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Recent Posts

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476
Living Room / Re: Meme time! Five Things People Don't Know About Me
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 20, 2009, 07:19 PM »
Awesome. Will so as soon as I get some icecream, thanks Mouse Man :D

Ehtyar.
477
Living Room / Re: Meme time! Five Things People Don't Know About Me
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 20, 2009, 06:39 PM »
Well, I've been missing out, this is one awesome thread. My contribution:

1. I can say the alphabet backward as easily as I can forward.
2. When eating ice cream from a bowl, I stir it to a paste before eating it. My favorite flavor is mint choc-chip.
3. I'm not a gamer at heart, but leave me alone with a Mario game for a few hours and you'll find squished goombas all over the place.
4. I tend to be a tad black and white; I love it or I hate it. Apparently I tend to be more black than white; f0dder has taken to calling me Hatery (an anagram of my nick) on the IRC channel.
5. I am utterly obsessed with Carnegie Deli Cheesecake (despite never having liked it from any other establishment) and Cheeburger Cheeburger despite the fact that nither have a branch in my country (.au).

Ehtyar.
478
General Software Discussion / Re: Command-line-fu is a brilliant idea (Linux)
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 20, 2009, 05:05 AM »
Oh well, totally justified now f0d man ;)

Ehtyar.
479
Living Room / Re: What if Google ate it's own dog food?
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 20, 2009, 02:54 AM »
This makes me rethink the SEO "strategy" I was using before on my site. Maybe I should just stop that nonsense and concentrate on content rather than ranking. Or make stuff easier to find for a human user than a bot...

I often suspect that Google's extreme secrecy about the internals of their search engine algorithm is less about keeping people from "gaming the system" and more about hiding just how simple minded and arbitrary it is.

That's my  :two:


+1  :Thmbsup:

Ehtyar.
480
Living Room / Re: What if Google ate it's own dog food?
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 19, 2009, 08:04 PM »
Indeed, very true. It's a shame SEO works like this. IMO Google's algorithm still needs much tweaking.

Ehtyar.
481
General Software Discussion / Re: Command-line-fu is a brilliant idea (Linux)
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 19, 2009, 06:15 PM »
command: rm -fr /
description: fixes all problems with linux

What moved you to 'help us out' with this f0dder?
1) I think it's funny :-*
2) people shouldn't run random shell commands without first looking up what they do :)
And as punishment for this heinous crime, they should have their entire drive erased, of course.

Ehtyar.
482
General Software Discussion / Re: WTF! Updating xmplay screwed up something BIG!
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 19, 2009, 04:05 AM »
WinHelpOnline have a fix for Vista here. It's simply that XMPlay thought for some reason that it could play .exe files and when you told it to associate itself with the formats it could play, it overwrote the .exe association, a very well know flaw in Windows.

Hope this helps, Ehtyar.
483
Living Room / Re: Incredible photo from Australian wildfires
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 19, 2009, 03:03 AM »
Halfway through the first paragraph was getting pretty pissed, but now that i've reached the end you make a good point. It has been bothering me how they actually managed to nab an arsonist like this guy. Good lesson Deo: question question question.

Ehtyar.
484
Living Room / Re: Incredible photo from Australian wildfires
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 18, 2009, 06:06 PM »
An update.

The fires will henceforth be know as Black Saturday. On Saturday February 14, smoke from the fires was visible over New Zealand, more than two thousand kilometers off the east Victorian coast. The death toll currently stands at 201, with more than 500 people admitted to hospital with fire related injuries and over 7,500 people left homeless.

The Churchill fire has been confirmed as being intentionally lit, and police have charged a man with the crime. Brendan Sokaluk, a volunteer firefighter, is charged with one count of deadly arson and one of lighting a wildfire. He will also face court on an unrelated charge of possessing child pornography. The Churchill fire death tole stands at 21. He faces a maximum prison term of 40 years and will remain in solitary confinement for his own protection at least until his committal hearing on May 25.

