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 17, 2025, 10:31 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 ... 237 238 239 240 241 [242] 243 244 245 246next
6026
Developer's Corner / Re: ASP Error 0126 -vs- Firefox
« Last post by Stoic Joker on July 25, 2008, 05:30 AM »
justice - I already ran across that page, enabling Parent Paths is only required if you're using the include file "../dir/file.ext" syntax. Parent Paths is the (flawed) feature that was used/exploited by Nimda, CodeRed and a few other server targeting broadcast bast viruses. So I never use it on a prodiction box.

f0dder - No I haven't checked the logs yet, but I'll do that when I get to the office this morning. Last night I installed FF on a XP SP3 VM and took it to the site only to find it was working fine ... for me ... which was no help at all as trying to troubleshoot a non-reproduceable error is a great way to break something (e.g. I was a bit PO'ed and decided it was best to just go watch TV).

I'll post what I find in the logs later this morning, now that I'm calmer... :)

P.S. Thank You - I'd been hoping to get your input when I originally posted.
6027
Developer's Corner / Re: ASP Error 0126 -vs- Firefox
« Last post by Stoic Joker on July 24, 2008, 10:34 PM »
Hence my quandry...

The visitor that reported the error was using Firefox, Safari, & OSX 10.5. Now Safari borking anything doesn't surprise me, but Firefox is written by folks that actually know what they're doing. And as already stated it's (an include statement in) a Server Side script (nothing client side)...which is supposed to make the scenario impossible. The site at that point uses only the browser session info, and the page just loops back to itself with SQL querys for different product types (e.g. it's really basic).

*Sigh*

I verified the page was working (in case the server glitched) and all was fine (in IE), I stepped outside the building (server is in-house) and tried the page from my home office which was also IE & fine. Our primary web developer (I'm more the server admin/backup coder), who always runs FF on a test machine, went to the site while we were on the phone and said it did indeed fail (ASP 0126) when loaded in FF ... even tho it was loading fine for me in IE.

So... Site broken -> Owner of company staring at me -> standing there with my D**k in my hand.

...Happy Times ...Not!

I know it "Can't" happen, but I've got a credible source verifying that it is happening.
6028
Developer's Corner / ASP Error 0126 -vs- Firefox
« Last post by Stoic Joker on July 24, 2008, 03:35 PM »
Okay... I'm sure most folks will recognize ASP 0126 as the (server side) include file pathing error. The "catch" here is that not only is the path correct, the page loads flawlessly when using IE (5, 6, or 7).

Firefox on the other hand is tossing out the an ASP 0126 error (apparently) all by itself... Now how the hell a browser is managing to run afoul of a Server Side Script I've not a clue.  But I'm open for suggestions if anybody has an idea on what may be happening.

Thank You,
Stoic Joker
6029
Okay I know I'm late (contest is over etc.), but I finally got time to play with Spore a bit and came up with an Evil Cody that I thought I'd share.

CRE_Evil Cody-06b03965_ful.png
6030
Activation/License/Language Help / Re: why??
« Last post by Stoic Joker on July 22, 2008, 05:34 AM »
Why can't use  KEY
Please research the 5 W's; What, When, Where, Why, & Who as these will assist you greatly in learning how to convey a complete (thought) story.

Thank You :)
6031
Living Room / Re: Wordle: Create Beautiful Word Clouds
« Last post by Stoic Joker on July 22, 2008, 05:30 AM »
Man that's got to be handy as hell for something ... I'm not sure what ... But I'll save the link till I find out ;)
6032
General Software Discussion / Re: TrueCrypt 6.0 released
« Last post by Stoic Joker on July 19, 2008, 02:26 PM »
Stoic Joker: if there's nothing to install, how do you access the encrypted part of the thumbdrive, then?
Man I'd love to be able to answer that, but I didn't design the damn thing...

