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HouseholdHacker is an inactive YouTube channel that posted videos of various "hacks", or quick solutions to common everyday problems. As of July 2022, the channel has 4.87 million subscribers and over 929 million views. The group is primarily known for its 2007 hoax video which claimed one could charge an iPod battery using an onion and Gatorade.
Taras Vladimirovich Kulakov [a] (born March 11, 1987), better known as CrazyRussianHacker, is a Ukrainian-American YouTuber of mixed Russian and Ukrainian descent. [4] [5]He became known for his content on life hacks, technology, and scientific demonstrations, [6] popularized with the catchphrase "Safety is [the] number one priority" at the beginning of most of his videos.
James Hobson (born February 10, 1990), known for his YouTube channel Hacksmith Industries (formerly the Hacksmith), is an engineer and YouTuber. [3] [4] Hobson is the presenter and prominent figure on the channel and has done a TEDx talk on his aspirations as an engineer. [5] In December 2020, Hobson was awarded a Guinness World Record for his ...
"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." Having a congested chest can be uncomfortable to say the least.
[21] [22] His channel was reinstated four days later. [23] He explained in a video that the scammer used Google Chat to send an authenticated phishing email from the "google.com" domain and convinced Browning to delete his channel under the pretense of moving it to a new YouTube brand account. [24]
OurMine is a hacker group [2] that is known for hacking popular accounts and websites, such as Jack Dorsey and Mark Zuckerberg's Twitter accounts. The group often causes cybervandalism to advertise their commercial services, [3] [4] [5] which is among the reasons why they are not widely considered to be a "white hat" group.
Talk about a tale of two cities. A new report calls New York one of the best cities in the country for an active lifestyle — while a spot right across the Hudson River ranks as one of the worst ...
Hack It To The Limit - Kevin and Brooke devise a protective hack for easily broken items (such as a cellphone), and they test it until it fails, or in some rare cases, not fail at all. The More You Hack - A segment, spoofing NBC 's The More You Know PSAs that show little-known hacks—such as unfolding a Chinese take-out carton to a plate.