I cleaned off the computer...before
my other "roomies" can have a pow wow..
concerning "the Jim" problem
again..
never mind it was me and XXXX who actually have out name on the rental..
after we did this insurance claim thing concerning
a KY Jelly incident in a Rite Aid a few years ago
I turn on the computer ..it obviously works
and see some ribble rable XXXX has written ...,and decide to keep it up
maybe as some kind of evidence against XXXX at some future claims court
concerning character defamation
or some Copy Clip and "fall" suit I can bring against XXXX
I decided to change my password
.
for tighter security.
and begin thinking
of longer more phraselike passwords
Baconbitsandwich9
Jellybeanjukeboxjunkie
tuskeegeetargetturnip
socialistsockhoppizzaparty12
and I hear my cellphone beep that I have 4 new messages
message 1(anonymous)
Baconbitsandwich9
message 2(anonymous)
Jellybeanjukeboxjunkie
message3(anonymous)
tuskeegeetargetturnip
message 4(anonymous)
socialistsockhoppizzaparty12
I close the phone..really what's the point of thinking at all
when every single thought
just gets interfaced, translated and judged...
a 5th message appears\
I don't feel like reading it..
"are you stoked for Stokes?!"
I go downstairs and Laura gives me "this look" the same exactly look one of my 3rd or 4th stepmothers used to give me
she even looks like her..
I swear makes herself look like her..
has even begun wearing her same perfume..
some brand I swear the don't make anymore..."Charlie" I think it's called..
and she uses ,Laura does this shampoo they don't make anymore (I think) Faberge ..something or other.
I swear she does it on purpose..
like she's some "Match n' Sniff to my senses of memories I would sooner forget...I know she works for "some team' that has to with Proxy Cyber...but unlike XXXX she doesn't make an issue about it....that is until it really began to bug me how somehow she made the very smell of the house seem retro..where she found for instance old versions of Glade Mountain Lark ...even her hair was sprayed with Aqua net aerosol.....for my birthday Laura would get me ..weird little presents...that I got when I was little ..stuff they don't make anymore like something called .Slime..or Shrinky Dinks..
.for one whole week the entire house smelled like shrinky dinks..it was the same week Laura got her hair dyed to look like my 3rd stepmother 1977...and bought herself a winter jacket I can only assume she saw in one of my photographs the 3rd used to wear...and she didn't take it off even when she was in the house.
I try thinking of passwords.again
Slimeshrinkydink7
and hear the beep that I have a message
Slimeshrinkydink7
I give up,why bother..when I see Evan appear as the Great Gazoo and graphs real Masterpiece Theater style". She sent out for one of those little cakes called ‘petites madeleines’. . . . And soon, mechanically, weary after a dull day with the prospect of a depressing morrow, I raised to my lips a spoonful of the tea in which I had soaked a morsel of the cake. No sooner had the warm liquid, and the crumbs with it, touched my palate than a shudder ran through my whole body, and I stopped, intent upon the extraordinary changes that were taking place within me.
Ears how to read someone's mind
Technology News
Ears looking at you kid
... models wear the necomimi, or cats' ears.
They may look cute or silly - depending on your view of view - but these ears are cutting-edge technology.
They can read your brain waves and transmit how you're feeling ... in ear movements.
The "Necomimi", which means "cat's ears" in Japanese, were launched in May but are set to go on sale at the end of the year, and were picked by Time magazine as one of the year's 50 best inventions.
The invention's goals are simple - it has two brain-wave sensors that can detect and interpret what you are thinking, and show it through four movements.
"We were exploring new ways of communicating and we thought it would be interesting to use brainwaves," Kana Nakano of Neurowear told Agence France-Presse this year.
"Because the sensors must be attached to the head, we tried to come up with something cute and catchy."
While having brainwave sensors attached to a pair of fluffy ears may seem frivolous, it is one example of the increasing accessibility of such technology, and how it can be used not just for high-end medical equipment, but also for children's toys and games.
The catch, though, is that accurately reading EEG (encephalogram) signals, which these technologies are attempting to do, can be difficult because of the amount of "noise" a brain generates.
Associate Professor Ross Cunnington of the Queensland Brain Institute, who is developing brain computer interfaces for communication, said the industry was moving in two streams.
"We're really going to have this split - the gimmicky toys and games that will get just more reliable and the medical-type applications, which is more challenging because they will never be used until they are entirely reliable.
"At the moment, that's entirely within a research field. But what's coming out of the research field is driving a lot of the commercial applications in gaming and toys."
Associate Professor Cunnington said the key to improving the technology was data.
The more data is fed into these systems, the more accurate they become in reading EEG signals, he said, adding that the main costs were associated with the development of signal processing.
"The technology really relies on the computer learning. What is the pattern that represents happy? What is a pattern that represents sad? And those patterns are going to differ a lot between individual people.
