This can be achieved on pretty much any Android device by rooting and installing this app: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=eu.chainfire.liveboot . It overlays the boot log of the device over the default animation as it is written supposedly.
>So blinking fiber optic breasts are neat and all...but where can I get that phone wrist mount she's wearing?
Buy this and a case for your phone, 3D print an adapter.
Don't bother with these kinds of masks, especially since the company wants $70 for one. They are just a piece of fabric with a thin carbon filter on the inside and no seal, they are glorified 3M paper masks.
If you want something that will actually work try a real respirator like one of these.
It's also not fucking true besides because they are clearly parts of the game that are like that! Both in the old trailer and in parts of this new trailer:
https://www.cyberpunk.net/img/4b1d760d1ce7081d/gallery/full/screen-just-around-the-corner.5.jpg
This shot was in the trailer and it's totally Blade Runner. It's clear they'll have the bog standard cyberpunk aesthetics as well as things that you don't usually see in film and video games.
OP's claim is complete bullshit. He's just a private label seller trying to market his business in a shady way.
I know this because I also happen to run a small private label business on Amazon in the plasma lighter niche, and I have had at least a dozen different Chinese manufacturers from Alibaba reach out to me to offer this new model in bulk in the past few months, from as early as ~~September iirc~~ February 2019. The tech is not innovative in anyway; it's just another slightly different iteration of the same old plasma lighter identical in functionality (arguably a little worse here).
For those who don't know what private labeling is, it's basically the business of purchasing generic, no brand made in China products in bulk, and rebranding them with custom logos and slight aesthetic design changes (what 90%+ of Amazon products are).
For further proof, I just did a simple Amazon search for 'plasma lighter'. This is one of the first results on the first page: https://www.amazon.com/Rechargeable-Windproof-Flameless-Fingerprint-Cigarette/dp/B07XMD2DT8 There are hundreds more like it on Alibaba.
You need the UCCW widget... https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=in.vineetsirohi.customwidget
and the Evangelion NERV theme to go with it.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=yau.QNBT.NERV&hl=en
FAQ on how to set it up are on the theme page.
I still use this format. I have a HiFi deck at home for recording as well as an MD deck in my car. Recording mixtapes (discs) is a lost art.
The one of the left could be cybergoth the other two are harder to place (although the middle looks like a modified 90s catwoman).
In general the designs look to clean for cyberpunk
Cyberpunk tends to be 80s which these are not. For example molly millions of neuromancer and others is based of the woman in the red jacket:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B004USRLZK/
For other stuff of that era see blade runner.
For more recent stuff see:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wFBSufLz0L4
If you really want to go that heavy on the exposed skin look check out the approach taken with tank girl.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08ZKBMCYN/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_glt_fabc_959WNRWSWG800QF830QK?psc=1
Looks like this probably, search some combination of full face sunglasses/UV face shield. This has the advantage of being relatively inexpensive, already tinted, and once you take off the arms you have a mount point. Personally i think you could do cool stuff with a replacement shield for a motorcycle helmet, like this one, but it would be pricy to screw up.
It actually is on amazon. I won't get as much from it as I would if you were to order it from Lulu, but I still wanted to provide that option. Store page is here.
It is if you're on Android! Download this: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.simple.apps.wallpaper
Then save the .gif locally. Load it into the app, fiddle with the settings, and there you go! Live wallpaper!
Politics and various forms of government interference certainly played their part but I feel like it was when the internet decided advertising would be its default revenue stream that online freedom was first lost.
The good news is that there's actions we can take right now. For example, ad nauseam
>AdNauseam is a free browser extension designed to obfuscate browsing data and protect users from tracking by advertising networks. At the same time, AdNauseam serves as a means of amplifying users' discontent with advertising networks that disregard privacy and facilitate bulk surveillance agendas.
Unlike ad blocking obfuscation doesn't just limit advertisers' data, it makes their data worthless by invisibly clicking all the ads.
>As the collected data gathered shows an omnivorous click-stream, user tracking, targeting and surveillance become futile.
