Tanker, by Geoffroy Thoorens.
“I always wanted to do an aspect ratio shift since film school. Why just have one?”
Ang Lee dished on 3D, film school and more during the Life of Pi press conference at the New York Film Festival.
Voyage of Darwin’s Beagle: On The Future of Species - s1 | e6 - Toolbox of Survival
The crew makes for Australia to examine the profound effect that human habitation—and the introduction of invasive species—has had on the island. They are also confronted with the reality of how climate change has impacted the land and its inhabitants.
Play time: 53:05

Neil Armstrong - RIP
Multiple US news sources are reporting that legendary astronaut Neil Armstrong has died at age 82. As the spacecraft commander for Apollo 11, the first manned lunar mission, he became the first human being to land on the moon and step on its surface — where, as he bounced down from the spacecraft’s ladder, he famously said “that’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.”
In November of 1965, Andy Warhol, who would’ve been 84 today, received this letter from his landlord, chastising him for the legendary parties he’d been throwing at The Factory, his equally legendary studio where the era’s greatest artists and musicians regularly visited.
“In the space of one hour, my entire digital life was destroyed.”
Read more about how Apple and Amazon security flaws led to the EPIC HACKING of our very own Mat Honan [@mat].
By now, you’ve probably read or heard about Wired staff writer Mat Honan’s journey through digital hell, in which hackers social-engineered Apple into giving them the keys to his digital life, allowing them to scrub his laptop, iPhone and iPad, hijack his and Gizmodo’s Twitter accounts and delete eight-years-worth of email from his Gmail account.
Honan admits to making a number of mistakes — such as failing to enable two-factor authentication and not backing up his data — that allowed the hack to escalate to the point from which there was no return.
In the hope of preventing you from experiencing a similar fate, we’ve listed a number of steps you can take to protect your data and your identity online. While nothing is foolproof — if hackers install a keystroke logging Trojan horse on your computer, all bets are off — these steps will help protect you from the tactics that Honan’s hackers used, and other ones out there.
[Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired]




![wired:
“In the space of one hour, my entire digital life was destroyed.”
Read more about how Apple and Amazon security flaws led to the EPIC HACKING of our very own Mat Honan [@mat].](http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m8czrhMqw31r69k7do1_500.jpg)
![wired:
By now, you’ve probably read or heard about Wired staff writer Mat Honan’s journey through digital hell, in which hackers social-engineered Apple into giving them the keys to his digital life, allowing them to scrub his laptop, iPhone and iPad, hijack his and Gizmodo’s Twitter accounts and delete eight-years-worth of email from his Gmail account.
Honan admits to making a number of mistakes — such as failing to enable two-factor authentication and not backing up his data — that allowed the hack to escalate to the point from which there was no return.
In the hope of preventing you from experiencing a similar fate, we’ve listed a number of steps you can take to protect your data and your identity online. While nothing is foolproof — if hackers install a keystroke logging Trojan horse on your computer, all bets are off — these steps will help protect you from the tactics that Honan’s hackers used, and other ones out there.
[Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired]](http://24.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m8faffuSNK1r69k7do1_500.jpg)