It will stop adding rows once you reach a solution. But the logic for stopping wasn't great, and it was breaking under some use cases if you went back and changed letters. It should be more robust now, and I've improved the congrats-you're-done messages.
This looks like a daily game, which is not what I’m after at the moment. I wanted to list games that put the user in control as much as possible. I would add it if the user could go through different challenges at their own pace. Still, this is looks like a really fun game; nicely done!
I'm considering adding an "unlimited" bank of puzzles that you can play once you've solved the daily games (or instead of the dailies). I'll let you know if I do!
Magic Leap is an eclectic group of visionaries, rocket scientists, wizards, and gurus from the fields of film, robotics, visualization, software, computing, and user experience. We are growing quickly, and this is the time to get on board and play a role in shaping the way people will be interacting with the world tomorrow.
We are hiring in the following areas:
computer vision
machine learning
embedded systems
software engineering
hardware and pcb design
android systems
embedded algorithm optimization
game dev tools (Unity, Unreal Engine)
cloud computing/apis
Magic Leap is an eclectic group of visionaries, rocket scientists, wizards, and gurus from the fields of film, robotics, visualization, software, computing, and user experience. We are growing quickly, and this is the time to get on board and play a role in shaping the way people will be interacting with the world tomorrow.
We are hiring in the following areas:
computer vision
machine learning
embedded systems
software engineering
hardware and pcb design
android systems
embedded algorithm optimization
game dev tools (Unity, Unreal Engine)
cloud computing/apis
I've applied 5 separate times with Magic Leap in the embedded systems domain over the last year, without a single response - no rejection letter, nothing other than an automated acknowledgement that my application was received. My background matched the job description at least 70-80% in every single case - I'm not sure why the responses are lacking. I would very highly appreciate it if you could somehow try to get my application to the right person or department. The reason I'm this persistent is that I actually think Magic Leap is doing something amazing, and would love to be a part of it.
I've sent you (email in your profile) two separate emails regarding this since the last "who is hiring" post for August, and I haven't even received an acknowledgement. It'd be great if you could let me know if my application is even being reviewed - I am actively interviewing with other companies currently, and whether I get to interview with Magic Leap would influence my decision with the others.
My team is looking to hire several software engineers to help us develop our computer vision systems. We're interested in finding excellent programmers who have some C++ experience. We prefer candidates with experience developing computer vision algorithms with OpenCV.
Magic Leap is an eclectic group of visionaries, rocket scientists, wizards, and gurus from the fields of film, robotics, visualization, software, computing, and user experience. We are growing quickly, and this is the time to get on board and play a role in shaping the way people will be interacting with the world tomorrow.
We are hiring in the following areas:
* computer vision
* machine learning
* embedded systems
* software engineering
* hardware and pcb design
* android systems
* embedded algorithm optimization
* game dev tools (Unity, Unreal Engine)
* cloud computing/apis
My team is looking to hire several software engineers to help us develop our computer vision systems. We're interested in finding excellent programmers who have some C++ experience. We prefer candidates with experience developing computer vision algorithms with OpenCV.
Yes. While we're mostly looking for permanent, full-time staff, we do also have a few interns, and we're open to hiring more.
If you'd like to apply, you can use https://www.smartrecruiters.com/MagicLeapInc/83759793 . I'd also submit an application (clearly marked 'intern') through the best-fitting regular job ad to be sure that the right hiring manager sees your application.
Don't think that'd add anything. The people investigating you would presumably look at your network traffic and see all of the non-anonymized TLS packets traveling between your VPS and the real server. And they shouldn't need to bring the VPS down to get an image of its disk (or its RAM).
Of course tho' I doubt it be enough for evidence in court especially if everything is bought with fake aliases.
And the saving memory contents (could hold config files on tmpfs for example) seems to be a difficult process, from wikipedia
"Holding unpowered RAM below −60 °C helps preserve residual data by an order of magnitude, improving the chances of successful recovery. However, it can be impractical to do this during a field examination."
It would be interesting to get perspective from any forensic experts.
The key imho is to put as many hoops in attackers path.
It doesn't need to be like that. You can have a frontend server with a public .onion domain that just pulls everything from a different remote and private .onion domain.
Yes, the latency will suck.