Tag Archives: programming

Wow… that last entry was really negative. I’ve since removed it form the role players community, but I’m keeping it here, for personal reference.

Let me say… I do like to game, and the majority of folks I’ve gamed with haven’t fallen into the irritating/weirdo categories prior. There are a lot of perfectly sane, grounded, friendly and clean folks that don’t dress up like Dracula all the time that like to get together and play.

But… there’s one person in every crowd… Sometimes I wonder what ‘one in every crowd’ role I fill. I think it depends on the crowd. Depending on said crowd, I become the designated-

Asexual Older Brother/Crying Shoulder… Heck.. for a time (and to some folks still) I’m of that persona here.

Hippie – See above

Voice of Reason – *snort-laugh*… Oh, man..

Tech Reference Guide – Usually by folks with *no* computer knowledge.

Trivia Reference Guide – I do know a lot of weirdo stuff. Feel free to ask me anything about Zeppelins, World War One, Comic Books or Primate Psychology

Babysitter (I like this gig.. one I haven’t had in a while. “Scotto! I was wondering if you’d like to come over for dinner, and have a pile of fun playing candyland or reading a story to kids who love you to death?” Heck… that just rocks)

chunker.

Well, if I can’t sleep, I can at least get my code spit out.

#include [stdio.h]

#define WORKSPACE “./Workspace/”
#define LINE_LENGTH 160

int chunk_size = 43;

main()
{
int i = 0, wrote = 0;
FILE *fp;
char filename[LINE_LENGTH], insuck[LINE_LENGTH];

sprintf(filename, “%s%d”, WORKSPACE, i++);
if ((fp = fopen(filename, “w”)) == NULL) exit(1);

while (fgets(insuck, LINE_LENGTH, stdin) != NULL) {
fprintf(fp, “%s”, insuck); wrote++;
if (wrote >= chunk_size) {
fclose(fp);
sprintf(filename, “%s%d”, WORKSPACE, i++);
if ((fp = fopen(filename, “w”)) == NULL) exit(1);
wrote = 0;
}
}

fclose(fp);

exit(0);
}

today, in flash…

I learned how to create symbols, edit layers, and that my ability to draw is kakadoodoo. but, at least I’m getting the technical side down. I’m also wondering where my sweetie has gotten herself off to… I’d been hoping for a date night, where we can just talk, and hang out…I’m guessing that she got home after work, and was inexorably drawn to the ol’ sack. It’s a tempting offer, I admit.

If I don’t see her by 11:30, I’ll go catch the midnight showing of planet of the apes, and then catch up with her in dreamland. At least I’m getting my shockwave lessons in. *sigh* I’m going to take a nice shower. I’ll be back in a few.

queso made mention of this,

and I think brad could be looking at this, to keep them that want to be ‘crawler free’ free

The three good ones so far seem to be standards for robot exclusion,killing scrapers,spider info resource.

of course, this goes counter to what I think the web is used for, and if you publish to the net, folks will find you, sooner or later.

personally, if it’s not a private entry or friend’s only, I want to be indexed like crazy, and to be found by whoever wants to find me.

straight dope – Does voice-activated eavesdropping technology listen in on phone conversations for suspicious “keywords”?

Is it true that U.S. and Canadian federal law-enforcement agencies have a voice-activated system connected to local telephone networks that activates and records telephone conversations based on certain keywords? I only ask this because a reliable source told me so. However, I am very skeptical because I can’t believe any government agency has the authority, let alone the technology.

Reply – Continue reading straight dope – Does voice-activated eavesdropping technology listen in on phone conversations for suspicious “keywords”?

12 hours after reconnecting to DSL.

over 900 ports scans on my firewall. Geez… is it because it’s summertime, and all the kids have time on their hands?

Ah well… I’m glad the sucker’s there. ZoneAlarm. Schweet, and free. Neener neener, script kiddies!
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Ok, just for the sake of saying so…after encountering a whole mess of things today.

After blathering on in an e-mail list as to why you shouldn’t send HTML to folks back and forth… I figured I’d post it here, too. most writing done in a while.

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My sympathies to all e-mailing from company environments where every message gets converted to HTML. Indeed, there is nothing the individual can do as this is almost always corporate policy and will not be changed. The reason is usually to tack on a corporate message of some sort to every outgoing piece of mail, and the editors of these programs to add commercials or corporate disclaimers and disavowals all default to HTML. Since this is the bailiwick of corporate Legal or Human Resources, don’t expect them to look beyond the default setup.

Just to repeat the process in another order to show the sequence:

1) You write message scrupulously formatted in plain text, the format of champions.

2) But squatting on the outbound queue is a software suite for covering corporate asses. It reads everything outbound, and depending on how much
money you spend it can:

a) Virus check. Ha, as if. Even if it costs nothing because the software is on hand and part of a corp license, only the Dalai Lama would be evolved enough to *slow the queue down* just to be civil. OK, I exaggerate… slightly.

b) Check for hot words like ECHELON and quarantine anything doubtful. Remember, as most corps phrase their E-mail Usage Policy “use of the company e-mail system implies consent to the conditions outlined in this Policy”, and that means you said it’s OK for them to read your mail. They promise not to unless they *really* want to.

c) Check for words related to internal projects to prevent company secrets from going out.

