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This week on the podcast we go over our reviews of the Thermaltake TR100 Mini Tower Chassis and Patriot Viper PVP30 Portable SSD. We also talk about attending the SOCALTech Fair and what it was all about, NVIDIA cancelling sales of the RTX 5090D to China, GPU issues with Gigabyte, Asetek's AiO patent expiring, GTA 6 being delayed and much more!
Suscríbete para más: https://www.youtube.com/c/pixxelersSigueme en redes: https://linktr.ee/jlrock92Discord: https://discord.gg/EFkfqhMZDUNOTAS:- Xbox sube precios: https://tinyurl.com/bdd6pe6b- No Switch 2 en latam: https://tinyurl.com/39ak2an8- Nintendo loophole: https://tinyurl.com/yfsk3dbm- Zelda BotW Switch 2: https://youtu.be/uJ8DM09SwxY- Intento de memes- Wii hack cancelado: https://tinyurl.com/w5avh54y- Google descontinua cosas: https://tinyurl.com/2autte9t- YouTube censura: https://tinyurl.com/yc4er76s- Defensa CEO Google: https://tinyurl.com/5ec783r7- Gigabyte responde: https://tinyurl.com/favbjdt3- Tesla favorcito: https://tinyurl.com/2s378z54- Meta IA Chatbot- Verificación de edad: https://tinyurl.com/2xenebam- El Anillo: https://tinyurl.com/4m99tht9
Timestamps: 0:00 Watch Andor or ur not my friend 0:08 Windows Recall re-rolls out 2:04 Yahoo, Perplexity want Chrome 3:44 New YouTube UI, AI Overviews 4:48 DeleteMe! 5:23 QUICK BITS INTRO 5:28 Gigabyte responds to gel issues 6:02 Switch 2 preorders were a mess 6:42 Facebook 'spam' crackdown 7:09 Slate Truck, $20K EV truck NEWS SOURCES: https://lmg.gg/uL84k Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Michael Verfürden und Sönke Iwersen und ihr Team haben 100 Gigabyte interner Daten eines Whistelbowers ausgewertet: Die Tesla Files. Sie lassen ins tief ins Innere des Technologie- und Innovationsgiganten Elon Musk blicken - aber auch in die Zustände bei Tesla. Teil 2.
Michael Verfürden und Sönke Iwersen und ihr Team haben 100 Gigabyte interner Daten eines Whistelbowers ausgewertet: Die Tesla Files. Sie lassen ins tief ins Innere des Technologie- und Innovationsgiganten Elon Musk blicken - aber auch in die Zustände bei Tesla. Teil 2.
250324PC: Die Tesla FilesMensch Mahler am 24.03.2025Elon Musk ist der mächtigste Mann der Welt. Tesla machte ihn zum dreihundertfachen Milliardär, mit seinem Satellitennetzwerk Starlink beeinflusst er das Kriegsgeschehen in der Ukraine. Sein Social-Media-Netzwerk X nutzt Musk als Bühne für seine persönliche Propaganda. Im Herbst 2024 kaufte er sich auch noch in die US-Regierung ein.Musk inszeniert sich als Retter der Zivilisation, doch sein Geniegestus birgt eine erschreckende Kehrseite: Ungewöhnlich viele Arbeitsunfälle in seinen Fabriken, gefährliche Fehler des Tesla-Autopiloten und zahllose gebrochene Versprechen werfen einen dunklen Schatten auf seinen Erfolg.Die Investigativjournalisten Sönke Iwersen und Michael Verfürden reißen im Buch „The Tesla-Files“ Musks Fassade ein, basierend auf 100 Gigabyte interner Tesla-Daten, die ihnen Ende 2022 von einem Whistleblower zugespielt wurden.Sie enthüllen, wie Musk seine Mitarbeiter nahezu sektenartig auf seine Vision einschwört und Kunden mit leeren Versprechungen vertröstet. Zudem decken sie auf, wie Tesla bei Unfällen Daten vor Kunden und Behörden verbirgt, um das Image des autonomen Fahrens zu schützen.Elon Musk ist nicht gefährlich, weil er reich ist. Er ist gefährlich, weil er auch die amerikanische Politik gekauft hat. Und die Behörden kontrolliert, die eigentlich ihn kontrollieren sollten. Sönke Iwersen - Michael Verfürden; DIE TESLA FILES Enthüllungen aus dem Reich von Elon Musk, als Buch, und Hörbuch verfügbar. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Michael Verfürden und Sönke Iwersen und ihr Team haben 100 Gigabyte interner Daten eines Whistelbowers ausgewertet: Die Tesla Files. Sie lassen ins tief ins Innere des Technologie- und Innovationsgiganten Elon Musk blicken - aber auch in die Zustände bei Tesla.
Michael Verfürden und Sönke Iwersen und ihr Team haben 100 Gigabyte interner Daten eines Whistelbowers ausgewertet: Die Tesla Files. Sie lassen ins tief ins Innere des Technologie- und Innovationsgiganten Elon Musk blicken - aber auch in die Zustände bei Tesla.
