KU team wins NSA funding to improve security for Internet of Things with ‘big-thinking’ research
Kansas
KU team wins NSA funding to improve security for Internet of Things with ‘big-thinking’ research
Kansas
The new US Cyber Command is jostling to attract the cream of cyber talent and show the NSA who is in charge.
https://www.intelligenceonline.com/grey-areas/2018/05/16/nsa-us-cybercom-scramble-for-top-hackers,108310464-art
A Base For Google’s Exiled Barge? Pier 29 Plan Shaping Up
September 2, 2014
A ten minute walk from Pier 39 which is the most-visited attraction in San Francisco with an estimated 8.5 million visitors annually, and directly adjacent to San Francisco’s new Cruise Ship Terminal at Pier 27 which will serve 300,000 passengers and host up to 100 events per year, the Port of San Francisco has big plans for Pier 29.http://www.socketsite.com/archives/2014/09/pier-29-vision-takes-shape.html
Google barges
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Class overview
Builders: C & C Marine and Repair
Operators: Google
Built: 2011–2013
In service: 2013–2015
General characteristics
Type: Barge
Tonnage: 2164 tons
Length: 249.6 feet (76.1 m)
Beam: 72 feet (22 m)
Depth: 16 feet (4.9 m)
Notes: All 4 barges sold
BAL0010 being demolished in Seattle, Washington, May 2016
The Google barges were a group of four floating barges built between 2010 and 2012, intended by Google to serve as "an interactive space where people can learn about new technology",[1][2] possibly as luxury showrooms for Google Glass and other products on an invitation-only basis.[3] Google halted work on the barges in late 2013 and began selling off the barges in 2014.[4][5]
Two of the barges (one San Francisco barge and the former Portland barge) have or had a superstructure consisting of four stories of modern shipping containers welded together. Most of these containers have small slits that may serve as windows. Each superstructure had a container that slants down to ground level at a shallow angle. CBS sources claimed that the first three floors were intended to serve as a showroom, while the upper floor was designated as a party deck.[3] The San Francisco structure has poles at the top that may be antennas, and was described as eventually being decorated with gigantic sails, and being moved among sites in the San Francisco Bay Area as a "temporary technology exhibit space" to "drive visitation to the waterfront".[6]
Google may have built the structures on barges to avoid mandatory city building permits and public plans that may disclose their purpose.[7] Ultimately, however, the time and cost of meeting federal maritime safety regulations may have prompted Google to abandon the project.[5]
The Missing "I"
Who is JD ?
[5.2]
[NP 8:11 “Speaker [xxxxxxx] your protection against…”]
[JD 8:13 “[ABC] has an interest in this…”]
[NP 8:14 “——————— Pier 39…”]
Q