Yes! I've been looking for this since the conference ended. I love reading about this CTF it sounds so awesome (they got to play DOOM on an original Xbox this year!) If I had one "hacker dream" it's that I'd one day be a part of it, but I don't think that's gonna happen so I'll stick with doing my pico CTF problems and reading about these tough CTFs
My school has blackboard for awhile now, I've always suspected it to be vulnerable but never really tested it. Particularly, you can make forum posts and view/edit the HTML that the WYSIWYG editor creates. This always made me feel like there's probably an XSS vulnerability there
> Honestly, they should have done exactly that. Flag their content and ban them. Then go to the capitol. And when some politician asks, "why was I banned?" Tell them honestly, your statements were determined to be extremist by the same algorithm that bans Al Qaeda and ISIS from posting. Then sit back and watch the real fireworks go off.
> Just because they have a political title does not mean we have to respect anything that
A big company like Google would want to be on the repubs good side because the Republican party is the ones who support mega corporation like them
Discord messages aren't actually unlimited; they are limited to 2,000 characters, unless this restriction was recently removed. I have personally encountered this, mainly when using code blocks.
Look I'm not asking for the most modern bloated web design, I like simplicity, but that website looks pretty outdated an ugly for a modern web browser. As a user if their website looks that outdated why should I trust their browser?
This is going to sound really basic, but a good start might be just to reproducibly generate and measure some signals: DC, AC, etc. Make an LED blink. Measure the voltage across the LED as a function of time. Get used to seeing a graph of voltage versus time, and interpreting it. Hook it up to a microphone and talk to it. Measure the headphone output of your PC.
This is all about just learning to think in terms of signals (static and as a function of time) and how they are measured. Try to predict what's going to happen, and see what you get.
It gives the following very basic pieces of equipment for doing hardware development. However this is quite low end and will have lots of limitations. A high end logic analyzer could be $50k for example.
USB Oscilloscope - observe an analog output waveform
Also there weren’t so many alternatives back then for getting articles and ads out. So the release schedule probably made sense and it was possible to make some profit off magazines. (Not that much though I think.)
These days the dynamics have changed a lot. Today many ads an articles would be outdated if they were written many months before being published.
As aasasd pointed out, it exists, but isn't part of the core distribution.
The openSUSE folks include it (Geeko) in the version that you find in their repositories, so that's why you might think that it is included by default.