This show has been flagged as Clean by the host. Maintaining The Remote System I have renamed the project Libre Indie Archive because the name theindiearchive is already someone else's domain. I never would have renamed The Indie Archive but I do think that Libre Indie Archive is more descriptive, hence, better. I am getting close to a pre beta push up to codeberg. Anyone following along who wants to help test, you can do this with two or three old systems. Let me know. Email hairylarry@gmail.com or on Mastodon I am @hairylarry@gamerplus.org. I have decided to develop and document for Xubuntu first and here's the reasons why. I bought an older HP small form factor office system with 4 Gigabytes of ram. HP Compaq 4000 Pro Pentium Dual-Core E6600 3.06GHz 4GB RAM Thirty dollars on ebay with shipping and taxes. I was testing Libre Indie Archive on it. Because of the age of the system Ubuntu wouldn't install. I tested it with some BSD systems and installed Indie Archive without a GUI. Ghost BSD didn't install but Midnight BSD did install so I used the Midnight BSD GUI and installed Indie Archive. None of this was easy for me because I'm a BSD newb and unless you already use BSD I can't recommend it for Libre Indie Archive. Remember, not all indie producers are computer programmers, and I want Indie Archive to work for those producers as well as for the computer savvy. Then on a whim I thought I would try the Xubuntu 24.04 distro and it installed no problems. Thanks XFCE for keeping it light. The other reason I am developing and documenting for Xubuntu is that I can use the Xubuntu install document and install on Ubuntu or Debian with only minor differences. I know because I tried it. This is probably also true for other Debian and Ubuntu derived distributions. So, if you want to help, you could take the Xubuntu install document and see if it works on other distributions. Write down what you had to change and let me know. I plan on making an install checklist out of the install document and it would be great to have a checklist with the actual commands for several distributions. So, that was the intro. Now on to the topic. I am planning on installing remotenear and remotefar systems, remotenear being a short drive away (or maybe in your home if your studio is not in your home, like mine) and the remotefar further away to avoid losing data in the case of a regional catastrophe like flood, fire, tornado, or hurricane. Still even a short drive is not what I want to do any time there might be something I need to check on a remote system so I have devised a way to manage it from the secondary system. When a remote system is delivered to a new location it will be headless. No monitor, no keyboard, and no mouse. At the remote location it is plugged into a UPS and attached to the network with an ethernet cable and attached to the UPS with a usb cable. Then it is turned on. Even without a keyboard or a mouse there is still some local control of the system available. As part of the remote system install we go into the power management settings and next to "when power button is pressed" we select shutdown. So, a short press on the power button initiates a Xubuntu shutdown just like the shutdown that you get from the menu or Alt F4. If that doesn't work a long press of the power button will turn the system off. This is like unplugging the system or losing power and is not recommended but Xubuntu will rebuild the file structure when the system is restarted. And if you do lose power the UPS will send a signal to the computer shutting it down with a controlled shutdown, just like a short press of the power button or a shutdown from the menu. I would like to carry this one step further and enable automatic power up for the computer. A quick search shows cyberpower PowerPanel software for linux. Also you can set a power restore function in the BIOS to restart the system when the power is restored. I just checked and this worked on my little HP. So ... with just the power button and an attached UPS you can get both manual and automatic control of shutting the remote system down and restarting it. Pretty cool for a rather sparse interface. If you know more about how to set this up please let me know. There's a big jump between doing a search to see if something is possible and actually implementing it. Okay, that was the easy part. Now for the fun part. First off, the remote system is probably not going to be at your place but at the home or business of friends or family. And they probably don't have a static IP, and they may not be able to implement port forwarding in their router, and they may not be able to control their firewall. So we can't go, "I'll just ssh in when I need to fix a problem". And you don't really want to change their setup anyway because all of the above add to their security risk. Also their router undoubtedly gives dynamic IP addresses so we want the remote system to use that because when we are setting it up we might not even know what subnet their LAN uses. But, at the same time it doesn't make any sense at all to try to maintain a remote system that you can't log into. So, the tool for setting up a terminal session on the remote system is called a remote tunnel reverse shell. The remote system is already connecting to the secondary system with rsync ssh when the cron job fires off every day to update the files. So, the secondary system is running an ssh server and the remote system has the public key that allows access without entering a password. There are two parts to setting up a remote tunnel reverse shell. The secondary system has to be listening for the remote system on a port, I use port 7070. And then the remote system runs a bash command with the -i parameter that means reverse shell, and with the port, 7070. I'm using nc to set up the listener. nc -lvnp 7070 -l is --listen -v is --verbose -n means the port is restricted to numeric values. -p is --port 7070 is the port I chose the port number, 7070. You can use any available port but the listener has to use the same port as the remote system uses in the bash call. Which is this. bash -i >& /dev/tcp/your-static-ip-from-your-isp/7070 0>&1 This is the order of events. On the secondary system I start listening. nc -lvnp 7070 Then a script runs on the remote system. bash -i >& /dev/tcp/your-static-ip-from-your-isp/7070 0>&1 And then a command prompt opens up in the terminal on the secondary system that's listening. And you are logged into the remote system and you can look around and check things out and even move or delete files until you exit. Except it didn't work. Of course not, nothing ever works the first time. Two other things have to be changed that we're going to talk about now, the firewall and port forwarding. These things are already discussed in install.txt because we had to fix the firewall and port forwarding for the remote system to log into the secondary system to pick up the new files. To set up port forwarding, log into your router from a browser attached to the router. Like, for instance, a browser on your secondary system. You open the browser and type into the address bar, 192.168.1.1 Which is right most of the time. On my setup I type 192.168.2.1 because the isp's router uses the 192.168.1 subnet. How do I know which to use??? This also is covered in install.txt because to connect from the primary system to the secondary system I have to connect to the static ip that I assigned to the secondary system. So my primary system has the static ip 192.168.2.11 and my secondary system has the static ip 192.168.2.12 which allows me to ssh into the secondary system from the primary system. And this means my router is at 192.168.2.1 Your router is likely at 192.168.1.1 because that's the most common LAN subnet. Anyway, in the browser I open the router's control console and then I have to enter the password. If you don't know what it is you have to find out and write it down. Check what the defaults are for your router by searching on the internet. The defaults might work. If they do change your login and password and write them down! Do not leave your router defaults in place. That's a big security