Thursday, August 28, 2008

Javascript online massive social password cracking ?

What about a javascript online massive social password cracking ?

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Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Creating accessible charts using canvas and jQuery

Data visualization in HTML has long been tricky to achieve. Past solutions have involved non-standard plugins, proprietary behavior, and static images. But this has changed with the recent growth...

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Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Creating accessible charts using canvas and jQuery

Data visualization in HTML has long been tricky to achieve. Past solutions have involved non-standard plugins, proprietary behavior, and static images. But this has changed with the recent growth...

read more | digg story

Monday, August 4, 2008

Creating accessible charts using canvas and jQuery

Data visualization in HTML has long been tricky to achieve. Past solutions have involved non-standard plugins, proprietary behavior, and static images. But this has changed with the recent growth...

read more | digg story

Sunday, August 3, 2008

Ext3, ReiserFS & XFS in Windows thanks to coLinux

If you ever: needed to access your ext3, reiserfs or XFS partitions from Windows, wanted to use one of your favorite file systems via FUSE, or had an idea to mount an image of your hard drive, then this article is for you. This is a how-to, describing what to do, if you want Windows to handle file systems in a similar way as Linux does.

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College Teacher Shows Students How To Be Hackers

In a windowless underground computer lab in California, young men are busy cooking up viruses, spam and other plagues of the computer age. Grant Joy runs a program that surreptitiously records every keystroke on his machine, including user names, passwords, and credit-card numbers.

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Biggest Military Hack of All Time Was Done With a 56k Modem

Gary McKinnon, a British computer expert, claims he's just fascinated with UFOs. Using his home computer and a modem — how WarGames! — he infiltrated military networks and accessed thousands of computers trying to find evidence of alien contact

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Saturday, August 2, 2008

New 3.2Gbps FireWire spec approved, not as fast as USB 3.0

The IEEE 1394 working group has formally approved FireWire's next-generation standard. The new version defines transfer speeds of 1.6Gbps and 3.2Gbps, is backwards compatible with FireWire 800 and 400, and uses the same cable standard as FireWire 800.

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