Original ExistDifferently.com Weblog of David, a Christian Network and Systems Manager, with topics ranging from Apologetics to Worldview, and some crypto, open source, programming, opinion, and daily life thrown in between.

Tue, 2006-10-24 (Oct 24)

Firefox 2.0 is out

Yep. Mozilla Firefox version 2.0 was released today.  I’ve been running it since yesterday.  I agree with Martin McKeay about tabs resizing vs. scrolling I think, I’m not sure yet.  I probably won’t try the Tabbrowser Preferences plugin he mentions yet, I’ll try and get used to the new way for a while first.  The spell check in form fields is nice, although writing this post is the first time I’ve seen it in practice.

One thing I missed at first was the del.icio.us plugin which wasn’t updated for Firefox 2.0 when I installed it, although I just checked and they appear to have released version 1.2 today with updated compatibility.  Firefox refuses to install it however, perhaps the old version is cached?  I’ll have to play with it, but the fact that they updated it makes me happy!

My favorite thing about 2.0? The look of the tabs and buttons look much more polished. The search function is improved, spell check I mentioned, phishing protection is good but I haven’t seen it in action yet (not likely to see it unintentionally!), RSS support slightly improved, and maybe something else I forgot.  Oh yeah, they seem to duplicate IE7’s new features and look in nearly every important way. Which is good, in my opinion…I tried IE7 the day it came out (last week), too, and although I’m sticking with Firefox, IE7 is much improved over IE6 and compared to Firefox 1.5, I was a tad jealous!

Mon, 2006-10-02 (Oct 02)

Toss some Phish in the Tank!

Filed under: Blog,General,Internet,OpenDNS,phishing,Spam,Tech (General) — David @ 14:27

Created by the guys of OpenDNS goodness, PhishTank is a new site that lets you submit emails you’ve received and lets the community verify whether or not the phishing site is working, and if so it lets application developers query to see if a particular URL is a phishing scam or not!  As this grows, it should provide a resource for programs like Mozilla Thunderbird and others to detect scams and help keep the less-informed users out there better protected.

I like the fact that you can submit phish, help verify phish others have submitted, but also you can tell when phish you’ve submitted have been verified by others and what the status is.  Nice to be able to get some feedback to know you’re helping to make a difference with your submissions!

They also have a blog (who doesn’t) if you want to read the musings of the site’s creators.

Thu, 2006-08-10 (Aug 10)

OpenDNS steps up to Cameroon .cm challenge

Filed under: Blog,General,In The News,Internet,Spam,Tech (General) — David @ 14:25

The guys at OpenDNS have responded to my (and the general online community’s) issues with Cameroon and .cm domains by allowing you to turn on the option to fix this individually from their prefs page. Turn on filtering if you want, or leave it off, it’s up to you. They even have a great blog post about it. OpenDNS has been doing a great job of setting up a service that lets the user choose what they want for their scenario, something that’s been lacking in the DNS arena for a long time. There are many charges I’ve seen claiming OpenDNS is trying to “control” DNS and they shouldn’t be doing what they’re doing. But as long as you’ve got control of whether or not to use their service, or even better which options of theirs to apply to you (which this post shows they are actively providing and expanding), they’re only going to help, not hurt, the internet in general. It doesn’t hurt that they’re doing it so openly and transparently on their blog! Thanks to David Ulevitch and his team!

Mon, 2006-08-07 (Aug 07)

Cameroon takes over all .cm typos of .com

The country of Cameroon has redirected all unregistered domains ending in their country top-level domain (TLD) of .cm to advertising pages in attempt to capitalize on people that mistype .com. Slashdot is where I read about it this morning, and their source was an article at CircleID.com, and someone else has more details and opinion over here.

Further investigation by a Slashdot commenter at the article above shows that the ads are being served by a company called “NameView Inc,” which is the owner of the IP block 72.51.27.0 – 72.51.27.255 (72.51.27.0/24), a subnet I’ve easily blocked access to from work (which at least gives an error when mistyping domains as .cm, I haven’t stumbled upon an easy way to redirect .cm to the correct .com using the Microsoft ISA 2004 firewall). OpenDNS doesn’t yet fix this but I’ve asked them to, so we’ll see what their decision is on this! If they re-start typo-correcting .cm to .com as they used to before Cameroon’s new trick, it should just work on top of my firewall block since they won’t be redirecting to the advertising IP addresses I’m blocking!

Wed, 2006-08-02 (Aug 02)

Stephen Colbert and Wikipedia, and how good is it, anyway?

