June 28, 2002

Internet group leaves ordinary surfer high and dry

http://www.cnn.com/2002/TECH/internet/06/28/tech.icann.reut/index.html

"BUCHAREST, Romania (Reuters) -- The group that oversees the Internet's
name system voted on Friday to exclude ordinary Web surfers from its
board in a move critics say allows mainstream interests to tighten
their grip on the online world. "

Posted by Steve at 01:06 PM

dual-headed laptop..

http://www.xentex.com/voyager/index.html

13.3" weighs 13lbs...

Posted by Steve at 01:06 PM

Built for Use: Driving Profitability Through the User Experience

http://www.humanlogic.com/

Should be a "must" read for any redesign/design activities on web sites...

A review from /.
http://books.slashdot.org/books/02/06/28/1354254.shtml?tid=98

Posted by Steve at 12:06 PM

new ocean monitoring satellite

http://aqua.nasa.gov/

Monitor the oceans from 705km in space...

Cool first pix though..

Posted by Steve at 12:06 PM

June 27, 2002

clearing house for spammers and sources...

http://cluelessmailers.org/

Worth a review if you get lots of spam... and want to know who/where
it's coming from..

Posted by Steve at 03:06 PM

Here's a workstation for you!

http://www.snowcrash.se/products/netsurfer/index.phtml

MSTA!

Posted by Steve at 09:06 AM

Akamai and Speedera have fun with the FBI!

http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/25915.html

Things are fun all over...

Posted by Steve at 09:06 AM

wanna see if yer credit card # has been stolen?

http://www.cnn.com/2002/TECH/internet/06/26/identity.theft.ap/index.html

An online list of numbers gleaned from chat rooms, etc.

Wanna give 'em yours to add to the list? ;-}

Posted by Steve at 09:06 AM

blocking mobile phone signals in cinemas and theatres..

http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_2067000/2067672.stm

Those clever japanese....

Posted by Steve at 09:06 AM

want to leave your name on asteroid?

http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_2067000/2067694.stm

Hmmm, might have to go and sign up!

Posted by Steve at 09:06 AM

get your own 'Crystal Ball'

http://www.eet.com/sys/news/OEG20020626S0037

What a display! Real 3D images ...

Posted by Steve at 09:06 AM

Caffeine 'repels slugs'

http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_2067000/2067214.stm

Certainly doesn't perform that way at my office.... ;-}

Posted by Steve at 09:06 AM

June 26, 2002

Does beheading hurt?

http://www.newscientist.com/lastword/answers/719body.jsp?tp=body1

My oh my... WCOM execs anyone?

Posted by Steve at 02:06 PM

beat the chickens at tic-tac-toe...

http://www.vegas4visitors.com/column/gingerpho.htm

.. and win $10K

Posted by Steve at 01:06 PM

site dedicated to 'hybrid' cars

http://www.hybridcars.com/

opportunities seem to be picking up.

Posted by Steve at 01:06 PM

the 'ultimate' drill-down site...

http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/java/scienceopticsu/powersof10/index.html

This is pretty amazing..

Posted by Steve at 01:06 PM

spam laws, by state

http://www.spamlaws.com/state/

Could be useful!

Posted by Steve at 12:06 PM

salon.com close to broke...

http://biz.yahoo.com/e/020626/salnc.html

Posted by Steve at 12:06 PM

thought for today...

In the land of the dark, the Ship of the Sun is driven by the Grateful
Dead.
-- Egyptian Book of the Dead

Posted by Steve at 10:06 AM

more background on M$ Palladium..

http://www.extremetech.com/article2/0,3973,282114,00.asp

Ineresting reading..

Posted by Steve at 10:06 AM

Sun processor news...

http://www.siliconstrategies.com/story/OEG20020625S0037

sounds like they're expanding into more low-end chip sets to compete with
Intel.

Posted by Steve at 09:06 AM

Cornell demos single-atom transistor

http://www.eet.com/at/news/OEG20020625S0043

Used a Cobalt atom...

Posted by Steve at 08:06 AM

buggy software costs $60B a year..

http://www.computerworld.com/managementtopics/management/itspending/story/0,10801,72245,00.htm
The poor user community bears half the load...

Posted by Steve at 07:06 AM

buggy software costs $60B a year..

http://www.computerworld.com/managementtopics/management/itspending/story/0,10801,72245,00.html

The poor user community bears half the load...

Posted by Steve at 07:06 AM

1 TB disk on laptop?

http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/innovation50702.asp

Sounds like we could be seeing it Real Soon Now...

