Since Google Reader added custom "Send To" controls to its feed reading prowess last week, we've been looking for the most useful links to feed it. Here are nine excellent send-to tools you can add to Reader, with more on the way.
What Anonymous realized was that if they always labeled the unknown scanned text with the same word - and if they did this thousands and thousands of times eventually a large percentage of the unknown words would be mislabeled with their word. All they had to do was look at the two words in the captcha, enter the proper label for the ‘easy’ one (presumably that would be the one that the two optical scanners would agree upon) and enter the word “penis” for the hard one. If they did this often enough, then soon a significant percentage of the images would be labeled as ‘penis’ and the ability to autovote would be restored (one side effect, that was not lost on Anonymous, was the notion that for years to come there would be a number of digital books with the word ‘penis’ randomly inserted throughout the text.
Here, I am collecting python snippets that I find enlightening and/or just useful. On a subpage, you find a JPype-using hack to access Weka's Java classes from Python.
Last year one of the interesting posts in TwiTip that really caught my attention was the post about how to turn a bedroom light on and off with Twitter. In
This article show you how you can fix bugs for maven-plugins (eclipse setup for hacking the code, debugging etc.) with a concrete project: maven-eclipse-plugin. Lets start …
One of the great things about Linux is that there's usually more than one way to do something. Chances are, the way you are doing a particular task right now isn't necessarily the best way either. This collection of hacks is the result of a lot of effort: some are functional, some are fun, but they are all cool! So, start reading, and find out what you could be doing with Linux...