I do know that that particular "Key" point was a big part of their launch/selling point, it's supposed to be a completely self contained hardware based encryption that requires nothing to be installed ... That even they can't get into (per the site's FAQ) if you lose your decryption key. Check out their site www.IronKey.com for details as I can't substantiate their claims ... I'm just conveying the devices existence as an option.
6033
Living Room / Re: Advice: Never use your ISP provided email address
« Last post by Stoic Joker on July 19, 2008, 02:14 PM »
Indeed my (ISP provided) Earthlink address turned into smoke a year ago when the local DSL provided (he who owns the copper...) broke the agreement they'd had and sprung up as Embarq. Embarq claimed to be migrating all the Earthlink accounts to their servers, but my (allegedly converted) Embarq account never has worked. Thankfully I've always run my own mail server, which is the only reason I'm still getting mail.  ...However Gmail does make for a nice backup & I keep a few other disposable Email accounts for (Um...) other stuff... :)
6034
General Software Discussion / Re: TrueCrypt 6.0 released
« Last post by Stoic Joker on July 18, 2008, 10:45 AM »
Does anyone know of an application like this which allows encrypted drives to be transported and opened on a system via a thumb drive?
TrueCrypt can do this if you use container files rather than direct partition encryption - but it does require installing a driver on the host computer, obviously requiring admin privileges. Iirc there's also a CodeProject or SourceForge project for dealing with container files directly?, probably require use of FAT32 filesystem though (but that's fine for smallish container files).
Wouldn't an encrypted ThumbDrive be simpler?
Like: IRONKEY 4GB Flash Drive (USB2.0 Portable) hardware-based encryption http://www.newegg.co...Item=N82E16820323003

Nothing to install and the price isn't (that) bad either
6035
General Software Discussion / Re: A new task manager on the block...
« Last post by Stoic Joker on July 14, 2008, 06:21 PM »
When I saw the title I immediately assumed it referred to a replacement for the Windows Task Manager, which is really a process manager. I guess that's what happens when you're a developer :)
Don't feel bad, I went there too.
6036
Living Room / Re: Where's my TCP/IP?
« Last post by Stoic Joker on July 09, 2008, 10:09 AM »
Speaking from the darker side of practical...the last think any EvilWare want's to do is cut itself off from the outside world.

WinSOCK & friends being borked won't stop TCP/IP from being listed, it just renders it useless.

I'm inclined to think this is a hardware malfunction, as in the NIC is half dead and either doesn't claim to need TCP/IP any more or has Phantom Deviced itself and the protol is being bound uselessly to it's "shadow" (I've seen both happen).

Use this to start Device Manager, make sure show hidden devices is selected, and see if the NIC is listed twice.
@echo off
Echo Find Phantom Devices
set DEVMGR_SHOW_NONPRESENT_DEVICES=1
start devmgmt.msc
exit

...Granted this was more of a Win2k (era) issue, but that doesn't mean it can't still happen.
6037
General Software Discussion / Re: TrueCrypt 6.0 released
« Last post by Stoic Joker on July 08, 2008, 10:24 PM »
Spiffy encryption widgets make you look interesting enough to poke around a bit, if that turns up anything your screwed. The first two guys you talk to, won't be that (IT) bright ... But the third guy that shows up...

While it may be true that using encryption makes you look interesting to customs (or whatever agency you're dealing with), it really shouldn't be.  I use encryption on my portable devices simply because the device could get lost or stolen and I don't want to have whoever might be on the receiving end to get access to that data (some of which isn't even mine - it belongs to my employer).  I'd hope that this would be the more usual case, but given the news stories that pop up about lost/stolen devices with sensitive data it seems that this is not true (yet).


Sure there are proper uses for it, it just the wild-eyed peek-a-boo crap that irks me...and stashing a complete OS in a sneeky looking Uber hidden partition sounds like a 5 star way of ending up in the body cavity search express lane.
6038
General Software Discussion / Re: TrueCrypt 6.0 released
« Last post by Stoic Joker on July 08, 2008, 06:57 PM »
Stoic Joker: doing the ADS thing only helps if you're trying to smuggle contraband - it's not feasible for regular data files that you need to use daily, programs, etc. If I had to go to the .us for work-related reasons, I'd have to bring a laptop full of reverse-engineering tools and other things that would probably look suspicious to customs. ADS wouldn't help me there, but a hidden OS partition would, since I could just boot an inconspicuous XP to sjov them that everything is hunky-dory.

Also, Justice's ADS link is outdated, with XP taskmgr was upgraded to show which stream of a file that's executed, so suddenly that trick stands out like a naked drag queen in the oval office. Or more, probably.

