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More than 15 years ago, Thomas Friedman wrote, “I prefer the term “global weirding,” because that is what actually happens as global temperatures rise and the climate changes. The weather gets weird. The hots are expected to get hotter, the wets wetter, the dries drier and the most violent storms more numerous.” Today's Stats+Stories episode will be a conversation about how a small shift in temperatures can lead to large changes in extreme weather events with guest Brett Falk. Dr. Falk is a research professor in computer and Information Sciences at the University of Pennsylvania and director of the Crypto and Society Lab. He is the author of a recent CHANCE article "Why Will a Small Increase in Global Temperature Lead to a Large Increase in the Number of Heat Waves? Truncation and Extreme Events".
Episode 97: In this episode of Critical Thinking - Bug Bounty Podcast Justin and Joel jump into some cool news items, including a recent Okta Bcrypt vulnerability, insights into crypto bugs, and some intricacies of Android and Chrome security. They also explore the latest research from Portswigger on payload concealment techniques, and the introduction of the Lightyear tool for PHP exploits.Follow us on twitter at: @ctbbpodcastWe're new to this podcasting thing, so feel free to send us any feedback here: info@criticalthinkingpodcast.ioShoutout to YTCracker for the awesome intro music!------ Links ------Follow your hosts Rhynorater & Teknogeek on twitter:https://twitter.com/0xteknogeekhttps://twitter.com/rhynorater------ Ways to Support CTBBPodcast ------Hop on the CTBB Discord at https://ctbb.show/discord!We also do Discord subs at $25, $10, and $5 - premium subscribers get access to private masterclasses, exploits, tools, scripts, un-redacted bug reports, etc.Today's Sponsor - ThreatLocker: Check out Network Control!https://www.criticalthinkingpodcast.io/tl-ncResourcesOkta bcryptAndroid Web Attack Surface WriteupsConcealing payloads in URL credentialsDumping PHP files with LightyearLimit maximum number of filter chainsDom-Explorer tool launchedMultiHTMLParseJSON CrackCaido/Burp notes pluginTimestamps(00:00:00) Introduction(00:02:43) Okta Release and bcrypt(00:10:26) Android Web Attack Surface Writeups(00:20:21) More Portswigger Research(00:28:29) Lightyear and PHP filter chains(00:35:09) Dom-Explorer(00:45:24) The JSON Debate(00:49:59) Notes plugin for Burp and Caido
In his regular monthly spot on PING, APNIC's Chief Scientist Geoff Huston re-visits the question of DNS Extensions, in particular the EDNS0 option signalling maximum UDP packet size accepted, and it's effect in the modern DNS. Through the APNIC Labs measurement system Geoff has visibility of the success rate for DNS events where EDNS0 signalling triggers DNS “truncation” and the consequent re-query in TCP as well as the impact of UDP fragmentation even inside the agreed limit, as well as the ability to handle the UDP packet sizes proffered in the settings. Read more about EDNS0 and UDP on the APNIC Blog and at APNIC Labs Revisiting DNS and UDP truncation (Geoff Huston, APNIC Blog July 2024) DNS TCP Requery failure rate (APNIC Labs)
Antoine GeorgesPhysique de la matière condenséeAnnée 2022-2023Conférence - Assa Auerbach : Computing Low Energy Effective Hamiltonians of Hubbard and Heisenberg Models in Two Dimensions by Contractor RenormalizationAssa Auerbach, Department of Physics, Technion, Israel Institute of TechnologyThe Higgs Mode and Quantum Criticality in Condensed MatterContractor Renormalization (CORE) invented for computing correlations in lattice gauge theories in 1996, is a very promising approach for deriving low energy effective Hamiltonians of condensed matter lattice models. CORE identifies the low energy degrees of freedom and their interactions up to the range of truncation. Truncation error is controlled by the entanglement lengthscale, similarly to the convergence of DMRG. Examples of CORE results the derivation of Plaquette Boson-Fermion phenomenology for cuprate superconductors, and prediction of p6 symmetry breaking in the gapped spin liquid of the Heisenberg Kagome model.
