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Like Everything on Facebook with this JavaScript Bookmarklet » Feross.org Do you want to like every post and comment that you see on Facebook all at once? Well, it’s your lucky day. Drag the link below to your Bookmarks Bar and click it to automatically like all the posts and comments on the page you’re on. Why’d I do this? Some friends and I were playing around with Facebook’s new comment-on-enter feature and we got a large 70+ comment thread going, then people began to like every comment in the thread, so the idea for this JavaScript bookmarklet was born. I whipped it up in 15 minutes. Source Code If you are curious how this works, here is the abbreviated source code: Get the full source code on GitHub. Bookmarklet Source Update I just updated the bookmarklet to show some UI about the progress of your “like bomb”, as well as a button to stop the liking if you suddenly have a change of heart. Update 2 I just fixed a bug in Firefox where clicking the bookmarklet causes the browser to redirect to a page with the message [object HTMLScriptElement] shown.

13 Little Known Free Programs Any LifeHacker Must Try | Webiot There’s plenty of useful free computer programs and websites that a lot of people don’t know about. Hopefully, after reading this post, your time spent in front of the computer will become a bit more healthy, productive, and easily managed. 1. Bitrix24 Bitrix24 is a multi-purpose program free to companies with fewer than 12 employees. 2. f.lux You know how you’re not supposed to sit in front of LED screens and expose yourself to blue light at night if you want to sleep well? f.lux can help with that. I’ve been using f.lux for over a year and I really recommend it. 3. RescueTime sends you weekly reports on how you’ve spent your time by the computer. You can personally adjust what kind of activities you want RescueTime to consider productive or distractive. 4. Want to appear hard-to-get by waiting to reply to someone, but afraid you’ll forget to reply if you wait too long? Just click the Boomerang box and set the date and it’ll be scheduled automatically. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. ePubReader 12.

Best books according to Larry Page - his suggested reading - FavoriteOf.com He read Nikola Tesla's autobiography when he was 12. Larry spoke about this during a talk he gave at the American Assiociation for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in 2007. Serbian inventor NIKOLA TESLA (1857-1943) was a revolutionary scientist who forever changed the scientific fields of electricity and magnetism. amazon Services of Internet - WWW, E-mail, News, FTP Cookies are used only to analyse traffic and provide advertising at the Website.More about it here. Internet service providers (ISP - Internet Service Provider) companies or institutions (such as T-Com, Iskon or CARNet in Croatia, AT&T in US and MTNL in India), which satellite or optical connections with several major Internet node abroad (mainly in the direction of America and Europe) and the thus ensuring high capacity connection to the rest of the Internet world. However, practice has shown that it can barely follow the needs of the growing number of members of Internet communities. When selecting an ISP of significance is the number of services that it provides to its customers. All services provided by e-mail, but do not provide any service to FTP, newsgroups, renting space on the disc, certain program support and etc. CARNet allows for almost all university departments. User from their computers at work or at home by joining the Internet can: Services of Computer System News Groups

Google's Artificial Brain Learns to Find Cat Videos By Liat Clark, Wired UK When computer scientists at Google’s mysterious X lab built a neural network of 16,000 computer processors with one billion connections and let it browse YouTube, it did what many web users might do — it began to look for cats. [partner id=”wireduk”] The “brain” simulation was exposed to 10 million randomly selected YouTube video thumbnails over the course of three days and, after being presented with a list of 20,000 different items, it began to recognize pictures of cats using a “deep learning” algorithm. This was despite being fed no information on distinguishing features that might help identify one. Picking up on the most commonly occurring images featured on YouTube, the system achieved 81.7 percent accuracy in detecting human faces, 76.7 percent accuracy when identifying human body parts and 74.8 percent accuracy when identifying cats. “The network is sensitive to high-level concepts such as cat faces and human bodies. Image: peasap/Flickr Source: Wired.co.uk

Google's Larry Page reveals ideas for health and DeepMind Making our medical records open for sharing will save 100,000 lives a year, Google CEO Larry Page told the TED conference in Vancouver today. "Wouldn't it be amazing if everyone's medical records were available anonymously to research doctors?" Page said. "We'd save 100,000 lives this year. We're not really thinking about the tremendous good which can come from people sharing information with the right people in the right ways." Page condemned the US government for abusing trust in accessing personal data unlawfully, but said he worried about "throwing away the baby with the bathwater" in moving against openness. Yet, he added in an interview with US television host Charlie Rose, it "doesn't make any sense" to deny that we are in an increasingly open age in terms of personal data. He added: "The world is changing. Google Loon Page indicated that Google Loon, a project to use balloons to provide global internet access, is a personal priority. This is where DeepMind fits in.

Silk Road: The Untold Story In October 2013, a young entrepreneur named Ross Ulbricht was arrested at the Glen Park branch of the San Francisco Public library. It was the culmination of a two-year investigation into a vast online drug market called Silk Road. The authorities charged that Ulbricht, an idealistic 29-year-old Eagle Scout from Austin, Texas, was the kingpin of the operation. They said he’d reaped millions from the site, all transacted anonymously with Bitcoin. They said he’d devolved into a cold-blooded criminal, hiring hit men to take out those who crossed him. The story of how Ulbricht founded Silk Road, how it grew into a $1.2 billion operation, and how federal law enforcement shut it down is complicated, dark, and utterly fascinating. Go Back to Top.

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