Month: November 2014


  • A.D.H.D. and the natural fix

    From A natural fix for A.D.H.D.:

    One of my patients, a young woman in her early 20s, is prototypical. “I’ve been on Adderall for years to help me focus,” she told me at our first meeting. Before taking Adderall, she found sitting in lectures unendurable and would lose her concentration within minutes. Like many people with A.D.H.D., she hankered for exciting and varied experiences and also resorted to alcohol to relieve boredom. But when something was new and stimulating, she had laserlike focus. I knew that she loved painting and asked her how long she could maintain her interest in her art. “No problem. I can paint for hours at a stretch.”

    Great piece by Richard A. Friedman.


  • OneDrive and NSA

    Do you think your OneDrive files are safe from NSA and Prism? Think again. Scary stuff if true, and hopefully something Microsoft will address in the future, although I’m not holding my breath. It seems like Apple is the only cloud player that’s taking a firm stand against these sort of things.


  • Facebook's Tor onion

    Facebook’s got a special URL for Tor browsers:

    Considerations like these have not always been reflected in Facebook’s security infrastructure, which has sometimes led to unnecessary hurdles for people who connect to Facebook using Tor. To make their experience more consistent with our goals of accessibility and security, we have begun an experiment which makes Facebook available directly over Tor network at the following URL:

    https://facebookcorewwwi.onion/

    [ NOTE: link will only work in Tor-enabled browsers ]

    Facebook’s onion address provides a way to access Facebook through Tor without losing the cryptographic protections provided by the Tor cloud.


  • The details of colonizing space

    From a Vice piece asking when we’ll live on Mars:

    It’s an impressive vision on its own, as cutting out Earth-to-orbit shipping is a major step towards cutting costs for space travel. But if you put their visions together, Moon Express and Made in Space shed light on the steps we need to take to actually build Moon factories and Mars bases. Moon Express hopes to be able to process resources on site (on whatever planet that might be), while Made in Space hopes to develop and ship entire automated manufacturing facilities to foreign worlds. Oh, and they’ll ideally self-replicate, too.

    The two companies remain independent in their goals, other startups might find more success, and yes, we’re still a couple decades out for the grand concept here. But the two are illustrative of just how the future may play out: Companies mining the Moon for resources will deliver those goods to off-world manufacturers to build the basic infrastructure for incoming space colonists. It’s indicative of just how compelling the space startup world is right now, and the even crazier thing is that, for as out there as the vision is, there’s no shortage of entrepreneurs and investors who believe that it can all actually happen.

    I can’t even begin to comprehend all the details that needs to be sorted out before Mars, or any other planetary body of rock, is within our reach for colonization. Such attention to detail is needed here that it’s staggering, and yet we’re getting closer every day. I just hope I’ll live to see it.


  • The Tim Cook moment

    Kara Swisher on Tim Cook:

    Otherwise, he eschewed the limelight during his first years, seeming to prefer to keep up that behind-the-scenes persona intact, despite the fact that he held the most high-profile job in Silicon Valley. This is in drastic contrast to everyone else in tech, who share — with great calculation, of course — quite a bit about their personal lives for the media.

    Google’s Sergey Brin kite-surfs! Amazon’s Jeff Bezos is a space nut! SpaceX and Tesla founder Elon Musk wants to die on Mars! Twitter’s Dick Costolo was once a stand-up comic! Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg is taking Chinese lessons! Box’s Aaron Levie sure is a funny tweeter!

    About Cook, nothing.

    Great piece, sparked by Tim Cook’s extraordinary essay where he officially tells the world he’s gay.


  • DN belyser sårbarheter i WordPress

    DN kör just nu en artikelserie, “Det sårbara digitala samhället”, och ger sig på WordPress i sin senaste del. Artikeln bygger på att DN har hittat dryga tio tusen svenska WordPress-installationer som
    de bedömer som osäkra, för att de inte är uppdaterade på två och ett halvt år.

    De 10.228 sajterna som DN exemplifierar har särskilt kritiska säkerhetsbrister. Därutöver finns en stor mängd sajter som har allvarliga säkerhetsbrister, men som är lite svårare att utnyttja. Även flera tidningsredaktioner använder sig av WordPress. DN har hittat minst fem tidningssajter i Sverige som har säkerhetsbrister.

    Dessa installationer kör alltså WordPress 3.3.1 eller tidigare. Nuvarande version är 4.0, för dig som inte har koll.

    Två saker rimmar illa med den här artikeln.

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