PS: encryption is only one of the benefits of VPNs - the main advantage is of course that you can refrain from punching any public holes through from the internet to your LAN, except for VPN... and still be able to access the LAN from home/whatever, as if you were inside your corporate building. Obviously you need strong password policies (and certificates for anything serious) for the VPN.

I tossed out ADS only as a comparative example not "the answer", however the TaskMgr showing the stream location would only apply if the program was running at the time. ...Which bring me to the main point which MrCrispy seems to have picked up on...Don't look interesting.

I too have network analysis (hacking) utilities (as part of my job) that have great potential to be hard to explain. How ever at first glance it wouldn't even raise an eyebrow because they're seed throughout the OS on a very boring appearing vanilla install. I know exactly how to find them, and that's all that's important. I don't really need a shortcut to eEye's Iris on the desktop, the hotkey works just fine...

Having any kind of 3rd party Uber encryption will simply make you and your laptop stick out like a shiny red Corvette at an Amish BBQ.

MrCrispy's 2nd point is also 100% correct, put anybody under a spot light and they're gona fail (politics 101). The laws are fast and loose, and there are a ton of bureaucrats that are dying to try out their new toys. Which is why you really don't want to look interesting.

Spiffy encryption widgets make you look interesting enough to poke around a bit, if that turns up anything your screwed. The first two guys you talk to, won't be that (IT) bright ... But the third guy that shows up...

...You can't hide a partition from the POST report (Talk about hard to Explain...).

PS: Yes I am familiar with the point and purpose of a VPN I was just tossing out an example of how some people (miss)use encryption to lock all the windows and then leave the doors wide open.

One of my biggest pet peeves is people who sell a ton of security hard/software to a person or company who then gets hosed by a (lack of) common sense issue that they would have known about if they had simply been told the truth in the first place.

The company I mentioned earlier spent a total of $12,000 on data recovery (4 catastrophic failures) over a six year period because the asshole vendor kept installing their (resource hogging) practice software on a low-end ("working server") workstation using a CD based backup (which failed every time...). I got them to spring for a entry level (dedicated) server with RAID and a tape drive ($2,000) ... and now their problem is finally (truly) solved.
6039
General Software Discussion / Re: TrueCrypt 6.0 released
« Last post by Stoic Joker on July 07, 2008, 09:46 PM »
justice: you'd notice it yourself because your partitions would obviously be resized :) - obviously the reason for something like this is those insane border patrol laptop searches. Now you can boot a clean XP install and let the customs people rummage through the drive, and keep all your NDA'ed work documents and client records safe in the hidden OS, without being retained for not giving up your decryption keys.
Or you could skip all the overhead that comes with encryption and stash 4GB of anything in an Alternate Data Stream under a text file containing a recipe for a chocolate cherry bunt cake. If you don't stand out, and at first glance your puter is boaring, next...

Encryption is viewed far too much like a magic bullet, when it's really just an excuse to be sloppy with other less snazy sounding aspects of security that whould have actually worked.

(Here's a Job I Actually Worked)
A major medical software company charged a doctor $5,000 (Mid-shelf VPN router + labor) to setup a VPN (Yahoo! encryption) so they could access their "server" which was one of 3 XP machines in their office network. Connection required only a standard Windows VPN connector, username, & password.

...Username & password were both the Dr's name in all lower case letters ... I went ballistic.
6040
Living Room / Re: Woot.com Bag of Crap post
« Last post by Stoic Joker on July 03, 2008, 12:08 AM »
...Now this is just the kind of crap I like to read at 1:00 in the morning...

:)
6041
of course if all else fails you could install the drive in another machine, and use the installed (and current) AV tools on that machine...

This exactly what I did last week with my old laptop! I had a bunch of 2.5 enclosures lying around... Finally it was a bad RAM stick. Anyhow : it's probably the easiest solution if possible -- instead of hunting for ISOs etc.
I can't count the number of times this thing saved my ass (Laptop to IDE Hard Drive Adapter) http://www.cablestog...id=906&sku=17705 ...I use it for everything from bug-zapping to data recovery ... Recovery of shakey laptop drive in USB enclosure == Bad Plan...
6042
Living Room / Re: Help! Any NetGear experts out there?
« Last post by Stoic Joker on July 02, 2008, 11:46 PM »
(Cable) broadband companies in general, but Comcast specifically was Traffic-Shaping people offline based on ports & protocols that they felt were (*Snicker*) "Optional"...
6043
Living Room / Re: Help! Any NetGear experts out there?
« Last post by Stoic Joker on July 02, 2008, 05:59 AM »
Interesting, but DHCP errors are all-or-none, and your hiccup was protocol specific. I can't help but wonder if this is a Comcast cover story since they got smacked by the FCC for Bandwidth-Throttling which choke-ed out certain protocols a while back.