3) It adds some advertising or legal boilerplate to distance the company from anything this bozo might say out to the real world.

a) The message was composed in an HTML editor and is in HTML format for that extra something that HTML always adds.

b) It tries to add the HTML coda to the plain text message, only to find that plain text doesn’t support color or graphics.

c) So the plain text message in converted to HTML so the HTML coda can be added. And the world takes another step towards the Endtimes.

HTML is code that is interpreted in order to display the message in the chosen font and color and so on. It has access to the abilities of macro-enabled e-mail clients. It used to be said that e-mail couldn’t infect your system with a virus because it didn’t run anything, it just carried it.

That is no longer true, and I can’t thank Microsoft enough for making that the standard.

These “features” can be turned off, but they default to On.

I can think of plenty of Ad Prac 101 reasons for making e-mail bigger and enabling macro “viruses” that can be written by grade schoolers.

According to Steve Gibson’s page – http://www.grc.com

“Windows XP’s new support of the full raw socket application programming Interface (API) allows for the creation of fraudulent and damaging Internet traffic. This has never been possible under Windows without first modifying the operating system with third-party device drivers – which has never been done by malicious programs.”

and

“For the first time ever, applications running under the Home Edition of Windows XP – whether deliberately executed or running as hidden “Trojan” programs – will be easily able, without modifying the operating system in any way, to generate the most damaging forms of Internet attacks.”

Denial of Service attacks on corporate routers, things like that.

Security software is going to be a hot item, expect weekly updates. Home firewalls for everyone with a cable modem. Net traffic updates on the commute to work. E-mail “going down” on a regular basis due to spam traffic and macro viruses.

Those gosh darn personal computers at home are a clear and present danger to business. They need to be regulated and licensed and restricted and above all controlled. 😉

Windows Utility Boot Disk w/CD-ROM Support – for my use, but you can have a copy if you like.

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Windows Utility Boot Disk w/CD-ROM Support
To create a boot disk to use to boot a system during troubleshooting, save the following file and then run it to extract the bootable image to a floppy disk.

Windows 95 Download (boot_cd.exe — 730k) Windows 98 Download (boot98cd.exe — 662k)
Boot Diskette File List
attrib.exe
autoexec.exe
cabs.bat
chkdsk.exe
command.com
config.sys
debug.exe
drvspace.bin
ebd.sys
edit.com
fdisk.exe
finder.dat
format.com
himem.sys
io.sys
mscdex.exe
msdos.sys
nec_ide.sys
regedit.exe
scandisk.exe
scandisk.ini
sys.com
uninstal.exe

the designer’s lament. grr! Poor Mike, me, and everyone else that makes things webly.

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Author: So, you’ve had a chance to look over the changes I want made to the online article, yes? When can I expect to see them?
Mike: Well, I had a couple of questions about that.
Author: Yes?
Mike: Uh… I’ve been looking at the changes, and it seems… I just wanted to make sure I understood…
Author: Yes?
Mike: …that you want your tables to, uh, look like ass.
Author: Yes. The tables are unsatisfactory as they currently appear.
Mike: So you want us to change them, so that they look like ass.
Author: Correct.
Mike: Total ass.
Author: That’s right.
Mike: You want us to take these perfectly clear and well-formatted tables… and turn them, basically you want us to turn them into an ass-cream sundae.
Author: Exactly.
Mike: With extra ass-sauce on top.
Author: You are exactly right.
Mike: …
Author: …
Mike: …
Author: So when can I expect to see those changes?

got me thinking about random journals.

I long for customized random search buttons. The random journal as it is now doesn’t do a lot for me, as my interests are usually a bit different than the average LJ-er, (according to statistics, the average LJ-er is a 16 year old girl… I’m Double that age and a male (worse, I’m a pod-person)). What I’d like to see is the user search engine return soon, so you can type in parameters. (and I’d like to add a parameter… “no foul language or l33t” text in a post. That way I could bypass the folks on a rant, or talking smack pseudo script-kiddy code. (and folks could find the same, if they wanted to read that stuff.) Heck, in the theme of Chris’s recent post, I wonder if there’s a clean way to implement a message size one, too.. “must contain at least 10 words” or whatever. I bet there is. (that’d snip out my Cap’n Kirk Joke…) Or, for example, have it cut out journals that use phrases or people you don’t like… (For example, don’t use anyone already on my friends list, or my blocked list, or anyone who uses too many ellipses (…’s, a guilty pleasure I partake in myself.)

The random feature hasn’t helped me find any journals I like to read in a long time. However, the interests list, and mutual communities are a great idea for mining for new folks. Stef’s latest idea of describing a friend and having you guess about them is another great idea.



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