Thursday, 12. July 12018
p3k dots

A Mini Browser for the Masses.

When a user pulled up their browser and requested a URL, instead of making a normal request, it bounced it through a proxy server owned and operated by Opera. That proxy server would then access the requested URL, render it out completely, and then send back an interactive image of the webpage down to the browser which processed the image in a Java environment and showed it to the user.

Relevant: brow.sh is a purely text-based browser that can run in most TTY terminal environments and in any browser.

I hope the sensomatics are reading this, because I think they might like this neat tool called web-riimote.

Turn your smartphone into a 3D controller with just a web app. No native app needed.

Wednesday, 11. July 12018
p3k dots

With Reverse Engineering for Beginners you will learn the basics of x86 and get hands-on experience, all for free!

Dancing in Movies: A Montage of Dance Moments from Almost 300 Feature Films.

Tuesday, 10. July 12018
p3k dots

And I wondered why it’s taking so long…

Note to self: next time exclude the backup device from the backup.

Monday, 9. July 12018
p3k dots

Whoah, this is so inspiring!

Itty bitty sites are contained entirely within their own link.

Abalonia: The Island Nation That Never Was.

After the Fall – 10 years later, the credit crunch revisited.

For the people inside the system that caused a decade of misery, no change. For everyone else, a decade of misery, magnified by austerity policies.

Source: cdn.lrb.co.uk

Trial runs for fascism are in full flow.

Fascism doesn’t arise suddenly in an existing democracy. It is not easy to get people to give up their ideas of freedom and civility. You have to do trial runs that, if they are done well, serve two purposes. They get people used to something they may initially recoil from; and they allow you to refine and calibrate. This is what is happening now and we would be fools not to see it.

ICANN't get no respect: Europe throws Whois privacy plan in the trash.

Clueless DNS overseer sees lazy efforts torn apart – again