
@todaysbird
corvids are way more advanced than people give them credit for. i’m so grateful towards all the interest in pursuing research on them because it’s (slowly) paving the way for a more progressive understanding of animal intelligence
Take the memory, leave the shell! Watch what happens when we return seashells to the beach & marine hermit crabs!
Seashells are so important to beaches for a whole host of reasons.
🐚Over-shelling can affect hermit crabs because it reduces the availability of suitable shells for them to inhabit. Hermit crabs rely on empty shells of other creatures for protection and shelter. When there are too few shells available, hermit crabs may be forced to inhabit inadequate shells & pollution as homes, which can hinder their growth and make them more vulnerable to predators and environmental stressors. This can ultimately impact their survival and reproductive success.
🐚Shells provide homes or attachment surfaces for algae, sea grass, sponges, coral and a host of other microorganisms.
🐚Animals such as decorator crabs and octopus use shells as camouflage and many fish use shells as hiding places to avoid predators.
🐚Shells help to stabilize beaches and anchor seagrass.
🐚Shells are used by shorebirds to build nests.
🐚When shells break down, they provide nutrients for the organisms living in the sand or for those that build their own shells. (Shells are a major source of calcium.) I’m a firm believer in when we know better, we do better. I once shelled, and then when I learned all of this, I returned all shells that were not sprayed with a clear varnish to the beach & watched the marine hermit crabs go wild changing shells that were so needed!
Have you ever stopped to wonder why, when attempting to enter a website, you are suddenly asked to prove your own humanity? And furthermore,
This is horrifyingly true.
San Jose invited tech companies to mount cameras on a vehicle in what appears to be first-of-its-kind experiment
If you get a captcha asking you to identify the tents or the RV's, request a new captcha. Stop snitching now includes making sure you're logging in online ethically I guess?
actually not emotional over graduating university, just over losing my jstor access
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