BLOGGER TEMPLATES AND TWITTER BACKGROUNDS »

May 25, 2009

Top 10 Most Famous Hackers of All Time

Get to know these notorious hackers, famous for wreaking havoc and driving technological innovation.

The portrayal of hackers in the media has ranged from the high-tech super-spy, as in Mission Impossible where Ethan Hunt repels from the ceiling to hack the CIA computer system and steal the "NOC list," to the lonely anti-social teen who is simply looking for entertainment.

The reality, however, is that hackers are a very diverse bunch, a group simultaneously blamed with causing billions of dollars in damages as well as credited with the development of the World Wide Web and the founding of major tech companies. In this article, we test the theory that truth is better than fiction by introducing you to ten of the most famous hackers, both nefarious and heroic, to let you decide for yourself.

Black Hat Crackers

The Internet abounds with hackers, known as crackers or "black hats," who work to exploit computer systems. They are the ones you've seen on the news being hauled away for cybercrimes. Some of them do it for fun and curiosity, while others are looking for personal gain. In this section we profile five of the most famous and interesting "black hat" hackers.

  1. Jonathan James: James gained notoriety when he became the first juvenile to be sent to prison for hacking. He was sentenced at 16 years old. In an anonymous PBS interview, he professes, "I was just looking around, playing around. What was fun for me was a challenge to see what I could pull off."

    James's major intrusions targeted high-profile organizations. He installed a backdoor into a Defense Threat Reduction Agency server. The DTRA is an agency of the Department of Defense charged with reducing the threat to the U.S. and its allies from nuclear, biological, chemical, conventional and special weapons. The backdoor he created enabled him to view sensitive emails and capture employee usernames and passwords.

    James also cracked into NASA computers, stealing software worth approximately $1.7 million. According to the Department of Justice, "The software supported the International Space Station's physical environment, including control of the temperature and humidity within the living space." NASA was forced to shut down its computer systems, ultimately racking up a $41,000 cost. James explained that he downloaded the code to supplement his studies on C programming, but contended, "The code itself was crappy . . . certainly not worth $1.7 million like they claimed."

    Given the extent of his intrusions, if James, also known as "c0mrade," had been an adult he likely would have served at least 10 years. Instead, he was banned from recreational computer use and was slated to serve a six-month sentence under house arrest with probation. However, he served six months in prison for violation of parole. Today, James asserts that he's learned his lesson and might start a computer security company.

  2. Adrian Lamo: Lamo's claim to fame is his break-ins at major organizations like The New York Times and Microsoft. Dubbed the "homeless hacker," he used Internet connections at Kinko's, coffee shops and libraries to do his intrusions. In a profile article, "He Hacks by Day, Squats by Night," Lamo reflects, "I have a laptop in Pittsburgh, a change of clothes in D.C. It kind of redefines the term multi-jurisdictional."

    Lamo's intrusions consisted mainly of penetration testing, in which he found flaws in security, exploited them and then informed companies of their shortcomings. His hits include Yahoo!, Bank of America, Citigroup and Cingular. When white hat hackers are hired by companies to do penetration testing, it's legal. What Lamo did is not.

    When he broke into The New York Times' intranet, things got serious. He added himself to a list of experts and viewed personal information on contributors, including Social Security numbers. Lamo also hacked into The Times' LexisNexis account to research high-profile subject matter.

    For his intrusion at The New York Times, Lamo was ordered to pay approximately $65,000 in restitution. He was also sentenced to six months of home confinement and two years of probation, which expired January 16, 2007. Lamo is currently working as an award-winning journalist and public speaker.

  3. Kevin Mitnick: A self-proclaimed "hacker poster boy," Mitnick went through a highly publicized pursuit by authorities. His mischief was hyped by the media but his actual offenses may be less notable than his notoriety suggests. The Department of Justice describes him as "the most wanted computer criminal in United States history." His exploits were detailed in two movies: Freedom Downtime and Takedown.

