This goes against modern understanding that say LDL or ApoB is an independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease. Also interestingly one of the authors, Dave Feldman, was a fellow SWE that left tech and started challenging this notion.
Sometimes there are too many errors to deal with. I find building on a machine that's on the exact macOS version that you are trying to build does the trick.
Apple allows 3rd party kernel extensions so naturally you would need to be able to debug the kernel. In my post, I link plenty of official Apple documentation that provide information on how to debug the kernel.
Jonathan Levin's MOXiL 2nd Edition volume 3 is out and I recommend you get it. 1st edition is still very good and can hold you off until the other volumes are out.
Amit Singh has a Mac OS X Internals A Systems Approach that is good we well.
There are also various talks at security conferences that detail parts of macOS/iOS.
I haven't used vimperator for a long time, but in petadactyl you can use C-o and C-i to go back and forth, respectively. The key bind matches pretty well to what it is in Vim too.
Many people in infosec generally learn programming on their own and only code for their own need. They don't care about coding style, small optimizations, programming best practices, etc.
It's a pity not more employers do this. I've always been a big proponent of 4-on-3-off work schedules. Traditional work 5 out of 7 was arbitrarily chosen. Regular 3-day weekends really rejuvenates you. If 40 hours of work a week is mandatory, spreading the 8 hours of the fifth day into the 4 days isn't so bad.
While I don't think athletes are the most intelligent, I think the stereotypes of dumb jocks is simply a type of bias. If you were an athlete with potential, you would put more focus on your sport instead of academics. If you were bad at sports you would typically spend less time doing them which would then allow you to focus your time on other things like academia. In America, when all you need to do to get As in like highschool is to put effort, the ones who weren't great in sports tend to get higher grades which is perceived as having a higher intelligence. Thinking that athleticism is negatively correlated to intelligence is just ignorant.
Am I missing something? The result for the 6 main emotional arcs basically enumerates all the possible permutations of rise and fall of length 1, 2, and 3 which seems pretty obvious.
Length 1:
rise, fall
Length 2:
rise-fall, fall-rise
Length 3:
rise-fall-rise, fall-rise-fall (must be interchanging because for example fall-fall-rise would probably just be considered fall-rise)
> Computers analyzed more than 30,000 different risk factors, including traditional ones like age and mental-health history. But some surprising issues—such as gastrointestinal problems, infections and injuries like rib fractures—were tied to increased risk.
> Dr. Nock says that some of these may be self-inflicted or related to impulsive behavior. Using the historical data, the approach was able to detect 45% of suicidal acts an average of about three years before the event.
> A study using similar methods looking at suicide risk among U.S. Army soldiers in the year after hospitalization for psychiatric issues was published in 2015 in JAMA Psychiatry. The algorithm was able to predict about 53% of the suicides in that high-risk period.
I wonder what the false positive rates on these are.
Wow, it seems life has changed quite a bit in China than what it was like when I was there (2002-2011). The author mentions that everything is using Wechat for e-payments and QR codes are every where. I wonder with such high rate of adoption and change, how secure every thing is.