Tag: pi
Microsoft BitLocker encryption cracked in just 43 seconds with a $4 Raspberry Pi Pico
![Microsoft BitLocker encryption cracked in just 43 seconds with a $4 Raspberry Pi Pico](https://www.techspot.com/images2/news/ts3_thumbs/2024/02/2024-02-07-ts3_thumbs-8a5.jpg)
In a YouTube video, security researcher Stacksmashing demonstrated that hackers can extract the BitLocker encryption key from Windows PCs in just 43 seconds using a $4 Raspberry Pi Pico. According to the researcher, targeted attacks can bypass BitLocker’s encryption by directly accessing the hardware and extracting the encryption keys stored…
Microsoft BitLocker encryption cracked in just 43 seconds with a $4 Raspberry Pi Pico
![Microsoft BitLocker encryption cracked in just 43 seconds with a $4 Raspberry Pi Pico](https://www.techspot.com/images2/news/ts3_thumbs/2024/02/2024-02-07-ts3_thumbs-8a5.jpg)
In a YouTube video, security researcher Stacksmashing demonstrated that hackers can extract the BitLocker encryption key from Windows PCs in just 43 seconds using a $4 Raspberry Pi Pico. According to the researcher, targeted attacks can bypass BitLocker’s encryption by directly accessing the hardware and extracting the encryption keys stored…
Okay, but how about a Raspberry Pi device with a BlackBerry keyboard designed for Beeper?
One thing you can definitely say about Eric Migicovsky: he seems to be having a lot of fun. The Pebble founder left a three-year stint as a partner at Y Combinator to co-found the chat aggregation app Beeper. During that time, he’s been dipping back into his hardware roots. Back in 2017, he launched a […]
Okay, but how about a Raspberry Pi device with a BlackBerry keyboard designed for Beeper? by Brian Heater originally published on TechCrunch
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Raspberry Pi Made an Online Code Editor
![](https://www.howtogeek.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/raspbery_pi_logo_hero_1.jpg?width=600&height=250&fit=crop&trim=2,2,2,2)
Programming can be a difficult skill to learn, especially for younger people. If you’re looking to learn, or you want to teach your children, a new tool by the Raspberry Pi Foundation could come in handy.
Read This Article on How-To Geek ›
Unbrick your Wii U with a $4 Raspberry Pi Pico
Magnum PI star Tom Selleck hails from former pit village near Barnsley
ALL-American Magnum PI star Tom Selleck hails from a former pit village near Barnsley, research has found.
The 78-year-old telly actor was born in Detroit, Michigan, and solved crimes in Hawaii in the hit 1980s series.
![](https://www.thesun.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/4663b87b-2108-4287-8166-cf884a7d1d52.jpg?strip=all&w=960)
![](https://www.thesun.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/48044ca2-347d-449d-98eb-fad68d28a360.jpg?strip=all&w=568)
So it was a shock for distant cousin Caroline Coffey, 55, when she found him on a branch of her family tree.
The retired child support worker revealed: “Tom’s great-great-grandfather Robert Jagger was born in Yorkshire in 1856 and one of his sons, Thomas, emigrated to America.
“My gran was a Jagger.”
Caroline said she found a picture of her great-grandad Robert and he was “a dead ringer” of Tom — with the same eyes and moustache.
She said: “When I saw that, along with the other research I had done, I knew that Tom was part of our family.
“I always thought there was something about him.”
Raspberry Pi Launches Online Code Editor to Help Kids Learn
When we think about Raspberry Pi, we normally picture single-board computers, but the Raspberry Pi Foundation was started to help kids learn about computers and it wants to help whether or not you own its hardware. The non-profit arm of Raspberry Pi this week released its new, browser-based code editor that’s designed for young people (or any people) who are learning.
The Raspberry Pi Code Editor, which is considered to be in beta, is available to everyone for free right now at editor.raspberrypi.org. The editor is currently designed to work with Python only, but the organization says that support for other languages such as HTML, JavaScript and CSS is coming….
The Raspberry Pi Foundation already had a nice set of Python tutorials on its site, but it has adapted some of them to open sample code directly in the online editor….The Pi Foundation says that it plans to add a number of features to the Code Editor, including sharing and collaboration. The organization also plans to release the editor as an open-source project so anyone can modify it.
There’s a pane showing your code’s output when you click the “Run” button (plus a smaller pane for adding additional files to a project).
Tom’s Hardware notes that “Since the entire programming experience takes place online, there’s no way (at least right now) to use Python to control local hardware on your PC or your Raspberry Pi.” But on the plus side, “If you create a free account on raspberrypi.org, which I did, the system will save all of your projects in the cloud and you can reload them any time you want. You can also download all the files in a project as a .zip file.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.