    Mitnick had a bit of hacking experience before committing the offenses that made him famous. He started out exploiting the Los Angeles bus punch card system to get free rides. Then, like Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, dabbled in phone phreaking. Although there were numerous offenses, Mitnick was ultimately convicted for breaking into the Digital Equipment Corporation's computer network and stealing software.

    Mitnick's mischief got serious when he went on a two and a half year "coast-to-coast hacking spree." The CNN article, "Legendary computer hacker released from prison," explains that "he hacked into computers, stole corporate secrets, scrambled phone networks and broke into the national defense warning system." He then hacked into computer expert and fellow hacker Tsutomu Shimomura's home computer, which led to his undoing.

    Today, Mitnick has been able to move past his role as a black hat hacker and become a productive member of society. He served five years, about 8 months of it in solitary confinement, and is now a computer security consultant, author and speaker.

  4. Kevin Poulsen: Also known as Dark Dante, Poulsen gained recognition for his hack of LA radio's KIIS-FM phone lines, which earned him a brand new Porsche, among other items. Law enforcement dubbed him "the Hannibal Lecter of computer crime."

    Authorities began to pursue Poulsen after he hacked into a federal investigation database. During this pursuit, he further drew the ire of the FBI by hacking into federal computers for wiretap information.

    His hacking specialty, however, revolved around telephones. Poulsen's most famous hack, KIIS-FM, was accomplished by taking over all of the station's phone lines. In a related feat, Poulsen also "reactivated old Yellow Page escort telephone numbers for an acquaintance who then ran a virtual escort agency." Later, when his photo came up on the show Unsolved Mysteries, 1-800 phone lines for the program crashed. Ultimately, Poulsen was captured in a supermarket and served a sentence of five years.

    Since serving time, Poulsen has worked as a journalist. He is now a senior editor for Wired News. His most prominent article details his work on identifying 744 sex offenders with MySpace profiles.

  5. Robert Tappan Morris: Morris, son of former National Security Agency scientist Robert Morris, is known as the creator of the Morris Worm, the first computer worm to be unleashed on the Internet. As a result of this crime, he was the first person prosecuted under the 1986 Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.

    Morris wrote the code for the worm while he was a student at Cornell. He asserts that he intended to use it to see how large the Internet was. The worm, however, replicated itself excessively, slowing computers down so that they were no longer usable. It is not possible to know exactly how many computers were affected, but experts estimate an impact of 6,000 machines. He was sentenced to three years' probation, 400 hours of community service and a fined $10,500.

    Morris is currently working as a tenured professor at the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. He principally researches computer network architectures including distributed hash tables such as Chord and wireless mesh networks such as Roofnet.

White Hat Hackers

Hackers that use their skills for good are classified as "white hat." These white hats often work as certified "Ethical Hackers," hired by companies to test the integrity of their systems. Others, operate without company permission by bending but not breaking laws and in the process have created some really cool stuff. In this section we profile five white hat hackers and the technologies they have developed.

  1. Stephen Wozniak: "Woz" is famous for being the "other Steve" of Apple. Wozniak, along with current Apple CEO Steve Jobs, co-founded Apple Computer. He has been awarded with the National Medal of Technology as well as honorary doctorates from Kettering University and Nova Southeastern University. Additionally, Woz was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in September 2000.

    Woz got his start in hacking making blue boxes, devices that bypass telephone-switching mechanisms to make free long-distance calls. After reading an article about phone phreaking in Esquire, Wozniak called up his buddy Jobs. The pair did research on frequencies, then built and sold blue boxes to their classmates in college. Wozniak even used a blue box to call the Pope while pretending to be Henry Kissinger.

    Wozniak dropped out of college and came up with the computer that eventually made him famous. Jobs had the bright idea to sell the computer as a fully assembled PC board. The Steves sold Wozniak's cherished scientific calculator and Jobs' VW van for capital and got to work assembling prototypes in Jobs' garage. Wozniak designed the hardware and most of the software. In the Letters section of Woz.org, he recalls doing "what Ed Roberts and Bill Gates and Paul Allen did and tons more, with no help." Wozniak and Jobs sold the first 100 of the Apple I to a local dealer for $666.66 each.

