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Note: This story appeared in our April Fools Distorter issue and is for comedic value only.
Famed iPhone Hacker and RIT student George Hotz recently
announced his latest hack this week, generating much attention
and enthusiasm across the Web. Hotz has reportedly
“hacked” our solar system’s sun, which he claims can be used
to tell time from any location.
Based on documents detailing his procedure on the Internet,
Hotz apparently soldered a paperclip at a 90-degree angle
onto a steel plate, although copycat hackers are reporting
that other metals (and even some types of wood) work
equally well. When placed in direct sunlight, this device apparently
creates what Hotz describes as a “negative light,” a
phenomenon that most laymen and the general public have
mistaken for a shadow. Remarkably, the position of this negative
light consistently correlates with the time of day. In fact,
Reporter has independently confirmed that individuals can
estimate the time to a general degree of accuracy, as long as
the device is placed in direct sunlight.
Hotz, who lists his religious affiliation as “lifehacker” on
Facebook, had this to say: “My hack of the Sun is probably
the most significant hack in the past thousand years. It can’t
really get bigger than hacking the Sun, you know? But that’s
what lifehacking is all about: It’s about taking those things
around you and exploiting them, soldering stuff to them, paperclips...
stuff like that. People often say Steve Jobs is God.
Well, if Steve Jobs is God, and I’ve hacked both the iPhone
and the Sun, then by my count, I just out-hacked God twice.
Boom.”
Hotz claims that the potential applications for this new “Sun
hack” are virtually limitless. Already, Hotz is working on a
way to solder a paperclip to the back of the iPhone so iPhone
users can tell time from any location. When asked why users
would want to use his Sun hack when the iPhone already
tells the time digitally, Hotz replied: “You’re talking about the
iPhone? Yeah, I hacked that.”
Still, Hotz’s hack is not without critics. One student who
was using a version of the hack outside of Sol Heumann hall
apparently missed one of his finals and will not be able to
graduate this year. “Who knew it wouldn’t work when it was
cloudy? It’s always cloudy in Rochester. This hack sucks,” the
student complained.
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