Don't wait for your reps to rep you. They don't work for us. With ad nauseum you're taking matters into your own hands. Essentially giving the finger to the industry that lobbied those senators in OP.
From the same thread in /r/gifs, I really like this picture
Hello, I'm a bot! The movie you linked is called Strange Days, here's some Trailers
Looks like:https://www.amazon.com/CHEMION-Customizable-Bluetooth-Festivals-Animation/dp/B01B41PHJM/
A bunch of other similar ones out there though.
Hi! I see there are a couple questions already, I'll answer those just before we start tomorrow and then we get down to business - I think we are going to talk some Future is Now lore which I like and that should also prompt more questions ;) - To those unfamiliar with the Future is Now series you can grab the digital version of Neon Rising (the current main book, Nightfall will be the follow up) for FREE at: https://gumroad.com/josan#FkSS - Enter the code hypetrain62k19 at checkout and price will be 0
I think it's safe to say "stiffy" was never seriously used for 3.5" floppy disks.
~~Don't you need a written invitation to go anywhere in Russia?~~
> Because of its strategic importance, Norilsk is a closed city and special permission is needed for travel (which will likely be denied unless you have a really good reason).
AirBNB has them for $77/night.
This article claims they were $430-$640/mo in 2012.
>Overseen by Watanabe in the producer role and directed by Kenji Kamiyama and Shinji Aramaki, the latter of whom worked in the art department on Black Out 2022, the new series will take place in 2032, between the events of the short and those of Blade Runner 2049.
Yeah, had to check for myself.
The Kickstarter page (still running)
I just backed you, /u/soleilz - Can't wait for the deck ;)
It's a situation virtually right out of Cory Doctorow's "Futuristic Tales of the Here and Now" comic. Which, if you've not read yet, is virtually required cyberpunk reading (and, it's licensing allows you to do so freely).
Also, read "Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom". Again, Cory allows it to be read freely.
I commute on an electric bike, and since long stretches of rainy days aren't uncommon here, I needed something to protect my face from the road spray.
Got one of these and it's been working great. When I'm wearing all black with gloves and a hood on, I kind of look like a cosplayer, but that's not necessarily a bad thing.
Yep, they're all on Wikiquote.
This one always stuck out most for me: >In the great commons at Gaia's Landing we have a tall and particularly beautiful stand of white pine, planted at the time of the first colonies. It represents our promise to the people, and to Planet itself, never to repeat the tragedy of Earth. >>Lady Deirdre Skye, "Planet Dreams"
This is a short game made for Ludum Dare in less than 72 hours. It's a point and click where you're a hacker who unfortunately has to get information about a company without a computer. You can download it from Gamejolt.
If you have a couple of grand to spare, some technical know-how, and the will to get it done - you can buy one yourself:
If you're in a country that doesn't regulate, enforce, and penalize for shit like this - you could probably get a few people with it.
Here's Green Plaza Shinjuku Capsule Hotel in Tokyo.
A comment says
>For the single traveler a capsule hotel can be a decent budget option at a cost of 2500-3500 yen.
Here http://gojapan.about.com/cs/accommodation/a/tokyocapsule1.htm says
>Capsule hotels are unique accommodations developed in Japan. It usually costs from 2,500 yen to 4,500 yen per night.
2500 yen = 32 US dollars = 26 euro = 20 British pounds
4500 yen = 57 US dollars = 46 euro = 37 British pounds
So, you don't get much, but you don't have to pay much for it either.
Get a laptop, pull the Hard Drive out and run a Live CD like Tails on it.
Even if it does contain something malicious and is sophisticated enough to do something to a Linux host, nothing is damaged or compromised and you just need to reboot your computer to get it off your system.
you can get his shoes off amazon https://www.amazon.com/Bates-Strike-Waterproof-Tactical-Black/dp/B00T3ITO0M/?th=1&psc=1
they seem a lot more practical than the stupid goth wafflestompers that get posted here now and then.
On Android you can actually move apps between sandboxes to isolate them. One app that allows you to do this is Island, from the makers of Greenify.