Apparently on his TV show, Steven Colbert actually modified the Wikipedia entry about himself “live” (while the show was being recorded) on-air!  And got a bunch of other users to modify some other pages as an example.  Interesting stuff, especially when compared with an article in Nature showing that the Encyclopaedia Britannica has an error rate of less than but still comparable to Wikipedia.  (Britannica didn’t like Nature’s article and Nature responded…follow the thread here.)
Personally, I like Wikipedia, but I’ll proably stay on the safe side and use it only for basic information and links to more credible information when writing college papers (oh yeah, I’m starting college this month since you probably didn’t know :-)

Sun, 2006-07-30 (Jul 30)

Google Talk now does File Transfers and more!

Hooray! Google Talk (their instant messaging application using a jabber compatible back-end) has finally released an update that lets you do file transfers to/from other users, as well as leave voicemails if they’re offline (and you have a microphone) and display what music you’re currently listening to in your Google Talk status. The new version is numbered 1.0.0.95, which doesn’t show up unless you really look for it :-)
Only some users have gotten the update with the automatic upgrade feature (they roll out new features a few users at a time generally, and this is no different), but if you want the upgrade now, you can grab it from http://dl.google.com/googletalk/googletalk-setup-testing.exe and start transferring!

There’s a good review of the features (how to use them, how well do they work?) over at BigBlueBall.com.

Mon, 2006-07-10 (Jul 10)

OpenDNS: interesting phishing and typo protection

The owner of EveryDNS, David Ulevich, has come out with an interesting new solution to phishing scams and domain name typos: fix it at the DNS level, which I found in an article at Wired.

The new service is free and it’s called OpenDNS.  You use it by changing the DNS server addresses on your maching, router, or wherever you get your DNS settings from to use their two DNS server IPs.  Then, they do some filtering to correct typos such as typing existdifferently.cm, which they automatically fix into existdifferently.com.  They also monitor sites that try to pull of phishing scams and block the addresses of the sites requesting your personal information, so even if you click the link in an email (such as “your PayPal account has been marked for fraud, come enter all your bank accounts, credit cards, and social security number at this link so we can rob you blind!”), if OpenDNS knows about it and you click on the link, you’ll be blocked and instead get a webpage similar to the screenshot shown here.

 Sample OpenDNS Phishing Block

Where do they make their money? Eventually, they plan on offering advertising when you type in a domain name that doesn’t exist and they can’t correct.  For now, they just give you some search results.  This is different from VeriSign’s fiasco Site Finder (see the Wired article above for details), because you’re choosing OpenDNS, it’s not being forced on all internet users worldwide at the authoritative DNS server level!

New Gmail features, just what I wanted!

Just a few weeks ago I was cleaning out my Gmail inbox and wishing for a way to apply new filters retroactively to emails already received.  Apparently my wish has become a reality: Google Operating System reports that this is now possible!  It is enabled on my Gmail account, I just checked.  Maybe it’s available on yours, too. ZDnet’s article says another new feature is to “Delete all spam emails” in the spam folder at once, which doesn’t help me much now as I’ve never let more than a screenful of comments accumulate, but should be helpful in the future as that never lasts long on my email addresses! Not that I need to delete the spam, really, but I’m just obsessive like that…I like Monk because I see too much of him in me a lot of times :-)

Okay, really time for bed now…

Sun, 2006-07-09 (Jul 09)

eBay says Google Check”out” over it’s own PayPal

I’m a bit late on finding this out, but apparently eBay has banned Google Checkout from being used to pay for its auctions.  Something about it being “too new.”  Which is perhaps code for “we don’t want to let our PayPal have any real competition especially with Google so we came up with a lame excuse.”  I don’t actually purchase from eBay often, but next time I log in I may hit their feedback page and let them know I don’t appreciate their decision. I’m trying to get to bed now, so I’m not going to hop over there at this precise moment :-)

Thanks to Robert Accettura’s link for the story, which is also carried over at theunofficialgoogleweblog.

Sat, 2006-07-01 (Jul 01)

Canned some Spam!

Filed under: Blog,General,Internet,Spam — David @ 13:54

Well, I’ve been spending some time deleting spam comments from this blog, which have piled up over the last year. I was doing it 20 at a time from the admin area, then I edited the .php file and told it to show me 500 at a time and did a few that way. Then I just went into the database and found the date of the last real comment, looked at the ID of that, and mass-deleted all comments newer than that comment. I’d already deleted a couple thousand manually at least, but the automatic cleanup deleted another 11,839 comments!!

