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    220

    Explore " 220" with insightful episodes like "Retake of service restarts (asg2023)", "Retake of service restarts (asg2023)", "Retake of service restarts (asg2023)", "Retake of service restarts (asg2023)" and "Rewilding Human-Computer Interaction (emf2022)" from podcasts like ""Chaos Computer Club - recent audio-only feed", "Chaos Computer Club - recent events feed", "Chaos Computer Club - recent events feed (high quality)", "Chaos Computer Club - recent events feed (low quality)" and "Chaos Computer Club - recent events feed"" and more!

    Episodes (34)

    Retake of service restarts (asg2023)

    Retake of service restarts (asg2023)
    Stopping the old and starting a new service afresh -- that is what service restart is roughly about. We will look what it comprises in more detail from service manager perspective and also from the service's client end. Thus we will look at how FDSTORE API can be used to smooth service restart. Furthermore, we will review how unit instances may provide further distinction between the stopped and the restarted service. Finally, we go through options that the existing service have to adopt these methods. about this event: https://cfp.all-systems-go.io/all-systems-go-2023/talk/FYHCNJ/

    Retake of service restarts (asg2023)

    Retake of service restarts (asg2023)
    Stopping the old and starting a new service afresh -- that is what service restart is roughly about. We will look what it comprises in more detail from service manager perspective and also from the service's client end. Thus we will look at how FDSTORE API can be used to smooth service restart. Furthermore, we will review how unit instances may provide further distinction between the stopped and the restarted service. Finally, we go through options that the existing service have to adopt these methods. about this event: https://cfp.all-systems-go.io/all-systems-go-2023/talk/FYHCNJ/

    Retake of service restarts (asg2023)

    Retake of service restarts (asg2023)
    Stopping the old and starting a new service afresh -- that is what service restart is roughly about. We will look what it comprises in more detail from service manager perspective and also from the service's client end. Thus we will look at how FDSTORE API can be used to smooth service restart. Furthermore, we will review how unit instances may provide further distinction between the stopped and the restarted service. Finally, we go through options that the existing service have to adopt these methods. about this event: https://cfp.all-systems-go.io/all-systems-go-2023/talk/FYHCNJ/

    Retake of service restarts (asg2023)

    Retake of service restarts (asg2023)
    Stopping the old and starting a new service afresh -- that is what service restart is roughly about. We will look what it comprises in more detail from service manager perspective and also from the service's client end. Thus we will look at how FDSTORE API can be used to smooth service restart. Furthermore, we will review how unit instances may provide further distinction between the stopped and the restarted service. Finally, we go through options that the existing service have to adopt these methods. about this event: https://cfp.all-systems-go.io/all-systems-go-2023/talk/FYHCNJ/

    Rewilding Human-Computer Interaction (emf2022)

    Rewilding Human-Computer Interaction (emf2022)
    I'm an artist creating interactive installations. The hardest part is devising open-ended interaction, spaces that invite people to reveal their authentic selves, and to connect with those around. But trends in technology have gone in the opposite direction. Whether it's for usability, profit, safety, profit or 'sparking joy', or profit (it's usually profit), 'User Experience Design' was the flavour of the 2010s. Human-Computer Interaction has become a very planned affair. And the more planned it gets, the less room there is for the ambiguous messy bits that make us human. Could it be another way? Presenting... ✯✯✯ Rewilding Human-Computer Interaction ✯✯✯ where, instead of designing micromanaged user experiences, we create open-ended spaces that embrace the unknown, the messy and the human. The ills of the online world are not problems inherent to its users but to systems that prevent those users from existing fully as humans. The solution is not more design, but more wildness. Soapbox aside, I do have a speculative project to share on this front. In a collaboration with artist/AI researcher Panagiotis Tigas, we've been training Variational Autoencoders on improvised dance, and from these devising personalised interfaces that respond to creative movement. The resulting system allows you to move through a 16-dimensional parameter space while following the intuitions of the body. As an entangled black box system, I can't explain how to use it, but it can be learnt by the body through exploration and play. We have it here at EMF as in Latent Voyage, letting you navigate the hallucinatory latent space of an image generating AI. about this event: https://c3voc.de

    Rewilding Human-Computer Interaction (emf2022)