Posted by Steve at 07:06 AM

June 25, 2002

bigger toys, for bigger boys...

http://www.kloudbusters.org/motors.html

Rocket Man!!!

Posted by Steve at 02:06 PM

whois changes for the future

various documents of possible interest

http://www.dnso.org/clubpublic/nc-whois/Arc00/msg00454.html

Powerpoint presentation for the ICANN meeting..

http://www.dnso.org/clubpublic/nc-whois/Arc00/msg00458.html

Posted by Steve at 11:06 AM

Don't get out much?

http://www.webworldcam.com/

See the world through web cams...

Posted by Steve at 11:06 AM

victorian post cards..

http://www.rebaspostcards.com/

low tech..

Posted by Steve at 11:06 AM

200TB NAS with Fluid File System

http://www.zambeel.com/products/index.html

Come to papa!

Posted by Steve at 10:06 AM

Collaboratively creating a hobo-language for free wireless networking

http://www.blackbeltjones.com/warchalking/

Look for the secret marks and find your available access point....

Posted by Steve at 10:06 AM

more verisign fans...

http://www.verisignoff.org/

Posted by Steve at 10:06 AM

robots called electronic driver of the 21st century

http://www.eet.com/sys/news/OEG20020624S0052

Klatu Barada Nikto

Posted by Steve at 10:06 AM

Get ready to receive your "Longhorn"

http://www.fortune.com/indexw.jhtml?channel=artcol.jhtml&doc_id=208505

We should all be afraid... ;-}

Posted by Steve at 10:06 AM

Capt Kirk's bridge command chair

http://cgi.liveauctions.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=1834314676

For sale on ebay!

Posted by Steve at 10:06 AM

John Travola, new 747 pilot...

http://www.thisislondon.com/dynamic/news/story.html?in_review_id=622870&in_review_text_id=592959

is NOT going to trade in his 707 and get a 747....

Posted by Steve at 10:06 AM

June 24, 2002

OpenSSH vulnerability..

http://www.mindrot.org/pipermail/openssh-unix-announce/2002-June/000041.html

If you're using it you better upgrade!

Posted by Steve at 10:06 PM

The next governor of California..

http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/entertainment/newsid_2062000/2062584.stm

Believe it!

Posted by Steve at 02:06 PM

new CD writer can las

http://www.yamaha.co.jp/english/product/computer/extra/products/crwf1/crwf1.html

Sounds kind of cool actually...

"...Laser Labeling System, which allows graphics and text to be burnt onto
CD-R disc, eliminating the need for labels. Customers can put graphics,
such as signatures, logos, memorandums, and photo images onto CD-R's
unused area after data writing."

Posted by Steve at 01:06 PM

The Apocolypse is at hand....

http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,265345,00.html

"The biggest book of the summer is about the end of the world. It's also a
sign of our troubled times..."

So the article begins..

Posted by Steve at 12:06 PM

FEMA to control wireless spectrum

http://www.usatoday.com/life/cyber/tech/fcw2.htm

Hmmm, Anyone else wonder why the FCC wouldn't be doing this?

Posted by Steve at 10:06 AM

EBay to offer health insurance to [small] merchants

http://www.usatoday.com/life/cyber/2002/06/24/ebay-insurance.htm

Even more reason to come up with a plan to sell "stuff" via ebay..

Posted by Steve at 10:06 AM

destined to be a classic driving movie..

http://hellsgate.online.ee/%7Emait/fahrschule.swf

needs flash, but it's a hoot!

Posted by Steve at 10:06 AM

100 years of Popular Mechanics covers..

http://popularmechanics.com/albums/index.phtml?dispsize=400

Pretty amazing stuff here just scanning covers..

Posted by Steve at 10:06 AM

non-green us currency..

http://news.ft.com/servlet/ContentServer?pagename=FT.com/StoryFT/FullStory&c
=StoryFT&cid=1024578118127&p=1012571727162

If you didn't see any of this yet...

Posted by Steve at 09:06 AM

M$ Secure PC?

http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/4/25852.html

Oxymoron?

Posted by Steve at 09:06 AM

June 21, 2002

Damn astronauts, anyway...

http://www.brokennewz.com/worldnews/spacestation.asp

Maybe it was the cat...

Posted by Steve at 02:06 PM

new cd's size of quarter, hold 1G

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=70&ncid=70&e=5&u=/cn/20020620/tc_cn/937621

Of course you won't be able to modify them the way you can with nickels....
(http://www.hobonickel.net/)

Posted by Steve at 02:06 PM

text images..

http://www.text-image.com/

Anyone remember doing this on line printers?..