risk. After you're logged into the control console check around in the menus for Port Forwarding. I already had to do this to make ssh work from the remote system to the secondary system. In that case I had to forward port 22 (the ssh port) from the internet to the secondary system. Here's how that works. On the remote system I type. ssh indiearchive@your-static-ip-from-your-isp Since it's coming in as ssh that means the router sees port 22. The router checks the port forwarding table and sees that incoming traffic using port 22 should go to the secondary system, in my case 192.168.2.12 So the incoming ssh goes to the secondary system which is my ssh server. What a coincidence. So in order to use port 7070 to open a tunnel from the remote system to the secondary system I have to add a row to the port forwarding table with 7070 as the port and 192.168.2.12 as the ip. Except on your LAN the ip address may be different. Except it doesn't work. I bet you guessed why. It's the firewall. On the secondary system type. sudo ufw status It should show you that port 22 is allowed because otherwise you wouldn't be getting ssh traffic. It probably won't show you that port 7070 is allowed. So type. sudo ufw allow 7070 Then check the status again and see if it shows 7070. Here's a nice firewall link with instructions. https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/ufw-essentials-common-firewall-rules-and-commands It still might not work even though it should. Why? Operator error. You may have typed 7000 instead of 7070. (I did that.) Or any other little typo in any of the commands. When this works you are ready to test the reverse shell. The remote system can ssh into the secondary system and we have added port 7070 to the port forwarding table on the router and to the firewall on the secondary system. This is great! But how do I know when to listen and how do I get the remote system to issue the bash command that sets up the reverse shell? Remember, in the future the remote system is going to be sitting somewhere with no monitor, keyboard, or mouse. Only computer programmers are required to remember the future. After all that setup, here's the clever bit. I have a text file on the secondary system named letmein.txt and it's a flag with two values. The text file either reads yes or no. If it reads yes it means I'm here at the secondary system and I want to log into the remote system. If it reads no. Not so much. I'm not really trying to log in to the remote system at all. The remote system has ssh access to the secondary system since that's the way it picks up the new files, with rsync ssh. So the remote system can use rsync to copy the letmein.txt file over to it's hard drive. And it does this every five minutes, with a cron job. On the remote system type sudo -s to become root. crontab -e to edit the root crontab. Add this line */5 * * * * /home/indiearchive/check.sh Every 5 minutes the remote system runs check.sh which grabs the letmein.txt file and checks to see if it says yes or no. If it says yes it starts the reverse shell, assuming I remembered to start listening to port 7070 on the secondary system. After I'm done working on the remote system while sitting at the secondary system I type exit to close the remote terminal and come back to the terminal on the secondary system. If I forgot to do something I can start listening again but if I'm done I edit letmein.txt to say no and the remote system will quit trying to set up a reverse shell every 5 minutes. But wait! There's more. Email notifications. I set up email notifications with mailersend for file integrity reports using curl. To do that I wrote a script called send.sh that takes a file name as an argument and then sends me an email with the contents of the file in the body of the email. So when I run my file integrity program if the log files are larger than they should be, it means there is a discrepancy and that log file gets emailed to me so I can check things out. (Maybe with my remote tunnel reverse shell.) I also check diskspace with df and send a disk space report. Using send.sh when I run check.sh and detect a yes in letmein.txt I call send.sh with letmein.txt as the parameter and I get an email that says yes, meaning the remote system is trying to set up a reverse shell. So if I change letmein.txt to yes on the secondary system and I wait five or ten minutes without getting notified I may just have to make a call. Maybe the nice people who are hosting my remote system have lost power. Or internet. Or maybe they will have to push a button. If that doesn't work I may have to make a trip. I hope it's remotenear and not remotefar. So when I was testing the email notifications part of check.sh and fiddling around with the code all of a sudden I quit getting notifications at all. I learned a lot about bash scripting trying to figure out what I did wrong and it turned out it wasn't me. After I sent myself numerous emails saying yes from a weird email address gmail decided they were spam. So I went into my spam folder and marked the notification email as not spam. That fixed it for me but if you are setting up email notifications for Libre Indie Archive or for anything be sure you white list the email address so that the email powers that be don't suddenly decide that your notifications are spam and you quit getting important notifications. In gmail you set up a filter entry with the notifier's email address and set the action to be "Never send it to Spam". Because getting these emails is important. First they remind me to have the secondary system listen. Then they remind me to change letmein.txt from yes to no after I'm done with the remote terminal. And while you're changing letmein.txt to no make sure the listener is off. Leaving it listening for an extended period of time is a security risk. So there's a lot of little moving parts involved in this. Kind of complicated but still fascinating. Almost done. I didn't think this would be so long and now I'm exhausted. I am including slightly redacted and well commented copies of check.sh and send.sh in the show notes which will be on Hacker Public Radio and on my Delta Boogie Network-Gamer+ blog at home.gamerplus.org. As always, I appreciate your comments. Thanks Provide feedback on this episode.
Mon, 02 Dec 2024 13:58:46 +0000 https://fussballmml.podigee.io/405-titz-fur-brest-e15-saison-2425 13ca92e6849ea31c1cf1328791c62006 Werbepartner dieser Folge: SIMon Mobile: Wer jetzt auf simon.link/mml oder in der App mit dem Code MML5 abschließt, bekommt die ersten 6 Monate monatlich 5 Gigabyte on top. Das Angebot ist nur bis zum 25.12.24 gültig! Flaconi: Mit dem Code BALL10 sparst du bis zum 18.12.2024 10% Rabatt auf flaconi.de, flaconi.at & flaconi.ch, ab einem Mindestbestellwert von 59EUR bzw. 59CHF. HUK24: HUK24 ist größter deutscher Kfz-Direktversicherer und überzeugt mit dauerhaft günstigen Beiträgen und Top-Leistungen. Mehr Infos findet ihr unter www.huk24.de. NEUER MERCH!: Unser neuer Shop ist jetzt live! Einfach auf fussballmml.de gehen. Der Tour Hoodie ist schon da und altbekannte Klassiker werden folgen. Es sind auch neue Tassen unterwegs! 405 full no Micky Beisenherz, Maik Nöcker, Lucas Vogelsang
Werbepartner dieser Folge: SIMon Mobile: Wer jetzt auf simon.link/mml oder in der App mit dem Code MML5 abschließt, bekommt die ersten 6 Monate monatlich 5 Gigabyte on top. Das Angebot ist nur bis zum 25.12.24 gültig! Flaconi: Mit dem Code BALL10 sparst du bis zum 18.12.2024 10% Rabatt auf flaconi.de, flaconi.at & flaconi.ch, ab einem Mindestbestellwert von 59EUR bzw. 59CHF. HUK24: HUK24 ist größter deutscher Kfz-Direktversicherer und überzeugt mit dauerhaft günstigen Beiträgen und Top-Leistungen. Mehr Infos findet ihr unter www.huk24.de. NEUER MERCH!: Unser neuer Shop ist jetzt live! Einfach auf fussballmml.de gehen. Der Tour Hoodie ist ...Du möchtest deinen Podcast auch kostenlos hosten und damit Geld verdienen? Dann schaue auf www.kostenlos-hosten.de und informiere dich. Dort erhältst du alle Informationen zu unseren kostenlosen Podcast-Hosting-Angeboten. kostenlos-hosten.de ist ein Produkt der Podcastbude.Gern unterstützen wir dich bei deiner Podcast-Produktion.
