I feel the same. Like, why does everything have to hacked? Everything can't possibly be hacked.
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Funny, I was thinking about this recently, because I used to know a lot of cab drivers, and I always thought it was a shame that the newer definition of "hack" rendered the older definition almost unknown. So I kind of hate how the word has been used for computers
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I am delighted that Boston still calls the taxi licensing office the Hackney Office
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CEO of a biotech company infected herself with telomerase resident genes quite awhile ago. No word yet on how her telomeres are doing...
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Not just software. Most hacks back then would have been hardware. I bookmark things as Hacks using that definition. Any novel use of technology to solve a problem across all domains can be a hack. It's about clever use of x to solve problem y.
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It'd be great if you learned the history of this term. Hacking is just figuring out a way to do something. The "computer security" version of hacking came much later. Here's a real hacker doing biohacking and to call it anything else would be stupid.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2hf9yN-oBV4 …
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