Posted by Steve at 09:06 AM

EyeSim, new twist on Xeyes....

http://cim.ucdavis.edu/Eyes/Version1/eyesim.htm

Darn, I was hoping for something to peel back the "parts"...

Posted by Steve at 09:06 AM

ouch, more dissatisfaction with ICANN

http://radio.weblogs.com/0108486/misc/icannstatementfinal-markle.doc

...

Posted by Steve at 08:06 AM

June 20, 2002

Need to translate an SMS message?

http://www.transl8it.com/index.cgi?convert

the phrase: "Don't you wish that you could be happy too?"
becomes: "Don't U wsh dat U c%d b :-) 2?"

Posted by Steve at 12:06 PM

robots escape when handler's back is turned

http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2002/06/20/1023864460978.html

It is about time for the new terminator movie isn't it? ;-}

Posted by Steve at 08:06 AM

new long distance surveilance cameras..

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/06/20/technology/circuits/20SPYY.html

Be afraid...

Posted by Steve at 08:06 AM

June 19, 2002

radio controlled helo with digital video camera..

http://www.apple.com/hotnews/articles/2002/05/draganflyer/

Gott have one of these...

Posted by Steve at 04:06 PM

wow, microwaves will read barcode on frozen dinners...

http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn?pagename=article&node=&contentId=A8275-2002May25¬Found=true

Don't need to RTFM any more!

Posted by Steve at 04:06 PM

breaking water balloons in zero g..

http://microgravity.grc.nasa.gov/balloon/blob.htm

Cool videos!

Posted by Steve at 04:06 PM

carrots used to be purple!

http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_1991000/1991768.stm

Until in the 17th century they were bred orange by patriotic Dutch
growers to match the flag...

Posted by Steve at 04:06 PM

machine of all machines....

http://www.plustech.fi/Walking1.html

Bet this one could win on Robotica!

Posted by Steve at 03:06 PM

build yer own home?

http://ownerbuilderbook.com/book/Ch1.cfm

Be your own general contractor..

Posted by Steve at 02:06 PM

java back in M$ XP? sort of...

http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/4/25776.html
http://news.com.com/2100-1001-937053.html

Ah m$...

"Microsoft said it would include its own Java software in the Service Pack
1
update to Windows XP due late this summer. In the long term, though, the
company plans to remove Java from Windows altogether."

What a waste... you pick the piece ;-}

Posted by Steve at 02:06 PM

IAB no likee ICANN

http://www.iab.org/DOCUMENTS/icann-response.html

yikes!

Posted by Steve at 09:06 AM

I liked this one...

http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/31/10719.html

Posted by Steve at 09:06 AM

June 18, 2002

wow, this sound familiar

http://msnbc.com/news/768401.asp

excerpt:

...because “code and fix” leads to such extensive, costly rounds of
testing, even successful projects can be wildly inefficient. Incredibly,
software projects often devote 80 percent of their budgets to repairing
flaws they themselves produced — a figure that does not include the even
more costly process of furnishing product support and developing patches for
problems found after release.
“System testing goes on for almost half the process,” Humphrey says.
And even when “they finally get it to work, there’s still no design.” In
consequence, the software can’t be updated or improved with any assurance
that the updates or improvements won’t introduce major faults. “That’s the
way software is designed and built everywhere — it’s that way in spaceships,
for God’s sake.”

Posted by Steve at 01:06 PM

June 17, 2002

Become an Atlas Pyrotechnician

http://www.atlaspyro.com/technician.asp

Pyro, need I say more...

Posted by Steve at 10:06 AM

learn about sun products..

http://sun-vbots.com/cd-html2/comic2/

Here's where Matt learns his stuff....

Splains a whole lot... ;-}

Posted by Steve at 10:06 AM

royalties on used cd's...

http://www.sduniontribune.com/news/business/20020614-9999_1b14usedcds.html

They just never give up do they...

If this succeeds do you think the book publishers won't follow suit?

Posted by Steve at 09:06 AM

June 14, 2002

system process monitoring...

http://linux.oreillynet.com/pub/a/linux/2002/05/09/sysadminguide.html

looks like it has one of the tools referenced might be useful..

monit web site: http://www.tildeslash.com/monit/

extract:

monit
Finally, I found Jan-Henrik Haukeland's monit on freshmeat.net. (I installed
version 2.2.1 for this article; the newest version is 2.3, the most
significant change of which is the addition of service grouping.) I chose to
implement it because, unlike supervise, it integrated easily into my
existing server, and, unlike mon, its feature set mapped very neatly onto my
requirement set. monit does just about exactly what I need a DMD to do, and
it doesn't do much else besides, which made it easier to install, configure,
and forget about.