DYSTOPIAN CITY
Modelling & Texturing Software: Blender 2.9
Signage Design: Illustrator CC
Compositing: Photoshop CC
www.artstation.com/artwork/mDJ211
The title is a bit confusing: it's not some set of default passwords for every Windows host on a particular account set or something.
This is testing every combination of uppercase letters, lowercase letters, numbers, and symbols you can type on a standard US keyboard.
If a cracker were able to acquire the hashes for a system and use this cluster to crack it, any user that put in a password that is 8 chars or less using naught but a keyboard would have their password compromised. From dumb passwords like password or a all the way to the random garbage of v%3{jM-4, every combination is in there.
Of course, they're talking about cracking passwords at a rate of 350 billion (3.5 E+11) / second, and that's pretty quick for doing it live. However, if you pre-compute the tables, you can supposedly crack the same password set with over 95% success at 1.57 E+13 (15.7 quadrillion) passwords per second using <em>one</em> Radeon R9 280X in a midrange desktop.
So: a cracker could probably crack faster than this cluster using a precomputed table downloaded from the internet (though it'd be 400+GB of data!) and a lot less hardware.
Of course, this cluster would be incredible at generating those tables for a variety of character sets, and maybe could achieve a huge performance boost for every crack after the first by splitting up and distributing the rainbow tables across all the hosts and GPUs.
edit: even more important, this amount of compute power allows for more general, non-brute-force attacks that could also achieve incredible performance. You know, something juicy like generating rogue ssl certs. Of course, that (academic) attack is from 7 years ago and counted on a very old hashing algorithm still being in use.
I think it's one of these but automated and backlit. Not to diminish the accomplishments here, just to explain it simply. The motors on these things must've been hell to arrange into a coherent array
Yet he did see a preview of Blade Runner in 1981, a year prior to his death. Dick ended his letter stating that he felt the film would prove to be a commercial success.
Very good. Windows 10 and Ubuntu are both terrible for privacy. Going forward I advocate people move to http://linuxmint.com/ and if their hardware is compatible then they should choose http://trisquel.info/
But yes lots have people have given up the fight, they think it is totally pointless to try tackling the state spying apparatus, I think they're wrong, and bloody lazy.
I do! because about a month ago in a different thread I posted it as the only Asian-character neon sign I could find for sale on amazon. It says "Dumplings".
I think a lot of cyberpunk is loosely based on Blade Runner. Which had a central plot point of Earth becoming unlivable and therefore most of the population had left. Entire massive buildings with only one person in them.
But yeah if we wanted to really cram in the people. Earth could hold about 10 Trillion. https://hooktube.com/watch?v=XAJeYe-abUA
I love this thing. I used my Pi to build a wearable rig that I'm slowly upgrading. I gotta lean to make sweet enclosures like you though. https://www.flickr.com/photos/108486283@N07/sets/72157642247834223/
It's possible to set up a Man-In-The-Middle hotspot without broadcasting anything, by intercepting connection requests to existing networks. I doubt this guy will be able to detect such a honeypot.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/dr6sedfteu8atwq/hak5-mk4-book1e.pdf
The single example I could find on amazon: Link
Your other option is to get something custom made, there are a lot of people providing that service online, but that's going to get expensive fast.
Also this would force people to buy new everytime they want to upgrade "X" piece of outdated/unsupported tech. Or force people to pay for a software upgrade they coulda done themselves... the difference between a $100 router and a $500 router, so this would be a huge corporate giveaway and lead to more throwaway black-boxes.
Last day to send the FCC a formal comment damning this: https://www.federalregister.gov/articles/2015/08/06/2015-18402/equipment-authorization-and-electronic-labeling-for-wireless-devices
I'd keep an eye on Bitcoin 21 and whatever mesh net news you can grok.
Edit: oh and something like OpenBazaar as a peer to peer bandwith market, like a stock market for the bits using micro-payments and peering.
It's all startups and ideas right now, but if you are into the subject there hasn't been a better time to be working in the problem space, lots of opportunity and dissatisfaction with the status quo.