    Rewilding Human-Computer Interaction (emf2022)
    I'm an artist creating interactive installations. The hardest part is devising open-ended interaction, spaces that invite people to reveal their authentic selves, and to connect with those around. But trends in technology have gone in the opposite direction. Whether it's for usability, profit, safety, profit or 'sparking joy', or profit (it's usually profit), 'User Experience Design' was the flavour of the 2010s. Human-Computer Interaction has become a very planned affair. And the more planned it gets, the less room there is for the ambiguous messy bits that make us human. Could it be another way? Presenting... ✯✯✯ Rewilding Human-Computer Interaction ✯✯✯ where, instead of designing micromanaged user experiences, we create open-ended spaces that embrace the unknown, the messy and the human. The ills of the online world are not problems inherent to its users but to systems that prevent those users from existing fully as humans. The solution is not more design, but more wildness. Soapbox aside, I do have a speculative project to share on this front. In a collaboration with artist/AI researcher Panagiotis Tigas, we've been training Variational Autoencoders on improvised dance, and from these devising personalised interfaces that respond to creative movement. The resulting system allows you to move through a 16-dimensional parameter space while following the intuitions of the body. As an entangled black box system, I can't explain how to use it, but it can be learnt by the body through exploration and play. We have it here at EMF as in Latent Voyage, letting you navigate the hallucinatory latent space of an image generating AI. about this event: https://c3voc.de

    Rewilding Human-Computer Interaction (emf2022)

    Rewilding Human-Computer Interaction (emf2022)
    I'm an artist creating interactive installations. The hardest part is devising open-ended interaction, spaces that invite people to reveal their authentic selves, and to connect with those around. But trends in technology have gone in the opposite direction. Whether it's for usability, profit, safety, profit or 'sparking joy', or profit (it's usually profit), 'User Experience Design' was the flavour of the 2010s. Human-Computer Interaction has become a very planned affair. And the more planned it gets, the less room there is for the ambiguous messy bits that make us human. Could it be another way? Presenting... ✯✯✯ Rewilding Human-Computer Interaction ✯✯✯ where, instead of designing micromanaged user experiences, we create open-ended spaces that embrace the unknown, the messy and the human. The ills of the online world are not problems inherent to its users but to systems that prevent those users from existing fully as humans. The solution is not more design, but more wildness. Soapbox aside, I do have a speculative project to share on this front. In a collaboration with artist/AI researcher Panagiotis Tigas, we've been training Variational Autoencoders on improvised dance, and from these devising personalised interfaces that respond to creative movement. The resulting system allows you to move through a 16-dimensional parameter space while following the intuitions of the body. As an entangled black box system, I can't explain how to use it, but it can be learnt by the body through exploration and play. We have it here at EMF as in Latent Voyage, letting you navigate the hallucinatory latent space of an image generating AI. about this event: https://c3voc.de

    Rewilding Human-Computer Interaction (emf2022)

    Rewilding Human-Computer Interaction (emf2022)
    I'm an artist creating interactive installations. The hardest part is devising open-ended interaction, spaces that invite people to reveal their authentic selves, and to connect with those around. But trends in technology have gone in the opposite direction. Whether it's for usability, profit, safety, profit or 'sparking joy', or profit (it's usually profit), 'User Experience Design' was the flavour of the 2010s. Human-Computer Interaction has become a very planned affair. And the more planned it gets, the less room there is for the ambiguous messy bits that make us human. Could it be another way? Presenting... ✯✯✯ Rewilding Human-Computer Interaction ✯✯✯ where, instead of designing micromanaged user experiences, we create open-ended spaces that embrace the unknown, the messy and the human. The ills of the online world are not problems inherent to its users but to systems that prevent those users from existing fully as humans. The solution is not more design, but more wildness. Soapbox aside, I do have a speculative project to share on this front. In a collaboration with artist/AI researcher Panagiotis Tigas, we've been training Variational Autoencoders on improvised dance, and from these devising personalised interfaces that respond to creative movement. The resulting system allows you to move through a 16-dimensional parameter space while following the intuitions of the body. As an entangled black box system, I can't explain how to use it, but it can be learnt by the body through exploration and play. We have it here at EMF as in Latent Voyage, letting you navigate the hallucinatory latent space of an image generating AI. about this event: https://c3voc.de

    Today's News You Can Use

    Today's News You Can Use
    Top 5 news stories for April 19, 2022 on the Affirm America podcast. 1. Mask Mandates lifted on Airplanes, Trains and Buses. 2. Apprehensions on the southern border in March tops 220,000 and more to come with the lifting of Title 42. 3. Wealth Tax proposed the day after Tax Day. 2. Cori Bush, Congresswoman spends $300,000 on personal security while calling for De-Funding the police. 5. iPhone releases pregnant man and gender neutral emoji's on their iPhones.