In this episode, Daniel J. DeAngelo, MD, PhD; Kjeld Schmiegelow, MD, DMSci; and Emily Curran, MD, answer key questions asked by the audience during a live satellite symposium at the 2022 American Society of Hematology Annual Meeting on optimizing pediatric or pediatric-inspired regimens containing asparaginase for the treatment of young and older adults with acute lymphoblastic leukemia.Topics discussed include:Practical considerations for management of allergy-like reactions and hypersensitivity to asparaginaseIndirect methods for measuring asparaginase activityStrategies to mitigate adverse events with asparaginase treatment, including hepatotoxicity, pancreatitis, and thrombosisConsiderations for use of asparaginase in special populations (eg, high BMI, older age)Presenters:Program DirectorDaniel J. DeAngelo, MD, PhDProfessor of MedicineDepartment of MedicineHarvard Medical SchoolChief of the Division of LeukemiaDepartment of Medical OncologyDivision of Hematologic MalignanciesDana‐Farber Cancer InstituteBoston, MassachusettsEmily Curran, MDAssistant ProfessorDivision of Hematology/OncologyUniversity of Cincinnati Cancer InstituteCincinnati, OhioKjeld Schmiegelow, MD, DMSciProfessorDepartment of Pediatric OncologyRighospitalet University HospitalCopenhagen, DenmarkContent based on an online CME program supported by an independent educational grant from Jazz Pharmaceuticals.Link to full program:http://bit.ly/3YXkLyj
Corrections to Estimated Accretion Disk Size due to Color Correction, Disk Truncation and Disk Wind by Andrzej A. Zdziarski et al. on Sunday 25 September We consider three corrections to the disk sizes estimated at a given frequency using accretion models. They are due to a color correction, a disk truncation at an inner radius larger than the innermost stable circular orbit, and disk winds, which we apply to the standard disk model. We apply our results to the estimates of the disk sizes based on microlensing. We find these three effects combined can explain the long-standing problem of the disk sizes from microlensing being larger than those estimated using the standard disk model (i.e., that without accounting for the above effects). In particular, an increase of the color correction with the increasing temperature can lead to a strong increase of the half-light radius even if this correction is close to unity at the temperature corresponding to an observed frequency. Our proposed formalism for calculating the half-light radius also resolves the long-standing issue of discrepancies between the disk size estimates based on the accretion rate and on the observed flux. arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/http://arxiv.org/abs/2206.06262v2
In this episode, Dr Jonathan Hudson discusses key points from a recent case report published in EHJ – Case Reports.
In this episode, Dr. Bulzacchelli, Dr. Smith, and Jason discuss the current crises we are experiencing in the world, the Church, and seemingly everywhere we turn. We take a 30,000 foot view of the current culture underlying the crises. We cover: - Diagnosing the problem - We cannot think rationally - Reactionary thinking - Public reasoning for public reasoning - Decline of public reasoning - Truncation of reason to scientism - Atheism – the view of the person - Human suffering - A New Dogmatism and a new magisterium
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.09.30.320408v1?rss=1 Authors: Sobti, M., Walshe, J. L., Zeng, Y. C., Ishmukhametov, R., Stewart, A. G. Abstract: F1Fo ATP synthase functions as a biological rotary generator that makes a major contribution to cellular energy production. Proton flow through the Fo motor generates rotation of the central stalk, inducing conformational changes in the F11 motor that catalyzes ATP production via flexible coupling. Here we present a range of cryo-EM structures of E. coli ATP synthase in different rotational and inhibited states observed following a 45 second incubation with 10 mM MgATP. The structures generated describe multiple changes that occur following addition of MgATP, with the inhibitory C-terminal domain of subunit {epsilon} ({epsilon}CTD) disassociating from the central stalk to adopt a condensed ''down'' conformation. The transition to the {epsilon}CTD down state increases the torsional flexibility of the central stalk allowing its foot to rotate by ~50{degrees}, with further flexing in the peripheral stalk enabling the c-ring to rotate by two sub-steps in the Fo motor. Truncation mutants lacking the second helix of the {epsilon}CTD suggest that central stalk rotational flexibility is important for F1Fo synthase function. Overall this study identifies the potential role played by torsional flexing within the rotor and how this could be influenced by the {epsilon} subunit. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info
The Census Bureau’s plan to finish the 2020 count on time is raising alarm bells. A former bureau director told the House Oversight and Reform Committee that expedited data processing requires the bureau to make last-minute changes to computer programs, increasing the potential for a serious computer error to go undetected until after the count is completed. Meanwhile, the bureau’s enumerators are walking off the job at twice the projected rate. Federal News Network’s Jory Heckman has more.