    Woz no longer works full time for Apple, focusing primarily on philanthropy instead. Most notable is his function as fairy godfather to the Los Gatos, Calif. School District. "Wozniak 'adopted' the Los Gatos School District, providing students and teachers with hands-on teaching and donations of state-of-the-art technology equipment."

  2. Tim Berners-Lee: Berners-Lee is famed as the inventor of the World Wide Web, the system that we use to access sites, documents and files on the Internet. He has received numerous recognitions, most notably the Millennium Technology Prize.

    While a student at Oxford University, Berners-Lee was caught hacking access with a friend and subsequently banned from University computers. w3.org reports, "Whilst [at Oxford], he built his first computer with a soldering iron, TTL gates, an M6800 processor and an old television." Technological innovation seems to have run in his genes, as Berners-Lee's parents were mathematicians who worked on the Manchester Mark1, one of the earliest electronic computers.

    While working with CERN, a European nuclear research organization, Berners-Lee created a hypertext prototype system that helped researchers share and update information easily. He later realized that hypertext could be joined with the Internet. Berners-Lee recounts how he put them together: "I just had to take the hypertext idea and connect it to the TCP and DNS ideas and – ta-da! – the World Wide Web."

    Since his creation of the World Wide Web, Berners-Lee founded the World Wide Web Consortium at MIT. The W3C describes itself as "an international consortium where Member organizations, a full-time staff and the public work together to develop Web standards." Berners-Lee's World Wide Web idea, as well as standards from the W3C, is distributed freely with no patent or royalties due.

  3. Linus Torvalds: Torvalds fathered Linux, the very popular Unix-based operating system. He calls himself "an engineer," and has said that his aspirations are simple, "I just want to have fun making the best damn operating system I can."

    Torvalds got his start in computers with a Commodore VIC-20, an 8-bit home computer. He then moved on to a Sinclair QL. Wikipedia reports that he modified the Sinclair "extensively, especially its operating system." Specifically, Torvalds hacks included "an assembler and a text editor…as well as a few games."

    Torvalds created the Linux kernel in 1991, using the Minix operating system as inspiration. He started with a task switcher in Intel 80386 assembly and a terminal driver. After that, he put out a call for others to contribute code, which they did. Currently, only about 2 percent of the current Linux kernel is written by Torvalds himself. The success of this public invitation to contribute code for Linux is touted as one of the most prominent examples of free/open source software.

    Currently, Torvalds serves as the Linux ringleader, coordinating the code that volunteer programmers contribute to the kernel. He has had an asteroid named after him and received honorary doctorates from Stockholm University and University of Helsinki. He was also featured in Time Magazine's "60 Years of Heroes."

  4. Richard Stallman: Stallman's fame derives from the GNU Project, which he founded to develop a free operating system. For this, he's known as the father of free software. His "Serious Bio" asserts, "Non-free software keeps users divided and helpless, forbidden to share it and unable to change it. A free operating system is essential for people to be able to use computers in freedom."

    Stallman, who prefers to be called rms, got his start hacking at MIT. He worked as a "staff hacker" on the Emacs project and others. He was a critic of restricted computer access in the lab. When a password system was installed, Stallman broke it down, resetting passwords to null strings, then sent users messages informing them of the removal of the password system.

    Stallman's crusade for free software started with a printer. At the MIT lab, he and other hackers were allowed to modify code on printers so that they sent convenient alert messages. However, a new printer came along – one that they were not allowed to modify. It was located away from the lab and the absence of the alerts presented an inconvenience. It was at this point that he was "convinced…of the ethical need to require free software."

    With this inspiration, he began work on GNU. Stallman wrote an essay, "The GNU Project," in which he recalls choosing to work on an operating system because it's a foundation, "the crucial software to use a computer." At this time, the GNU/Linux version of the operating system uses the Linux kernel started by Torvalds. GNU is distributed under "copyleft," a method that employs copyright law to allow users to use, modify, copy and distribute the software.

