π Hi, Iβm @Aquahoodjd
I'm editing this on a rebuilt Tower I thought i bricked but clearly didn't with Ubuntu Studio-. I will be 3 of 5 in a distributed system. This one is done for the moment.
Iβve not seen every current exploit most older a zero days (now common). there is a hotel in Sion it's a French chain but they had more access points then they could ever possibly need if they had 20 people in each room and 100 people in their conference rooms. They had a Swisscom logo on the outside of the building but I looked up their IP provider who had it awful reputation.
I am kind of new with GIT and coding but have been a "maker and tinker" for a long time. I had a TI-994a, then a C64 with 4 daisy-chained floppy drives, and my own BBS at 10 years old. -π» I did take "a computer language" rather than a foreign language (relational databases) and ended up learning French and becoming a dual national. Einstien was the first "legal dual U.S. dual national" but now it is allowed. A word on Swiss French: "lente...ment"...and with more tonal shifts, as Swiss German π¨ππ©πͺ is so much kinder and more beautiful πΆπΌ to hear than "high German β¬οΈπ©πͺ- a little bit of language bias - guess to them. It's like hearing someone from Eastern, Kentucky,I assume,but much much more educated and sophisticated - I can say that as that is my birth place. But, Swiss Germanπ¨ππ§πͺπΉπ·π»π· is so much nicer to listen to and the German spoken in Germany feels and sounds very π‘οΈπ‘οΈπ£π’ to me. How did a "hillbilly" end up a A-list private international lawyer?!?β€οΈπ€π―πβοΈποΈπππΌπππ΅πͺ (That's supposed to be the flag of Peru I couldn't find it but I ran into my future wife and now ex-wife with whom part of my heart is still madly in love with but life intervened ans she and all of us know she is half nuts - loved her totally anyway.) - we also have two children together who know nothing but π¨π.
But I seemingly have unique skills that I didn't even know I had until I heard feedback long after my salary had increased significantly. I realized that I was good at doing the work. π« It's exactly what they tell you not to do in law school Which is why learning new specialties of the law, expertly not just competently, as the type of clients here demand precision, no errors, or failure. The ability to find the best people to solve each problem and in the right place with the right knowledge, that usually involves multiple countries, and then merge everyone's work into legal functional solution. You're basically the conductor of a symphonyπΌπΆof legalβοΈ experts from multiple countries or for our AmericanπΊπ² readers the quarterbackπ. You make sure you find the very best experts in any jurisdiction and make sure that they do it legally, correctly, and without error.
-βοΈ Yeah, the Fone Phreaking era" (black and blue boxes, 800 extenders" and real "auto dialer like in wargames (I did not have that Sinclair).β¨οΈ
π« How to reach me [email protected] or [email protected] ππ§π¨ MAKE YOUR EMAIL VERY OBVIOUSLY TO SOMEONE WHO WANTS TO TALK TO ME AS IT IS A DUMPSTER MAILBOX and I will reply with my real mailbox!
π Pronouns: Heπ§- Human Being (but sometimes a fish)
-PLEASE DO NOT "LABEL AND DEFINE ME BY MY J.D.π§ββοΈ (Juris Doctor)" or my birth country- I founded the Honor Society in Philosophyπ§βπ»π§βππβ·οΈππ£ at my Uni and I was heavily pressured to become a lawyer ( despite taking it to the most difficult and "exclusive" level of ultra-wealthy private international business law. This specialty does not exist in the U.S., you get one course, ok one class, the ABA requirement on "conflicts of law". They tell you never to do in U.S. law school, yet every day I did and it was a perfect match for my ADHD and was like candy. But, we practice across the whole spectrum of specialty areas and normally in the 100mil + range (I just had to get used to a lot more zeros behind every transaction as the first trust I ever wrote on my own was for over 1 billion dollars. I didn't sleep for a week thinking if I thought of every contingency possibility everything, crossed every t dotted every i. I have done everything from Criminal defense, to Aviation law, to having done the legal work for two full featured Hollywood films, three small brewery flips to a major beer manufacturer, natural resource extraction, real estate, resort management, securities law, sat on the board of directors of a financial newspaper, set on the board of directors of a hedge fund, was a registered financial intermediary with the Swiss Bankers Association, was the compliance officer for the law against money laundering, and never had a single bar complaint nor any civil or criminal suits for my professional behavior which as an American lawyer abroad requires significant effort and careful investigation of your clients. You must be very selective on who you will represent a person or not so guns, sex, and gambling were always never and tax evasion was clearly out and I would not represent a US person unless I was personally doing their income taxation as I won the book award in that class even though that only was about 10% of my workload. Honestly, I would have gone for an M.D, or a Ph.D. in the Philosophy of Science , Technology and Culture (which I may still do as long as as can be a associate prof. of law while doing it). It involves, more than one but up to handfuls ( I have worked in more countries than I have not) jurisdictions, for any given problem laid on your lap. Loydes and Swiss Re would not even attempt to underwrite our risk. They could not even determine the "risk". They has no idea what they were exposing themselves to and due to the air tight rules on Swiss professional secrecy, we couldn't tell them. banking secrecy may have taken a large hit here but the rules covering the attorney client relationship as well as just business secrets and intellectual property when you're working for a Swiss company and that applies and double doses to health data. It carries both criminal and civil penalty penalties so you can go to jail for breach. -We would ask or try every so often but it was always the same answer NO β‘ππ£
Fun fact: I am a PADI Open Water Scuba Diver (was a Master Scuba Diver, Rescue Diver, then Dive Master and have done all their TecRec), IANTD, all their courses trimix, tech wreck, cave, etc..) and a GUE TECH 1 Diver.
-ππ·π¬β¨οΈπ»πΎβ΅πΆπππΊοΈπΎβοΈπ₯Ό I teach First Response, was an EMT, had an Emergency Pharmaceuticals Course, ACLS, and did some DAN decompression chamber work and courses. I even teach coral reef conservation but "Peak Buoyancy and Don't Touch Anything in the Sea (not only does help not cause damage but we don't know what so many things are to this day you never know if it has tetrodotoxin or some other super nasty venom. They don't want to mess with you so it is much safer than you think. Just know where you are diving, know you limits, plan your dive and dive your plan. I hunted and fished my whole life. I suck at pistols, but I could qualify, as I had two jobs with badges and guns. I was on my high school skeet team and like long-shot shooting the best. So, rifles like we used in Montana. You have to take long shots there. The valley are big, the wind unpredictable, and they will always know your near of you get too close. -Track a wounded animal that could be a very long time, few roads, and then have to field dress it, quarter it, and carry it out in pieces. You get good through negative reinforcement. -When Diving- always come back with 1/3 of your gas (applies to Tech Divers, as we carry 4400l of gas min. (2x21l @ 220 bar of bottom gas mix) that's without a possible additional four 12l cylinders for deco - two under each arm (travel gas, or extra bottom gas, 50% /50% @ 25m and 100% O2@6m). Thanks, Dr. Bhulman 12 / 16 and his Swiss Goats ;-)
Aquahoodjd repository GitHub profile. You can click the Preview link to take a look at your changes. --->