I must take a moment to second the bit about proper push-up form.
Fantastic exercise you can do just about anywhere.
I went an hour out of town to watch the Perseids a couple months back. I'm a bit of a gym rat, so I did sets of push-ups to keep my body temperature up, though I'm already shivering by the time I'm starting each set. So, I completely neglected to even think about the proper form (I made the classic mistake of squaring outward my elbows), and further aggravating the circumstances was dealing with the awkward road angles/grades.
With just a handful of sets, I'm pretty sure I permanently damaged my right shoulder. Ugh. The Perseids were fantastic, though :)
You might check out the Keychron K3. The 500+ looks (at least, in the photos) so much like my K3 that I thought at first it was a collab with Keychron.
If you're looking at configurations that look very different aesthetically, keep in mind you can replace with aftermarket keycaps.
There are several variants of the "K3"; some configurations will have swappable switches, others not. Beware.
If you want software hackability as well, you'd probably go with one of the QMK/VIA versions.
If it's just the keyboard appearance itself piquing your interest, you might check out the Keychron K3 (the brand has apparently grown a lot since I was last shopping around for keyboards, so it looks like they have a "K", "K Pro", and "K QMK" as well as several other "[Insert Letter Here]" lines of models now... back then all they had were K keyboards).
To clarify, this is to say I'm looking on their website right now and seeing at least five variants of "K3" alone.
It's hard to tell when all the promotional photos are showing either a partial shot or an aggressive angle, but it looks so much like my K3 that I actually thought they were going to say they collaborated with Keychron on the design.
Yep I second this. I have a K1 (I think) with blue switches. The switches are the most important choice - since that controls the entire feel of using the keyboard. When I first got mine, I got red switches. But red switches don’t give you any tactile feedback when it passes the threshold to be considered “pressed”. I swapped to blues and I love them. Very satisfyingly clicky. They’re a bit loud though. Swapping switches is easy - I think the replacement set of blues just set me back $20 or something.
If there are any computer shops you can go in person to try them out, I highly recommend it. They make a lot of different switches and the feel is a very tactile, personal thing. (Though I think I’d also be happy with yellow or brown switches after some time with them!)
I have plenty of decent external keyboards about. I usually have to make my own. Keychrons are pretty decent except for the difficulty of updating the firmware and having to pay extra for proper back-lighting on some models.
The whole device pegs my nostalgia meter. It's almost like a C64, but it has a decent OS and now it has a better keyboard than the C64 ever had.
for anyone reading this actually interested, just FYI an improved model "HackRF Pro" is due for release in the next month or so, is backwards-compatible, and is what will come in at that $400 price tag.
years ago, there used to be a very abundant market for used or chinese clone HackRF One units, but i haven't been able to find any these days.
I don't think you need to try to die on this hill (primarily remarking w.r.t. your lumping in Anubis with Cloudflare/Google/et al. as one). In any case, I'm not appreciating the proliferation of the CAPTCHA-wall any more than you are.
The mascot artist wrote in here in another thread about the design philosophies, and they are IMO a lot more honorable in comparison (to BigCo).
Besides, it's MIT FOSS. Can't a site operator shoehorn in their own image if they were so inclined?
Viewing the challenge screenshot again after reading your response definitely sheds light as to why I have no aggro toward Anubis (even if the branding supposedly wouldn't jive well with a super professional platform, but hey, I think having the alternate, commercial offering is super brilliant in turn).
On the other hand, I immediately see red when I get stopped in my tracks by all the widely used (and often infinitely-unpassable) Cloudflare/Google/etc. implementations with wordings that do nothing but add insult to injury.
Thank you for the thought you put into that. I think you guys hit it out of the park.
Assuming it doesn't do anything else magical, I don't see much point in dignifying it with a web hit, let alone finding out its name.
It's odd to throw in the dark web, thousand dollar firmware bit when third-party firmwares are developed in the open and have long ago already implemented KeeLoq, but I guess they aim for sensationalism and shock value.
So to follow up on my misconceptions, the RollBack attack it is based on is now implemented on underground firmwares and is what is novel. The research itself too is fairly novel and was published in 2022, capable (at least, on paper) of rolling back the cipher state on the receiver, preventing de-sync (and is the crux of why this submission is amazing).
The prior RollJam that I thought this was dates back to Samy's 2015 findings. It turns out 2015's RollJam (unlike RollBack) requires active interference and seems to necessitate the attacker being in the vicinity of both the remote and the receiver.
Right. There's still something I found unsettling about performing searches without restraint on Kagi (which, until recently, absolutely required being logged in) that I wouldn't have thought twice about on a common search engine.
Unfortunately, the VPN experience has been deteriorating quickly as BigCo and BigGov have been catching up in natural escalation.
well, given the pervasiveness of KYC requirements these days, i reckon that would still feel not unlike being required to log in in order to use a search engine.
moreover, it's already fairly common for web service operators to proactively block/shadowblock swaths of VPS ranges.
I wouldn't call it a "good" fallback, but i do have a VPS handy with an always-on squid proxy (remember to bind only on localhost and use via ssh tunnel, or some other secure method, if anyone is going to get ideas from this comment) among the other things i use my VPS for.
I do find that different subsets of services tend to get blacklisted.
Fantastic exercise you can do just about anywhere.
I went an hour out of town to watch the Perseids a couple months back. I'm a bit of a gym rat, so I did sets of push-ups to keep my body temperature up, though I'm already shivering by the time I'm starting each set. So, I completely neglected to even think about the proper form (I made the classic mistake of squaring outward my elbows), and further aggravating the circumstances was dealing with the awkward road angles/grades.
With just a handful of sets, I'm pretty sure I permanently damaged my right shoulder. Ugh. The Perseids were fantastic, though :)