    Stallman's life continues to revolve around the promotion of free software. He works against movements like Digital Rights Management (or as he prefers, Digital Restrictions Management) through organizations like Free Software Foundation and League for Programming Freedom. He has received extensive recognition for his work, including awards, fellowships and four honorary doctorates.

  5. Tsutomu Shimomura: Shimomura reached fame in an unfortunate manner: he was hacked by Kevin Mitnick. Following this personal attack, he made it his cause to help the FBI capture him.

    Shimomura's work to catch Mitnick is commendable, but he is not without his own dark side. Author Bruce Sterling recalls: "He pulls out this AT&T cellphone, pulls it out of the shrinkwrap, finger-hacks it, and starts monitoring phone calls going up and down Capitol Hill while an FBI agent is standing at his shoulder, listening to him."

    Shimomura out-hacked Mitnick to bring him down. Shortly after finding out about the intrusion, he rallied a team and got to work finding Mitnick. Using Mitnick's cell phone, they tracked him near Raleigh-Durham International Airport. The article, "SDSC Computer Experts Help FBI Capture Computer Terrorist" recounts how Shimomura pinpointed Mitnick's location. Armed with a technician from the phone company, Shimomura "used a cellular frequency direction-finding antenna hooked up to a laptop to narrow the search to an apartment complex." Mitnick was arrested shortly thereafter. Following the pursuit, Shimomura wrote a book about the incident with journalist John Markoff, which was later turned into a movie.

We hope you have enjoyed our introduction to some of the most famous real-life hackers, both white and black alike, and have gotten a clearer impression of who hackers really are. To find out more about hacking, cracking, these or other famous hackers, or just how to keep your computer safe from all of the above, check out the following resources:

  1. Kevin Mitnick's Security Advice
  2. IT Security: 10 Steps to Make Your Firewall More Secure
  3. Frontline: Hackers
  4. InfoSEC Institute Ethical Hacking

**http://www.itsecurity.com/features/top-10-famous-hackers-042407/

Ouija Board Experience

I have had 2 different experiences with Ouija boards. The first came in the early 1980's when i was in college. The rooming house i lived in had many stories and lore behind it as it had once been a sanitarium for people with TB and other air born diseases in the early 1900's. There was one room in particular on the 4th floor of this building that was the old solarium. A large room with huge windows and glass doors going out onto a balcony. We could all imagine how this had been set up during its original use.

One night in mid winter, about 10 girls including myself sat down to use the Ouija board in this room. We took turns in groups of 4 at using the board though we all sat around one table watching intently. While the board was in use at the opposite end of the table, I heard a whisper of my name over my right shoulder. I quickly turned to the right, and of course saw nothing. Assuming it was one of the girls, I said nothing as to not let on I even heard it.

Again , I heard this voice over my shoulder quickly whisper my name but this time, the whisper was accompanied by a cool breath on my neck. I swear I felt this breath. I turned my head again to see absolutely nothing and having been seated at the end of the table, there was no one sitting on that side to have been able to do it.

The second occurrence came during the initial stages of my marital break up in '95. I rented a small house next door to my sister in Upstate New York. The house was more of a summer home and had been owned and lived in by a elderly widow who had died a few years prior. Though he had family, they did not have concern for the residence or the mans belongings which had been left behind. Family photos, clothing, furniture...the entire contents of the mans home were left helter smelter as they had been when he lived there.

Among these belongings was a Ouija board which I found on the back porch in an old cupboard. I mentioned the board to my sister and she encouraged me to bring it over so we could give it a try. And so, we tried.

And of course, at first, we like most folks who have tried a Ouija board, assumed and accused the other of moving the eye, of pressing too hard, or giving our scientific analysis of movement by heat transmission through our hands. But the board took on its own personality very quickly.

