Long-lost H.P. Lovecraft manuscrupt found

The Cancer of Superstition , a non-fiction treatise commissioned from author H.P. Lovecraft, was found in a memorabilia collection in a defunct magic shop . Magician Harry Houdini asked Lovecraft to ghostwrite the text for a book project, but died shortly thereafter. Now it goes to auction. The collection bounced around after Beatrice Houdini’s death in 1943 and was never truly catalogued or ‘mined’ in all that time. The papers were never researched or inventoried,” said Potter & Potter president Gabe Fajuri. “In all that time, no one seemed to realise the significance of the manuscript.” Fajuri said the collection was recently bought privately, and when “the new owner began sorting through the mountain of paperwork, he began putting the pieces together, and in the process discovered the manuscript and its significance” From the excerpts, it sounds exactly as you’d imagine a Lovecraft text about superstition to sound (‘superstition is an “inborn inclination” that “persists only through mental indolence”’ etc). There is some debate over the authorship, with S.T. Joshi identifying CM Eddy. If you want it, expect to pay $25,000-$40,000 for it.

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Long-lost H.P. Lovecraft manuscrupt found

Hotel’s Android-based lightswitches are predictably, horribly insecure

Matthew Garrett checked into a London hotel and discovered that the proprietors had decided that “light switches are unfashionable and replaced them with a series of Android tablets.” (more…)

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Hotel’s Android-based lightswitches are predictably, horribly insecure

TV program shows to send an email in 1984

Attention crackers – his Micronet password is 1234. “How to send an e mail 1980’s style. Electronic message writing down the phone line. First shown on Thames TV’s computer programme ‘Database’ in 1984”

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TV program shows to send an email in 1984

Disgruntled IS defector dumps full details of tens of thousands of jihadis

Abu Hamed is a former Free Syrian Army fighter who defected to ISIS, where he served in their internal security forces; after a split with the organization, he stole a thumb-drive containing the induction questionnaires and personnel files of over 22,000 jihadi fighters who travelled from 51 countries to fight with ISIS. He has turned the files over to Sky News correspondent Stuart Ramsay. (more…)

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Disgruntled IS defector dumps full details of tens of thousands of jihadis

Man has fun pranking email scammers

https://youtu.be/KDc-M4dHr0s?list=PLSKUhDnoJjYmeW6nNasZSaVAGh4u91pEk I’m enjoying James Veitch’s weekly video series where he has fun with email scammers. In this episode, James has an exchange with a US soldier named Mary Gary who discovered a buried safe while on a routine patrol and wants to share the $15 million booty with James.

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Man has fun pranking email scammers

Gorgeous new covers for 100 great public domain books

The New York Public Library’s spectacular Digital Public Library challenged designers to create new covers for some of the public domain’s greatest books, which had been previously doomed to an undeserved dullness thanks to the auto-generated covers that book-scanning projects stuck them with. (more…)

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Gorgeous new covers for 100 great public domain books

Crapgadget apocalypse: the IoT devices that punch through your firewall and expose your network

Cheap Internet of Things devices like Foscam’s home CCTVs are designed to covertly tunnel out of your home network, bypassing your firewall, so they can join a huge P2P network of 7 million other devices that is maintained and surveilled by their Chinese manufacturer. (more…)

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Crapgadget apocalypse: the IoT devices that punch through your firewall and expose your network

_applyChinaLocationShift: In China, national security means that all the maps are wrong

Chinese law makes independent mapmaking a crime (you may not document “the shapes, sizes, space positions, attributes, etc. of man-made surface installations”) and requires tech companies to randomly vary the locations of all landmarks by 100-500m. (more…)

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_applyChinaLocationShift: In China, national security means that all the maps are wrong

Your Next Phone Might Have 256GB of Storage Thanks to Samsung’s New Chip

I love high capacity things. So when Samsung announced it’s producing 256 GB flash storage that can be used in mobile devices, I swooned. The memory is two times faster than the previous generation of Universal Flash Storage (UFS) memory, meaning that phones will not only have greater storage capacities, but also breeze reading and writing operations. Read more…

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Your Next Phone Might Have 256GB of Storage Thanks to Samsung’s New Chip

Player Discovers Secret Menus In Mortal Kombat Games After Over 20 Years

Through a series of button inputs, a player has found previously undiscovered menus that lay dormant in the arcade versions of Mortal Kombat 1 , 2 and 3. How did they last so long without being discovered? Read more…

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Player Discovers Secret Menus In Mortal Kombat Games After Over 20 Years