To give an indication of just how responsible government is for these fires, fire services in Victoria have reported of waits a year long for approval to conduct controlled burning. In many cases, the volunteer rural fire services have given up seeking approval because they don't have the manpower to pursue the requests. There were even reports of waits up to three years long.

Every report into wildfire prevention since the 1930s has listed controlled burning as a necessity to avoid uncontrolled outbreak. They are typically followed by government initiatives that do not list controlled burning among the measures to be taken. This response has come from both major parties when in power (frequently put there by Green Party preferences).

In one case, a couple living in a fire-prone area were fined $50,000 and faced a potential prison term for felling trees on their property without council approval. Their home is now the only building left standing within a 2km radius.

Ehtyar.
485
Living Room / Re: [NSFW - Parody] Sony Releases New Piece Of Technology
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 18, 2009, 02:37 AM »
Eeep, I forgot to quote. I was referring to the Mac Wheel, not the Sony Piece of Sh*t.

Ehtyar.
486
Living Room / Re: silly humor - post 'em here! [warning some NSFW and adult content]
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 18, 2009, 12:28 AM »
I was going to start a thread on workplace humour, but this is surely as good-a-place as any.

A few weeks back I spent a loong time working on crash bug in PHP. Afterward, I went on a tirade against shoddy programming, stupid developers etc. A non-techie (creative dept.) workmate was subjected to this tirade, and afterward, he printed this off and stuck it on the office door.

null ptr.jpg

Ehtyar.
487
I thought it was a measure of how much you modified rather than a time limit.

Ehtyar.
488
Living Room / Re: Shared todo list manager
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 17, 2009, 03:58 PM »
If you didn't find ToDoList in your initial search then you did a pretty bad job :P but I thought I ought to mention it anyway as I can't see which of the features you require it's missing. It does *not* sync over the internet, but it will share lists across a network.

Ehtyar.
489
One of the first Perl scripts I ever wrote was one that deletes everything older than 2 weeks from temp. Never had a problem.

Ehtyar.
490
Living Room / Re: [NSFW - Parody] Sony Releases New Piece Of Technology
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 17, 2009, 01:03 PM »
I must now face into the corner and bow my head in shame.

I fell for the Apple wheel crap.  I never even looked at the url when someone sent me bit.

I fell for it so hard that I trotted it out at a departmental meeting and was soundly laughed into a crimson red complexion.

The crazy thing is that I was convinced that Apple was just that f***ing stupid.

/sigh - you may all ridicule and jeer to your hearts content - I deserve it.

Back to the doghouse for me :(
I thought they did an excellent job of making it look credible. Had it not been from the onion it would have been 50/50 whether or not I'd have thought it was for real.

Ehtyar.
491
N.A.N.Y. 2009 / Re: NANY 2009 Release: Notepad++ plugins
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 16, 2009, 01:42 PM »
Sorry, edited.

Ehtyar.
492
N.A.N.Y. 2009 / Re: NANY 2009 Release: Notepad++ plugins
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 16, 2009, 01:30 PM »
I use the Portable Apps build of Notepad++.

I'm guessing from this that it's the UNICODE version:
Unicode: Users wishing to use the Unicode version of Notepad++ can extract the files from the unicode directory in the zip version and place them in the Notepad++Portable\App\Notepad++ directory. Many plugins have not yet been updated for Unicode and will fail to load.
Unless you're using the portableapps npp with the menu/launcher, you needn't use it at all. Installing notepad++ from the zip as opposed to the installer yields a portable npp install. You can also do it from the executable installer if you so wish by creating 'doLocalConf.xml' in the installation directory.

Ehtyar.
493
Yaaay, new newsletter :) Ty Mouse Man  :Thmbsup:

Ehtyar.
494
Living Room / Re: Tech News Weekly: Edition 07-09
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 16, 2009, 04:43 AM »
Crap.

Ehtyar.