Soon we realized that I had some sort of connection with whatever was making the board work and I no more than had to think the questions, not speaking them out loud, and the board would answer, with my sisters hands (and not mine) on the eye. I would think a question, and the eye would guide my sisters hands to the appropriate answer. Questions that my sister would have no way of knowing the answers even if I had said them out loud.

Within a few days, we began to ask the board specific questions about its power. The board spelled out that the spirits name was Gordon. It said that he was a man in his early 20's and had lived in the 1800's. He had not been married nor did he have any children and had been killed in a bank robbery. And so, we joked around about Gordon among ourselves on a regular basis, but kept returning to the board.

One day, we were calling Gordon to come play with us with our hands on the eye awaiting response. No result came. My sister began to tease, calling Gordon to come play with us or we would find a new spirit. No result. She said "ok Gordon, don't come play with us anymore then" and suddenly the eye began to move.

It spelled out a warning not to do that. She asked him why as he wouldn't come and play when we wanted so she would find another spirit. The eye spelled out the words of someone very angry and said that we would be sorry if we were mean to him and that he was a good person but we should not get angry with him.

We both felt a chill of apprehension and stopped playing. From that point on, the board never worked. Every time I attempted to use the board, with my sister or not, the eye failed to move.

I have since moved from that house, and left the board exactly where I found it, in that cupboard on the back porch.


**http://www.wirenot.net/X/Stories/Ghost/Ghost_N-O/Ouijaboardexperience.shtml

Am I Seeing Things, Or Is This Just A Strange Coincident?

I am looking for some answers to things that I have experienced for as long as I can remember. I have had dreams or visions that for example show bits and pieces of events or people. These dreams or visions are sometimes scattered and it's like I have to figure out what they mean.

I had for a long while, saw a man in my dreams, never his face, just the back of him and then he would pick up a hand full of soil and let it run through his fingers. I would also see items that I just felt were connected to this individual, like a fishing rod and a wheat field. This dream or vision continued on for 8 or 9 years, not all the time but enough that it drove me crazy!

One night about 4 years ago, I went out with some friends to a local pub, we were meeting some people a girlfriend of mine worked with. When I got to the table where the group was sitting, there was a man, sitting with his back to us. I felt this, almost like a punch in the stomach, like the wind had been knocked out of me and I knew without a doubt that this was the individual I had been seeing over and over again. This man and I have since become best friends and through talking with him, all the things I had seen that I thought must be connected to this individual turned out to be true.

There have been other similar experiences that I have had. And I am looking for answers as to if this is just a strange coincidence or something more. I also get very strong feelings if I am around certain people, for example while waiting in line at the grocery store, a middle age women came in to line right behind me and I suddenly felt this over powering need to cry. I was actually tearing up in the check out line. What does all this mean and what can I do?


**http://www.psychic-experiences.com/real-psychic-story.php?story=2716

Whispered Name, Cat Ghost, And Haunted Island

By Lollypop
(1 stories) (5 posts)
Date: 2009-05-14
Country: United States
State: Georgia
Paranormal Category: Misc



I never thought much about this when it happened, but there was a place between our house and the one next door where I used regularly to hear my name whispered. This will have been when I was less than 10 years old. I just sort of got used to it: that was the place where I would hear my name. I'd walk a little faster and be glad to be away from it--so apparently I was slightly spooked but not really scared enough ever to tell anyone about it. Until now, that is!

Cat ghost

As a young adult, I had a cat that I loved very much: Libby the Wonder Cat! She got mangled by two overplayful dogs and I had a horrible, horrible day at the vet's where her needs were ignored so that other pets could get their shots or whatever... Libby disappeared eventually into the vet's room and I never saw her alive again. I was gutted! For years afterwards, I would feel her jump on my bed at night. I would really be convinced she was there. I put this down to imagination and grief--though it continued long after I was grieving for little Libby--until I read that a lot of other people have had the same experience. So, maybe she did come back to cheer me up!