While monit lacks some of the features of mon, the features missing are ones
I decided I could do very nicely without. Because it is too often overlooked
and undervalued, let me say that chief among monit's virtues is its
excellent documentation, which the author conveniently provides in man form.

As for its feature set, monit runs as a daemon; can start, stop, and restart
the service daemons it monitors; can manage services individually or in
groups; logs either to its own logfile or to syslog; has a very comfortable
configuration and control syntax; can do runtime and TCP/IP port checking
and knows about the protocol of most common service types, including HTTP,
FTP, SMTP, POP, IMAP, NNTP; can be configured to take actions depending on
the stability of a service over some time slice; will compute and monitor
MD5 checksums of service binaries; and does alert notification via email.
(monit also has a built-in Web server for remote control, but the author
does not recommend using it over the public Web; I enthusiastically endorse
that recommendation, at the very least until monit gets Digest
Authentication, as opposed to Basic.)

Written in C, installing monit on my Linux box was as simple as invoking the
standard:

[root@chomsky monit-2.2.1]# ./configure; make
[root@chomsky monit-2.2.1]# make installOnce installed, you have two main
tasks before you: first, you must gather the information monit needs in
order to manage the services you want it to manage; and, second, you have to
configure monit.

I decided I wanted it to monitor the daemons which provide SSH, HTTP, and
DNS on my remote box. (I also have monit watching over my RDBMS and SMTP
daemons, too, but for the purposes of this article, I'll only show
configuration examples for the first three.) I subsequently started using
monit to monitor a misbehaving Zope server, which I describe below.

As for the information you need to gather about each service, that's basic
stuff and you shouldn't have any trouble; you need start and stop scripts
and the fully qualified path name of the service PID file. The basic runtime
setup of monit is to create a /root/.monitrc, which contains configuration
information for each daemon to be monitored, plus general configuration
directives in the prologue. monit is then invoked thus (you can change some
configuration directives via command-line switches, but I like to put that
kind of stuff into the control file, whenever possible):

[root@chomsky monit-2.2.1]# monit -c /path/to/.monitrcA working monitrc file
looks something like this:

(1) #
(2) #$Id: monit.html,v 1.1 2002/04/30 16:52:36 kclark Exp $
(3) #
(4)
(5) set daemon 300
(6) set logfile /var/log/monit
(7)
(8) check apache with pidfile /var/log/httpd/httpd.pid
(9) start = "/root/apache-start"
(10) stop = "/root/apache-stop"
(11) checksum /usr/local/bin/httpd
(12) timeout(3, 3) and alert kendall@monkeyfist.com
(13) host foo.com port 80 protocol http
(14) host bar.org port 80 protocol http
(15)
(16) check sshd with pidfile /var/run/sshd.pid
(17) start = "/root/sshd-start"
(18) stop = "/root/sshd-stop"
(19) timeout(3, 3) and alert kendall@monkeyfist.com
(20) checksum /usr/local/sbin/sshd
(21)
(22) check named with pidfile /var/run/named.pid
(23) start = "/root/named-start"
(24) stop = "/root/named-stop"
(25) checksum /usr/local/sbin/named
(26) timeout(3, 3) and alert kendall@monkeyfist.com
(27) port 53 use type udpThe first few lines are obvious. I use RCS to
manage important config files, especially since I share sysadmin duties with
a fellow geek. That way we don't step on each other's toes. Lines 5 and 6
contain general monit configuration directives; the first tells monit how
often I want it to poll each service, and the second tells it where to write
its logfile.

The other directives that are legal anywhere in the control file include
setting an SMTP server for monit alerts, setting the port number of its
built-in HTTP server, and specifying host names allowed to use the HTTP
server, including username-password pairs. One important note: monit uses
"localhost" as the SMTP server by default; it may make sense in some cases
to set it to a secondary SMTP server, if you have one, in case your SMTP
daemon is misbehaving. Postfix has been amazingly reliable for me, so I
haven't specified another SMTP server.

The configuration of daemons for monit to monitor is fairly straightforward,
but there are some features covered in the man page I don't discuss here, so
it's worth a look. Lines 16 through 20 tell monit how to monitor my SSH
daemon, which was my original reason for installing a DMD.

The format of service-monitoring statements in the control file is flexible,
but monit expects the first line to be of the form: check [service name]
with pidfile [fully qualified path name of PID file]. The start and stop
declarations are not mandatory, but monit is less useful if it has no way to
restart a daemon when it has died.

