topbanner_forum
  *

avatar image

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
  • Monday November 10, 2025, 3:55 pm
  • Proudly celebrating 15+ years online.
  • Donate now to become a lifetime supporting member of the site and get a non-expiring license key for all of our programs.
  • donate

Recent Posts

Pages: prev1 ... 13 14 15 16 17 [18] 19 20 21 22 23 ... 46next
426
I was very much like you - loving the idea of microcredit whenever I heard about it, but not knowing what I could do about it - kiva makes it easy to just lend $25, and that got me to do it.
427
Living Room / Re: Whole Earth online!
« Last post by iphigenie on January 11, 2009, 11:13 AM »
Oh, that is a great find

Rereading thinking from 30/40 years ago always puts things in perspective, we dont seem to learn and listen much as a species, since some of the issues and warnings are still the same as today.

Also you notice how many modern day "thinkers" just recycle stuff pretending it is their own thinking, and on most topics we just don't know enough to figure it out.
428
Living Room / Help others help themselves: Microcredit Online via site Kiva.org
« Last post by iphigenie on January 11, 2009, 10:34 AM »
Site: http://www.kiva.org
Kiva's mission is to connect people through lending for the sake of alleviating poverty.
Kiva is the world's first person-to-person micro-lending website, empowering individuals to lend directly to unique entrepreneurs in the developing world.

I got introduced to Kiva via a blog I read, www.theroadtothehorizon.org - a site by an engineer who joined the UNHCR and writes about aid and development (a good site to read to get one's horizons widened and one's perspective adjusted).

Kiva's principle is simple, aggregate normal people, who can perhaps only contribute a small amount (amounts start at $25), to offer microcredit to people all over the developing world, via existing microcredit organisations.

on a personal note last week when I was feeling quite worried (still no job, savings decreasing, can't decide what to do, take a 'lesser' job, try to go self employed, ah poor me!) I went and lent 2x$25 to people, and frankly it reminded me that I am far far far from poor. Here are their stories:

Rosa is 40 years old and lives in the Laureles Norte section of the capital, Managua. She is married and has three children in grade school, ages 2, 7 and 12. She hopes to offer her family, her children, a bright future and to leave them an inheritance. Rosa has a small business selling homemade food. She has ten years experience in customer service, and would like to improve her business, expanding it and increasing sales by offering new types of food. In order to increase her income and sales, Rosa plans to invest this loan in new products and appliances, such as staples and perishable items for food preparation, a grill, and new tables and chairs to provide for and attract new customers.

Silvia is 55 years old and lives in the Laureles Norte neighborhood of the capital, Managua. She is a single mother with four grown children. Thanks be to God, she has been able to help her children to prosper and has started her own business, a guest house. Silvia hopes to leave her family something worth inheriting. In addition to the guest house, she also sells cosmetics retail and on credit. For the past ten years she has rented a room to bring in more income and to help herself financially. Her goals are to expand and buy new product lines. Thanks to loans from Afodenic she has been able to buy products such as perfume, lipstick, nail polish, shoes and silver jewelry, generating higher profits and offering her clients better and a greater variety of products.


The site is extremely simple to join and use, create a basic profile, browse entrepreneurs by type, country etc., and make your loan. Payments are over paypal.

My oldest loan is less than a month old so I do not know much about what kind of information one might get from the lenders in the long run, but I did get a fairly generic email from each of the organisations about the loan and its recipient, and I assume I will get more.

It feels quite good to be able to do something that feels *useful* - although I find it very hard to choose between all the people. They are all tales of courage, self reliance and dignity, and of lives much different from our own (I remember the old grandmother whose children are all dead and who is working to get all her orphaned grandchildren a future)

Because these are loans, you do get your money refunded eventually, which you can take out or re-lend.

I like the spirit - and I'm planning to lend a further $50 in the next month, probably in Africa this time around.