But hay, long as you got it fixed ... who cares. :)
6044
General Software Discussion / Re: Install updates and shut down
« Last post by Stoic Joker on June 27, 2008, 06:18 AM »
Stoic Joker: For people who never switch theirs PCs off it's not safer. In contrary, if you don't intentionally open the shutdown dialog, you'll never know such an update is waiting to be performed!
The default settings are set up for the main stream user that treat their computers like any other appliance (e.g. TV is turned off when the show is over...). People that leave their comps on 24/7 (like me) turn off the auto-rebooting defaults to avoid loosing information from large projects that are left open. Both of the other Win update options flag the user from the system tray about the existance of any updates that are available.
6045
I like to keep the C: drive clean, but I've used a variation on this for years. I put all the small installer-less apps in C:\Program Files\Mini-Tools

I also keep a copy on the (easy to sync single) Mini-Tools folder on my ThumbDrive so I have quick access to key utilities when I'm on-site.
6046
I believe that is an arguement that reality proves again and again to be false. Artists will always create, it's what they do. If you need convincing just look to opensource software.

What the world no longer needs is the leeches like the music industry which produce nothing themselves, but simply 'manage' the artists works.
Agreed - People who like to create do so for the shear joy of it.  It's the ones that like to create things to sell that are producing the rush to market crapware that we all abhor.
6047
Wasn't it Metalica that decided to stand up and take a hand in killing the original Napster ... about 4 seconds before their record sales went into the toilet for a few years...?

f0dder's right, the Greed Machine shot themselves in the foot with a bad over reaction to a non issue. 

In the digital world if draw too much attention from the wrong people, you onLine life is pretty much over (e.g. When was the last time the RIAA had a website?). ...You make someone with skill & a lot of free time mad & you got a war on your hands ... Kinda like what's going on now.

They're (wasteing) spending millions of dollars to put kids & little old ladys in jail and the pirates are looking like Robin Hood!



...Crap, I didn't read all of J-Mac's post earlier ... but I'll leave my ramblings any how as the point needs to be over stressed. ;)
6048
Living Room / Re: Rest In Peace - George Carlin - 71
« Last post by Stoic Joker on June 24, 2008, 06:19 AM »
George Carlin was the one and only true sage of the 20th century...he forced us to look at ourselves and the things arround us for what we/they really were, not what we wanted or pretended them to be.

The world is a lessor place to be now,

RIP George Carlin
6049
General Software Discussion / Re: Install updates and shut down
« Last post by Stoic Joker on June 24, 2008, 06:12 AM »
I don't think it has anything to do with necessity. It's just for convenience ... Lazy people tend to skip updates because they're "to busy" to interuppt their computing session to do them. So... MS add an option to automatically kill two birds with one stone. When Too busy person is "done" with the computer they can simply shut it down and it will update itself. Which is why it grabs the default so they don't even have to bother remembering it's there.

Any good netizen (much as the term irks me) should do their part to keep their machine's security up-to-date, this just makes it easier for the less diligent ones.

Note: I spend a ton of time installing security updates on client machines (I refuse to let one go out-the-door unless it's current) and none of the updates have ever required a complete shutdown.
6050
General Software Discussion / Re: NewEgg
« Last post by Stoic Joker on June 24, 2008, 05:55 AM »
one of the things newegg has done for me before (don't remember if i requested or they suggested), is send me a new one before i even sent old back, by charging me and then auto-refunding when they get back the rma one.
It's an option on the request RMA form, I did it once with an Asus Commando motherboard (no support calls required) that died a week after I got it.  Actually as I recall, they just kept the card info "on record" and never charged it because I got the Mboard back within the 2 week grace period.

...Besides there are way too many transaction fees (cost to NewEgg) to do a charge/refund.
Pages: prev1 ... 237 238 239 240 241 [242] 243 244 245 246next