No hacks dropdown/flyout menu v5
A multi-level drop/fly menu using the new system with manually adjusted widths for top and sub levels.
No hacks dropdown/flyout menu v6
No hacks dropdown/flyout menu v7
The previous menu with the ability to adjust the widths of all levels and center each level.
No hacks flyout menu v2
No hacks dropdown/flyout menu v8
No hacks dropdown/flyout menu v9
A small restyle to make this menu system more robust and have an easy menu trail style.
No hacks dropdown/flyout - 'Snowstorm'
Image dropdown menu - no hacks
Using the latest no hack system to have top level images and dropdown boxes cntaing images and text
Mrs Hinch's top cleaning product and hacks as voted for by you
The Naval Base shacks south of Perth are located on the doorstep of a heavy industrial area
'Shacks' used to be glorified tents, now they're 'architect-designed showpieces'
In the years after World War II Tasmanians took to the country to buy up vacant land and built makeshift dwellings on their own patches of paradise. Shacks now dot the Tasmanian coastline, but they're not as shabby as their names suggest.
Editorial: Trump whacks at the inspectors general appointed to keep him honest
Trump's demotion of the inspector general who was going to monitor coronavirus spending marks his continued drive to put his own interests above the nation's.
Home-schooling hacks from real parents. (Hint: You need a schedule yesterday)
We asked parents across the country how they're managing the new job of educating their kids. These are the tricks they rely on.
Money saving hacks: How you could save over £650 in a year - from just one penny
Retro Indy: Vintage life hacks your grandma might have used
From restoring a corset to avoiding banana unpleasantness, some of these hints are still helpful today.
9 Top Cruise Hacks, Tricks And Tips For 2019 / 2020
I reveal my top and best cruise hacks, tips and tricks that will help you make the most of your cruising vacation in 2019 and 2020. These cruising tips are things that I have learnt to help me get better cruise fares, save money on board a cruise ship, pack better and smarter, find the best cabin, find and save money on excursions and lots more. These are all proven and should help you. Enjoy these cruising hacks, tips and tricks.
** Subscribe to my channel: http://bit.ly/TFT_YouTube2
** Buy one of my unique Cruise T-shirts: http://bit.ly/TFTStore
** Get great cruise deals via CRUISEDIRECT.COM: http://bit.ly/TFTBookCruise
Gary Bembridge's Tips For Travellers aims to help you make more of your precious travel time and money on land and when cruising the oceans or rivers of the world. To help you, in every video I draw on my first-hand tips and advice from travelling every month for over 20 years and 60+ cruises.
Follow Tips For Travellers on:
- Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/garybembridge
- Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/tipsfortravellers
- Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/garybembridge
7 Must-Do Hacks for When Your Motivation Dips
Do you know that feeling when you are hyped and ready to take on a new challenge? You are taken over by a surge of motivation and excitement and you’ve made a commitment you fully intend to stick to. It sounds familiar, right? Perhaps you declared your intention to dedicate more time to self-care, or […]
The post 7 Must-Do Hacks for When Your Motivation Dips appeared first on Dumb Little Man.
Anonymous group hacks Islamic State, tells them to chill out: reports
Episode 28 - The Internet of Gamescom (IoG) Blackberry security and plane hacks
David Price is in the host chair this week and is joined by Lewis Painter, staff writer at PC Advisor and Macworld UK to discuss all the news coming out of Gamescom, including No Man's Sky, Metal Gear, Final Fantasy and Battlefield.
Henry Burrell, staff writer at PC Advisor and Macworld UK jumps in to chat Blackberry and its trumped up security claims (15:00).
Finally, Charlotte Jee, editor at Techworld.com talks about hacking planes, trains and automobiles (26:30).
See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Forum 2019 : 2D: Marketing hacks for legal services in 2019 : slides / presented by Loren Renton, Business Partnership and Digital Strategy Manager, NewsCorp.
How Google Changed The Secretive Market For The Most Dangerous Hacks In The World
U.S. power grid vulnerable to foreign hacks
Security researcher Brian Wallace was on the trail of hackers who had snatched a California university's housing files when he stumbled into a larger nightmare: Cyberattackers had opened a pathway into the networks running the United States power grid.
HARMAN Hacks TechCrunch Disrupt NY
HARMAN Hacks TechCrunch Disrupt NY As one of the year’s premier tech events, TechCrunch Disrupt NY continues to attract the industry’s top innovators, startups and developers – this year was no exception. Today, developers can personalize everything...