Haunted Island

My last mini-tale is about a place where I had a very bad feeling and years later heard of someone else having the same feeling about the same place. When I was little, my family used to go to Jekyll Island on the coast of Georgia for holidays. One day, aged about 14, I decided to walk all the way around the island. Crazy idea--I would never had made it--it was about 15 miles and I had no supplies! Anyway, I had only gone about 2 miles to the north end of the island, which at that time (it will have been circa 1975) was very isolated--not a building in sight. I was suddenly, inexplicably overcome with terror. What I imagined to myself was that an alligator would attack. I had never heard of alligators on that island. It was broad daylight with the Georgia sun beating down at about 90F. Anyway, a good 15 years later, an Italian friend of mine at university went on a trip through Georgia with another friend visiting from Italy. My friend (Clara) came back with stories from her travels, including Jekyll, which I had recommended to her. The other friend had insisted on sunbathing on a particularly lonely part of the island (probably so she could go topless!), but Clara felt very uncomfortable there. She was deeply unsettled and only half joked to her friend, when she saw a running shoe on the beach, that something must have got the jogger... It was only when Clara told me this story that I remembered my experience so many years earlier. We discussed it and decided it must be just about the same place on the island--the northeast end, beautifully secluded view onto the Atlantic and mysteriously unpopulated. Well, I've been back since and it is now very populated, and doesn't feel scary. So, go figure!

So, there's a few stories, short and sweet. I hope they're not too boring!


**http://www.yourghoststories.com/real-ghost-story.php?story=5955

Depression Blog

December 11, 2007
I’m depressed

When I feel like this, I don’t talk about it much. In fact, it’s hard to have a conversation with anybody about anything. Sometimes I’ll get caught in a conversation - standing in line at the grocery store, and the lady behind me rolls her eyes and says, “I always pick the wrong line” I want to respond appropriately (however that is), but I don’t say anything. I try to smile so the woman doesn’t think I’m being a prude. I think, I want to slit my wrists; why are you talking about this small delay?

I bump into a friend at the shopping center, and I tell her, “I’m depressed” and she asks, “Why?” I can see in her eyes that she thinks I’m having a “bad hair day.” Maybe my stockings ran. Maybe I chipped a nail, or couldn’t find my favorite shampoo. Maybe my son is being unruly. I shake my head and listen to her talk about the sweater she just found at some great price and I think, “I just want to hang myself in the garage or take a bottle of pills.” That’s what I don’t say to people.

Saran Wrap commercials make me cry. My husband asks me, “What is the matter with you?” The laundry sits in a pile and I can’t get to it. The phone rings and I can’t answer it. My son’s teacher wants to talk to me about my son (who is brilliant, but can’t get around to doing his homework), and I want to run away.

I am intelligent. I know my son’s school work is the most important thing on the planet not just to my son’s teacher, my son and my husband, but also to me. Theoretically, I should return her call immediately and wade into whatever the issue is, but I can’t. I want to, but I’m afraid because in my state of depression, the English language doesn’t make sense. I worry that my son’s teacher won’t get the intelligent response she wants. I fear I will not manage to convey the “appropriate” level of understanding and caring. I know I will cry and embarrass myself and the teacher. I’ll look like a fool.

If I try to let somebody know how I am feeling, I just know they will tell me that I am too self-involved, being silly or that I need to think about my family and accomplish something and that will make me feel better. I agree, but then again…

I’m depressed.

-Marti


**http://www.everydayhealth.com/blog/making-sense-of-depression/im-depressed/

Oprah's 5 Eco-Friendly Tips


Eco-Friendly Tip #1 on Oprah: Eco-friendly Canvas Bags

When you’re deciding between paper and plastic at the grocery store, choose neither. Plastic takes 1,000 years to decompose and paper bags use 14 million trees a year. Instead, an easy eco-friendly tip is to use cloth grocery bags. Any cloth bag will do, but Oprah said that her website is selling organic cotton canvas bags made without pesticides.