P.S. Ty Mouse Man.
495
Living Room / Re: Windows Secrets jumps shark
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 14, 2009, 02:43 PM »
Windows Secrets newsletter fail. Bet if we uploaded that to failblog it would be published. How can you possibly pen an article about a technology you don't even know the name of? Sorry mouse man, but I'm with the rest of the executioners...

Ehtyar.
496
Living Room / Re: [NSFW - Parody] Sony Releases New Piece Of Technology
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 14, 2009, 02:33 PM »
The swearing was sometimes unnecessary, but it certainly didn't ruin the entire video.

Ehtyar.
497
Living Room / Tech News Weekly: Edition 07-09
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 13, 2009, 05:31 PM »
The Weekly Tech News
TNWeekly01.gifHi all.
Hope you're all partying hard for 1234567890 ;)
As usual, you can find last week's news here.


1. Hacker Site Claims Breach of Third Security Firm Web Site in a Week
Spoiler
http://news.cnet.com/8301-1009_3-10161874-83.html
HackersBlog claims the websites of security firms Kaspersky, BitDefender and F-Secure have been breached via various SQL injection and cross-site scripting attacks.

HackersBlog publicized on its site that it had breached the U.S. Web site of Moscow-based firm Kaspersky on Saturday and the Portugal site of BitDefender on Monday using the same attack techniques.

Kaspersky said on Monday that no sensitive or customer data had been exposed in the breach and that it would ask a database expert to audit its systems. BitDefender said the site that had been breached belonged to an unnamed partner and no customer data was stolen.


2. HP Printer Hack Risk Prompts Update
Spoiler
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/02/09/hp_printer_firmware_update/
Several HP printer series have vulnerabilities in their firmware that could allow an attacker to gain access to documents sent to the printer via the web administration panel.

Users of HP LaserJet printers need to apply a firmware update following the discovery of a potentially troublesome vulnerability.

The security bug creates a means for hackers to gain access to files sent to printers via the web administration console on vulnerable machines. A security advisory from HP explains various versions of its HP Digital Senders as well as HP LaserJet printers and HP Color LaserJet printers are all potentially vulnerable.

Users of HP LaserJet 2410, 2420, 2430, 4250, 4350, 9040, and 9050 series all need to upgrade their printer's firmware software to a secure version. HP Color LaserJet 4730mfp, HP Color LaserJet 9500mfp and HP 9200C Digital Sender users also need to update.


3. Houston Justice System Laid Low by Conficker Worm
Spoiler
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/02/09/houston_malware_infection/
Yet another corporate network falls prey to Conflicker/Downadup.

The justice system in Houston was thrown into disarray late last week after the infamous Conficker (Downadup) worm infected key systems.

The infection forced municipal courts in the Texan city to shut down on Friday, and police had to temporarily stop making arrests for minor offences, such as those for outstanding traffic warrants or minor drug possession. "The people we pull over with outstanding traffic warrants will be issued a citation rather than being taken to jail," explained Houston Police Department spokesman John Cannon. "Anyone suspected of a violent crime will be taken to jail. We’re not cutting back on that."

Meanwhile, bail bonds agencies report that the process of releasing prisoners and handling bond payments has slowed to a crawl.


4. Win 7 and Smartphones Targeted in Pwn2own Challenge
Spoiler
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/02/12/pwn2own_preview/
The next Pwn2Own contest on the 16th of March will feature Windows 7 and Smartphones.

An annual hacking challenge has put the security of browsers and smartphones in the firing line.

The latest Pwn2own contest at CanSecWest next month will reportedly include challenges involving hacking into browser packages running on Windows 7 PCs and a separate contest involving breaking into next-generation smartphones. 3Com's TippingPoint security division is to sponsor both contests, due to take place at the Vancouver conference from 16 March.


5. A Promising New Key Management Standards Effort
Spoiler
http://news.cnet.com/8301-1009_3-10163186-83.html
Several of the big guns in IT have banded together to produce a new standard for encryption key management. Unfortunately, technical details are sketchy.