How tempering chocolate hacks its crystalline structure
Here's how to use chocolate's crystalline structure to your advantage to make delicious tempered chocolate
Money saving hacks: How you could save over £650 in a year - from just one penny
12 awesome tech hacks to save you money and time
Looking to get the most out of your tech? Here are a dozen software or hardware tips, tricks and shortcuts that might save you money, time and aggravation.
International Hacker Pleads Guilty for Massive Hacks of U.S. Retail Networks
An international computer hacker pleaded guilty today to multiple charges relating to hacking activity and credit card fraud. More than 40 million credit and debit card numbers were stolen from major U.S. retailers as a result of the hacking activity. Albert Gonzalez, 28, of Miami, pleaded guilty today to 19 counts of conspiracy, computer fraud, wire fraud, access device fraud and aggravated identity theft relating to hacks into numerous major U.S. retailers.
Why Bridgegate proves we need fewer hacks, machines, and back room deals, not more
I had been mulling a rebuttal to my colleague and friend Jon Rauch’s interesting—but wrong—new Brookings paper praising the role of “hacks, machines, big money, and back room deals” in democracy. I thought the indictments of Chris Christie’s associates last week provided a perfect example of the dangers of all of that, and so of why Jon was incorrect. But in yesterday’s L.A. Times, he beat me to it, himself defending the political morality (if not the efficacy) of their actions, and in the process delivering a knockout blow to his own position.
Bridgegate is a perfect example of why we need fewer "hacks, machines, big money, and back room deals" in our politics, not more. There is no justification whatsoever for government officials abusing their powers, stopping emergency vehicles and risking lives, making kids late for school and parents late for their jobs to retaliate against a mayor who withholds an election endorsement. We vote in our democracy to make government work, not break. We expect that officials will serve the public, not their personal interests. This conduct weakens our democracy, not strengthens it.
It is also incorrect that, as Jon suggests, reformers and transparency advocates are, in part, to blame for the gridlock that sometimes afflicts our American government at every level. As my co-authors and I demonstrated at some length in our recent Brookings paper, “Why Critics of Transparency Are Wrong,” and in our follow-up Op-Ed in the Washington Post, reform and transparency efforts are no more responsible for the current dysfunction in our democracy than they were for the gridlock in Fort Lee. Indeed, in both cases, “hacks, machines, big money, and back room deals” are a major cause of the dysfunction. The vicious cycle of special interests, campaign contributions and secrecy too often freeze our system into stasis, both on a grand scale, when special interests block needed legislation, and on a petty scale, as in Fort Lee. The power of megadonors has, for example, made dysfunction within the House Republican Caucus worse, not better.
Others will undoubtedly address Jon’s new paper at length. But one other point is worth noting now. As in foreign policy discussions, I don’t think Jon’s position merits the mantle of political “realism,” as if those who want democracy to be more democratic and less corrupt are fluffy-headed dreamers. It is the reformers who are the true realists. My co-authors and I in our paper stressed the importance of striking realistic, hard-headed balances, e.g. in discussing our non-absolutist approach to transparency; alas, Jon gives that the back of his hand, acknowledging our approach but discarding the substance to criticize our rhetoric as “radiat[ing] uncompromising moralism.” As Bridgegate shows, the reform movement’s “moralism" correctly recognizes the corrupting nature of power, and accordingly advocates reasonable checks and balances. That is what I call realism. So I will race Jon to the trademark office for who really deserves the title of realist!
Authors
In celebration of MacGyvering: 90 hacks to welcome in a new word
With Oxford Dictionary’s addition of the verb 'MacGyver' to the official lexicon, we pay homage to the almighty hack.
11 Clever Mason Jar Hacks and Mods
From cocktail shakers to terrariums, is there anything the mighty mason jar can't do? Rethink this humble vessel with new uses for an old standby.
6 lazy cleaning hacks
10 clever house cleaning hacks
life hacks sharing economy
HOLY SHIT WE DID IT!!! Superpoop is back and updates every Thursday. Drewtoothpaste is back and updates every Monday. Subscribe to the combined RSS feed for Superpoop and Drewtoothpaste and get updates in your RSS reader.
life hacks 2017
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gamer hacks
The Worst Things For Sale is Drew's blog. It updates every day. Subscribe to the Worst Things For Sale RSS!