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Videos (19) | Sift Talk (0) | Blogs (2) | Comments (64) |
Videos (19) | Sift Talk (0) | Blogs (2) | Comments (64) |
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The dance of the Earth and Venus around the sun
Reminded me of a *quality Windows 95© screensaver.
Super Trolling: Rickrolling with fake parking tickets
Most QR reading apps show you the URL or other QR code contents before doing anything with it. They don't just go to the URL automatically unless you tell it to do so (none that I've used anyway). I'm assuming if there were a program for desktop/laptop PCs that reads QR codes, it would behave similarly. Standard QR codes can't really contain anything other than text data, because they are extremely limited in the number of bytes they can represent. Generally, they're used to store a website URL or similar type of thing.
I've never heard of a web-based attack that would automatically infect you. There would be some sort of confirmation or you'd need to run some piece of software manually in order to get infected. JavaScript doesn't have the ability to actually break out of the browser, so there's nothing it could really do at a system level. If it downloaded software, you would need to let it install before there was any risk.
I've heard of screensavers, back in the like, Windows 95/98 days, where if you used it, you could become infected. But that's no different. Screensavers (at least back then) were nothing more than specialized .exe files, so you're just running a program like any other thing.
If you're dumb enough to click a link and then install the software it downloads, then you're not exercising proper basic security principles and you kind of deserve to learn a lesson anyway.
I consider a cell phone a hand held computer. I started computing on an Apple2, so the power of a cell phone certainly meets the definition in my eyes.
Also, my PC has a decent camera built in. One could just as easily scan it into their PC, no? If not, why not?
I've never have a cell phone (FREAK!...What?! Who said that?!), so I don't really know how those QR codes work.
I just assumed that phones are nearly as vulnerable as computers, and I know that just opening a web page CAN infect your system, even with anti-virus software and without clicking/intentionally installing anything. Some viruses auto-download once you're on the site with no notice, or a fake notice pretending to be a 'I've read the terms of service' or 'I agree' boxes and downloading to hidden files in the background in ways only IT specialists would notice.
I know that I've seen many reports claiming that many 'fremium' games include Trojan horse programs that track your phone usage, location, and in some cases steal your information. I'm just guessing that the same thing is possible without the game attached. It wouldn't be difficult on a PC to use a link/web page to auto-infect visitors, I'm just guessing the same goes for 'hand held computers'.
I think "literally zero risk" is a bit much. Possibly extremely unlikely, but certainly not really zero risk.
Super Hydrophobic Surface and Magnetic Liquid
Nerdgasm.. and yes nice bokeh effect.
If I had those set on loop as a screensaver I'd never take my eyes off it.
Rotating Moon Mosaic Is the Most Accurate You've Ever Seen
I want this as a screensaver, NOW!
The Simpsons 130 Simultaneous Episodes Experiment
I want a screensaver that does this. You have a library of videos and it tries to randomly fill the screen with videos from your library, starting at arbitrary times, and looping them all. If you don't have enough videos within your specified library to fill the specified number of video tiles, it will reuse items from the library, but they will start at different times.
If I could develop that, it would be awesome.
Love You Honey! (Viral Talk Post)
>> ^alien_concept:
she might walk past while the screensaver has kicked in, hahaha
But she has to move the screen saver--and she's addicted to the comp, so she'll be back on today
Love You Honey! (Viral Talk Post)
she might walk past while the screensaver has kicked in, hahaha
The Drunk Office Hook-up
that's a desktop image, not a screensaver! jeez, amateur mistake.
Stephen Colbert Sings "Friday" Late Night with Jimmy Fallon
>> ^Kofi:
I was really hoping for Rebecca to appear. I feel sorry for that tone-deaf spoilt little brat. Hope she doesn't become too emotionally scarred from all this.
Don't worry, she has her own channel on Funny or Die, and they gave her videos a special voting setup - instead of "Die" Or "Funny" for choices you have "Monday" or "Friday". She is milking this thing for all it is worth, and good for her. She's still just a kid, yet she seems to be taking it all in stride rather than letting it crush her soul.
Besides, her 15 minutes are almost up, and at least it her song didn't rocket up the charts like some other crap did in the past:
Aye yay yay, how come so many people to this day still think MacArthur Park is anything other than a horrible song? We all may be part of the problem.
Mitchell and Webb - Arse Store (Apple Store Parody)
the default desktop background for an arse computer is goatse.cx. Luckily they were all in screensaver mode!
kronosposeidon (Member Profile)
NP, KP.
In reply to this comment by kronosposeidon:
Thank you very much, my Finnish friend!
In reply to this comment by Norsuelefantti:
*promote
Norsuelefantti (Member Profile)
Thank you very much, my Finnish friend!
In reply to this comment by Norsuelefantti:
*promote
I Can Has Gravity? - Weightless Cats
O_O.. I want those silly flip floppin' space cats as a screensaver or somethin'.
IBM's Watson supercomputer destroys all humans in Jeopardy
>> ^spawnflagger:
From the latter half of the video it seems Watson will only buzz in if the probability of a correct answer is very high (green). If they set the cut-off lower, say 60%, it would have buzzed in much more often.
By the title of the video, I assumed that "destroy" meant the humans would have 0 points... It would have been much more intimidating if they had a "Cyberdyne Systems Model 101" standing between the 2 humans instead of a screensaver.
KILL KILL KILL!
IBM's Watson supercomputer destroys all humans in Jeopardy
From the latter half of the video it seems Watson will only buzz in if the probability of a correct answer is very high (green). If they set the cut-off lower, say 60%, it would have buzzed in much more often.
By the title of the video, I assumed that "destroy" meant the humans would have 0 points... It would have been much more intimidating if they had a "Cyberdyne Systems Model 101" standing between the 2 humans instead of a screensaver.