From the Kickstarter page : "In addition to finding as many new ways as possible to share the final documentary, we have decided in the spirit of open access to release the film digitally through a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. Aaron gave a lot of his time and energy to Creative Commons."
Bruce Sterling is credited here.
CPU is a Raspberry Pi model B, hooked to a 5" composite display. Separate batteries for the CPU and the display, both can run the rig for several hours, actual battery life not yet known. The keyboard is bluetooth and has a little trackpad and buttons for pointer control. Finally it's got a wifi dongle.
OS is Raspbian Linux
Kickstarter link. Six issues are already finished; we're trying to raise money to print a trade paperback. Please support if you can!
If you'd like to read the book digitally (this is /r/cyberpunk after all), the full series to date is available on comiXology here.
I'm not entirely sure, but it points to someone called Chevasis.
Here's a gallery of some more images generated by google. Super interesting.
I've bought several LED and Binary/semi-binary watches on Amazon. This one is just the tip of the iceberg.
I am quite fond of this one. Had it for a couple years, still goes strong.
The US used to have the same problem. All hail the EPA, because without it, you wouldn't see the sunrise on this side of the globe, either. I remember this when I was a kid:
https://weather.com/science/environment/news/america-before-epa-photos-images
That's easy. Using same infoplease data:
That's 127,451,000 people. worldometers says there are 7,517,473,000 living people on Earth now. That's 1.695%
Great stuff! I don't know if you already use it, but the Nik Collection is a great free Photoshop plugin that beeple uses. You can blend in some rough edges with the filters in the collection. :-))))
Here's the walkthrough on my new shoulder-mounted robot familiar: https://www.hackster.io/glowascii/archimedes-the-ai-robot-owl-325ff5
Lots of room left for mods – I'm looking forward to reprogramming and upgrading this guy. :]
not quite as ease of access as you might think, they are zip tied if ya look
also, while you can do external gpu's its probably not recommended unless you absolutely 100% have a need, otherwise there are better solutions out there.
Here's a link to Brazillian Amazon, they sell them. Expensive as fuck though, and I don't know if they ship outside Brazil.
It's actually AnimGif Live 2... I use it too. But with this gif.
Some google-fu, got me the source, it's a NSFW PC-98 hentai game called Power Slave. Did I mention NSFW?!
There is a writeup on someone tracking down the source of the image here.
It's desperately unfinished but you can absolutely download it to take a look around. There's not too much more to the main city than what I've shown at the moment (though the TV tower does have a complete interior) but there's plenty to explore in the slums. Check it out here. If you haven't played Minecraft for a few years you'll need to download the new client - the old one was replaced with one which streamlined updating significantly. As long as you can dig up your account information (username, password) you'll be able to play it just fine. Thanks for your interest!
It all depends on where you live. I'm from Puerto Rico. All routes lead to the west -> enter the US from Miami. Since the difference is in matter of miliseconds, I'm still using both.
If you want to test out which one's faster, you can use this tool:
Yes, and there is also this: http://hackaday.com/2012/01/02/give-yourself-a-sixth-sense-on-the-cheap/
But because the magnet is now as close to my nerves as possible, the resolution and intensity is much higher. Also I don't need to glue stuff to my hands everyday :)
I believe that there are varying degrees of Cyberpunk.
Degree of Cyberpunk Visuals: Medium
Correlation to Cyberpunk Themes: Medium
> Cyberpunk died when it was so thouroughly marketed that it became pop-culture.
If that's the case, what's the point of /r/cyberpunk?
>The original Metropolis
Well ...
>metropolis (n.)
>"seat of a metropolitan bishop," 1530s
>Meaning "chief town or capital city of a province" is first attested 1580s
http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=metropolis&allowed_in_frame=0
I'm pretty sure that London was being called "The Metropolis" since at least the 19th century - when New York City was, if not actually a collection of mud huts, at least definitely not a world-class city in the same league.
