Everything you've said lines up with exactly what the author said. Carbon fiber bikes are made for and good for racing. If you're not actually racing you probably want to be on something more durable. It's almost like…
The last place I worked at had some serious issues going on internally. A couple hundred people but a basically non functioning HR department. People being yelled at by managers without repercussion. Also just bad…
Location: NYC / New York City Remote: Yes Willing to relocate: Not immediately Technologies: Python (Django/Twisted), Java/Scala/Kotlin, postgres/MySQL/redis/hbase/elasticsearch, rabbitmq/kafka/sns/sqs etc etc…
I had exactly the same experience coming to SF from NYC. I took taxis in NYC every once in a while, the only bad experience was on new years eve where everybody turns their lights off and operates without the meter.…
I did replace the # with %23 in my testing, it works on the S2 but not the S3. You can view for yourself at: http://kristofferr.com/samsung.html
I've tested this using both a galaxy S2 and S3. On the S2 the above page is safe and triggers the exploit to view the IMEI. On the S3 it launches the dialler however, the dialler is empty and does not display the IMEI.…
Testing this myself, any USSD code that begins with * # launches the device's dialler with no characters dialled. Looking at the list of codes: http://umitem.blogspot.com.au/2010/10/samsung-galaxy-s-i9000... The factory…
Everything you've said lines up with exactly what the author said. Carbon fiber bikes are made for and good for racing. If you're not actually racing you probably want to be on something more durable. It's almost like…
The last place I worked at had some serious issues going on internally. A couple hundred people but a basically non functioning HR department. People being yelled at by managers without repercussion. Also just bad…
Location: NYC / New York City Remote: Yes Willing to relocate: Not immediately Technologies: Python (Django/Twisted), Java/Scala/Kotlin, postgres/MySQL/redis/hbase/elasticsearch, rabbitmq/kafka/sns/sqs etc etc…
I had exactly the same experience coming to SF from NYC. I took taxis in NYC every once in a while, the only bad experience was on new years eve where everybody turns their lights off and operates without the meter.…
I did replace the # with %23 in my testing, it works on the S2 but not the S3. You can view for yourself at: http://kristofferr.com/samsung.html
I've tested this using both a galaxy S2 and S3. On the S2 the above page is safe and triggers the exploit to view the IMEI. On the S3 it launches the dialler however, the dialler is empty and does not display the IMEI.…
Testing this myself, any USSD code that begins with * # launches the device's dialler with no characters dialled. Looking at the list of codes: http://umitem.blogspot.com.au/2010/10/samsung-galaxy-s-i9000... The factory…