“It is not enough to have a good mind, the main thing is to use it well.”
Rene Descartes (via madddscience)
Sweet Seals For You, Always
KIROKAZE
One Nice Bug Per Day
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
h
macklin celebrini has autism

Kiana Khansmith

tannertan36
Jules of Nature
art blog(derogatory)
todays bird
taylor price
sheepfilms

⁂
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Show & Tell
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
No title available

oozey mess
wallacepolsom
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Singapore
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Japan
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
@pmmeyourhitlers
“It is not enough to have a good mind, the main thing is to use it well.”
Rene Descartes (via madddscience)
Fans sent an X-wing into space hoping to score Star Wars tickets.
Now that’s dedication.
Alien computer screens
Emma can move on her own now. There are a couple of bugs but I can sort of clumsily drive her around the room over Bluetooth using the motor command I added to the monitor over the past week. I stayed away from it for as long as I could but the battery and breadboard are the first parts to really be held on by tape (the power switch doesn't really count right? :p). The motor driver board's firmware needs some work (it needs better cohesion with the main board firmware) eventually I'll put it all on github but git is such a pain on windows and avr studio is such a pain everywhere else.
okay but this one is all too real
the first infomercial ad that makes sense
I think the whole point of being with someone is so you can talk to them and let go of everything, and even when you’re at your worst, they still like you, they still want to speak to you and care about you.
— Unknown (via fearlessknightsandfairytales)
I think the thing I like so much about this is the simulated distortion around the sun.
FBI Director James Comey gave a speech yesterday reiterating the FBI’s nearly twenty-year-old talking points about why it wants to reduce the security in your devices, rather than help you increase it. Here’s EFF’s response:
The FBI should not be in the business of trying to convince companies to offer less security to their customers. It should be doing just the opposite. But that’s what Comey is proposing—undoing a clear legal protection we fought hard for in the 1990s.1 The law specifically ensures that a company is not required to essentially become an agent of the FBI rather than serving your security and privacy interests. Congress rightly decided that companies (and free and open source projects and anyone else building our tools) should be allowed to provide us with the tools to lock our digital information up just as strongly as we can lock up our physical goods. That’s what Comey wants to undo.
It’s telling that his remarks echo so closely the arguments of that era. Compare them, for example, with this comment from former FBI Director Louis Freeh in May of 1995, now nearly twenty years ago:
[W]e’re in favor of strong encryption, robust encryption. The country needs it, industry needs it. We just want to make sure we have a trap door and key under some judge’s authority where we can get there if somebody is planning a crime.
Now just as then, the FBI is trying to convince the world that some fantasy version of security is possible—where “good guys” can have a back door or extra key to your home but bad guys could never use it. Anyone with even a rudimentary understanding of security can tell you that’s just not true. So the “debate” Comey calls for is phony, and we suspect he knows it. Instead, Comey wants everybody to have weak security, so that when the FBI decides somebody is a “bad guy,” it has no problem collecting personal data.
That’s bad science, it’s bad law, it’s bad for companies serving a global marketplace that may not think the FBI is always a “good guy,” and it’s bad for every person who wants to be sure that their data is as protected as possible—whether from ordinary criminals hacking into their email provider, rogue governments tracking them for politically organizing, or competing companies looking for their trade secrets.
Perhaps Comey’s speech is saber rattling. Maybe it’s an attempt to persuade the American people that we’ve undertaken significant reforms in light of the Snowden revelations—the U.S. government has not—and that it’s time for the “pendulum” to swing back. Or maybe by putting this issue in play, the FBI may hope to draw our eyes away from, say, its attempt to water down the National Security Letter reform that Congress is considering. It’s difficult to tell.
But if the FBI gets its way and convinces Congress to change the law, or even if it convinces companies like Apple that make our tools and hold our data to weaken the security they offer to us, we’ll all end up less secure and enjoying less privacy. Or as the Fourth Amendment puts it: we’ll be be less “secure in our papers and effects.”
For more on EFF’s coverage of the “new” Crypto Wars, read this article focusing on the security issues we wrote last week in Vice. And going back even earlier, a broader update to a piece we wrote in 2010, which itself was was based on our fights in the 90s. If the FBI wants to try to resurrect this old debate, EFF will be in strong opposition, just as we were 20 years ago. That’s because—just like 20 years ago—the Internet needs more, not less, strong encryption.
19c2e79a2f00838859d851edac9747350c15b33b8fb4cfee1008c7d0b678c78c *-
There are no physicists in the hottest parts of hell, because the existence of a “hottest part” implies a temperature difference, and any marginally competent physicist would immediately use this to run a heat engine and make some other part of hell comfortably cool. This is obviously impossible.
Richard Davisson (1922—2004); Physicist (via unixfortune)
internet friends are kinda like illegally downloaded friends. you don’t get the physical copy but you still get all the great content
#i’d illegally download you all
Spent pretty much all day writing a small monitor program for the teensy so I can upload and test navigation code without having to physically interact with the robot (which a friend of mine has named "Emma"). I'll probably release it with the rest of the firmware source code when I feel it's ready.
I loved this movie! Especially the scene where it looks like they're programming the weapons from a rigged up laptop in the car. The whole thing is just so cyberpunk :D
Disney Vs. Smash Bros
Mickey x Mario, Goofy x Luigi, Robin Hood x Star Fox, Stitch x Pikachu, Russel x Ness, Pete x Bowser, Abu x Diddy Kong, Olaf x Kirby, Peter Pan x Link
I love this.
Testing the motor driver for the new chassis I got to replace the old one that was 90% electrical tape.
"Now buy a house!" (smbc-comics)
Soon.
The bestest time of the year
Apparently that's a thing........ :p