Just to clarify, which CIA are we talking about here?
Posts by allthecoolshortnamesweretaken
6157 publicly visible posts • joined 20 Oct 2015
Page:
- ← Prev
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
- 11
- 12
- 13
- 14
- 15
- 16
- 17
- 18
- 19
- 20
- 21
- 22
- 23
- 24
- 25
- 26
- 27
- 28
- 29
- 30
- 31
- 32
- 33
- 34
- 35
- 36
- 37
- 38
- 39
- 40
- 41
- 42
- 43
- 44
- 45
- 46
- 47
- 48
- 49
- 50
- 51
- 52
- 53
- 54
- 55
- 56
- 57
- 58
- 59
- 60
- 61
- 62
- 63
- 64
- 65
- 66
- 67
- 68
- 69
- 70
- 71
- 72
- 73
- 74
- 75
- 76
- 77
- 78
- 79
- 80
- 81
- 82
- 83
- 84
- 85
- 86
- 87
- 88
- 89
- 90
- 91
- 92
- 93
- 94
- 95
- 96
- 97
- 98
- 99
- 100
- 101
- 102
- 103
- 104
- 105
- 106
- 107
- 108
- 109
- 110
- 111
- 112
- 113
- 114
- 115
- 116
- 117
- 118
- 119
- 120
- 121
- 122
- 123
- 124
- Next →
Leicestershire teen admits attempting to hack director of the CIA
How bad can the new spying legislation be? Exhibit 1: it's called the USA Liberty Act
After seven-hour operation, the ISS has a new 'hand'
Support team discovers 'official' vendor paper doesn't rob you blind
As this particular product has been already above and as this thread is mostly about barcode scanners: You can now buy CueCats on Amazon Prime. I understand they can be modded and used in various projects.
Blade Runner 2049: Back to the Future – the movies that showed us what's to come
" [...] why does Deckard need the slow and unwieldy Voight-Kampff machine to spot a skin-job when replicants can pluck eggs from boiling water and have trademarks built into their skin cells?"
False positives? Because the tests you suggest would amount to torture when performed on an actual human. And hopefully, in the future we won't do that anymore.
"Skin jobs". That's what Bryant called Replicants. In history books he's the kind of cop who used to call black men "niggers".
What does the Moon 4bn years ago and Yahoo! towers this week have in common? Both had an awful atmosphere
Hipster disruptor? Never trust a well-groomed caveman with your clams
Re: And then, back in the ancient days of 2016, The Caveman Martini was invented...
The perfect Martini (for IT persons).
(Cued video link in really bad quality. If cue doesn't work, FF to 48:30.)
Open your doors to white hats before black hats blow them off, US deputy AG urges big biz
Google touts Babel Fish-esque in-ear real-time translators. And the usual computer stuff
Biochem boffins win the Nobel Prize for cryo-electron microscopy
Splunk hits Oracle's Larry where it hurts: His failure to win America's Cup boat race
US Senate stamps the gas pedal on law to flood America's streets with self-driving cars
Commodore 64 makes a half-sized comeback
Re: "Essentially they are reducing home computers to games machines."
"They replaced consoles for some time probably because games were much easier to pirate - and maybe even because owning a personal computer had some "cool" factor, and parents saw them less as a pure game machine only."
Main selling point. Parents wouldn't buy you a console (like, say an ATARI), but you could talk them into buying you a home computer for school work... Not that this was entirely untrue.
Microsoft shows off Windows 10 Second Li, er, Mixed Reality
White House plan to nuke social security numbers is backed by Equifax's ex-top boss
Developers' timezone fail woke half of New Zealand
Town wants Amazon's new HQ so much it plans to split off new town called 'Amazon'
Dropbox thinks outside the … we can't go there, not when a box becomes a 'collection of surfaces'
Russian telco backs up North Korea's sole Internet link
Rosetta probe's final packets massaged into new snap of Comet 67P
What is the probability of being drunk at work and also being tested? Let's find out! Correctly
Hollywood has savaged enough sci-fi classics – let's hope Dick would dig Blade Runner 2049
Somewhat off topic, but an excellent comment on the trailer-is-a-spoiler problem.
The Clippy of NetApp is an IBM Watson-powered cartoon robot called Elio
Home Sec Amber Rudd: Yeah, I don't understand encryption. So what?
The axeman strikes again: Microsoft has real commitment issues
Physicists win Nobel Prize for spotting ripples in fabric of space-time
ISIS and Jack Daniel's: One of these things is not like the other
I quite agree - you really need a proper flag to get anywhere.
Ex-Intel boss Paul Otellini dead at age 66
Azure fell over for 7 hours in Europe because someone accidentally set off the fire extinguishers
Life began after meteorites splashed into warm ponds of water, say astronomers
Microsoft may have its groove back but it's binned 'Groove'
Tech VCs sue Uncle Sam over President Trump's immigration chill
HPE coughed up source code for Pentagon's IT defenses to ... Russia
Re: Ha ha ha ha ha! Ha ha ha ha ha! <cough> Ha ha ha ha ha!
Aww, cut them some slack, willya? With all the budget cuts in recent years the Pentagon has barely the money to fund outstandingly successful projects like the F35. And I hear all that computery stuff is about virtual zeroes ons ones anyway, so what's the worst that could happen?
NetApp scraps first day of Insight conf talks at Mandalay Bay after terrorist guns down 58
Bad news! Astroboffins find the stuff of life in space for the first time
MCubed: Doors open in a week, tickets running low
Oracle CEO Mark Hurd reads 'mean tweets' about his 2025 vision
"In a bid to demonstrate how little he cared about the criticism, Hurd spent the next few minutes pulling up various pieces of research that supported his worldview, which he was at pains to add was “not from the Mark Hurd research department”."
Demonstrating how little you care... you're doing it wrong.
We went to Nadella's launch of Hit Refresh so you didn't have to
UK lotto players quids in: Website knocked offline by DDoS attack
A todger, a 2.5kg dumbbell, the fire brigade... and the inevitable angle grinder
'All-screen display'? But surely every display is all-screen... or is a screen not a display?
Pains of giving birth to stars gives heft to elliptical galaxies
Boffins fear we might be running out of ideas
Boffins: 68 exoplanets in prime locations to SPY on humanity on Earth
Stuff the movement of celestial spheres, let's sit down and watch Bonnie Tyler on TV
Page:
- ← Prev
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
- 11
- 12
- 13
- 14
- 15
- 16
- 17
- 18
- 19
- 20
- 21
- 22
- 23
- 24
- 25
- 26
- 27
- 28
- 29
- 30
- 31
- 32
- 33
- 34
- 35
- 36
- 37
- 38
- 39
- 40
- 41
- 42
- 43
- 44
- 45
- 46
- 47
- 48
- 49
- 50
- 51
- 52
- 53
- 54
- 55
- 56
- 57
- 58
- 59
- 60
- 61
- 62
- 63
- 64
- 65
- 66
- 67
- 68
- 69
- 70
- 71
- 72
- 73
- 74
- 75
- 76
- 77
- 78
- 79
- 80
- 81
- 82
- 83
- 84
- 85
- 86
- 87
- 88
- 89
- 90
- 91
- 92
- 93
- 94
- 95
- 96
- 97
- 98
- 99
- 100
- 101
- 102
- 103
- 104
- 105
- 106
- 107
- 108
- 109
- 110
- 111
- 112
- 113
- 114
- 115
- 116
- 117
- 118
- 119
- 120
- 121
- 122
- 123
- 124
- Next →