Friday, April 24, 2009

I LIKE THESE | CREATIVE RECREATION


DUE TO HIT SOMETIME NEXT MONTH | LOOK OUT FOR THEM | LINK


Thursday, April 23, 2009

XLARGE 2009 FALL PREVIEW |




NICCE | LINK

NEIGHBORHOOD 2009 SPRING?SUMMER COLLECTION





NICCE |

HOODS Hong Kong
No. 12 On Lan Street
Central, Hong Kong
p: 852.2162.8009


>

NIKE PRESENTS ONWARDS BY JAMES JARVIS




Onwards from akqa on Vimeo.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

48 HOURS WITH KISS

NEW LOSO JOINT SNIPPET




FINAL JOINT WILL FEATURE KERI HILSON

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

MIXTAPE REVIEW |


DEFF THE BEST MISTAPE OUT RIGHT NOW FROM THE BEATS TO THE LYRICS. HES NOT REALLY GOIN HARD ITS MORE MELODY MUSIC TO RIDE OR GET TOO | LINK

COMING LATER TODAY IM SURE IS NICCCCE THO

VERY USEFUL |

IPHONE/IPOD TOUCH CAR CHARGER 15 CASH NICCE | LOL LINK

TISK TISK TISK


Computer spies have broken into the Pentagon's $300 billion Joint Strike Fighter project and made off with several terabytes of code. The Pentagon, and consequently the Wall Street Journal, suspects Chinese involvement.

The Joint Strike Fighter, also known as the F-35 Lightning II Fighter, is the most costly project in Pentagon history, so it's a little bit problematic that some spies scampered in and nicked an unknown, but undoubtedly large, quantity of data without getting anywhere near caught. The cyber-spies encrypted the data on its way out, so nobody's really sure where they came from or where the data went, but some IP addresses have been tracked to China, prompting a little bit of back-and-forth between the DoD and the Chinese government.

A Pentagon report issued last month said that the Chinese military has made "steady progress" in developing online-warfare techniques. China hopes its computer skills can help it compensate for an underdeveloped military, the report said.

The Chinese Embassy said in a statement that China "opposes and forbids all forms of cyber crimes." It called the Pentagon's report "a product of the Cold War mentality" and said the allegations of cyber espionage are "intentionally fabricated to fan up China threat sensations."

Though the most valuable information, including data on the F-35's flight control and sensors, is inaccessible (stored on non-networked computers), nobody's really sure exactly what happened, and nobody, from the manufacturers to the researchers to the Pentagon's press team, wants to talk about it. It's a pretty alarming read, check it out.

Monday, April 20, 2009

I KNO IM KINDA LATE BUT THE NEW KICK IS HOT |



ONLY 200 CASH GET URS @ T-MOBILE.COM |