At ESG, we have this concept called ubiquitous encryption. As more and more encryption technologies are baked into products and enter the enterprise, data will likely be encrypted everywhere--on hard drives, networks, database columns, file systems, tape drives, portable media, etc.

Good news for data confidentiality and integrity but all of this encryption means tons of new encryption keys to create, protect, and manage. This situation has scared me for a while. If encryption keys are stolen, they can easily unlock secret data. If encryption keys are lost, critical data can turn into useless 1s and 0s.


6. Personal Data Of 45,000 Exposed In FAA Data Breach
Spoiler
http://www.darkreading.com/security/attacks/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=213402894
The US Federal Aviation Administration has suffered a data breach that has exposed that details of some 45,000 staff. It is not known how the data was exposed.

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is warning some 45,000 employees that their personal data may have been compromised in a hack of one of its computer systems.

A notice about the FAA breach says that "an agency computer was illegally accessed and employee personal identity information was stolen electronically." Affected employees will receive individual letters to notify them about the breach, the notice says.


7. Security Websites Hit By Big DDoS Attack
Spoiler
http://darkreading.com/security/attacks/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=213402595
Security site Metasploit has been subjected DDoS attacks comprised of up to 80,000 hits per second.

Several renowned white-hat hacker security sites have been hit during the past few days with a distributed denial-of-service attack (DDoS). Immunity, Milw0rm, and Packet Storm were in the clear as of this posting, but attackers were still hammering away at Metasploit.

The attackers behind the DDoS -- which began on Feb. 6 and continued through the weekend on most of the sites -- deployed a massive botnet of some 80,000 zombies to flood the sites' domains with HTTP requests, according to Cisco researchers.


8. Cracking Down On Conficker: Kaspersky, OpenDNS Join Forces
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/business/news/2009/02/cracking-down-on-conficker-kaspersky-opendns-join-forces.ars
Kaspersky and OpenDNS will be working together to try to stop Conflicker from spreading.

The Conficker botnet is proving to be a feisty bit of malware. It may never become a problem of Storm-sized proportions, but Conficker's authors seem determined to keep their system in play. Team White Hat, however, isn't giving up—OpenDNS and Kaspersky Lab announced on Monday, February 9 that they'd be working together to prevent Conficker from spreading once it's infected a network. There are two components to the new approach. First, Kaspersky Labs is capable of predicting what domains Conficker will attempt to contact, while OpenDNS' Botnet Protection feature prevents those domains from resolving internally. The result—at least in theory—is a cooped-up Conficker.

The problem the two companies are trying to address dates back to a new version of Conficker we first covered three weeks ago. Dubbed Conficker.B, the newer model is capable of spreading via USB stick and attempts to crack the passwords of other local systems. Once it has found additional systems to sink its hooks into, Conficker fires up and begins spreading itself across the network; only one system need remain unpatched for an entire network of systems to become infected.


9.  Mozilla Call for EU Intervention in Browser War is Troubling
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/open-source/news/2009/02/mozilla-call-for-eu-intervention-in-browser-war-is-troubling.ars
Mozilla is backing calls from Opera for the EU to impose sanctions on Microsoft for including Internet Explorer in their operating system.

Mozilla Foundation chairperson Mitchell Baker contends that the inclusion of Microsoft's Internet Explorer web browser in the Windows operating system represents an ongoing threat to competition and innovation on the Internet. She supports the European Commission's investigation of Microsoft's bundling tactics and believes that remedies are needed to address Microsoft's alleged abuses. To that end, Mozilla intends to assist the commission by offering expertise about the browser market.

The European Commission (EC) issued a finding last month declaring that Microsoft has abused its dominant position as an operating system vendor by tying its web browser to the Windows platform. The commission has sent a Statement of Objections to Microsoft which outlines the basis for the accusation. Microsoft will be given the opportunity to respond in formal hearings before the EU evaluates the possibility of imposing fines or other remedies.