Angela Merkel hat ein Buch geschrieben. Richtig dicker Wälzer. Über 700 Seiten. „Freiheit“ heißt es und erscheint in dieser Woche. 16 Jahre Bundeskanzlerin aus der Ich-Perspektive. Sie wird damit Multi-Millionärin heißt es. Klaas, Schmitti und Jakob schreiben keine Bücher. Sie waren auch nie Bundeskanzlerin. Sie publizieren nicht. Ihr Verlag heißt nicht Suhrkamp, nicht Kiepenheuer und Witsch. Ihr „Verlag“ ist ein aus Popeln, alten Amazon-Paketen und Pfeifes Reglers zusammen geschraubtes Studio. Ihr „Verlag“ heißt „Studio Bummens“. Dort sabbeln die drei jede Woche eine Speicherkarte mit ihren Leben voll. Aus Erlebtem werden Gigabytes. Aus Gigabytes ein Podcast. Das große Nichts. Sie bekommen keine Millionen. Sie bekommen gratis Holy-Brause. Merkels Widersacher heißen Putin und Trump. Bei Baywatch heißen Widersacher: Ramon Roselli. Ihre Ich-Perspektive richtet sich auf Lichterketten. Ihnen fehlt ein Pinökel, deswegen müssen sie im Auto Formatradio hören. Sie verhandeln nicht zu Nordstream 2. Sie verhandeln Regeln fürs Klo. Sie verurteilen nicht Erdogan. Sie verurteilen Comedians die Terassenmöbel in einen Hotelkamin verbrennen. Vielleicht ist es gut so. Vielleicht muss die Welt genauso sein? Unterhalter blasen das große Nichts, die Petitessen des Lebens mit Luft auf, damit sie noch leichter werden und bekömmlicher. Wie Aero Schokolade oder Mousse au Chocolat. Eben der Kern des Entertainments: die süße Leichtigkeit. Vielleicht ist es genau richtig so, dass klügere Politiker sich um die großen Fragen des Zusammenlebens kümmern. Ganz ohne sie aufzupusten; das große Existenzielle klein machen, um es zu lösen, ohne Luft mit Sachlichkeit. Politik ohne Entertainment. Kein Wrestling. Trocken. Ein Wälzer. 16 Jahre in 700 Seiten. Die aktuelle Folge „Baywatch Berlin“ heißt nicht „Freiheit“. Sie heißt "Schmitts Festival of Light" und hat 78 Minuten. Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte: https://linktr.ee/BaywatchBerlin
We made it to 800! It's amazing what can be done by simply sitting in front of a PC and chatting with a few friends for an hour or two almost every Wednesday night for many years in a row. Stick around for 9800X3D talk (of course), (in)Security scares, and a quick review of some RGB free ram! Oh Nvidia financials, some Ryzen turbo, and Win 11 smacking around.00:00 Intro04:06 Food with Josh05:57 We check Ryzen 7 9800X3D stock status10:53 Gigabyte's X3D Turbo mode tested by TweakTown14:46 NVIDIA financials25:42 Intel Battlemage is apparently happening32:29 Microsoft reveals Win 11 remote recovery tool37:37 AMD Radeon UDNA may not launch until 202640:20 You can now download Windows 11 for ARM systems41:47 Windows 365 Link is 349 USD cloud-based mini PC44:01 (in)Security Corner50:32 Gaming Quick Hits59:59 Crucial's RGB-free Overclocking DDR51:04:14 Picks of the Week1:15:41 Outro ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Mon, 18 Nov 2024 13:41:43 +0000 https://fussballmml.podigee.io/402-smallservicewuste-deutschland-e13-saison-2425 1eba8045ef6194b406ffd18dcf110295 Werbepartner dieser Folge: SIMon Mobile: Wer jetzt auf simonmobile.de oder in der App mit dem Code MML1 abschließt, bekommt die ersten 24 Monate monatlich 1 Gigabyte on top. Das Angebot ist nur bis zum 11.12.24 gültig! Alle weiteren Infos gibt's auf: simon.link/mml. Mewa: Mewa ist führender Anbieter von nachhaltigen Textilmanagement-Lösungen in Europa. Seit 1908 bietet das Familienunternehmen innovative und umweltfreundliche Services für Berufskleidung und Putztücher. Mewa zeichnet sich durch hohe Qualität, Ressourcenschonung und individuelle Kundenlösungen aus. Mehr Infos findet ihr unter www.mewa.de/rundum-service/. Nord VPN: Greife sicher auf deine Lieblingsstreams und -inhalte aus deinem Heimatland zu, egal wo du gerade auf der Welt bist. Wechsle ganz einfach deinen virtuellen Standort, um auf Apps und Webseiten in anderen Ländern zuzugreifen. Also Fussball gucken egal wo du auf der Welt bist! Bei jedem Kauf des 2-Jahres-NordVPN-Tarifs erhalten Sie +4 Bonusmonate obendrauf: nordvpn.com/mml MML Live - Wein, Maik & Gesang: Jetzt Tickets sichern! NEUER MERCH!: Unser neuer Shop ist jetzt live! Einfach auf fussballmml.de gehen. Der Tour Hoodie ist schon da und altbekannte Klassiker werden folgen. Es sind auch neue Tassen unterwegs! 402 full no Micky Beisenherz, Maik Nöcker, Lucas Vogelsang