    PDL #220 – O Fim da URSS

    PDL #220 – O Fim da URSS
    Fala, Vagabundo! Neste Papo de Louco, fhistórico, falaremos sobre os fatos que culminaram no fim da URSS ou não.
    Edição - Luciano Munhoz. Capa - Luciano Munhoz.

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    Die EU im Krisenmodus (rc3-2021)

    Die EU im Krisenmodus (rc3-2021)
    Ein Überblick über die Geschichte und den Herausforderungen der europäischen Integration. Die lange Geschichte einer europäischen Integration und den Herausforderungen damit. Von vor dem ersten Weltkrieg über die Montan-Union bis hin zum aktuellen komplexen EU-Gebilde der 28 Mitglieder. Anschließend werden die neuralgischen Spannungspunkte in der aktuelle EU-Konstellation aufgezeigt. 00:00 Intro 00:15 Heraldin kündigt an 00:50 Vortrag beginnt 51:10 Q&A Session 74:33 Outro about this event: https://pretalx.c3voc.de/rc3-2021-r3s/talk/HCVYZH/

    Die EU im Krisenmodus (rc3-2021)

    Die EU im Krisenmodus (rc3-2021)
    Ein Überblick über die Geschichte und den Herausforderungen der europäischen Integration. Die lange Geschichte einer europäischen Integration und den Herausforderungen damit. Von vor dem ersten Weltkrieg über die Montan-Union bis hin zum aktuellen komplexen EU-Gebilde der 28 Mitglieder. Anschließend werden die neuralgischen Spannungspunkte in der aktuelle EU-Konstellation aufgezeigt. 00:00 Intro 00:15 Heraldin kündigt an 00:50 Vortrag beginnt 51:10 Q&A Session 74:33 Outro about this event: https://pretalx.c3voc.de/rc3-2021-r3s/talk/HCVYZH/

    Insights Into Entertainment: Episode 124 “Yehaa Bob and the Sith Lords”

    Insights Into Entertainment: Episode 124 “Yehaa Bob and the Sith Lords”

    Today in our Disney Detective, Say hello to “Yehaa Bob” and Dining 220 Miles above the Earth.  In our Tales from the Edge of the Galaxy, Is Darth Vader the way? Plus Old favorites from the Old Republic. And for our Entertainment News, Mobius in the Mansion? And TMZ sells out to Fox Entertainment. And as always we’ll finish up with our Insightful Picks of the week....and some afterthoughts


    Flux: Making fonts smarter (glt21)

    Flux: Making fonts smarter (glt21)
    We'll learn more about how font technology works, and demonstrate the Flux layout editor You might think of a font as a collection of shapes, but there's more to font technology than that. A font can contain instructions in a little programming language called OpenType Layout. We'll look at how font technology works and how fonts are rendered on a Linux system. We'll also then look into a new project called [Flux](https://github.com/simoncozens/flux) which provides a visual editing interface to OpenType Layout. about this event: https://pretalx.linuxtage.at//glt21/talk/B3XWEW/

    Flux: Making fonts smarter (glt21)

    Flux: Making fonts smarter (glt21)
    We'll learn more about how font technology works, and demonstrate the Flux layout editor You might think of a font as a collection of shapes, but there's more to font technology than that. A font can contain instructions in a little programming language called OpenType Layout. We'll look at how font technology works and how fonts are rendered on a Linux system. We'll also then look into a new project called [Flux](https://github.com/simoncozens/flux) which provides a visual editing interface to OpenType Layout. about this event: https://pretalx.linuxtage.at//glt21/talk/B3XWEW/

    Shit is getting real, messy and we are in for a surprise (rc3)

    Shit is getting real, messy and we are in for a surprise (rc3)
    Artist talk walking through the process of bringing ideas into reality and how things along the way get messy, confusing, contradictory and wilder beyond your wildest imaginations. I will talk about Human Cheese, I Did Not Have to Kill in Order to Survive, and I Want to Become a Cephalopod (Training Transhumanism) about this event: https://pretalx.rc3.studio/rc3-channels-2020/talk/XK7AE8/

    Shit is getting real, messy and we are in for a surprise (rc3)