You can download Flux at https://justgetflux.com/. It regulates the amount of blue light on your screen based off your location. Towards the evening, it dims the amount of blue light in your monitor. That being said, it probably doesn't work well with color-intensive operations.
Maybe is just me but I'm getting sick of that Guy Fawkes mask appearing even in a nice collection of cyberpunk images.
Anonymous helped to popularized that mask and doing so helped Warner Bros (right's owner) to gain a huge mountain of money.
Those masks are made in (sweatshops?) Mexico and China for the greater glory of Warner Bros.
Yep, maybe that's all very cyberpunk in the end.
Hey, three authors I never heard of and will look into.
I am an old head (54), I read when I was young the usual science fiction books, but in my mid teens (1977-79) the first taste of "cyberpunk" I got wind of was from the European and a few American writers/comic artists in Heavy Metal. They (Enki Bilal, Philippe Caza, Guido Crepax, Philippe Druillet, Jean-Claude Forest, Alejandro Jodorowsky and Jean Giraud (aka Moebius)) created a very influential body of work that even inspired William Gibson's vision of what his world and characters looked like in his early work.
The Internet Archive has a smattering of the early issues for download, there are huge torrents, and if you want high quality full color print (and some digital) graphic novels Humanoids is where to go.
You can find more (and in some cased bigger) images at the original source. This is a really neat thing, though. I especially like the one for the artificial spine. That's the kind of clever play on words that sticks in your mind. Also, I wouldn't mind all of these and more, so long as it didn't keep me in perpetual debt to some megacorp.
https://www.ionos.com/digitalguide/websites/web-development/iso-8601/
> The ISO 8601 standard defines an internationally recognized format for representing dates and times. For times, they are expressed with the notation hours-minutes-seconds. In the case of dates, the format is year-month-day. This basic format enables the numbers to be written directly after another.
> Advantages of the ISO 8601 Standard Compared to Other Common Variants
> ISO 8601 only specifies numerical notations and does not cover any dates and times in which words are included. It’s not intended as a substitute for language-dependent wording, such as “February 1, 1995”. But ISO 8601 should be applied to replace designations like “2/5/95” and “9:30 am”.
> The advantages of the ISO8 8601 standard can be summarized as follows:
> * Easy to read and write with software
> * Easily to compare and sort with a simple string comparison
> * Understandable regardless of the national language
> * Cannot be confused with other common date representations
> * Corresponds with the standard 24-hour time system in which the larger units (hours) are also placed in front of small units (minutes and seconds)
> * Strings that contain a date followed by a time are also easy to compare and sort (e.g. “2019-09-07 20:15:00”)
> * Notation is concise and has a constant length, simplifying keyboard entry and table layout
> * Identical to Chinese date notation, meaning the largest cultural group (>25%) in the world is already familiar with the system
> * Date values with the order “year, month, day” are also widespread, such as in Japan, Korea, Hungary, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, and some other countries
> * A four-digit year format does not lead to any problems at the turn of a century
This. Though you might want to use a BeagleBone Black instead of a Raspberry Pi as it's more powerful.
Basically the idea is that you'll use the text bots but you'll speak and the system will translate the speech to text by matter of voice recognition. The text bot will reply and the system will use voice synthesis to read out the text back to you. However this will only work in a quiet environment or with directional microphones. Hmm, i wonder if there are facial recognition programs/libraries that have been adapted for lip reading in order to help out speech recognition? That would be kinda cool.
Oh, and speaking of facial recognition and stuff, check out OpenCV. You might be able to use it to have the system differentiate between different people requesting things and other fun stuff. Or, if it sees the same person ordering too many drinks it might refuse to serve them. Just some ideas.
> I wholeheartedly wish it were common practice to build your own 'deck' from raspberry Pi boards, and just make it as retro-cyberpunk as you can, as a fashion statement.
You now have the same set-up /u/Thykka does! If you do a lot of command line work, I would really suggest learning tmux.
You might want to check out the documentary/study about cyberpunk in films in the 1980's called The Cyberpunk Educator . Although the film might be kind of abstract and disturing at times I think it also offers some new insight (atleast it did so for me) into cyberpunk in general. I hope I could help and please enjoy.