PS: I would be quite happy to join a donationcoder group if others are also on kiva, make donations in the name of cody ;) - here's my profile http://www.kiva.org/lender/iphigenie
429
N.A.N.Y. 2009 / Re: NANY 2009 Withdrawn (sorry): Iphi's Memorable Passwords
« Last post by iphigenie on December 23, 2008, 05:28 AM »
I will revisit this in the new year - I think for me this could be a great learning exercise of having a webapp coupled with a desktop app. I have written frameworks and CMSes and other website engines, but never many "self contained" complete little apps. So fun to learn, and perhaps it can be useful. And I wont let myself get sidetracked by the crawling and indexing of source material (which i did 10 days ago, mostly because it is again familiar terrain for me), I will build it next time :D

I've had the shoulder thing a while, fell over the dog. I thought it would get better. But instead of getting better it keeps getting worse, and sitting at a computer holding my arm at these kinds of angles is just painful.

I also just noticed I can't lift my arms above my head as much as the other - doesnt hurt but won't go further. Clearly will need to see a doctor after the xmas break.
430
I alas must put this on hold as I have done something to my shoulder and just cannot sit at a computer for very long at the moment.
 :mad:

431
Living Room / Re: Sick of cute animal sites? Try this one...
« Last post by iphigenie on December 18, 2008, 02:12 PM »
I saw that on friendfeed earlier - very silly :D

Anyway, I have all the cuteness I need at home in the form of the cutest dog possible.
432
I'm sitting on a mountain of yiggles over the years - they are annoying because:
- the yiggle cost is based on the full price, whether you have the app or not
- you can only use it once per app, so if you need 2 licenses you have to buy one (and you have to buy it full price, in theory, because you no longer have the 40% or 60% rebate you had while you had less yiggles)

What I would like to use yiggles for is buy licenses to give people - some of the software is nice enough that I would pick it for someone who wants that!

For example the image manager is no ACDSee but it is pretty nice and easier to use for a novice
433
What I would like is a project management application that does work for multiple projects in parallel - many of them can be used to have multiple projects, but somehow not connected. I want to know what time creep in project A might imply for project B, so I can make a forceful argouument against said creep. Also if A has some delays, perhaps something can be moved up from C that could be done now with the people waiting on A.

I have used many many tools but short of treating everything like a big permanent project with the real projects as subprojects (something which always comes with compromises, eg you lose a lot on budgeting, time tracking etc.)...

I know it is hard enough to do a decent project management tool - but i dont know in what world people are only on one project at a time - in my world we typically had 3-4 in build, 3-4 in planning, plus some infrastructure/support tools projects.
434
Living Room / Re: A rant on religiousness about OSes
« Last post by iphigenie on December 18, 2008, 05:13 AM »
I will do -

zfs is bootable, it is the default file system used for 2008.11 - at least I think it is! Must check now, I might have assumed wrongly.

What I really like about it is that it is what I always wanted a filesystem to be:

Truly virtual. We have now reached the point where we have virtual machines created on top of pooled real machines, and the same thing needs to happen with the filesystem.

Dynamic. I dont have the spare hardware to test this but this virtual nature can allocate extra space to mission critical systems, optimise faster/slower drive usage (not yet supporting solid state drive but that is on the way)

Solid. I have just pulled the plug off the machine while disk activity was happening and no repair or anything needed to be done on reboot. That's the limit of my testing

Ease of use. Create a new "partition" or "virtual machine" in seconds, one command, no waiting. Turn some off, shrink some, grow some. Especially with the virtualization this is cool. I currently have no need for it but next time I have an infrastructure project I would have to consider it seriously.

I hear the performance is excellent too, I know smugmug are starting to use it for their mysql databases, with compression on, and were impressed. I also know that wikipedia has just decided to go for it for all their media hosting.

Enough for zfs - i am by far not a filesystem specialist, just a user who has set up and managed web datacentres a few times and to me it seems that zfs (and some of the additional things in solaris) would remove a lot of the pain we had in day to day operations.