There shouldn’t be a single spam comment left now, but they keep trying to post more ever minute or less so some will probably get through even though I have a ton blacklisted. I’m working on upgrading to WordPress 2.0.3 (this is 1.2.1) and we’ll see if it has better anti-spam built in. If not, I’m going to implement a Captcha solution where you type a number from an image to post a comment and see if that stops the spam, but it will be stopped, someway, somehow!

I’ll probably be doing the upgrade over the next few days, not sure when specifically (have in-laws coming over tonight though Tuesday), but this site will probably go down for a while while I complete the upgrade. Don’t worry…I’ll be back!! :-)

Married life is good, by the way…since I haven’t posted since my marriage announcement :-)

Wed, 2005-01-19 (Jan 19)

Comment Spam-Be-Gone: Thank You Google!

“Google”:http://www.google.com/ has done it again: solved a major problem on the web. Fixed Comment Spam! It was a blindingly obvious fix, but only with the usual 20/20 hindsight :-) It will take a little while to make a difference in the number of comment attacks, until all blogs are updated to take advantage of it. The major services out there (including LiveJournal for some of my readers) have it or are implementing it right away, in cooperation with Google, Yahoo, and MSN Search. Robert “brought it to my attention”:http://robert.accettura.com/archives/2005/01/18/no-more-spam/ from his blog and I checked out (as you should) this Google post called “Preventing comment spam“:http://www.google.com/googleblog/2005/01/preventing-comment-spam.html on Google’s official blog. All the gory (not really) details.

Very elegant, but it does require the major search engines, the reason for the comment spam problem, to implement ignoring the rel=”nofollow” attribute to all links they index. Fortunately, that’s exactly what has happened, and why this is even news!

So, Google, thank you once times a “googol”:http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=googol&btnG=Google+Search!

Sun, 2005-01-16 (Jan 16)

LibraryLookup

Filed under: Books,General,Internet,Tech (General),Web Development — David @ 01:49

Another awesome library-related web tool (the first I mentioned was “LibraryElf”:http://www.existdifferently.com/archives/2005/01/16/library-elf/) is the “bookmarklet(Google for term to define)”:http://www.google.com/search?q=bookmarklet creation tool over at “Jon Udell’s LibraryLookup”:http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/stories/2002/12/11/librarylookup.html page. If you live in Indianapolis, Indiana (or in the county of Marion in Indiana), you can use his customize tool to “build your own bookmarklet”:http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/stories/2002/12/11/librarylookupGenerator.html that lets you, when browsing Amazon.com or another similar web merchant, click this bookmarklet in your toolbar to open a search for that book at your local library! Easy way to save money buying a book that’s at your library!

This is very cool. If you go to the “Indianapolis-Marion County Public Library(IMCPL)”:http://www.imcpl.org/ you can just drag this link to your bookmarks/favorites/links bar, go to a page at Amazon (see “my LibraryElf post”:http://www.existdifferently.com/archives/2005/01/16/library-elf/ for some Amazon links), and click the bookmarklet to try it yourself! It seems that IMCPL returns the identical match in a list of search results, but it seems the exact ISBN match is the third item down, so click the third ISBN down in the results to see the actual book information.

Note that if you use his “custom bookmarklet generator”:http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/stories/2002/12/11/librarylookupGenerator.html (which I did to create the link above) the values for IMCPL are:


Base URL: http: //catalog.imcpl.org/
Library Name: [whatever you want to call the link]
Vendor: "iPac" is the one you must select

(note: remove the space between the “http” and the “catalog.imcpl.org” above, I had to add it to get it to show up correctly in this post)

I provide this information because it was very hard to figure out that “iPac” was the correct vendor type, since it doesn’t mention that specific vendor anywhere on IMCPL’s site. Try it, you’ll like it!

Library Elf

Filed under: Books,General,Internet,Tech (General),Web Development — David @ 01:02

In news important enough to deserve its own entry, I found a great new little resource over at “LibraryElf“:http://www.libraryelf.com/ that I found through a great little “post at 43 Folders“:http://www.43folders.com/2005/01/lazyweb_library.html. It gives you an RSS feed, and emails, with notifications of books due at the local public library here in town (they added ours, in one day, at my request!) and several others around the country. Granted, the local library already has reminder emails. But this site will not just email you, but text message your cell phone and provide a nice little RSS feed you can stick in your newsreader to let you know when what’s due, or overdue. With customizable reminder times (library’s limited to three days prior to due date), and the ability to notify you when holds are ready to be picked up as well!

