Maybe the easiest way is to set up a couple of home networks? Set them up, break into them, take them apart, reset it all and do it again and again until you can do it in your sleep?
I think the modern world has messed up peoples sleeping, getting jarred awake by an alarm is unnatural and unhealthy.
I'm a big fan of the 'natural' way of sleeping[0][1].
Basically, sleeping twice, like two 4 hour sleeps through the day. Sometimes I don't sleep at all or only get a couple of hours, there's a gene that helps ABCC9[2] (also DEC2).
>Most of the points is arguing that NSA could compel the company Duck Duck Go, Inc to install equipment and then forbidding the company from disclosing that fact.
You don't need to do anything like that. DDG doesn't crawl the web itself, it uses API providers like Bing (Microsoft/NSA) and Yandex (Russian/FSB). They're legally required to disclose that on their site.
It's possible to identify people solely through anonymised credit card transactions[0] so doing the same for search results is pretty much the same.
DDG isn't private, it just gives the illusion of privacy, same as TOR. That said though if you're a high profile target then there's much more direct means to track what you're searching.
He means there's been tons of cures for it already, just from memory the African prostitutes that are immune to HIV (except now they all got infected, and the story was buried), the nanoparticles carrying melittin that could destroy HIV, the fact that horses are naturally immune etc etc after the initial media cycle it all gets buried, this will go the same way.
HIV/AIDS is a multi-billion dollar business, no-one seriously wants to cure it.
Maybe teach her how to make a Wordpress plugin? It'd slot in with what she already knows and she'd see immediate benefit as well as a real life application of her code.
Learn Python the hard way is a great idea too though, I got my friend started with the Ruby one and she really took to it. Another good one for Python is http://automatetheboringstuff.com/
Something to watch out for though is a lot of books are hopelessly out of date, code moves so fast that all the code examples in a book even just a couple of months old will be broken. Trivial for experienced people to workaround but typically if you're reading the book to learn you won't be able to figure it out.