Downloads Primesense Nite Win32 Malware
Connect Kinect to PC Using PrimeSense Drivers. Avin2-SensorKinect-0124bd2 Bin SensorKinect-Win32-5.0.0.exe Step 4 Restart Step 5 Plug in Kinect. Wait till Windows finds and installs the drivers. Download and install NITE (user tracking module).
I wanted to try the Zigfu OpenNI
approach for my projects so I installed the following drivers.
openni-win32-1.5.2.23-dev
SensorKinect091-Bin-Win32-v5.1.0.25
nite-win32-1.5.2.21-dev
The samples NISimpleViewer
and NIUserTracker
are working well, but when I tried to test the sample scene Blockman3rdPerson
from Zigfu
I get this error.
I tried to uninstall and install my drivers and still got no luck with running the sample scene. Anyone knows where could I fix this problem?
Liam McInroyBrowse other questions tagged unity3dkinectopenni or ask your own question.
Watch Dogs, eat your heart out. An industrious little hacker – well, a 5-year-old kid – named Kristoffer Von Hassel found a fairly ingenious way to bypass security restrictions on the Xbox One.
Downloads Primesense Nite Win32 Malwarebytes
In doing so, and by bringing the exploit to Microsoft’s attention, he’s been rewarded the title of “security researcher” from the company.
That, and he scored quite a bit of loot for his find: four free games, a cool $50, and a 12-month subscription to Xbox Live. Not too shabby, especially given what it took for Von Hassel to find said hole in the Xbox One’s authentication system.
Downloads Primesense Nite Win32 Malware-gen
Here’s how his exploit worked. Von Hassel’s dad put a password on his Xbox Live account so that the 5-year-old couldn’t (presumably) access it when he wasn’t around. As 5-year-olds do, Von Hassel tried anyway. When his first attempt at the password didn’t work, the Xbox One pulled up a second verification screen. Von Hassel filled this prompt with nothing but spaces and — Voila! — the Xbox One$499.00 at Amazon authenticated him into his father’s account.
What gave Von Hasssel away? Descargar autocad 2010 crack 1 link. Alas, youth: His parents caught him playing a game on the Xbox One that they didn’t recall giving him access to. Once Von Hassel showed them his trick, his father filmed his son re-performing the exploit. A security researcher himself, the dad ended up sending that video off to Microsoft, and the rest is digital history.
“We’re always listening to our customers and thank them for bringing issues to our attention. We take security seriously at Xbox and fixed the issue as soon as we learned about it,” reads a statement from Microsoft.
Although it’s probably good for Von Hassel’s father, Robert Davies, that his son didn’t figure out how to buy anything and everything from the Xbox Live Store, the dad is nevertheless proud of his kid’s accomplishment. However, it apparently isn’t Von Hassel’s first foray in exploit finding. According to Yahoo Tech, the tyke had already found success bypassing his parents’ smartphone toddler lock four years prior.
“Just being 5 years old and being able to find a vulnerability and latch onto that. I thought that was pretty cool,” said Davies in an interview with San Diego news station KGTV.
By Jarrett Neil Ridlinghafer
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