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Hardware Hacking







Hardware Hacking

Hardware Hacking 04/23/2004 01:31 PM




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Hardware Hacking

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Hardware Hacking In The WSJ


Hardware Hacking In The WSJ 09/08/2004 10:35 AM

New: Hardware Hacking Projects for Geeks


New: Hardware Hacking Projects for Geeks 01/28/2004 11:25 AM
O'Reilly & Associates announced Hardware Hacking Projects for Geeks by Scott Fullam, which offers an array of customized electronics projects from hacking a toaster to web-enabled coffee machines.

Hardware Hacking Projects for Geeks


Hardware Hacking Projects for Geeks 03/06/2004 02:09 AM

More Cringley on Linux Embedded Hardware
Hacking


More Cringley on Linux Embedded Hardware
Hacking
06/06/2004 01:08 PM

Microsoft Hardware & Starck Design
Company Hardware Collaboration


Microsoft Hardware & Starck Design
Company Hardware Collaboration
06/22/2004 10:50 AM
You heard it first here. Microsoft informed us today that we could post a link to this teaser announcing a product collaboration between Microsoft Hardware and Starck Design Company. Starck is a high-end cosmopolitan design company which works include everything from boats to clocks..along with this upcoming mystery product which is going to be released on July 8th.

Car hacking


Car hacking 12/19/2004 03:40 PM
Race for the Ultimate Car Hacks By Michelle Deli People have been tinkering with their cars since the first horseless buggy hit the road. Now, thanks to onboard computerized systems that control everything from engine management systems to radios, hackers can customize their rides in ways that are likely to have Henry Ford doing back flips in his grave. Feeding this need for speed with aftermarket computer chips and simple upgraded components gneerates $25 million…

Direct and Related Links for 'Car hacking'


Hacking Mac OS X


Hacking Mac OS X 03/28/2005 03:16 PM

GIF Hacking


GIF Hacking 09/08/2004 12:27 PM

Common knowledge says that modifying a compressed image is a bad idea. Not always, though.


Who's hacking who?


Who's hacking who? 07/11/2004 06:20 PM
Macleans Online Jul 11 2004 9:28PM GMT

Social Hacking


Social Hacking 06/05/2005 10:46 PM
While I'm really glad that smart people like Tim O'Reilly and Chris Anderson are enjoying t-shirt media hack, I'm realizing that the really terrifying thing is that everybody in my social circle knows what Goatse is. But Tim's right, of course. The only thing bloggers love as much as a...

Embracing the Art of Hacking


Embracing the Art of Hacking 05/19/2004 04:42 AM
If you can avoid some of the tedious bits, Paul Graham has some good points to make about the relationship between art and coding. Michelle Delio reviews Hackers and Painters.

Hacking Reality


Hacking Reality 01/16/2004 10:59 AM
"Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one." --Albert Einstein

Querystring Hacking with PHP


Querystring Hacking with PHP 06/05/2005 11:46 PM

PHP and Standards: arg_separator.output: A few months ago, I went ballistic on querystring arguments. I rambled on about how I hate them and go to ridiculous lengths to avoid them. I think I'm somewhat insane in this respect.

Well, I found out today that PHP can be set to parse the querystring differently using the "arg_separator.input" ini setting. You could have it use semi-colons or whatever, and it would correctly parse the querystring into the $_GET array.

However, I can't see a setting to change the key/value separator, which must have to stay the equals sign. Anyone else know how to change that...you know, just so we can make our apps completely non-standard?


Man charged with hacking


Man charged with hacking 07/23/2004 11:35 AM
globetechnology.com Jul 23 2004 3:26PM GMT

Law Against Internet Hacking


Law Against Internet Hacking 08/30/2004 08:01 AM
Hankooki Aug 30 2004 12:08PM GMT

Hacking Explained


Hacking Explained 12/30/2003 01:29 AM

Hacking Quartz


Hacking Quartz 07/06/2004 03:19 PM

Hacking the planet


Hacking the planet 08/05/2004 02:23 PM

Hacking Your GPS Firmware


Hacking Your GPS Firmware 04/01/2005 11:21 AM

Hacking Idol


Hacking Idol 05/17/2004 02:54 PM

It's great to finally hear someone talk about phone phreaking and other attempts to subvert American Idol voting. Just last week I was trolling the web looking for web-to-SMS gateways to see if one could write a bot to vote-spam an American Idol contestant. To hear that folks are using automated dialers to shut out voters seems even more obvious. They should probably just make the voting a 900 number, at say, 50 cents a vote, in order to limit hackery but people could still simply jam the lines with DoS attacks using dialers.


Is Hacking Ethical


Is Hacking Ethical 05/13/2004 09:40 AM

Wi-Fi hacking, a primer


Wi-Fi hacking, a primer 08/13/2004 09:18 AM

Hacking Text


Hacking Text 05/10/2004 04:21 PM

CNET posts an inter esting New York Times article about a group of European researchers who have found ways to 'un-black' blacked out text in documents like those released by the government in recent months by using a process-of-elimination technique to figure out what words fit under the obscured area.

The researchers showed their software at the conference, called Eurocrypt, by analyzing a presidential briefing memorandum released in April to the commission investigating the Sept. 11 attacks. After analyzing the document, they said they had high confidence the word "Egyptian" had been blacked out in a passage describing the source of an intelligence report stating that Osama Bin Ladin was planning an attack in the United States.

Via BoingBoing.

