I remember the time I rode an elevator top to the attic of a university building where we found about a ton of mercury and an old radioactive waste storage area. That sent us to the building core of a building next door to sneak into the graduate lab and borrow a Geiger counter.
A few years later they cleaned the area out and moved the Latino studies department in.
Well currently in many cities, shortly afterward some engineering department would move in next door and make that area prime spot for tech collaboration and study, and after a while the Latino Studies department would have to be relocated off campus.
Decent summary, and I'd also encourage the watch-in-full. Even play in the background without visual aids, as the presenters did a great job enhancing the data via presentation.
It's worth it, sat down and watched it last night. They did a really interesting, in-depth presentation including the history, quirks of the trade and video from pen tests.
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[ 3.5 ms ] story [ 46.9 ms ] threadA few years later they cleaned the area out and moved the Latino studies department in.
(alluding to the google bus fiasco)
In it, you can find /events/000000000030c2ae/19d2ee6c-f8a5-4d3a-bc09-2d2d21c3912c_2096.mp4
And since the streaming comes from http://livestreamvod-f.akamaihd.net/, I get:
http://livestreamvod-f.akamaihd.net/events/000000000030c2ae/...
* Every lift has mandated modes that allow an operator to take full control and override any building access controls.
* The security on these modes is poor.
* Don't do dumb things with elevators
I'd encourage you to watch it in full, as it is interesting and contains more detail than the above suggests.