    Shit is getting real, messy and we are in for a surprise (rc3)
    Artist talk walking through the process of bringing ideas into reality and how things along the way get messy, confusing, contradictory and wilder beyond your wildest imaginations. I will talk about Human Cheese, I Did Not Have to Kill in Order to Survive, and I Want to Become a Cephalopod (Training Transhumanism) about this event: https://pretalx.rc3.studio/rc3-channels-2020/talk/XK7AE8/

    Droid Life Show: Episode 220 - 5G Be Creepin'

    Droid Life Show: Episode 220 - 5G Be Creepin'

    On this episode of the Droid Life Show, after a few week break for the holiday shopping season, we're back to talk about Qualcomm's Snapdragon 865 and how much closer to 5G we are. Not 5G in the sense that it'll be meaningful, but 5G in the sense that you'll have a phone capable of connecting to 5G whether anyone is ready or not.

    We'll also dive into T-Mobile and AT&T's new 5G networks, Motorola re-joining the premium realm, the December Android patch, Galaxy S11 renders, and more!

    Trivia is back at the end of the show as usual.

    Über Bruteforce Protection und warum das gar nicht so leicht ist (mrmcd19)

    Über Bruteforce Protection und warum das gar nicht so leicht ist (mrmcd19)
    Bruteforce Angriffe - also Angriffe durch Ausprobieren aller möglicher Passwörter - sind so alt wie Passwörter selbst. Seit Systeme über das Internet erreichbar wurden, haben diese Angriffe an Relevanz gewonnen. Doch obwohl die Idee des Angriffs simpel und altbekannt ist, gibt es in der Praxis kaum Verfahren zur Abwehr dieser Angriffe, die nicht neue Probleme mit sich bringen. In meinem Vortrag möchte ich die gängigen Verfahren beleuchten, aufzeigen welche Probleme sie mit sich bringen und schließlich auch eine Lösung vorstellen, die es besser macht. Im Vortrag zeige ich verschiedene Ansätze wie Bruteforce Protection in der Praxis gehandhabt wird, und dass sie fast alle ein zentrales Problem ignorieren - sie ermöglichen einen Denial of Service Angriff. Schließlich stelle ich das Verfahren der Bruteforce Protection via Device Cookies vom Open Web Application Security Project (OWASP) vor, das bisher der einzige praktikable Ansatz zu sein scheint. Abschließend gibt es noch ein Ausblick über Zwei-Faktor-Authentifizierung zu WebAuthn um zu zeigen, dass es auch andere Lösungsansätze gibt die sich mit der Problematik von Passwörtern allgemein befassen und eine Zusammenfassung mit Hinweisen für Anwendungsentwickler\*innen und Nutzer\*innen. about this event: https://talks.mrmcd.net/2019/talk/PMPV9P/

    Über Bruteforce Protection und warum das gar nicht so leicht ist (mrmcd19)

    Über Bruteforce Protection und warum das gar nicht so leicht ist (mrmcd19)
    Bruteforce Angriffe - also Angriffe durch Ausprobieren aller möglicher Passwörter - sind so alt wie Passwörter selbst. Seit Systeme über das Internet erreichbar wurden, haben diese Angriffe an Relevanz gewonnen. Doch obwohl die Idee des Angriffs simpel und altbekannt ist, gibt es in der Praxis kaum Verfahren zur Abwehr dieser Angriffe, die nicht neue Probleme mit sich bringen. In meinem Vortrag möchte ich die gängigen Verfahren beleuchten, aufzeigen welche Probleme sie mit sich bringen und schließlich auch eine Lösung vorstellen, die es besser macht. Im Vortrag zeige ich verschiedene Ansätze wie Bruteforce Protection in der Praxis gehandhabt wird, und dass sie fast alle ein zentrales Problem ignorieren - sie ermöglichen einen Denial of Service Angriff. Schließlich stelle ich das Verfahren der Bruteforce Protection via Device Cookies vom Open Web Application Security Project (OWASP) vor, das bisher der einzige praktikable Ansatz zu sein scheint. Abschließend gibt es noch ein Ausblick über Zwei-Faktor-Authentifizierung zu WebAuthn um zu zeigen, dass es auch andere Lösungsansätze gibt die sich mit der Problematik von Passwörtern allgemein befassen und eine Zusammenfassung mit Hinweisen für Anwendungsentwickler\*innen und Nutzer\*innen. about this event: https://talks.mrmcd.net/2019/talk/PMPV9P/
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