Click here to comment on this entry


Hacking: A history


Hacking: A history 04/12/2005 03:46 AM
News.bbc.co.uk - Mon Apr 11, 08:41 am GMT

No medals for hacking


No medals for hacking 08/22/2004 11:17 PM
USA Today Aug 23 2004 3:14AM GMT

- Law Against Internet Hacking


- Law Against Internet Hacking 08/30/2004 08:01 AM
Hankooki Aug 30 2004 12:28PM GMT

More Roomba hacking


More Roomba hacking 07/14/2004 10:00 AM
img_1514 Another group of hardware hackers have at a Roomba robotic vacuum cleaner:
"For higher level control, we've attached a Virgin Webplayer. The Webplayer was sold as a loss leader for Virgin's internet service in the late 90s, and thus can be found on ebay for under $100. It has two serial ports, a 200MHz Geode processor, 64M ram, and a miniPCI port. Thus, we can give it an 802.11b card, a webcam, and a usb-serial adapter."
Link (via MetaFilter)

Hacking the MuVo2


Hacking the MuVo2 01/22/2004 03:24 PM
A reader points us towards an interesting hack involving Creative's new 4GB MuVo2 MP3 player. It seems that it's 4GB MicroDrive isn't soldered to the...

Hacking the RoboSapien


Hacking the RoboSapien 09/19/2004 02:15 AM

Lowering the bar for hacking


Lowering the bar for hacking 03/19/2003 10:25 PM
Information related to 55,200 social security numbers were "stolen" from the University of Texas, and the "hacker" has turned himself in.  His crime?  Scanning ~2.7 million social security numbers through a web interface.  Obviously there are some security concerns here.

Hacking your Car Stereo


Hacking your Car Stereo 06/17/2005 06:10 PM

16.jpgiPod enthusiast Matt Gilbert has thrown together a nice, cost-efficient hack to get the iPod running directly to a car stereo without having an auxiliary input. He had experienced static and interference when using FM Transmitters or cassette adapters, and this tweak uses a toggle switch and some wire splicing to create a direct line-in into any car stereo.

The total cost of the mod is under $1 (if you already have basic wiring tools and supplies), and it's a great way to ruin your dashboard if you mess up.

Car Stereo Auxiliary Input [MattGilbert]


Hacking the Hotel TV


Hacking the Hotel TV 09/24/2004 05:40 PM
How to get your video from their TV

Hacking Away At Apple


Hacking Away At Apple 03/26/2005 10:22 PM

Apple has traditionally been regarded as partially immune to the exploits of hackers and virus writers, thanks to its low market share -- but those days may be over. By Steven Musil, CNET News.com


Features: Hacking XML


Features: Hacking XML 09/15/2004 07:42 PM
Among author Mike Fitzgerald's favorite hacks in XML Hacks are two that use SP, James Clark's free, open-source SGML-parser package. The first hack shows how to convert a minimally tagged document to well-formed XML. The second shows how to convert a Wiki format to XML via SGML and SP tools.

Hacking Crusoe


Hacking Crusoe 02/10/2004 02:44 AM
RWT is running an serious of articles by an anonymous author who has done an impressive job of reverse engineering many of the technical details of Transmeta's Code Morphine Software and the VLIW hardware at the core of Crusoe.

""Hacking" Revisited"


""Hacking" Revisited" 02/13/2004 02:37 PM

Google hacking


Google hacking 02/15/2004 11:32 PM
Information Highways Feb 16 2004 3:47AM GMT

Hacking matter


Hacking matter 06/24/2004 06:41 AM
I've been reading Wil McCarthy's book Hacking Matter, which is a popularized version of the serious study of quantum dots and the ability to build pseudomatter using artificial atoms. How can one not like a book, which contains wonderful sentences such as this one:

Now we can create not only a thin film of goldlike pseudomatter, but a three-dimensional solid with pseudogold dopant atoms on the inside as well. Thus, we can generate a bulk material with the mass of wickered silicon, but the physical, chemical, and electrical properties of an otherwise-impossible gold/silicon alloy.

I mean - even the minuscule thought of it is breathtaking! The wonders of the universe! How could one not love this world, when so many incredible things are about? This could, and would change the face of the world as we know it. You just flick a switch, and you can make a part of the wall transparent - or a light source - or a TV screen - or gold. Whatever pleases you.

As an aside, I also found another very interesting paragraph (among thousands, but this one has an ominous look):

At his insistence, we filed an application with the United States Patent and Trademark Office, and within a few weeks we'd been contacted by the U.S. Air Force about the possibility of maybe licensing it.

Note that even in the US, patents are generally considered secret and proprietary, until a year of the filing date has passed. This is so that the application can be amended, fixed, and just being kept secret from the competitors, who might find a way to redesign around the actual implementation (ideas are not patentable as such). Obviously, the military is ignoring all that and have their own informants within the US patent process... Somehow, that does not surprise me at all.


Hacking An Election


Hacking An Election 02/10/2004 02:41 AM
Nothing particularly new here if you've been following the whole issue on problems with electronic voting machines, but Salon has a fairly comprehensive piece describing the concerns of those who want to stop current voting machines from being used in elections. It describes some of the not-quite-so-secure techniques Diebold used to "secure" their machines - including leaving the necessary password out in the open. It also talks about how comments in the source code of the Diebold machines make it clear that the engineers knew that parts of the software don't work, and yet it was still used in elections. The responses from those who defend the electronic voting systems are a bit scary, as they basically ignore the point. Instead, they talk about how other voting methods have problems as well, and how difficult or expensive it would be to fix these voting machines. Whoever said democracy was supposed to be cheap? Update: Whoops. A new report says electronic voting machines in North Carolina lost 436 ballots last year.
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