327,965 research outputs found

    Interview with Joseph (Joe) S. Hack

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    Joe Hack is interviewed about his career at UNCW and elsewhere. Mr. Hack has an undergraduate and master's degree in engineering, which he put to use for 20 years in the Marine Corps. Following his career in the service he came to the UNCW Physical Plant in 1983. He eventually became physical plant director, retiring in 2003. During his time at UNCW, he oversaw many construction and repair projects, such as work on the Kenan House for Chancellor William Wagoner. Included in Mr. Hack's recollections are his reflections on people he knew at UNCW and his associations with faculty and administrators

    Geiger, Wolfgang; Melber, Henning: Kritik des deutschen Kolonialismus. Postkoloniale Sicht auf Erinnerung und Geschichtsvermittlung (Mathias Hack)

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    Erstveröffentlichung der Rezension in deutscher Sprache auf H-Soz-Kult am 6.07.2022: Mathias Hack: Rezension zu: Geiger, Wolfgang; Melber, Henning: Kritik des deutschen Kolonialismus. Postkoloniale Sicht auf Erinnerung und Geschichtsvermittlung. Frankfurt am Main 2021: Brandes & Apsel Verlag ISBN: 978-3-95558-307-1; 256 S., In: H-Soz-Kult, 06.07.2022 https://www.hsozkult.de/publicationreview/id/reb-113884Первая публикация рецензии на немецком языке на H-Soz-Kult 6 июля 2022 г.: Mathias Hack: Rezension zu: Geiger, Wolfgang; Melber, Henning: Kritik des deutschen Kolonialismus. Postkoloniale Sicht auf Erinnerung und Geschichtsvermittlung. Frankfurt am Main 2021: Brandes & Apsel Verlag ISBN: 978-3-95558-307-1; 256 S., In: H-Soz-Kult, 06.07.2022 https://www.hsozkult.de/publicationreview/id/reb-11388

    Exploring hidden narratives: Conscript graffiti at the former military base of Kummersdorf

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    This article explores the cultural significance and interpretative potential of graffiti left by Soviet conscripts at Kummersdorf, a former military base in the German federal state of Brandenburg. The graffiti is framed as war art and its typology, distribution and content is studied in detail. In this way opportunities for further research are highlighted, as well as the potential for the graffiti to contribute to interpretative and conservation strategies. We demonstrate how the graffiti embodies multi-level interpretative narratives which can help to reveal hidden aspects of Soviet conscript life and cultural practices whilst alluding to global events and Soviet and Russian military policy. More generally, the article aims to promote the potential of graffiti and other forms of what is traditionally considered vandalism to contribute to the cultural significance and interpretation of heritage sites

    Explorations by Mr. S. Hack

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    Scanned from the original held in the University of Adelaide Law Library

    Archombrotus et Theopompus sive Argenidis : secunda & tertia pars, ubi de institutione principis.

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    Sign.: *\p8\s, 2*\p4\s, A-2R\p8\sPort. grab. calc. arquitectónica con las figuras de Archombrotus y Argeni

    Título: Argenis

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    Sign.: *\p8\s, 2*\p6\s, A-2R\p8\s, 2S\p7\sPort. grab. calc. arquitectónica con las figuras de Archombrotus y Argenis: "I. Hackius sculp."Retrato del autor, grab. calc., en la p. [16]: "H. Grotius

    Título: Conspiratio Anglicana

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    Marca tip. en port. tip., grab. xilSign.: *\p8\s, *\p4\s, A-2Y\p8\sPort. frontispicia grab. calc., con retrato del autor: "G. Appelmans sculps.

    Cyber Operations and Automatic Hack Backs Under International Law on Necessity

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    This article examines the use of automatic hack backs under international law on necessity. Hack backs are a form of active defence measure adopted in response to cybersecurity threats that involve effects outside the victim's systems or networks designed to mitigate or prevent the cybersecurity threat. Automatic hack backs are systems that, once activated, are capable of performing these functions without direct human control. The plea of necessity under international law on State responsibility provides a basis on which States can adopt measures that would otherwise be unlawful in order to respond to cyber operations that constitute a grave and imminent against their essential interests. This article argues that the use of automatic hack backs can be justified on the basis of necessity, however, the system would need to be capable of making a range of complex assessments to ensure it meets the strict criteria required by international law. The complexity of systems capable of making these assessments carries a risk unintended effects and escalation of conflict at machine speed.Full Tex

    Planet Earth II: why most animals can’t hack city living

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    First paragraph: The grand finale of the BBC’s Planet Earth II showcased the ingenious strategies that some animals use to thrive in urban environments. Though impressive, these species are in the minority. As the number of people living in cities around the world continues to rise, we should really be turning our attention to those animals that find city living too hard to handle.  Access this article on The Conversation website: https://theconversation.com/planet-earth-ii-why-most-animals-cant-hack-city-living-6995

    To Hack in Italy Ethnographic Notes on HackIt - Hack Meeting 2007

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    This paper examines the broader political climate surrounding some Italian hackers communities that organize the annual hack meeting. When Italian people began to hack, the first thing that they learned was that computing was fun. Going around inside a machine, hacking it, sharing passion and line-code with friends was a tantalizing activity in the 80’s. But these emerging technologies were targeted by counter-hegemonic and strongly politicized groups as one of the tools of increasing control over society. Denouncing an overwhelming, embedded, presence of the state in everyday tasks (such as phoning, or traveling with private or public transportation), semi-legal, often anti-globalization, groups strongly supported hackers, sometimes strongly inviting them to join their political view. Hacking in Italy is nowadays perceived as subversive and resistant to mainframe activity. The concept of hacking is now in question under discussion: you can find Italian hacking groups that propose security breaking, anonymising, intellectual property issues, but also other issues seemingly or completely unrelated to hacking (like how to build a cheap wi-fi antenna, or how to bake home made bread). Enlisting ethnographic data obtained at a hacker meeting in Pisa (Italy) in September 2007, and through followup interviews with hackers in the months after the meeting, this paper explores the terrain of hacking in Italy. The rhetoric of rehabilitation, the retrieval of the lost skills, of the re-possession of a conversational place that was “taken” by big corporations, is nowadays the ground of most of Italian hackers communities
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