I ask monit to checksum the binary, because it's free and it would be nice
to know if it is tampered with. The timeout(foo,bar) and alert statement is
very useful; it instructs monit that if the service has to be restarted foo
times within bar cycles (in my case, 3 times in 3 cycles, or 900 seconds), I
want to be alerted, since that's usually an indication something needs
explicit sysadmin attention.

Lines 13 and 14 are worth mentioning. They tell monit to not only check the
Apache binary but also to check Apache at the HTTP protocol level, for which
port and which virtual host. In the case that Apache stops being able to
answer requests -- because, say, one of my users has published an article
everyone suddenly wants to read -- but is still running, monit may be able
to alert me more quickly than I would otherwise be alerted.

One of monit's most valuable bits, which wasn't immediately apparent to me
when I installed and configured it, is that it can be run by any user on my
system, which means users can use it to monitor daemons which they are
running, whether short or long term.

I run the Zope Web application server under a special user account, and
lately it's been falling down more often than I'd like, sometimes in the
middle of the night, which means its sites are unreachable until the next
day. So I created another control file, installed it in the Zope user
account, and spawned another monit instance to monitor Zope:

(1) set daemon 240
(2) set logfile /home/k/monit.log
(3)
(4) check Zope with pidfile
/home/k/Zope-2.4.0-linux2-x86/var/zProcessManager.pid
(5) start = "/home/k/Zope-2.4.0-linux2-x86/start"
(6) stop = "/home/k/Zope-2.4.0-linux2-x86/stop"
(7) alert restart
(8) timeout(3, 3) and alert kendall@monkeyfist.com
(9) host foobarbaz.com port 8080 protocol httpIn this case, I want a
separate logfile, and I want monit to check on Zope every 4 minutes, rather
than every 5. This capability is useful in more than production-service
monitoring cases. For example, I'm starting work on a WebDAV server in
Python, and I expect it will be very unstable at first. I will likely use a
monit daemon to keep my prototype WebDAV server running continuously while I
iterate through develop-debug cycles. I can set the daemon polling time very
low, to say 60 seconds, so that I never have to wait more than a minute to
retest the server, and I don't have to continually restart it by hand.

Posted by Steve at 03:06 PM

doesn't this strike a cord..

http://www.userland.com/whatIsStopEnergy

Stop Energy and Forward Motion.

We've all seen it!

Posted by Steve at 01:06 PM

June 13, 2002

VeriSign switching from BIND to ATLAS for DNS...

http://www.nwfusion.com/news/2002/133242_06-10-2002.html

Always the last to know....

Posted by Steve at 02:06 PM

June 12, 2002

Price Waterhouse Cooper consulting changing their name to "Monday"

http://www.msnbc.com/news/764333.asp

Anybody want to be "Wednesday"?

Posted by Steve at 02:06 PM

DRAM news..

http://www.siliconstrategies.com/story/OEG20020524S0087

OEM prices currently running @ $3.50 per 128Mbit...

BUT there may start being shortages in Q3..

Posted by Steve at 09:06 AM

M$ registry snapshot program...

http://regshot.ist.md/

Looks useful..

Posted by Steve at 09:06 AM

new bluetooth 2.0 spec leaks....

http://www.commsdesign.com/story/OEG20020611S0033

going to 4, 8 and 12 Mbps

Posted by Steve at 09:06 AM

June 11, 2002

IBM Terabit per square inch technology

http://www.cnn.com/2002/TECH/industry/06/11/ibm.storage.breakthrough.ap/index.html

more ultradense technology news....

25 million pages of text on a postage stamp size...

could put 10-15 Gig in a multifunctional wristwatch...

sheesh...

Posted by Steve at 09:06 AM

June 10, 2002

state of Internationalized Domain Names (Multilingual Domain Names)

http://radio.weblogs.com/0108486/2002/06/05.html#a25

There's still a long and winding road.... ;-}

Posted by Steve at 03:06 PM

verisign days off news...

http://www.usatoday.com/money/tech/2002-06-06-forced-vacations.htm
http://news.zdnet.co.uk/story/0,,t300-s2111168,00.html

Sounds like we'll be enjoying extended holidays for Labor Day and
Thanksgiving...

Posted by Steve at 02:06 PM

IBM Servers beat up on Dell Servers..

http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/61/25652.html

Price and performance.

Posted by Steve at 02:06 PM

electronically controlled tennis rackets...

http://www.eet.com/sys/news/OEG20020607S0077

In use today!

Posted by Steve at 01:06 PM