We’re GoldieBlox, a toy company out to show the world that girls deserve more choices than dolls and princesses. We believe that femininity is strong and girls will build the future — literally.
Our founder, Debbie Sterling, is a Stanford engineer who decided last year that girls need more choices than the pink aisle has to offer. She developed GoldieBlox, an interactive book series + construction set starring Goldie, the kid inventor who loves to build.
This year, we wondered what we could do to showcase the amazing inventive power that girls have. So…we might have recruited three young girls and that guy who made OK Go’s famous Rube Goldberg machine to turn an average home into a massive, magical contraption.
For our latest mission, we sent an 11-year-old actor dressed as Harry Potter into New York’s Pennsylvania Station to search for Platform 9 3/4. Harry wandered the station with a caged owl and a luggage cart and asked both strangers and transit employees how to get to the Hogwarts Express, presenting them with his Platform 9 3/4 ticket.
Now that is the biggest, most detailed RC commercial airliner I’ve ever seen. Wow. This RC replica of an Airbus A380 is over 15 feet long and has a wingspan of around 17 feet.
The history of “modern” mankind as rapped by Dan Bull, with visuals from Civilization. I’m a big fan of Dan Bull, and IMHO, this is the best thing he ever released so far.
A Romanian security researcher has created a machine that can take advantage of rounding errors to make money at the expense of banks. Yes, that’s a key plot point in Office Space (among other movies), and no, it wouldn’t exactly be as profitable as in the movie.
Adrian Furtuna is a penetration tester for KPMG Romania and was hired by an online bank to try to find ways people could breach its systems. He explored what happens when you transfer money between Internet bank accounts set up in different currencies. He noted that the bank accounts always list amounts to two decimal places, meaning for example to the nearest cent when using the US dollar or Euro and to the nearest hundredth of a Leu when using Romania’s national currency.
However, exchange rates used for currency conversions are more precise, meaning that depending on the amount you convert and the current rate, the amount you receive will be rounded up or down, meaning you gain or lose a tiny amount with each transaction.
Because banks and other currency exchanges usually charge different rates depending on whether you buy or sell currency, any gain would usually be wiped out. However, this isn’t the case when you convert a tiny amount, something that would be socially awkward at a currency exchange, but can work with online banking.
Because the gain is so tiny with each transaction, the key to the technique is being able to make large numbers of transfers between two online accounts in different currencies, effectively making you both the buyer and seller of currencies. That tactic is slowed down by the fact that Internet banking needs to verify each transaction request.
The machine Furtuna created was more of a robot than a computer. It uses cameras and robotic arms to read the computer screen, physically type the code into the security keypad, read the keypad display, then type the response code on the computer keypad.
Furtuna found the machine was able to perform the process in six seconds. While it’s nothing a human couldn’t do, the machine could do it continuously without mistakes or needing a break. That meant it could carry out 14,400 transactions a day.
The problem is that even at this pace, the tiny amount of profit made on each transaction means the theoretical maximum daily take would be the equivalent of US$68 a day. Any kind of mass-scale scam would have to involve multiple accounts and multiple machines.
In practice a bank would likely notice somebody carrying out so many transactions. Even if such behavior didn’t break either the terms and conditions of the bank account or the local law, it might well cause unwanted hassles from tax authorities and agencies investigating potential money laundering.
That said, Furtuna recommends banks can take a couple of steps to make the technique worthless, even if they can’t or won’t limit the number of daily transactions. One is to have a minimum amount for each transaction. The other is to impose a tiny fee (such as one cent) for each cross-currency transaction, which would not only make the technique unviable, but would ironically add up to a huge profit for the bank.
Because why should being The Doctor end, just because it’s bedtime? (Also: If/when The Doctor sleeps, you don’t think he actually changes clothes, do you?!)
Every other Monday, master swordsmith Tony Swatton forges your favorite weapons from video games, movies, and television. This week, he tackles Finnick’s Trident from The Hunger Games: Catching Fire.