As for opensolaris as a whole, i'm ambivalent - the core is a great package but I am both intrigued by some of the features annoyed by any OS which forces so much down my throat - full desktop with tons of apps preinstalled. My normal mode of operation is BSD core, then everything from ports, and only the minimum necessary... I'm from the school that saw anything that is installed and not used as both a waste of resources and a security risk.

The solaris machine is dual boot with FreeBSD7 and I am tempted to revert to freebsd, because i know where to go and what to look for and how to find what is available. On opensolaris I am unsure what is available, unsure how to go about certain things. I am sticking with it mostly because I am curious to see if I can find all that is promised. And an old nostalgic love for Solaris from when I was a student and my first jobs.

But I have too many things to do and haven't sat down for a straight amount of time with a straight goal, which is why I am unsure and uneasy with it still.
435
just wait a month or two and you'll get the email offering you to upgrade at 9.99

I haven't upgraded anything from ashampoo for a while, they haven't added features that I needed (things I already have elsewhere, mostly), but eventually i might get a 7.99 or 9.99 offer and go for it.

The exception is actually the Burning Studio - I have updated that one. It is a nice slick and simple/clear tool to use
436
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: Peggle Extreme now free on Steam
« Last post by iphigenie on December 17, 2008, 06:10 PM »
The fascinating thing about peggle is that there is very little skill involved - i mean it feels like there is, but things go random so quickly.

You are always delighted when things turn up good, it's like a surprise win. And it's not at all frustrating when things go totally pear shaped, because frankly who could foresee that?

Add to that some very slick crafting of the game, achievements etc. and it works as a fun little game
437
Living Room / Re: Childhood Memory
« Last post by iphigenie on December 17, 2008, 01:10 PM »
I'm like you - numbers are just hard. (it gets worse across languages, too). My husband on the other hand can remember numbers real well

I had problems at school as long as most of it was memorisation based - i had trouble remembering vocabulary lists (made worse by the fact that i already knew the words, i think), math and science formulas, all these things that have no pattern or justification or them, that are arbitrary (math and science became easier once things were derived from principles, but i never could remember the constants beyond 1 or 2 digits). The same goes today for the details of programming languages/commands etc.

I on the other hand have an excellent memory for things that are not arbitrary - text of plays, music and songs, scientific derivations - and for larger picture elements. And stories (i cant tell you what the exact syntax is for something in python but i can tell you stories around python, zope, how we built what, problems we had and the time i just deleted the database and rebuilt it from the copy that was in memory)

And that is the problem with passwords, they have to be arbitrary to be secure. But arbitrary (for me) means forgotten unless there is a pattern of derivation that I can remember. A song, a rhyme, a proverb, a book title...
438
maybe this app idea will be reinvented as the memory trainer  :P
439
Living Room / Re: Childhood Memory
« Last post by iphigenie on December 16, 2008, 06:54 PM »
our number changed once, they added a 6 in front to make space for more numbers - i suspect original planners didnt expect people would have quite that many phones!

I cannot remember any of the numbers I have had as an adult, although I moved 5 times. I cannot even remember the number I had before I last moved in 2005 (although I probably have it written in an email somewhere), or the number of the house I had in London for a year until this September (although that one I *never* knew)... I think I dont remember those cause I never kept them for longer than 2-3 years and that is not enough to get engraved?

I find it fascinating how memory works - I cannot remember people's names that easily, especially in my second and third language (it is way easier in my 1st language), it takes me forever to remember phone numbers (i think it took me 5 years before I really automatically remembered my mobile/cellphone number - i just didnt have to give it out often enough for it to stick), but I can remember books I read, when i read them, where i got them from, what the story was (but not character names, on average) - same thing for games, films, good meals, holiday trips.

On the other hand say in technology I have learned and used an awful lot of things, but I always need to look up details, they just don't stick. I always say it's to make more room for the big picture ;) - at school too, i could never remember equations by heart, but i could rederive them... I could never learn the kind of list of words they made us learn, but I had perfect spelling and could use all of them...