Werbepartner dieser Folge: SIMon Mobile: Wer jetzt auf simonmobile.de oder in der App mit dem Code MML1 abschließt, bekommt die ersten 24 Monate monatlich 1 Gigabyte on top. Das Angebot ist nur bis zum 11.12.24 gültig! Alle weiteren Infos gibts auf: simon.link/mml. Mewa: Mewa ist führender Anbieter von nachhaltigen Textilmanagement-Lösungen in Europa. Seit 1908 bietet das Familienunternehmen innovative und umweltfreundliche Services für Berufskleidung und Putztücher. Mewa zeichnet sich durch hohe Qualität, Ressourcenschonung und individuelle Kundenlösungen aus. Mehr Infos findet ihr unter www.mewa.de/rundum-service/. Nord VPN: Greife sicher auf deine Lieblingsstreams und -inhalte aus deinem Heimatland zu, egal ...Du möchtest deinen Podcast auch kostenlos hosten und damit Geld verdienen? Dann schaue auf www.kostenlos-hosten.de und informiere dich. Dort erhältst du alle Informationen zu unseren kostenlosen Podcast-Hosting-Angeboten. kostenlos-hosten.de ist ein Produkt der Podcastbude.Gern unterstützen wir dich bei deiner Podcast-Produktion. ?>
In today's episode John Adler and Evan Forbes reveal how three major breakthroughs at blockchain's data layer may enable truly unstoppable applications. They explain why previous attempts at unstoppable apps have fallen short, and how Big Blocks, Vacuum, and Big Blocks, Slow Squares will finally make internet-scale decentralized applications possible. Thanks for tuning in! - - Follow John: https://x.com/jadler0 Follow Evan: https://x.com/evansforbes Follow Rex: https://x.com/LogarithmicRex Follow nosleepjon: https://x.com/nosleepjon Follow Expansion: https://x.com/ExpansionPod_ Subscribe on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@expansionpod Subscribe on Apple: http://apple.co/4bGKYYM Subscribe on Spotify: http://spoti.fi/3Vaubq1 Get top market insights and the latest in crypto news. Subscribe to Blockworks Daily Newsletter: https://blockworks.co/newsletter/ -- Join us at Permissionless III Oct 9-11. Use code: EXPANSION10 for a 10% discount: https://blockworks.co/event/permissionless-iii -- Timestamps: (00:00) Introduction (01:20) Schwab Upgrade to Celestia (15:24) Compact Blocks Perks & Limitations (28:31) Vacuum's Edge Case Solutions (40:47) Fast Blocks, Slow Squares (57:15) What's Left for Gigabyte Blocks (1:01:42) Impact of DA - - Disclaimer Expansion was kickstarted by a grant from the Celestia Foundation. Nothing said on Expansion is a recommendation to buy or sell securities or tokens. This podcast is for informational purposes only, and any views expressed by anyone on the show are solely our opinions, not financial advice. Rex, Jon, and our guests may hold positions in the companies, funds, or projects discussed.
What a week. So much exciting news to cover, including the extremely well-received new Intel Core Ultra desktop processors! Does sarcasm evident? Anyhow, we received them, too, but without a motherboard, so not much tested happened before this launch. No worries, we're getting a board, and have turned off our AI assistants. Or have we?Timestamps:00:00 Intro01:23 Food with Josh04:10 Observing Intel Core Ultra Desktop Eve04:57 The Core Ultra 9 285K can pull almost as much as a 14900K - if you enable 4095W PL207:47 Arm to cancel Qualcomm 2 license as dispute escalates18:43 Another report about Qualcomm buying Intel19:12 NVIDIA says Blackwell chip flaw was their fault, but it's fixed now21:28 Intel and Samsung foundry collaboration possible25:45 HAVN is a new case company with a new take on the aquarium trend30:24 Podcast sponsor 1Pasword XAM31:45 Help turning off "ai" assistants - if the app allows34:28 New X3D turbo mode promises big gains for Ryzen CPUs38:21 Check out our Intel microcode video44:53 (in)Security Corner54:13 Gaming Quick Hits1:02:29 Picks of the Week1:18:11 Outro ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Wie viel Megabyte (MB) sind 1 Gigabyte (GB)? Die einen sprechen von 1.000, die anderen von 1.024 – aber woher kommt die Differenz und was stimmt nun wirklich? Wir dröseln euch das „Mysterium“ hier auf.
Wenn ihr euch jemals gefragt habt, warum eure nagelneue 500-GB-Festplatte anscheinend doch nur 465 Gigabyte freien Speicherplatz besitzt, hat das vor allem etwas mit dem Unterschied zwischen Gigabyte und Gibibyte und deren Verwendung in der Computer-Industrie zu tun. Was es genau mit Gibibyte, Mebibyte und Kibibyte auf sich hat und warum die Begriffe häufig falsch verwendet werden, verraten wir euch hier.
