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  2. Cheat Engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheat_Engine

    Cheat Engine (CE) is a proprietary, closed source [5] [6] memory scanner/debugger created by Eric Heijnen ("Byte, Darke") for the Windows operating system in 2000. [7] [8] Cheat Engine is mostly used for cheating in computer games and is sometimes modified and recompiled to support new games.

  3. Nonsense (song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonsense_(song)

    An accompanying music video for "Nonsense" was released on November 10, 2022. [4] Additionally, a sped-up version and a holiday remix, entitled "A Nonsense Christmas", were released. [5] The song peaked at number 35 on the Billboard Global 200 chart and reached the top 10 in various countries.

  4. Team Xecuter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Team_Xecuter

    Team Xecuter is a hacker group that makes mod chips, cartridges and jailbreaking software for game consoles. Among console hackers, who primarily consist of hobbyists testing boundaries and believe in the open-source model, Team Xecuter was controversial for selling hacking tools for profit. [1]

  5. Shamoon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shamoon

    It was later described as the "biggest hack in history". [3] Symantec, Kaspersky Lab, [10] and Seculert announced discovery of the malware on 16 August 2012. [2] [11] Kaspersky Lab and Seculert found similarities between Shamoon and the Flame malware. [10] [11] Shamoon made a surprise comeback in November 2016, [12] January 2017, [13] and ...

  6. Sokal affair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sokal_affair

    Sokal in 2011. In an interview on the U.S. radio program All Things Considered, Sokal said he was inspired to submit the bogus article after reading Higher Superstition (1994), in which authors Paul R. Gross and Norman Levitt claim that some humanities journals will publish anything as long as it has "the proper leftist thought" and quoted (or was written by) well-known leftist thinkers.

  7. Max Headroom signal hijacking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Headroom_signal_hijacking

    The Max Headroom signal hijacking (also known as the Max Headroom incident) was a hijacking of the television signals of two stations in Chicago, Illinois, on November 22, 1987, that briefly sent a pirate broadcast of an unidentified person wearing a Max Headroom mask and costume to thousands of home viewers.

  8. Nonsense suppressor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonsense_suppressor

    Nonsense suppressors are a useful genetic tool, but can also result in problematic side effects, since all identical stop codons in the genome will also be suppressed to the same degree. Genes with different or multiple stop codons will be unaffected. SUP35, a nonsense suppressor identified by Wickner in 1994, is a prion protein.

  9. Nonce word - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonce_word

    pseudoword: a nonsense word that still follows the phonotactics of a particular language and is therefore pronounceable, feeling to native speakers like a possible word (for example, in English, blurk is a pseudoword, but bldzkg is a nonword); thus, pseudowords follow a language's phonetic rules but have no meaning [10]