Another easy eco-friendly tip on Oprah is to use an organic mesh bag for organic produce. One eco-friendly expert urged consumers to look at the amount of packaging in the grocery store. Since petroleum-based packaging isn’t good for the environment, buy items that use minimal packaging.

This easy eco-friendly tip may cost you a little more money: organic produce. It’s a green tip because it takes less energy to harvest and doesn’t use pesticides, so it’s healthier for the planet. But, organic produce isn’t necessarily a green money saving tip – though it could make you physically healthier.



Eco-Friendly Laptops

LG Electronics recently unveiled a concept for a future laptop called 'ebook'. Instead of the current LCD (liquid crystal display) panels, it uses OLED (organic light-emitting diode) panels which are more efficient in terms of energy consumption and manufacturing processes.

The laptop will be powered through clean fuels such as methyl alcohol or natural gas, and it features a special cylindrical hinge to storage such fuels. All the combined characteristics make this laptop much more environment-friendly than standard products.

The average person will keep a laptop for only three years before it is tossed in the closet or tossed in the garbage, which presses the issue for an even more recyclable laptop. Some issues that still need addressed and some possible solutions:

1. Problem: Petroleum-filled plastic. Solution: Produce laptops from corn using bioplastic-polymers. The main issue at the point is creating a heat resistant polymer that can withstand the heat from a laptop.

2. Problem: Power Supply. Solution: Use the power of the sun the recharge your laptop. Solar powered chargers are in the works.

3. Problem: Lead products in the waste. Solution: As mentioned above, the European Union has enacted legal restrictions on lead. President Bush has also followed suit with standards for American lead use.

4. Problem: Spinning hard drives. Solution: Future laptops could reduce their energy use up to 10 percent by replacing hard drives with flash memory, which has no watt-hungry moving parts. Dell debuted a laptop with a 32-gigabyte solid-state drive this year.

Some recent awards winners for laptops that are friendly to the environment include: XO Laptop, Toshiba Portege R500, HP 2710p, Lenovo Thinkpad X300, and the Dell D630.

Mike T Martin


**http://safeandgreenliving.blogspot.com/2009/04/eco-friendly-laptops.html

May 24, 2009

Survival of the Fittest: Surviving a Winter Storm While Camping

Posted by Lee S. Apr 28, 2009

The experienced wilderness survivor knows the joys of winter camping, like silence and solitude. You already know how to dress; next, is to prepare for a winter storm. A winter storm can come out of nowhere in the mountains. So, let's set up your base camp so it's storm-ready.

Make your camp in a sheltered spot, like the down-wind side of a group of trees. Check them for dead branches and pull down any you find. Trample the base for your tent wearing your snowshoes or skis; make it as level as possible.

Start with an insulating footprint for your tent. The best tents are shaped to shed snow, like a dome tent., and also provide plenty of space. A tent fly can keep your tent walls freezing. Erect the tent on the footprint with the entrance away from the prevailing wind. Build a packed snow wall three to four feet high and a foot away from your tent walls along the back and around the sides to the entrance as a windbreak and for extra insulation.

Place a tarp or space blanket, like the one inside your first aid kit, on the tent floor for more insulation. Keep a brush just outside your tent (or in the vestibule) to knock off any snow on your clothes and boots, and keep it outside your tent. Use warm sleeping pads under a good winter sleeping bag like this one from Sierra Designs that's good to 30 degrees. Sleep in your baselayer top and bottom, and bring your outer clothes inside your sleeping bag to warm up before you put them on. Wear a hat or balaclava for warmth while you sleep as well as when you're outside, and make sure you're breathing outside your sleeping bag to avoid humidity building up.

Use your stove to cook and to melt snow; keep water bottles upside down. Cook outside your tent; fuel fumes can be deadly. Eat plenty of carbohydrates, and make warm drinks throughout the day to help keep your core warm and to avoid dehydration.

Now that you've set up a storm-sturdy camp, your next big danger is hypothermia.