Un grupo de hackers llamado LockBit filtró 630 gigabytes de información privada que robaron del Cuerpo de Vigilancia Auxiliar y Urbana del Estado de México (CUSAEM). See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Welcome back to another jam-packed episode of the "That's Absurd Podcast." This week, we're diving into some intense developments in the world of hip-hop, including health scares, legal troubles, and celebrity drama. Plus, we're covering some big moments in pop culture. Let's get into it! Fatman Scoop Dies at 56 During a Live Show: In devastating news, legendary voice of the clubs, Fatman Scoop, passed away during a live performance at the age of 56. We honor his legacy and reflect on the impact he had on hip-hop culture and beyond. Rich Homie Quan Dies From Overdose at Age 34: Another major blow to the hip-hop world, Rich Homie Quan tragically died of an overdose at just 34 years old. We look back on his career, his contributions to rap, and the lessons to be learned from this heartbreaking event. 50 Cent Calls Dame Dash Broke: 50 Cent is back to his trolling ways, this time calling Dame Dash "broke." We unpack the ongoing beef between these two industry titans and how 50 Cent stays relevant by stoking the fires. Drake Drops 100 Gigabytes of Music: Drake just dropped an insane 100GB worth of new tracks! We break down what's included in this massive drop and what this could mean for his career moving forward. Is this too much, or is Drake just flexing on the entire music industry? Rebecca Cheptegei, Olympic Distance Runner from Uganda, Set on Fire by Boyfriend: In an absolutely horrific event, Olympic distance runner Rebecca Cheptegei was set on fire by her boyfriend. We cover this shocking incident and discuss the broader issue of domestic violence in the sports world and beyond. Another week, another episode filled with big headlines and even bigger takes. From tragic losses in the hip-hop world to jaw-dropping news in sports, there's always something happening that we need to unpack. Be sure to tune in next week as we continue to dive into the latest and greatest in absurd news Thanks for rocking with us on That's Absurd Podcast! Make sure you're subscribed, leave a review, and follow us on social media. Got a topic you want us to cover? Drop us a line—we love hearing from y'all! Leave Voice Message by Clicking Here.
Crowdstrike post-mortem PiDP-11 What Crowdstrike is fixing Marcus Hutchins on who is to blame Entrust's Updated Info 3rd-Party Cookie Surprise Security training firm mistakenly hires a North Korean attacker Google and 3rd party cookies Google's influence The auto industry and data brokers DNS Benchmark on Mac Platform Key Disclosure Show Notes - https://www.grc.com/sn/SN-985-Notes.pdf Hosts: Steve Gibson and Leo Laporte Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/security-now. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can submit a question to Security Now at the GRC Feedback Page. For 16kbps versions, transcripts, and notes (including fixes), visit Steve's site: grc.com, also the home of the best disk maintenance and recovery utility ever written Spinrite 6. Sponsors: lookout.com GO.ACILEARNING.COM/TWIT code SN100 panoptica.app bitwarden.com/twit
Crowdstrike post-mortem PiDP-11 What Crowdstrike is fixing Marcus Hutchins on who is to blame Entrust's Updated Info 3rd-Party Cookie Surprise Security training firm mistakenly hires a North Korean attacker Google and 3rd party cookies Google's influence The auto industry and data brokers DNS Benchmark on Mac Platform Key Disclosure Show Notes - https://www.grc.com/sn/SN-985-Notes.pdf Hosts: Steve Gibson and Leo Laporte Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/security-now. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can submit a question to Security Now at the GRC Feedback Page. For 16kbps versions, transcripts, and notes (including fixes), visit Steve's site: grc.com, also the home of the best disk maintenance and recovery utility ever written Spinrite 6. Sponsors: lookout.com GO.ACILEARNING.COM/TWIT code SN100 panoptica.app bitwarden.com/twit
Crowdstrike post-mortem PiDP-11 What Crowdstrike is fixing Marcus Hutchins on who is to blame Entrust's Updated Info 3rd-Party Cookie Surprise Security training firm mistakenly hires a North Korean attacker Google and 3rd party cookies Google's influence The auto industry and data brokers DNS Benchmark on Mac Platform Key Disclosure Show Notes - https://www.grc.com/sn/SN-985-Notes.pdf Hosts: Steve Gibson and Leo Laporte Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/security-now. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can submit a question to Security Now at the GRC Feedback Page. For 16kbps versions, transcripts, and notes (including fixes), visit Steve's site: grc.com, also the home of the best disk maintenance and recovery utility ever written Spinrite 6. Sponsors: lookout.com GO.ACILEARNING.COM/TWIT code SN100 panoptica.app bitwarden.com/twit
Crowdstrike post-mortem PiDP-11 What Crowdstrike is fixing Marcus Hutchins on who is to blame Entrust's Updated Info 3rd-Party Cookie Surprise Security training firm mistakenly hires a North Korean attacker Google and 3rd party cookies Google's influence The auto industry and data brokers DNS Benchmark on Mac Platform Key Disclosure Show Notes - https://www.grc.com/sn/SN-985-Notes.pdf Hosts: Steve Gibson and Leo Laporte Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/security-now. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can submit a question to Security Now at the GRC Feedback Page. For 16kbps versions, transcripts, and notes (including fixes), visit Steve's site: grc.com, also the home of the best disk maintenance and recovery utility ever written Spinrite 6. Sponsors: lookout.com GO.ACILEARNING.COM/TWIT code SN100 panoptica.app bitwarden.com/twit
Crowdstrike post-mortem PiDP-11 What Crowdstrike is fixing Marcus Hutchins on who is to blame Entrust's Updated Info 3rd-Party Cookie Surprise Security training firm mistakenly hires a North Korean attacker Google and 3rd party cookies Google's influence The auto industry and data brokers DNS Benchmark on Mac Platform Key Disclosure Show Notes - https://www.grc.com/sn/SN-985-Notes.pdf Hosts: Steve Gibson and Leo Laporte Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/security-now. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can submit a question to Security Now at the GRC Feedback Page. For 16kbps versions, transcripts, and notes (including fixes), visit Steve's site: grc.com, also the home of the best disk maintenance and recovery utility ever written Spinrite 6. Sponsors: lookout.com GO.ACILEARNING.COM/TWIT code SN100 panoptica.app bitwarden.com/twit
Crowdstrike post-mortem PiDP-11 What Crowdstrike is fixing Marcus Hutchins on who is to blame Entrust's Updated Info 3rd-Party Cookie Surprise Security training firm mistakenly hires a North Korean attacker Google and 3rd party cookies Google's influence The auto industry and data brokers DNS Benchmark on Mac Platform Key Disclosure Show Notes - https://www.grc.com/sn/SN-985-Notes.pdf Hosts: Steve Gibson and Leo Laporte Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/security-now. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can submit a question to Security Now at the GRC Feedback Page. For 16kbps versions, transcripts, and notes (including fixes), visit Steve's site: grc.com, also the home of the best disk maintenance and recovery utility ever written Spinrite 6. Sponsors: lookout.com GO.ACILEARNING.COM/TWIT code SN100 panoptica.app bitwarden.com/twit
Crowdstrike post-mortem PiDP-11 What Crowdstrike is fixing Marcus Hutchins on who is to blame Entrust's Updated Info 3rd-Party Cookie Surprise Security training firm mistakenly hires a North Korean attacker Google and 3rd party cookies Google's influence The auto industry and data brokers DNS Benchmark on Mac Platform Key Disclosure Show Notes - https://www.grc.com/sn/SN-985-Notes.pdf Hosts: Steve Gibson and Leo Laporte Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/security-now. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can submit a question to Security Now at the GRC Feedback Page. For 16kbps versions, transcripts, and notes (including fixes), visit Steve's site: grc.com, also the home of the best disk maintenance and recovery utility ever written Spinrite 6. Sponsors: lookout.com GO.ACILEARNING.COM/TWIT code SN100 panoptica.app bitwarden.com/twit
It has been a while since Hardware Asylum was at Computex and the 2024 edition of this global technology show did not disappoint. NVIDIA had their keynote the day before Computex opened followed by an AMD keynote to kick the show off. After that Dennis visited with Gigabyte, Corsair, beQuiet during the first hours of the event.