The environment being trained upon seems very similar to what's offered by robocode, was the author not aware that this existed or was there a particular reason for this reimplementation?
I have been here many times. It's Golden Gai near Kabuki-cho. This is a great place to drink and experience a more grimy type of Tokyo. Many bars are only open for regulars, but there are plenty that cater to tourists. Try it if you are ever in Tokyo.
So you wanna be a cyberpunk eh?
You will get differing opinions here about what cyberpunk is.
Personally I feel it's more than just a look, it's an understanding of the tech. Making something yourself from whatever you may have lying around is kinda cyberpunk. /u/sexycyborg has some great examples, not only do they look fantastic but she made them herself.
If you wanna have something a bit more practical I recommend learning about electronics both digital and analog. There is a good cicruit sim here. I reccomend you learn and practice then make something that suits you.
Try to avoid anything that is a mass made high tech product, you learn nothing from them and they will more likely be a security risk.
There are no 100% secure systems... i agree. But the issue here is this one:
Hosting in the US can let somebody put a server before the crypto.cat machine, inside the colocation facility. As the SSL is used to check the identity of the site, you can get a signed cert just asking to Comodo or whatever. Then all the data will be intercepted, using that key cryptos, then encrypted again using crypto.cat's key and sent to real crypto.cat server... and no need to crack it or anything.
This has been made before, in fact it's pretty known for crypto geeks and social activists all around the world http://www.autistici.org/ai/crackdown/index.html So, it's not my paranoia/imagination, it's history.
Please, don't recommend this kind of stuff.
I poked around some and found this EL wire on Amazon that's pretty inexpensive. This is another source that may help out. I suppose you could go with a fluorescent fixture that is quite common in industrial areas but that would require some additional tools and possibly wiring knowledge.
Are you looking for some sort of atmospheric all-around glow or a stark, minimalist look?
Syd Mead has done concept art for a few more sci-fi movies, like Tron (1982) and Aliens (1986), and I believe he has put all of them together in his book The Movie Art of Syd Mead: Visual Futurist, and it's still on Amazon.
I wouldn't put it past that ultimately, he used a VPN provider that was subpoena'd and they gave up the logs. I was recently reading an article a few weeks back where even some VPN providers that boast they don't, did ( I think it was NordVPN? ) - anyway, another one also gave a transparency report of how many subpoena's they had. CyberGhost's 2015 transparency report
While AI/Machine Learning is really interesting and has seemingly infinite applications, I'm with you in that it all boils down to ones and zeroes. At least, currently.
Every piece of AI or Machine Learning currently available to us has been programmed by someone or a team of someones.
And usually those programmers have spent large amounts of time (and money) to program it.
It has taken decades of research (people have spent their entire lives researching AI) to get to this point!
/u/w33dw1tch 's response is riding a pretty slippery slope. To say "we don't fully understand the limitations or applications of AI" is fair enough, to say "we don't have a grasp on AI" is just wrong.
But don't just take my word for it!
For anyone looking for more information about AI or Machine Learning, or for anyone making grandiose claims about what we do/don't know about AI with 0 knowledge on the subject, I'd recommend "Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach".
Get whatever the latest edition is, because we've made a lot of developments over the years.
A German comedian wrote a kinda harsh poem about Erdogan and suddenly Germans and Turks have anything to do with it, even if they don't.
Video glasses, drones, thought controlled devices, smart phones,smart tvs, networked houses, wireless cameras the size of matchboxes, raspi, arduino, battery powered movement detection led lights that network. Tesla and other electric vehicles, night vision goggles, Infra red cameras, power point monitoring wireless devices, remote controlled power points and multiple types of remote control cars, helicopters, legged devices and tentacle devices(some already set up with multiple cameras and controlled by mobile phone or tablets). IR remote security cameras, gyroscope assisted personal vehicles, powered skates and skateboards. Jetski rocket devices, dolphin submarines, wingsuits, bungee, base jumping parachutes, backpack power chutes, itec maverick flying car, bluetooth headsets and tasers. Personal flying craft, jet assisted wing suits, personal submarines and extremely large private submarines.