**http://blogs.zappos.com/blogs/outdoor/2009/04/28/survival-of-the-fittest-surviving-a-winter-storm-while-camping

May 21, 2009

Where The Hell Are The Strong Women?


In The Independent today, Johann Hari writes, "Where have all the strong women gone?" Hari gets all nostalgic for Bette Davis: "She was not only a woman; she was an electrical storm with skin. She never pretended to be dumb, or a little girl. She didn't do soft, or simpering. She had a voice like sour cream, and eyes like a raven." But, Hari argues, women on film — and on TV — have weakened. "If the symbol of 1930s Hollywood was Bette Davis in Jezebel, defiantly wearing red to her virgin-white ball, today it is Cameron Diaz in There's Something About Mary, rubbing semen into her hair because she is too dumb to realize it's not hair gel."

But what about Buffy? You may ask (I definitely ask!) Hari answers:The few strong women in Hollywood movies and TV are safely located in an unreal world: Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Xena: Warrior Princess. The closest to an unapologetic feminist is Lisa Simpson - and she is eight years old, and a cartoon. This isn't because Hollywood is especially sexist. Hollywood largely gives us what we want - and we don't want to idolize strong, powerful women today.


I tried taking a look at my DVD collection to see if there were any movies with strong women in it. Whale Rider was the only "modern" movie. And the lead is — in the words of Ms. Britney Spears — not a girl, not yet a woman. Maybe Flirting? Or Blue Crush. I don't own Death Proof but I plan to. Other than that, all of the other films with strong women (The Women, His Girl Friday, The Wizard Of Oz?) are from a bygone era. (The rest, stuff like Midnight Cowboy, Nowhere, Shampoo, Adaptation, Pirates Of The Caribbean, Velvet Goldmine, Harold & Kumar... male-oriented.

Hari notes that today, a majority of college graduates are female. We have a woman running for president. We live in a time where women are in business, in government, in outer space. Why aren't they in entertainment?

Johann Hari: Where Have All The Strong Women Gone? [Independent]


**http://jezebel.com/372963/where-the-hell-are-the-strong-women

Crisiboy.Com: Katrina Halili and Hayden Kho Scandal

May 20, 2009 by Chris
Filed under: Entertainment


The 3-year relationship or should I say love affair between Dr. Vicki Belo of the Belo Medical Group and Dr. Hayden Kho has now put into sensation and controversy due to some fellows who got involved on a scandalous video, which according to others, was the main reason of their recent break-up.

Based on stories of some showbiz respected resources, their controversial breakup happened last December 10 after Vicki Belo discovered by herself some scandalous videos on Hayden Kho’s laptop. The racy videos were filmed by Hayden himself and it involved different woman,most of whom were secretly filmed. And yes, it was confirmed that the sexy star Katrina Halili, who is a former BeloMed endorser and model was in one of the scandal videos. And as reportedly recently, Katrina had a confrontation with Vicki Belo and admitted a relationship with Hayden Kho that lasted for almost a year.

A few hours ago, featured in SNN (Showbiz News Ngayon) by Boy Abunda and Kris Aquino, the Katrina Halili and Hayden Kho Scandal video was leaked over the Youtube by some sources who got hold of the alleged controversial video. The scandal video that leaked in youtube was firmly confirmed that it involves Katrina Halili wearing her 2-piece bikini caressing and singing the song “Careless Whisper” together with Hayden Kho that can be seen wearing his underwear too in an intimate private place.

In latest news, Sen. Bong Revilla called up the PRC (Professional Regulation Commission) to revoke the license of Hayden Kho, who he described the controversial videos as an “insanity”, and Kho should be punished from the results.

Gabriella movement also gave their full support to Katrina Halili and promised to give their conselling to the young actress.

Now, after I saw the video, I felt so pity to Katrina and thought what could it bring to her family and friends. Judge for yourself if its true that this video link below is Katrina and Hayden.

Katrina Halili and Hayden Kho Scandal


**http://www.crisiboy.com/entertainment/katrina-halili-hayden-kho-scandal/