Guest: JC Heinbockel, Associate, Seyfarth Shaw LLPOn LinkedIn | https://www.linkedin.com/in/j-c-heinbockel-6563996a/____________________________Host: Sean Martin, Co-Founder at ITSPmagazine [@ITSPmagazine] and Host of Redefining CyberSecurity Podcast [@RedefiningCyber]On ITSPmagazine | https://www.itspmagazine.com/sean-martinView This Show's Sponsors___________________________Episode NotesIn the latest episode of Redefining CyberSecurity, Sean Martin delves into an intriguing conversation with JC Heinbockel, an intellectual property lawyer specializing in brand protection. The episode primarily focused on the intersection of the ELVIS Act and rights of publicity in the age of AI.The discussion kicked off with JC Heinbockel providing a primer on intellectual property and the rights of publicity. He explained that while intellectual property encompasses discrete categories such as copyrights, patents, and trademarks, the right of publicity is more nuanced and often intertwined with personal privacy rights. Essentially, the right of publicity allows individuals to exploit their likenesses for commercial purposes or prevent others from doing so without permission. Heinbockel emphasized that the right of publicity is particularly relevant to celebrities and public figures whose likenesses hold significant market value. However, with the advent of generative AI and deepfake technology, protecting one's likeness has become more complicated.The new ELVIS Act in Tennessee is designed to address these challenges by extending the right of publicity to include voices and by explicitly targeting the misuse of likenesses through deepfake technology. The episode also touched on various instances where deepfake technology has already led to unauthorized use of celebrity likenesses. JC Heinbockel cited examples like deepfake ads featuring Clint Eastwood and Tom Hanks, highlighting the legal and ethical complications these technologies introduce.The Elvis Act serves as a legislative response to these advancements, aiming to protect individuals' likenesses from unauthorized commercial exploitation. For business leaders and security professionals, the conversation underscored the imperative need to develop robust AI policies, especially within marketing and advertising departments. Heinbockel urged organizations to carefully navigate the use of AI in creating content, as both the input and output of AI-generated material need to be scrutinized for compliance with existing laws and ethical standards. Moreover, the potential pitfalls of using generative AI extend beyond marketing to areas such as customer support and even internal operations.Heinbockel warned of the risks associated with using AI platforms that might inadvertently disclose confidential information or generate legally dubious content. He emphasized the necessity of setting strict guidelines and having comprehensive policies in place to mitigate these risks.The episode concluded with a call to action for companies to be proactive in understanding the implications of using AI and to plan accordingly. By doing so, they can better navigate the complex legal landscape surrounding intellectual property and publicity rights in the digital age. This timely discussion with JC Heinbockel highlights not just the challenges but also the opportunities for businesses to adapt and thrive in this evolving technological environment.Top Questions AddressedWhat are the rights of publicity, and how do they relate to intellectual property laws?How does the ELVIS Act in Tennessee address the challenges posed by deepfake technology?What should businesses be aware of when using AI to ensure they are compliant with legal and ethical standards?___________________________Watch this and other videos on ITSPmagazine's YouTube ChannelRedefining CyberSecurity Podcast with Sean Martin, CISSP playlist:
Computers have been integrated into nearly everything. Most of us who know enough to get by don't ever really get into the deeper nuts and bolts, or 1's and 0's, of our tech systems. That's where Nate Folker, of EZ Solutions, comes in. Helping to build, secure and maintain various systems, business and personal, Nate keeps operations running smoothly, and sensitive data protected. North Liberty is the headquarters of local media, regional financial and national transportation companies and home to solar energy and tech startups, and entrepreneurs getting their big ideas off the ground. Get to know your new business community.