"One of the big applications currently is detecting drowsiness or fatigue in people driving, especially truck drivers. That's also proved incredibly difficult to work reliably enough that the driver will wear it and use it.
"In a toy or a game, not having 100 per cent reliability is not a problem ... In situations where there is safety involved, it's really important that it works."
This year, German scientists announced they were working on a system that harnesses a driver's brainwaves to control their car's emergency braking system.
In Japan, developers from car manufacturer Nissan and Swiss University Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne are using technology developed for disabled people to manipulate their wheelchairs to create a car that can be driven with just the mind.
And in Australia, Emotiv Systems has for some time been selling a wireless headset for people to play computer games using their thoughts alone.
my other "roomies" can have a pow wow..
concerning "the Jim" problem
again..
never mind it was me and XXXX who actually have out name on the rental..
after we did this insurance claim thing concerning
a KY Jelly incident in a Rite Aid a few years ago
I turn on the computer ..it obviously works
and see some ribble rable XXXX has written ...,and decide to keep it up
maybe as some kind of evidence against XXXX at some future claims court
concerning character defamation
or some Copy Clip and "fall" suit I can bring against XXXX
I decided to change my password
.
for tighter security.
and begin thinking
of longer more phraselike passwords
Baconbitsandwich9
Jellybeanjukeboxjunkie
tuskeegeetargetturnip
socialistsockhoppizzaparty12
and I hear my cellphone beep that I have 4 new messages
message 1(anonymous)
Baconbitsandwich9
message 2(anonymous)
Jellybeanjukeboxjunkie
message3(anonymous)
tuskeegeetargetturnip
message 4(anonymous)
socialistsockhoppizzaparty12
I close the phone..really what's the point of thinking at all
when every single thought
just gets interfaced, translated and judged...
a 5th message appears\
I don't feel like reading it..
"are you stoked for Stokes?!"
I go downstairs and Laura gives me "this look" the same exactly look one of my 3rd or 4th stepmothers used to give me
she even looks like her..
I swear makes herself look like her..
has even begun wearing her same perfume..
some brand I swear the don't make anymore..."Charlie" I think it's called..
and she uses ,Laura does this shampoo they don't make anymore (I think) Faberge ..something or other.
I swear she does it on purpose..
like she's some "Match n' Sniff to my senses of memories I would sooner forget...I know she works for "some team' that has to with Proxy Cyber...but unlike XXXX she doesn't make an issue about it....that is until it really began to bug me how somehow she made the very smell of the house seem retro..where she found for instance old versions of Glade Mountain Lark ...even her hair was sprayed with Aqua net aerosol.....for my birthday Laura would get me ..weird little presents...that I got when I was little ..stuff they don't make anymore like something called .Slime..or Shrinky Dinks..
.for one whole week the entire house smelled like shrinky dinks..it was the same week Laura got her hair dyed to look like my 3rd stepmother 1977...and bought herself a winter jacket I can only assume she saw in one of my photographs the 3rd used to wear...and she didn't take it off even when she was in the house.
I try thinking of passwords.again
Slimeshrinkydink7
and hear the beep that I have a message
Slimeshrinkydink7
I give up,why bother..when I see Evan appear as the Great Gazoo and graphs real Masterpiece Theater style". She sent out for one of those little cakes called ‘petites madeleines’. . . . And soon, mechanically, weary after a dull day with the prospect of a depressing morrow, I raised to my lips a spoonful of the tea in which I had soaked a morsel of the cake. No sooner had the warm liquid, and the crumbs with it, touched my palate than a shudder ran through my whole body, and I stopped, intent upon the extraordinary changes that were taking place within me.
Ears how to read someone's mind
Technology News
Ears looking at you kid
... models wear the necomimi, or cats' ears.
They can read your brain waves and transmit how you're feeling ... in ear movements.
We're really going to have this split - the gimmicky toys and games that will get just more reliable and the medical-type applications, which is more challenging because they will never be used until they are entirely reliableWhen you are relaxed or bored, the ears lie flat, when you are concentrating or focused they perk up, and even wiggle if you are amused.
The "Necomimi", which means "cat's ears" in Japanese, were launched in May but are set to go on sale at the end of the year, and were picked by Time magazine as one of the year's 50 best inventions.
The invention's goals are simple - it has two brain-wave sensors that can detect and interpret what you are thinking, and show it through four movements.
"We were exploring new ways of communicating and we thought it would be interesting to use brainwaves," Kana Nakano of Neurowear told Agence France-Presse this year.
"Because the sensors must be attached to the head, we tried to come up with something cute and catchy."
While having brainwave sensors attached to a pair of fluffy ears may seem frivolous, it is one example of the increasing accessibility of such technology, and how it can be used not just for high-end medical equipment, but also for children's toys and games.
The catch, though, is that accurately reading EEG (encephalogram) signals, which these technologies are attempting to do, can be difficult because of the amount of "noise" a brain generates.