For those with big families of book-checker-outers, or those with accounts at multiple libraries that ‘Elf supports, you can add multiple cards to one account and it will track all of them for you on the same system. Makes tracking all your stuff that much easier, even if they don’t let you place holds or auto-renew the books online through their system at the moment.

I’m thinking maybe if they allowed you to place holds on books you find in the library’s catalog (wait, I know the library lets you do this already through their site, let me finish!), but add them to an “interest queue” (see the second comment at that 43 Folders post above, which links to “Netflix for books or ‘interest queues'”:http://www.sauria.com/blog/computers/open_source/osaf/chandler/1129) that monitors when I return books and puts the next book or two on hold for me automatically. That would give the library more books on its shelves (so I don’t have to check out 30 books on a topic because I don’t want to forget to get them, then renew them up to the 15-times max unless someone else requests them). And me a more manageable stack of books to read at once, while letting me get to my “wish list.” But ‘Elf doesn’t place holds yet, so it’s a dream for the moment. Enough from, me go check it out!

Unrelated: “this is cool”:http://www.lazyweb.org/.

Fri, 2004-12-17 (Dec 17)

Shark Tank: Computer Support Humor

Filed under: Blog,Funny,Internet,Personal,Tech (General) — David @ 04:30

Shark Tank his hilarious. You need to read it if you’ve ever helped anyone with computer, or even thought, “man, that person needs to get a clue–and by the way, ha ha ha ha ha!”

It’s really the only humor “blog” (it’s got an RSS feed) I read consistently and completely. I’m starting to read “Dilbert”:http://www.dilbert.com/ regularly though…used to read a lot of Dilbert but just forgot and got busy for a while. Still funny if not a bit recognizable sometimes. Actually I’ve got a pretty darn good setup at my current job, and I think trying the same thing somewhere else would resemble Dilbert quite a bit more, so for now I read Dilbert in a spirit of thankfulness (that I don’t have to deal with it that bad).

I’m in a funny (‘ha ha’-type) mood, at least underneath the, “I’m so tired I should be sleeping rather than blinking my eyes trying to get them to stay open long enough to finish typing this sentence” mood that comes from staying up ’till close to 4:30 in the morning :-) The funny part probably comes from the fact that I’m finally on vacation (read: “not at work” rather than “out of town”) for over two weeks! I don’t have to be back at the office until January 3rd! Of course I’ve still got to be there those three Sundays during that time, but three days instead of the usual fifteen (and that’s on a normal, 40-hour week…what is that again?) isn’t bad.

I have a feeling I’ll be really bored at some point during that time, but for now I’m just tired. The episodes of “Stargate: Atlantis”:http://www.scifi.com/atlantis/ I watched until 2:30am were good though; then I caught up on some news/blogreading, now I’m doing some blogwriting, then I’ll be doing some blogsleeping (not so much…to the blog part anyway, kind of hard to blog while sleeping).

Which leads me into another point: I was thinking earlier how I really find the usage of the phrase “not so much” very amusing throughout the Atlantis series (may be in SG-1, too, but I can’t remember right now. Okay now I can…I know in the first Atlantis episode, Gen. O’Neill is in the helicopter with Maj. Sheppard and they out-maneuver the Ancients’ missile and Sheppard says, “That was different.” O’Neill replies (in traditional Jack style), “For me, not so much.”). I know I heard the phrase in at least one of the three episodes I watched tonight (the first three new ones that are coming Jan 21, 2005…you’ll have to ask if you want to know why I have them already…I still have two more to watch but I figured I’d quit while I was awake). I think it was Maj. Sheppard who said it, but like I said I can’t remember. It’s just one of my favorite quotes right now (when delivered correctly), and I thought I’d mention it. And I not only thought it, but I actually did mention it, as you now know (unless you skipped to the end of the post without reading about it, which I must scold you for (why? I don’t know…)). I also love (nested (inside each other (in case you couldn’t tell))) parentheses…

Thu, 2004-12-16 (Dec 16)

Google to Index Books

Filed under: Blog,General,Internet — David @ 18:50

“WorldMagBlog”:http://www.worldmagblog.com is reporting that “Google”:http://www.google.com/ is scanning and indexing the colletctions of books from several major universities and public libraries (if you don’t recognize half the names on the list of sources what planet are you on?) and will have the full text available to search and read by the middle of 2005 (if copyright permits, otherwise an excerpt can be found with a search). Google is becomming more and more useful; heck the other search engines should finish taking their nap and let Google just take over the world at this point. Phone numbers, scholarly journals, as-you-type suggestions, SMS text message searches, locality-based searches, Firefox Start Page hosting…and that’s just the short list!

Can you tell I like Google?

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