Build a DIY Ambient Weather Indicator with an Adafruit Neopixel Ring

Have an office without a window? Not sure whether to grab your jacket or umbrella on the way out. Sure you could hit the Internet or pop open a weather app on your smartphone, but what fun would that be? Read more…        

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Build a DIY Ambient Weather Indicator with an Adafruit Neopixel Ring

NSA System Can Record Entire Countries’ Calls for 30 Days at a Time

Remember all that business about the NSA saying it only collects phone metadata ? Yeah, that’s not true. Not only can the NSA listen in on foreigners’ phone calls. It can record “every single” conversation in an entire country and store the recordings for 30 days at a time, according to a new Washington Post report . Read more…        

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NSA System Can Record Entire Countries’ Calls for 30 Days at a Time

Scientists Revive Moss That Was Encased In Ice For 1,500 Years

Cryonics enthusiasts will be pleased to hear that scientists have demonstrated the ability to revive frozen life not just after a couple years or even a couple of decades. They can bring something back to life that’s been frozen for fifteen centuries. The previous record was just 20 years. Read more…        

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Scientists Revive Moss That Was Encased In Ice For 1,500 Years

Welcome to The World’s Largest Ghost City: Ordos, China

Built for over a million people, the city of Ordos was designed to be the crowning glory of Inner Mongolia. Doomed to incompletion however, this futuristic metropolis now rises empty out of the deserts of northern China. Only 2% of its buildings were ever filled; the rest has largely been left to decay, abandoned mid-construction, earning Ordos the title of China’s Ghost City . Read more…        

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Welcome to The World’s Largest Ghost City: Ordos, China

Crowdsourcing Confirms: Websites Inaccessible on Comcast

Bennett Haselton writes with a bit of online detective work done with a little help from some (internet-distributed) friends: “A website that was temporarily inaccessible on my Comcast Internet connection (but accessible to my friends on other providers) led me to investigate further. Using a perl script, I found a sampling of websites that were inaccessible on Comcast (hostnames not resolving on DNS) but were working on other networks. Then I used Amazon Mechanical Turk to pay volunteers 25 cents apiece to check if they could access the website, and confirmed that (most) Comcast users were blocked from accessing it while users on other providers were not. The number of individual websites similarly inaccessible on Comcast could potentially be in the millions.” Read on for the details. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Crowdsourcing Confirms: Websites Inaccessible on Comcast

The Proper Reading Order for the Star Trek Novels in a Handy Flowchart

Have you been wanting to dive into the world of Star Trek novels, but aren’t sure where to start? Check out the Almighty Star Trek Lit-verse Reading Order Flowchart , which lays out which books should come earliest on your reading list. Read more…        

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The Proper Reading Order for the Star Trek Novels in a Handy Flowchart

Americans Are Riding Public Transit In Record-Breaking Numbers

Visit any major U.S. city and you’ll likely see the anecdotal evidence that use of public transit is steadily growing in popularity. Last year, however, Americans reached an important milestone: according to a new study by the American Public Transit Association , U.S. residents took almost 10.7 billion trips on transit, the highest number since 1956. Read more…        

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Americans Are Riding Public Transit In Record-Breaking Numbers

School Tricks Pupils Into Installing a Root CA

First time accepted submitter paddysteed writes “I go to secondary school in the UK. I went digging around the computers there and found that on the schools machines, there was a root CA from the school. I then suspected that the software they instruct windows users to install on their own hardware to gain access to the BYOD network installed the same certificate. I created a windows virtual machine and connected to the network the way that was recommended. Immediately afterwards I checked the list of root CA’s, and found my school’s. I thought the story posted a few days ago was bad, but what my school has done is install their certificate on people’s own machines — which I think is far worse. This basically allows them to intercept and modify any HTTPS traffic on their network. Considering this is a boarding school, and our only method of communicating to the outside world is over their network, I feel this is particularly bad. We were not told about this policy and we have not signed anything which would excuse it. I confronted the IT department and they initially denied everything. I left and within five minutes, the WiFi network was down then as quickly as it had gone down, it was back up. I went back and they confirmed that there was a mistake and they had ‘fixed’ it. They also told me that the risk was very low and the head of networks told me he was willing to bet his job on it. I asked them to instruct people to remove the bad certificate from their own machines, but they claimed this was unnecessary due to the very low risk. I want to take this further but to get the school’s management interested I will need to explain what has happened and why it is bad to non-technical people and provide evidence that what has been done is potentially illegal.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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School Tricks Pupils Into Installing a Root CA

Why Daylight Saving Time Is Pointless

Ugh. You’re up an hour early, your body hates you for it, and even a gallon of coffee can’t get your day on track. Daylight saving sucks. But you know the worst part? It doesn’t have to be like this. Read more…        

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Why Daylight Saving Time Is Pointless

The Always Up-to-Date Guide to Building a Hackintosh (OS X 10.9.2)

Building a hackintosh—that is, installing Mac OS X on non-Apple hardware—used to require extremely restricted hardware choices and quite a bit of know-how. Now your options are vast and the installation process is fairly simple. With that in mind, here is our always up-to-date guide to building a hackintosh that will walk you through purchasing compatible parts, building your machine, and installing OS X all on your own. Read more…        

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The Always Up-to-Date Guide to Building a Hackintosh (OS X 10.9.2)