Timestamps: 0:00 an agreement has been made 0:10 Google Search documents leak 1:29 Paypal ad network 2:30 OpenAI forms new safety team 4:06 QUICK BITS INTRO 4:19 Colorado Right to Repair law 4:54 Android apps on Win11 in China 5:25 Nvidia's Arm processor built by Intel? 5:55 Venus mission goes dark 6:35 Gigabyte's chonky GPU support News Sources: https://lmg.gg/T3Edu Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The bigger problem with AI Overview https://udm14.com/ -and- https://tenbluelinks.org/ The horses have left the barn VPNs and Firewalls Email @ GRC Extension to fix Google search Passwords and SPAM Fixing motherboard components Vertical tabs in Firefox FritzBox routers Too many PINs More Google search fixes Testing Windows XP The 50 Gigabyte Privacy Bomb Show Notes - https://www.grc.com/sn/SN-976-Notes.pdf Hosts: Steve Gibson and Leo Laporte Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/security-now. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can submit a question to Security Now at the GRC Feedback Page. For 16kbps versions, transcripts, and notes (including fixes), visit Steve's site: grc.com, also the home of the best disk maintenance and recovery utility ever written Spinrite 6. Sponsors: kolide.com/securitynow joindeleteme.com/twit promo code TWIT bitwarden.com/twit 1bigthink.com
The bigger problem with AI Overview https://udm14.com/ -and- https://tenbluelinks.org/ The horses have left the barn VPNs and Firewalls Email @ GRC Extension to fix Google search Passwords and SPAM Fixing motherboard components Vertical tabs in Firefox FritzBox routers Too many PINs More Google search fixes Testing Windows XP The 50 Gigabyte Privacy Bomb Show Notes - https://www.grc.com/sn/SN-976-Notes.pdf Hosts: Steve Gibson and Leo Laporte Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/security-now. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can submit a question to Security Now at the GRC Feedback Page. For 16kbps versions, transcripts, and notes (including fixes), visit Steve's site: grc.com, also the home of the best disk maintenance and recovery utility ever written Spinrite 6. Sponsors: kolide.com/securitynow joindeleteme.com/twit promo code TWIT bitwarden.com/twit 1bigthink.com
The bigger problem with AI Overview https://udm14.com/ -and- https://tenbluelinks.org/ The horses have left the barn VPNs and Firewalls Email @ GRC Extension to fix Google search Passwords and SPAM Fixing motherboard components Vertical tabs in Firefox FritzBox routers Too many PINs More Google search fixes Testing Windows XP The 50 Gigabyte Privacy Bomb Show Notes - https://www.grc.com/sn/SN-976-Notes.pdf Hosts: Steve Gibson and Leo Laporte Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/security-now. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can submit a question to Security Now at the GRC Feedback Page. For 16kbps versions, transcripts, and notes (including fixes), visit Steve's site: grc.com, also the home of the best disk maintenance and recovery utility ever written Spinrite 6. Sponsors: kolide.com/securitynow joindeleteme.com/twit promo code TWIT bitwarden.com/twit 1bigthink.com
The bigger problem with AI Overview https://udm14.com/ -and- https://tenbluelinks.org/ The horses have left the barn VPNs and Firewalls Email @ GRC Extension to fix Google search Passwords and SPAM Fixing motherboard components Vertical tabs in Firefox FritzBox routers Too many PINs More Google search fixes Testing Windows XP The 50 Gigabyte Privacy Bomb Show Notes - https://www.grc.com/sn/SN-976-Notes.pdf Hosts: Steve Gibson and Leo Laporte Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/security-now. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can submit a question to Security Now at the GRC Feedback Page. For 16kbps versions, transcripts, and notes (including fixes), visit Steve's site: grc.com, also the home of the best disk maintenance and recovery utility ever written Spinrite 6. Sponsors: kolide.com/securitynow joindeleteme.com/twit promo code TWIT bitwarden.com/twit 1bigthink.com
The bigger problem with AI Overview https://udm14.com/ -and- https://tenbluelinks.org/ The horses have left the barn VPNs and Firewalls Email @ GRC Extension to fix Google search Passwords and SPAM Fixing motherboard components Vertical tabs in Firefox FritzBox routers Too many PINs More Google search fixes Testing Windows XP The 50 Gigabyte Privacy Bomb Show Notes - https://www.grc.com/sn/SN-976-Notes.pdf Hosts: Steve Gibson and Leo Laporte Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/security-now. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can submit a question to Security Now at the GRC Feedback Page. For 16kbps versions, transcripts, and notes (including fixes), visit Steve's site: grc.com, also the home of the best disk maintenance and recovery utility ever written Spinrite 6. Sponsors: kolide.com/securitynow joindeleteme.com/twit promo code TWIT bitwarden.com/twit 1bigthink.com
The bigger problem with AI Overview https://udm14.com/ -and- https://tenbluelinks.org/ The horses have left the barn VPNs and Firewalls Email @ GRC Extension to fix Google search Passwords and SPAM Fixing motherboard components Vertical tabs in Firefox FritzBox routers Too many PINs More Google search fixes Testing Windows XP The 50 Gigabyte Privacy Bomb Show Notes - https://www.grc.com/sn/SN-976-Notes.pdf Hosts: Steve Gibson and Leo Laporte Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/security-now. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can submit a question to Security Now at the GRC Feedback Page. For 16kbps versions, transcripts, and notes (including fixes), visit Steve's site: grc.com, also the home of the best disk maintenance and recovery utility ever written Spinrite 6. Sponsors: kolide.com/securitynow joindeleteme.com/twit promo code TWIT bitwarden.com/twit 1bigthink.com
Episode 31: After testing the new Intel Baseline Power Profile on Asus and Gigabyte motherboards, we've come to the conclusion that once again, Intel has a power spec problem. Also, some hot takes on the EKWB situation following Gamers Nexus second video.CHAPTERS00:00 - Intro02:14 - Further Thoughts on EKWB Situation20:02 - Intel's Power Spec Problem27:38 - Partners Can't Just Do Whatever They Want34:05 - Differences to AMD 7800X3D CPUs Blowing Up46:35 - What Actually Is the Intel CPU Power Spec55:11 - Our Theory Why CPUs are Crashing1:07:01 - Multiple Power Configs Are Fine, Misleading Consumers Isn't1:20:25 - Why Do Some People Take the Side of Companies?1:33:37 - Updates From Our Boring LivesSUBSCRIBE TO THE PODCASTAudio: https://shows.acast.com/the-hardware-unboxed-podcastVideo: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqT8Vb3jweH6_tj2SarErfwSUPPORT US DIRECTLYPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/hardwareunboxedFloatplane: https://www.floatplane.com/channel/HardwareUnboxedLINKSYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@Hardwareunboxed/Twitter: https://twitter.com/HardwareUnboxed Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.