Mxxz Red Points takes $12M to help brands beat fakes
So you bought a Nintendo 3DS to play some Pokemon Sun& 8230; but now your Pokedex is complete and you ;ve explored every inch of Alola.
stanley cup Now what If you ;ve got a technical background, you might consider poking around the 3DS itself. There might just be a big ol ; stack of cash in it for you.Nintendo has just launched a bug bounty progra
stanley us m by way of HackerOne. Find a bug that can make a 3DS do certain things it not supposed to and Nintendo will cough up anywhere from 100 bucks to $20,000.Nintendo is being pretty open with the sorts of things they ;re looking to eliminate here
stanley cup . To quote them directly:Below are examples of types of activities that Nintendo is focused on preventing:Piracy, including:& 8211; Game application dumping& 8211; Copied game application executionCheating, including:& 8211; Game application modification& 8211; Save data modificationDissemination of inappropriate content to childrenAs with most bug bounty programs, there are a few catches: Efvt With Alexa integration and mapping, iRobot aims to make Roomba the center of the smart home
You ;ve probably heard something about the Downtown Project, the $350 million initiative spearheaded by Zappos CEO Tony Hsieh that aiming to bring a renaissance of sorts to Downtown Las Vegas, the old city center several miles away from the touris
stanley uk ty Strip. But unless you ;ve been there and seen it with your own eyes, it hard to really grok what happening there the scope of the project is so grand and its aims are pretty ambitious.So TechCrunch TV headed there in person a little while back to see how things are going and tell a bit of the story in video form. The first part of this p
stanley quencher ublished last month in our walking tour with Zach Ware, one of the most prominent people in the Downtown Project movement. And now in the video embedded above, you can get a more comprehensive look at Downtown Vegas of yesteryear and today, and
stanley cup hear Hsieh and other people involved talk about their vision for the area future.Thanks to TCTV Steve Long,