Добрый день уважаемые слушатели. Представляем новый выпуск подкаста RWpod. В этом выпуске: Ruby Ruby 2.7 - Singleton class yield syntax throws a warning Different Ways to Set Attributes in ActiveRecord (Rails 6) Wrangling slow reports, large file exports, and long-running tasks in Rails with ActiveJob Timestamp Truncation: A Ruby on Rails ActiveRecord Tale How to Perform Concurrent HTTP Requests in Ruby and Rails 16 New ML Gems for Ruby Vacuum - a Ruby wrapper to Amazon Product Advertising API 5.0 Web JavaScript Libraries Are Almost Never Updated Once Installed JavaScript tree shaking, like a pro ResizeObserver — a new powerful tool for Responsive Web How Smashing Magazine Manages Content: Migration From WordPress To JAMstack ESLint configuration and best practices Deno - a secure runtime for JavaScript and TypeScript (0.31.0) iHateRegex
Diagnostic Medical Image Processing (DMIP) 2011/2012 (SD 640)
The 75th episode of The Dark Verse podcast. Short stories of occult, metaphysical, and fantastical horror that will follow you to the visions of your sleep. The Dark Verse is a multiverse of Lovecraftian terror written and narrated by M. Amanuensis Sharkchild. For more information or to pick up the award-winning hardcover books, visit www.thedarkverse.com. Support the podcast at www.patreon.com/thedarkverse.
Transcript -- Did you know rocks are far from solid? Discover how the internal matrix of rock is formed.
Did you know rocks are far from solid? Discover how the internal matrix of rock is formed.
Transcript -- Did you know rocks are far from solid? Discover how the internal matrix of rock is formed.
Did you know rocks are far from solid? Discover how the internal matrix of rock is formed.
Black Hat Briefings, Las Vegas 2006 [Video] Presentations from the security conference
In this talk, I will discuss some ways to circumvent common mitigations of SQL Injection vulnerabilities in dynamic SQL. I will then suggest ways to protect against them. Bala Neerumalla specializes in finding application security vulnerabilities. He worked as a security engineer for SQL Server 2000 and SQL Server 2005. He is currently working as a security engineer for Exchange Hosted Services."
Black Hat Briefings, Las Vegas 2006 [Audio] Presentations from the security conference
"In this talk, I will discuss some ways to circumvent common mitigations of SQL Injection vulnerabilities in dynamic SQL. I will then suggest ways to protect against them. Bala Neerumalla specializes in finding application security vulnerabilities. He worked as a security engineer for SQL Server 2000 and SQL Server 2005. He is currently working as a security engineer for Exchange Hosted Services."
Fri, 1 Jan 1993 12:00:00 +0100 http://epub.ub.uni-muenchen.de/5960/ http://epub.ub.uni-muenchen.de/5960/1/5960.pdf Meyerheim, Holger L.; Robinson, Ian K.; Jahns, V.; Eng, P. J.; Moritz, Wolfgang Meyerheim, Holger L.; Robinson, Ian K.; Jahns, V.; Eng, P. J. und Moritz, Wolfgang (1993): Coverage dependent adsorption sites in the K/Cu(001) system: A crystal truncation rod analysis. In: Zeitschrift für Kristallographie, Vol. 208: pp. 73-92.