False !! ist not like Real Life....
In Reality you can be Tracked from a License or Software that is not Open source !
Every SOftware Communicates with Ports , these Communicates with DNS , Gateway and ISP and the most Dangerous Thing : Your Hardware and Mac Adress...so please do not think that t...
For school we have to perform a return-to-libc exploit. Doing this, we need to spawn a shell from /bin/xh which will print a message that we succeeded with our exploit.
To do this exploit, I used this script to get in
$(perl -e 'print "\x90" x (789) . "\x60\xb0\xe6\xb7" . "\xe0\xeb\xe5\xb7" . "...
was looking at Ross Johnston's pics of a snowbound Aviemore - looks lovely. Then had a ping from my kids in Italy saying they are having to snowboard on artificial snow :-)
well even then it can be relatively annoying to get perfect and you can easily ruin a track with it
but thanks to side chaining you can also maximize your perceived loudness
by, for example, having your lead riff compressor threshold side chained into your kick peak volume to make the lead riff duck slightly when the kick comes in
since the kick is loud anyway you don't notice the riff ducking slightly but it makes just a little more room to allow you to turn the entire track up
or, in absence of de-essing tools you can bus your vocal to a muted channel, EQ everything that isn't the major sibilances you're targetting and then use that as a side chain source to apply automatic EQ to the main vocal channel and effectively de-ess the vocal without a dedicated plugin
effectively you're saying "this ESSS you keep making, well, every time you do that, turn it down slightly"
@Adi you mean scanning something like a web service? If so then not really, I wouldn't usually use Nessus for that, although it does have web app tests of course
@RоryMcCune nah. @kalina was talking about simple music production things. Side-chaining is essential and ubiquitous in recorded music. We have experimented with it live -which is fun
if I woke up one morning and I was @Adi I'd spend the entire morning freaking out and then the entire afternoon experimenting just to see what the big deal was
@Simon I don't see any claim to power there. Just that they're only going to complain about the flagging once. So, be glad that they'll never bother us about it again.
Hm. What's up with the Everybody Gets A Hat thing? Is it counting hats from past WinterBash or something? 'Cause I'm not even out of the single-digits for hat unlocks this season.
YRERHJTGKREGJSJFN WIKIPEDIA STOP ASKING ME FOR CASH DORRAHS
Wow, wikipedia is getting passive agressive with me. I close the thingy, and it pops up another thingy when I scroll down, but in all red and yellow. "GIVE US MONEY!!!!!!!!!!!"
Heh. Yeah. Checked on my phone. Threw in a certain keyword to find pictures like that which use the other kind of bunnies, and I got all of two relevant results. The rest had nothing to do with pancakes, and were definitely NSFW.
@MarkBuffalo That's not passive aggressive. That's just aggressive.
@Simon For example, the doctors take their scooters to the hospital and drive them up / down stairs, or take them in the elevator. Then you get to the maternity ward, and they take blood from you, and pour it into a cup, contaminating it
And then you see blood stains on the floor that dried up there... Like a woman gave birth on the cold floor and attacked the doctors for Coming near her
It could be an adventure when @kalina delivers your brood
In computer security, a DMZ or demilitarized zone (sometimes referred to as a perimeter network) is a physical or logical subnetwork that contains and exposes an organization's external-facing services to a larger and untrusted network, usually the Internet. The purpose of a DMZ is to add an additional layer of security to an organization's local area network (LAN); an external network node only has direct access to equipment in the DMZ, rather than any other part of the network. The name is derived from the term "demilitarized zone", an area between nation states in which military operation is...
@DavidFreitag well theoretically general swearing isn't (although I think that's daft personally) but describing a historical event related to a swear word shouldn't be an issue