10. A Farewell to Palm(O)s: Company Stakes Future On WebOS
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/news/2009/02/a-farewell-to-palm-os-company-stakes-future-on-webos.ars
PalmOS will be laid to rest as Palm's new WebOS takes over.

Palm's Pre debuted with a bang at CES this past January and was arguably the star of the show. Palm has struggled to remain a relevant, profitable player in the smartphone market for years; the company's last major smartphone (the Centro, released in the fall of 2007) was reasonably well-received, but it couldn't entirely negate the barrage of negative criticism that hit Palm following the cancellation of the ill-fated Foleo.

In a meeting with investors today, Palm President and CEO Ed Colligan confirmed that the company intends to leave its past behind and to devote itself entirely to its new webOS—after twelve-plus years, Palm OS is finally headed for retirement.


11. Moonlight 1.0 Brings Silverlight to Linux
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/open-source/news/2009/02/moonlight-10-brings-silverlight-to-linux.ars
Moonlight has officially gone gold, bringing Silverlight 1.0 compatibility to the Linux platform.

Novell has announced the official 1.0 release of Moonlight, an open source implementation of Microsoft's Silverlight rich Internet application framework. This release will make it possible for users of the Linux operating system to view content that is compatible with Silverlight 1.0.

The Moonlight project emerged in 2007, shortly after Microsoft unveiled Silverlight at the MIX conference. When Microsoft officially released Silverlight 1.0, the company announced plans to provide specifications and test suites to Novell in order to facilitate development of a Linux-compatible version. Moonlight has evolved significantly over the past year and is now ready for widespread use.


12. Russian and US Satellites Collide
Spoiler
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7885051.stm
Two communications satellites, one Russian, and one US, have collided in orbit.

The US commercial Iridium spacecraft hit a defunct Russian satellite at an altitude of about 800km (500 miles) over Siberia on Tuesday, Nasa said.

The risk to the International Space Station and a shuttle launch planned for later this month is said to be low.

The impact produced a cloud of debris, which will be tracked into the future.


13. Unix Lovers to Party Like It's 1234567890
Spoiler
http://blog.wired.com/gadgets/2009/02/unix-lovers-to.html
On Friday the 13th, 2009 at 11:31:30pm UTC (here in Aussie land that will be Saturday the 14th at 10:31:30am) the UNIX timestamp will reach 1234567890. This article was posted as close to that time as I could manage. To find out when it happened for you, try executing perl -e "print scalar localtime(1234567890);".

Unix weenies everywhere will be partying like it's 1234567890 this Friday.

That's because, at precisely 3:31:30 p.m. Pacific time on February 13, 2009, the 10-digit "epoch time" clock used by most Unix computers will display all ten decimal digits in sequence. (That's 6:31:30 Eastern, or 23:31:30 UTC.)


14. [NSFW] Sony Releases New Stupid Piece Of S**t That Doesn't F**king Work
Spoiler
http://www.theonion.com/content/video/sony_releases_new_stupid_piece_of
Discussion started by justice: https://www.donationcoder.com/forum/index.php?topic=16990.0
The Onion News Network reports on Sony's new "retarded hunk of garbage" which hit the shelves this week.

onion.png



Ehtyar.
498
Thank Christ the US military work faster than this IRL, they'd still be attempting to overthrow Saddam otherwise  :(

Ehtyar.
499
Living Room / Re: Incredible photo from Australian wildfires
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 12, 2009, 03:06 AM »
I tried to restrain myself Deo, really I did, but reading that just made me feel so good, lol. Next time I'll be sure to beat you to it :P

Ehtyar.
500
Assembly / Re: What version of assembly? Any
« Last post by Ehtyar on February 11, 2009, 10:49 PM »
On the newsgroups in particular there are some very very big flame wars taking place revolving around HLA not being real asm etc etc. Before you ask for help with HLA on a dedicated forum, be sure to poke around and see what kind of reaction other have gotten to questions about it.

Ehtyar.
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