Strange how memory works
440
Living Room / Re: Childhood Memory
« Last post by iphigenie on December 16, 2008, 07:11 AM »
since my mother has died, her phone number is my banking pin - i think that is pretty secure
441
Living Room / Re: Childhood Memory
« Last post by iphigenie on December 16, 2008, 06:39 AM »
I guess it is easier if your parents didn't move

I'm trying to see if I can remember my best friend's phone number - I used that nearly every day (girls!) for 8 years. Can't pull it back yet, but will let it simmer for a few hours. pretty sure hers started with 24.
442
DC Gamer Club / Re: The Best Gaming Moments of 2008
« Last post by iphigenie on December 16, 2008, 06:32 AM »
Been playing my old games most of the year, from arcanum to sacrifice.

Best "new" game moment of the year will still be in the new WoW expansion when I realised that something I had done had triggered something that changed the game world for me - something I had always wished MMOs would dare do again.
443
For me, that would be the biggest question and is why I use RoboForm. Personally, I don't want to remember any passwords, but if there could only be one result from a given group of words (with my generation rule) and the phrase is easy enough to remember, then I think I could work with that.

You're right, the pattern is a key one - if i can come up with a set of patterns that are easy to remember/retrieve, yet are safe (let the user choose as configuration, i guess) then this will work better.
444
i for example still remember that 258512 was my phone number when i was a kid. I mean it don't always remember it, but I can pull that memory back. I also remember most of the first paragraph of Isaac Asimov's "Liar" short story (a stellar short story, by the way) (It starts with "alfred manning lit his cigar carefully, but the tips of his fingers were trembling slightly and he was frowning as he spoke. "It reads minds, no doubt about that") (i might remember it wrong, but the point is i will remember it wrong the same way. It has been 19 years since i read it in english class)

I can also remember nursery rhymes and silly songs I learned when i was a kid, plus the silly songs we sang at hockey games, and the rude version of songs we made up as teens, and bits of plays I was in, and satirical songs we wrote for the yearly review etc.etc.etc. - I suspect I will never forget any of them for a very long time. Song lyrics from the 80s? You bet!

We remember stories very well, especially if they have a meaning or connection, but even if we pick something today to anchor a password, we will remember it - generations of oral tradition have wired us that way I guess.
445
One of the reason I came up with a scheme like this is that I needed a large number of passwords and passphrases for servers, server certificates and the likes. They needed to be hard to crack with random attacks, and dictionary attacks, but they also needed to be memorable by more than one person, and in no way was it ok for people to have to create a list of their passwords to remember them (although we had one in the safe). Instead, one our team's computers you would have found a collection of poems and quotations, not all of which were used in passwords (people would save neat things for future use). I wonder what people might have thought of that.

So I used film names, book titles, aphorisms, quotes, films - mail servers passphrases and certificate passphrases were taken out of  "the night mail" (http://www.poemhunte...m/poem/night-mail-2/), and the one used for communication between the backup mail server was based on "Le Facteur sonne toujours deux Fois" (the postman always rings twice, in french). "I have a bad feeling about this" was used with our source control system :D

I also used total banalities like "there are 26 letters in the alphabet" and "there are 7even hills in rome" and the like. Another one was based on "all the pretty horses 1992" a book that I never even read but meant to for a while.

I works, I remember these to this day!

Wherever I worked I have suggested people that they use this kind of system, and am always surprised that most people never thought of using that more - favorite childhood books, poems you had to learn at school, plays you did, favorite movie lines - they all can be used successfully as very safe password you won't forget.

But what I noticed is that even quotes that meant nothing to people, because I had picked them, they could remember, never need to write down.