Electronic locks,security systems, solar chargers,satellite phones, personal EPIRBS(or yuppie locators as the rescue services label them). Heat powered chargers, heat pumps, personal solar/wind chargers and Lithium battery devices.
Tube solar heating, laser/sound measuring devices, near or contact charge devices, carbonfibre anything, goretech anything, superthin vacuum insulation clothing. 3d printers and scanners.
Just off the top of my head although cyberpunk also included re-purposing common or out of favour things in new and interesting ways(ie furbies,baby monitors or whatever else is the pasts forgotten toys).
ThisiswhyImbroke is not a bad place to look and also think geek if you are xmas shopping. Look around once you see something you like because they are not always the best source for the toys once you know what they are called.
He said he bought his on wish for $3 but I got mine on amazon for $18. Hell of a price difference, but here is an amazon link https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01N7CAO0Q/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_glt_fabc_90EWQSQX6VJA0HV0QVKT?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
> electro-luminescent pet collar
Found one on Amazon, though the stripe on that one is narrower than the collar as a whole, and it isn't very well rated. LED collar and a diffuser might be the way go.
Here's an app that should get you a similar lock screen: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.slickscreens.cyberpunkwp (Search Cyberpunk live wallpapers in Google play) Still unsure about the notifications tho those are so cool
I have been with Private Internet Access for 3 years. Take Bitcoin, you can use an anonymous email to get login and password. No logging. Often have specials and sales. Nice Linux client as well as Android.
Torque is a great android app that lets you read obd2 data and clear codes. That app and a $20 bluetooth OBD2 reader have been great for myself and friends and family. Lots of real time monitoring tools too.
Hey again Ace, look your idea got through :)
PM on KS - so I can add a thank you something :)
If you missed anything, this here is a BBC news article on the whole affair.
EDIT: More background
Cyberlady is nice, but nothing beats cyber woman with corn.
http://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/dark-reader/eimadpbcbfnmbkopoojfekhnkhdbieeh?hl=en
I've got this nice one for the Chrome browser.
And this one is great for late night surfing. Turns the hue to a warmer color at night rather than that bright blue.
I've been thinking about this quite a bit recently, especially after reading the old Time Magazine article on Cyberpunk from 1993, and the Wired article around the same time. Both publications got it so very wrong, in terms of it becoming a subculture on par with Hippies as far as import to the mainstream.
I think Cyberpunk can't be a scene for a few reasons. First and foremost, we're living in a cyberpunk world right now. We all have hand-held computers that can access networks across the planet. Tattoos and piercings are widely socially accepted. Everyone is part of one or more "virtual communities," and listens to electronic music. How do you form a subculture when most of your distinguishing tropes are part of everyone's everyday life?
To answer your question: A big part of cyberpunk is love of technology, near-future fashion, and a DIY sensibility. Based on that, I would love to see a scene that shares these values in makerspaces, tech and fan conventions, and occasional nightclub events. It could grow out of the goth, punk, gypsy, circus, anime, and cosplay communities.
Hello, I'm a bot! The movie you linked is called TRON: Uprising, here are some Trailers
The military has been using it for a while to train soldiers, and there's a lot of studies out there on it.
Download and install the TOR browser here. This browser allows you to browse the 'normal internet' with strong anonymity, and also to access sites that are specific to TOR, sites with addresses that end in .onion
TOR has gotten really easy to install recently. If you can e.g. install a game, you should be able to do this.
Alternatively, if you're doing it on mobile, you get two apps: Orbot (which creates the internet connection to the TOR web) and Orweb (which is the browser). You need to boot up Orbot, then browse with Orweb.
Once you're online, go to reddit.com/r/onions, and look at the sidebar for sites to visit.
I also want to mention that TOR is a dark web, not the dark web. There are others. I've been getting interested in the invisible internet recently.