Krebs' Free form/Chaos Thread

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Feb 23, 2010
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ramjambunath said:
a8mO7.png

The character used to depict a person from which you're supposed to identify somebody gay here is the Korean phonetic which when read aloud sounds like "you". :)
 
Jul 4, 2011
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L'arriviste said:
The character used to depict a person from which you're supposed to identify somebody gay here is the Korean phonetic which when read aloud sounds like "you". :)

Impressive knowledge, Andy's still a tad gay for the repost request.


hhdhc.jpg


512x508xpiracy-e1299573133979-512x508.jpg.pagespeed.ic.kkEGePnVGF.jpg


cQBpo.jpg


Go to google.com and click 'I'm feeling lucky' without typing anything in the search box to find all logos google has used.
 
Mar 16, 2009
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Man sues former hostages, says they broke promise
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Can there be no trust between a kidnapper and his hostages?

A man who held a Kansas couple hostage in their home while fleeing from authorities is suing them, claiming they broke an oral contract made when he promised them money in exchange for hiding him from police. The couple has asked a judge to dismiss the suit.
 
Mar 16, 2009
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Adobe eyes fraud-busting tools for Photoshop
In the near future, it could be a lot easier to see if those pictures of the person you've been talking to on Match.com have been retouched.

Adobe Systems' Advanced Technology lab is working on plug-ins for Photoshop that would detect whether a photo has been tampered with, according to an Adobe representative. So far, the company has two plug-ins that are in a fairly advanced stage of development. Adobe is working with Dartmouth professor Hany Farid, an expert in photo fraud detection.

One tool from Adobe, called Clone Tool Detector, determines whether a section in a picture, such as a patch of sand or a field of grass, has been recopied from another part of the picture. Last year, Reuters admitted that a photographer cloned a smoke plume in a shot of wartime Beirut. The tool can't ascertain with absolute certainty whether two items, say a pair of clouds or other images, have been cloned, but it will say that the two images are "improbably similar."
 

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