This was all created manually, never thought to create a programmatic one before. Had a simple "pronouncable" password generator for our website registration system (a simple syllable-combination system so the passwords would look less cryptic than pure random characters. It improved memorability and makes errors less likely -eg Moma71fUsi vs rtHguL16fg. The only tricky bit was removing certain letter combinations to avoid random rude words )

It's a shame more sites and systems don't allow long passwords, because using full sentences would be even safer.
446
What a great idea: and you're right, I use RoboForm but the main entry point would be easy to break.

I need a little clarification though: after selecting the Title/Lyric/etc is there only one possible password returnable? That is, do you set up a generation rule, like:
  • Pattern: aANSNNAA
  • Min Characters: 6
  • Max Characters: 8
  • Repeat: True

and your selected phrase, etc is passed through that rule to create a password??

The way I would see it would be that the user gives the following:
- a general keyword (optional)
- any rules they are aware of (length, number of digits, UC letters etc.). The defaults being 8-10 long, 2 digits, 2 uppercase (since that meets most requirements I have encountered)

The tool would then return several options, along those lines:

3 extracts (since it is up to the user to pick something they easily can remember), perhaps from 3 different collections (poem, folk song and famous quotations, for example)
2-3 password per extract, if enough varying patterns could be found

The passwords would be generated by:
* picking a long enough set of words, starting at a punctuation (easier to remember).
* randomly pick characters to turn in digits (say, any "a" or any "o") (experience shows that if you only picked one of the As or one of the Os to turn into a digit, the password is more secure, but you are less likely to remember which it was a year later. I don't know if that is a problem or not, since 2-3 tries should nail it. But for now lets assume we pick one letter and change all of them).
* I am less sure about the uppercase part - totally random, picking one character-type again or the "visual" option xxXXxxxx XxxxxxX (but can you remember that a year later?)

I'll probably run some of the results through password security tests to see what the memorability vs safety effect is.
447
Lyrics are a good idea too, although it is a bit more vague who owns them. Are there public domain Lyrics collections out there? (I know I am just using them internally, and if i do a web app it might be ok to use any lyrics, but if it is redistributed as a desktop app then I might fall under copyright/license fees)

I'm currently pondering the format for storing things - something open so it is easy to swap collections/create new collections. After all these only work in a language people are familiar with, so it is important to be able to create similar lists for french, german, spanish etc. I was surprised to find out there is no microformat for things like excepts/quotations/references, I would have thought such a format could be a good open base for the content collections I am thinking of. I guess I will have to do some very simple XML schema for it instead + associated CSV converter/importer. (What's mouser using for his collection, I wonder?, maybe I just write a password generator that uses his tool as a base :D )

Since in my last job one of our projects was a vertical search engine (foundography, never quite managed to achieve what we wanted), customising a spider to crawl things like lyrics database, project gutenberg, etc. and create databases is actually something that I would consider. Seems like a lot of spidering work for something so mundane, though...
448
I will try to post my progress/ideas/thoughts here - this is because I learn a lot by doing, and reading of others doing - and I learn most by my mistakes. But most tutorials, work diaries etc. are expunged of all the dead ends, mistakes etc.

I figure all my mistakes will probably be more useful to someone than my final solution (I have no illusion of being anything special when it comes to produced code), and besides, if I don't finish anything at least I will have shared something :D

Oh and any comments increase motivation  :-*
449
N.A.N.Y. 2009 / Re: NANY 2009 Intro
« Last post by iphigenie on December 15, 2008, 01:42 PM »
Yes, it might - in part it is my ignorance that limits me.
I used popfile many times, awesome product. It stopped working on my machine at some point, although now that i have strawberry perl I should give it a try again

The advantage of doing it in perl is that i can do all the engine bits, and fallback to web if needed
450
N.A.N.Y. 2009 / Re: NANY 2009 Release: Comparer
« Last post by iphigenie on December 15, 2008, 12:19 PM »
This looks awesome! Downloading it now :D
Pages: prev1 ... 13 14 15 16 17 [18] 19 20 21 22 23 ... 46next