Bruegger’s marks 33rd year with 3 free bagels

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Bruegger’s Bagels is celebrating “33 years of authentic New York-style bagels” with a freebie. On Feb. 4, the bagel bakery is giving customers three FREE bagels from store opening until 11 a.m. at participating locations. To get the “hole-y” freebie, claim the coupon here. The offer does not include cream cheese, premium, topped Read More

The post Bruegger’s marks 33rd year with 3 free bagels appeared first on Columbus on the Cheap.

via Columbus on the Cheap
Bruegger’s marks 33rd year with 3 free bagels

Create an RSS Feed for any Search Result

Create an RSS Feed for any Search Result

Whether you’re constantly searching your own name online (you know who you are) or there’s a topic you want to follow closely, Google Alerts lets you know when new pages hit the web that match your query—and you can convert these results into an RSS feed (or something else) to make them easier to manage.

It means you don’t have to start every day googling your own name or whatever else it is that you’re interested in, because the results come to you. Head to the Google Alerts page to get started—type your query in the top box and then configure your options underneath (click Show options if you can’t see them).

Create an RSS Feed for any Search Result

The final option, Deliver to, can be set to RSS feed rather than your email address. Once you click on Create alert, the new alert will have an RSS icon next to it, which you can select to get your feed: plug this into your RSS reader of choice and you’re good to go. The other icons let you edit and delete alerts as you need to.

Of course using something like IFTTT you can convert this RSS feed into a different format if you prefer: send the feeds to a read-it-later service or a Google Sheet, for example. The beauty of the RSS format is you can queue up all of your web search hits in the background and then check in on them when you’ve got the time.

Header image: Nito/Shutterstock.com

via Gizmodo
Create an RSS Feed for any Search Result

Sell Your Vacation Photos to Help Offset the Cost of Your Trip

Sell Your Vacation Photos to Help Offset the Cost of Your Trip

If you’re already taking photos of your trip, you might as well make a couple bucks off them (and you don’t need a fancy camera to do it.) You won’t get rich, but you may be able to cover the cost of souvenirs or a nice meal.

http://ift.tt/1SsQKSm…

Of course, you should only sell the good photos. Skip the ones with friends or family in them, since they may not want their image being used for stock photos. Travel+Leisure recommends entering your photos in contests to try for a big payday, but you can also sell your photos on sites like iStock, Alamy, Shutterstock, and Getty Images. If you have video from your travels, you can sell those, too.

http://ift.tt/1SsQIda…

How to Make Money While Traveling | Travel+Leisure

Image from Nicolas Navarrete Carrasco.


via Lifehacker
Sell Your Vacation Photos to Help Offset the Cost of Your Trip

Use Raspberry Pi to Measure Broadband Speeds, Dropouts to Hold Your ISP Accountable

IMG_5887Constant drops and outages with your broadband connection can drive you to frustration, but you can use the Raspberry Pi, and a little bit of command line scripting to monitor it.

Read more on MAKE

The post Use Raspberry Pi to Measure Broadband Speeds, Dropouts to Hold Your ISP Accountable appeared first on Make: DIY Projects, How-Tos, Electronics, Crafts and Ideas for Makers.


via Make: DIY Projects, How-Tos, Electronics, Crafts and Ideas for Makers
Use Raspberry Pi to Measure Broadband Speeds, Dropouts to Hold Your ISP Accountable

Apple Has Been Directing People Searching For Abortion Clinics To Adoption Centers Since 2011

apple-maps Apple is working on changing an algorithm in Siri and Apple Maps that has been directing people to adoption centers when they asked for an abortion clinic.
Though the company knew this was a problem since at least 2011, it said at the time that this was a “glitch” and promised Siri would get better.
But not much changed in five years.
UCSF researcher Alexis Hoffman tested search… Read More


via TechCrunch
Apple Has Been Directing People Searching For Abortion Clinics To Adoption Centers Since 2011

Google’s VirusTotal can tell if your firmware is infected

BIOS firmware is the root of your electronic devices, dictating communication between a computer’s hardware and operating system from the boot-up process. It’s an insulated layer in most devices, and organizations including the National Security Agency have focused on infecting firmware because it’s not covered in standard virus-detection scans. Google’s latest VirusTotal tool changes that — in a blog post, VirusTotal security engineer Francisco Santos outlines the dangers of firmware malware and how the company can now pinpoint that bad code.

"Since the BIOS boots a computer and helps load the operating system, by infecting it attackers can deploy malware that survives reboots, system wiping and reinstallations, and since antiviruses are not scanning this layer, the compromise can fly under the radar," Santos writes. "As of today VirusTotal is characterizing in detail firmware images, legit or malicious."

Researchers can upload malware to VirusTotal to see which antivirus products detect malicious code. On top of labeling firmware images, the new tool can extract certificates from the firmware and its executable files, and it can extract portable executables inside the image. PEs are a high-profile source of malicious software, Santos says.

"What’s probably most interesting is the extraction of the UEFI Portable Executables that make up the image, since it is precisely executable code that could potentially be a source of badness," Santos writes. "These executables are extracted and submitted individually to VirusTotal, such that the user can eventually see a report for each one of them and perhaps get a notion of whether there is something fishy in their BIOS image."

The "next interesting step" for VirusTotal’s firmware tool is the ability to dump your own BIOS firmware into its scanning service, Santos says.

Via: PC World

Source: VirusTotal

via Engadget
Google’s VirusTotal can tell if your firmware is infected