Associate Professor Ross Cunnington of the Queensland Brain Institute, who is developing brain computer interfaces for communication, said the industry was moving in two streams.
"We're really going to have this split - the gimmicky toys and games that will get just more reliable and the medical-type applications, which is more challenging because they will never be used until they are entirely reliable.
"At the moment, that's entirely within a research field. But what's coming out of the research field is driving a lot of the commercial applications in gaming and toys."
Associate Professor Cunnington said the key to improving the technology was data.
The more data is fed into these systems, the more accurate they become in reading EEG signals, he said, adding that the main costs were associated with the development of signal processing.
"The technology really relies on the computer learning. What is the pattern that represents happy? What is a pattern that represents sad? And those patterns are going to differ a lot between individual people.
"One of the big applications currently is detecting drowsiness or fatigue in people driving, especially truck drivers. That's also proved incredibly difficult to work reliably enough that the driver will wear it and use it.
"In a toy or a game, not having 100 per cent reliability is not a problem ... In situations where there is safety involved, it's really important that it works."
This year, German scientists announced they were working on a system that harnesses a driver's brainwaves to control their car's emergency braking system.
In Japan, developers from car manufacturer Nissan and Swiss University Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne are using technology developed for disabled people to manipulate their wheelchairs to create a car that can be driven with just the mind.
And in Australia, Emotiv Systems has for some time been selling a wireless headset for people to play computer games using their thoughts alone.
Don’t you dare even think about your banking account password when you slap on those fancy new brainwave headsets.
Or at least that seems to be the lesson of a new study which found that sensitive personal information, such as PIN numbers and credit card data, can be gleaned from the brainwave data of users wearing popular consumer-grade EEG headsets.
A team of security researchers from Oxford, UC Berkeley, and the University of Geneva say that they were able to deduce digits of PIN numbers, birth months, areas of residence and other personal information by presenting 30 headset-wearing subjects with images of ATM machines, debit cards, maps, people, and random numbers in a series of experiments. The paper, titled “On the Feasibility of Side-Channel Attacks with Brain Computer Interfaces,” represents the first major attempt to uncover potential security risks in the use of the headsets.
“The correct answer was found by the first guess in 20% of the cases for the experiment with the PIN, the debit cards, people, and the ATM machine,” write the researchers. “The location was exactly guessed for 30% of users, month of birth for almost 60% and the bank based on the ATM machines for almost 30%.”
To detect the first digit of the PIN, researchers presented the subjects with numbers from 0 to 9, flashing on the screen in random order, one by one. Each number was repeated 16 times, over a total duration of 90 seconds. The subjects’ brainwaves were monitored for telltale peaks that would rat them out.
The EEG headsets, made by companies such as Emotiv Systems and NeuroSky, have become increasingly popular for gaming and other applications. For the study, the researchers used the Emotiv Epoc Neuroheadset, which retails for $299.
The researchers — Ivan Martinovic of Oxford University; Doug Davies, Mario Frank, Daniele Perito, and Dawn Song of UC Berkeley; and Tomas Ros of the University of Geneva — analyzed P300 peaks, an important component of event-related potentials — electrical potentials that happen after the user is presented with a stimulus.
Or at least that seems to be the lesson of a new study which found that sensitive personal information, such as PIN numbers and credit card data, can be gleaned from the brainwave data of users wearing popular consumer-grade EEG headsets.
A team of security researchers from Oxford, UC Berkeley, and the University of Geneva say that they were able to deduce digits of PIN numbers, birth months, areas of residence and other personal information by presenting 30 headset-wearing subjects with images of ATM machines, debit cards, maps, people, and random numbers in a series of experiments. The paper, titled “On the Feasibility of Side-Channel Attacks with Brain Computer Interfaces,” represents the first major attempt to uncover potential security risks in the use of the headsets.
“The correct answer was found by the first guess in 20% of the cases for the experiment with the PIN, the debit cards, people, and the ATM machine,” write the researchers. “The location was exactly guessed for 30% of users, month of birth for almost 60% and the bank based on the ATM machines for almost 30%.”
To detect the first digit of the PIN, researchers presented the subjects with numbers from 0 to 9, flashing on the screen in random order, one by one. Each number was repeated 16 times, over a total duration of 90 seconds. The subjects’ brainwaves were monitored for telltale peaks that would rat them out.
The EEG headsets, made by companies such as Emotiv Systems and NeuroSky, have become increasingly popular for gaming and other applications. For the study, the researchers used the Emotiv Epoc Neuroheadset, which retails for $299.
The researchers — Ivan Martinovic of Oxford University; Doug Davies, Mario Frank, Daniele Perito, and Dawn Song of UC Berkeley; and Tomas Ros of the University of Geneva — analyzed P300 peaks, an important component of event-related potentials — electrical potentials that happen after the user is presented with a stimulus.
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