Author | Message | Time |
---|---|---|
Thing | September 27, 2003, 4:02 PM | |
Adron | Sounds like a nice trick played by the Stockholm University computer science guys :P | September 27, 2003, 5:44 PM |
j0k3r | Sounds like BS to me. If it really did happen without them knowing (which I doubt), I agree with Adron that some guys probably took control of hte computer with a backdoor or something, and that the computer was left on. | September 27, 2003, 6:37 PM |
K | You may want to check out what the Weekly World News is first before pointing out how completely impossible the story is ::) | September 27, 2003, 7:58 PM |
Adron | It doesn't sound impossible at all. Sounds just like what you get when you ask the guy who put the program there to investigate exactly how a program that secretly records video got there :P | September 27, 2003, 8:22 PM |
iago | They said the computer turned itself on, which is impossible. Although I love this conclusion: [quote]After eliminating all other causes, one bizarre possibility emerged: The computer had developed some kind of rudimentary artificial intelligence and used it to launch -- on its own -- a pornographic Web site[/quote] Also, WWN never tells the truth. | September 27, 2003, 9:00 PM |
Skywing | [quote author=iago link=board=4;threadid=2856;start=0#msg22371 date=1064696436] They said the computer turned itself on, which is impossible. Although I love this conclusion: [quote]After eliminating all other causes, one bizarre possibility emerged: The computer had developed some kind of rudimentary artificial intelligence and used it to launch -- on its own -- a pornographic Web site[/quote] Also, WWW never tells the truth. [/quote] Most modern BIOS' have an option to boot the computer up at a certain time of day. | September 28, 2003, 12:55 AM |
iago | [quote author=Skywing link=board=4;threadid=2856;start=0#msg22409 date=1064710515] [quote author=iago link=board=4;threadid=2856;start=0#msg22371 date=1064696436] They said the computer turned itself on, which is impossible. Although I love this conclusion: [quote]After eliminating all other causes, one bizarre possibility emerged: The computer had developed some kind of rudimentary artificial intelligence and used it to launch -- on its own -- a pornographic Web site[/quote] Also, WWW never tells the truth. [/quote] Most modern BIOS' have an option to boot the computer up at a certain time of day. [/quote] I've never seen that before; although I've never seen a modern BIOS so I guess it's possible :) | September 28, 2003, 1:05 PM |
Adron | Most old bioses do too. Well, any bios that can wake on an event. The RTC in a pc has been able to generate a wake up event for a long time. And now you can set the computer to turn off and wake up in X hours with a win32 api too! | September 28, 2003, 1:34 PM |
Yoni | [quote author=Adron link=board=4;threadid=2856;start=0#msg22446 date=1064756088] Most old bioses do too. Well, any bios that can wake on an event. The RTC in a pc has been able to generate a wake up event for a long time. And now you can set the computer to turn off and wake up in X hours with a win32 api too! [/quote] I've seen options in the BIOS to wake up on modem ring, on LAN (for NICs that support it), and on keyboard/mouse, but not on timer event... Maybe I missed it though. How do you do that using Win32 API? (Point to built-in Windows GUI option if one exists, I don't care much about the exact function call/API details) | September 28, 2003, 3:06 PM |
Adron | No GUI option that I know of, you'll have to use API. Many scheduling softwares can do it though. You can use SetWaitableTimer, see: [quote] fResume [in] Specifies whether to restore a system in suspended power conservation mode when the timer state is set to signaled. If fResume is TRUE on a platform that does not support a restore, the call will succeed, but GetLastError returns ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED. [/quote] | September 28, 2003, 8:16 PM |
St0rm.iD | wwn = tabloid... | September 29, 2003, 1:08 AM |