07 Sep 2003 More Linux bits for the WRT54G. Here's a set of utilities in an easily downloadable set. The goal is a full nocat portal. That and reverse engineering some Broadcom Linux drivers.
Meanwhile the Atheros Linux/BSD drivers are available. [from: JB Wifi] [ 07-Sep-03 2:40pm ] OK. This is an unabashed scare story. It hasn't happened yet. It's always possible that it will never happen.
So that's the disclaimer over. Now take a look at the series of articles here. This is a collection of speculations about SOBIG.G which hasn't appeared yet. If the history of the SOBIG series is anything to go by, then it's quite likely to appear on Sept 11th. Hmmm. Interesting date. It's also very likely that SOBIG.G will be further debugged and enhanced using the lessons learnt from the F infection. I'm really expecting SOBIG.G to spread extremely fast and to do some real damage. The really scary bit is that even if SOBIG.G gets stopped, the same will be true of SOBIG.H One of the interesting tidbits is an answer to a question I'd been asking. How did SOBIG.F spread so fast initially? This is the first suggestion I've seen that the initial injection used SPAM techniques to get a few tens of millions of copies of the initial email out into the world in a couple of hours. Some person or group of persons appears to be working pretty hard on this and they appear to be pretty damn clever and definitely not stupid. Which doesn't exactly square with the usual virus writer/hacker image of the confused loner teenager. Which then begs some difficult questions. Just exactly what are they aiming to achieve? This may be a technological war that nobody wins and ends up as a stalemate. In the short term, there are some things that can be done. I've been thinking a lot about what went wrong with SOBIG.F and how it could have been less bad than it was. Here's some suggestions:- - ISPs routinely block port 25 to anywhere but their own relay server. This stops viruses using their own smtp engine to spread. This is already happening. - ISP relay servers should use authentication. This stops viruses from using the relay server directly to send email out. This is something that ISPs should do anyway. I really don't understand why they don't. - Outlook and Outlook Express are changed so that you have to save an attachment to disk before opening it outside the program. This actively discourages users from "just clicking" on attachments. Don't hold your breath for this one. - People stop using auto-responders. Anti-virus programs stop trying to notify the forged from addresses of virus emails. This cuts down the number of completely useless notifications. - Mail servers only send back bounce messages to the envelope from address and not to the from: address. And when they do they send headers and first lines only. Not completely sure about this one. But in theory it sends bounces back to the legitimate sender only. And if there's no obvious legitimate user, then it dumps it in /dev/null instead of clogging up the system. - ISPs start offering anti-virus and anti-spam filtering as a premium service. This takes some of the onus off the end user and rewards the ISP with some extra money to pay for the cost of running it. I really think that BT, AOL, Freeserve, Blueyonder and all the others ought to think seriously about this. Especially as we see more broadband services provided as "Wires only". In all that, for "ISP", read "Corporate IT" as appropriate. And if you manage or run an Anti-virus system TURN OFF THE AUTO-RESPONDER. If you don't you're part of the problem. [from: JB Ecademy] 05 Sep 2003 The Opodo presentation from Wednesday's event is now available for download.
opodo.zip 5Mb You'll be able to watch the presentation very soon in the events area here. [from: JB Ecademy] [ 05-Sep-03 8:10pm ] We've got nearly 200 clubs with less than 3 messages. Many of these have also got less than 3 members. If you own one of these clubs and you're not likely to do anything with it, how about closing it down and deleting it.
I'm pondering doing this automatically and just expiring old clubs that are clearly not going anywhere, but I figured I'd give you the opportunity to do it for me first. [from: JB Ecademy] [ 05-Sep-03 1:10pm ] 04 Sep 2003 Square 7 - Wireless Hotspots, Locations, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth
I'm having trouble understanding exactly what's going on here. Square 7 appear to be a virtual WISP with roaming across ther hotspot networks which appear to include BT Openzone. Their costs are higher than anyone else's at £6.99 per hour, £59.99 per month. The interesting bit is the additional services they're pushing such as VoIP, SMS and Wireless printing. they also seem to have a tie up with Regus. Even with the extra services I can't believe the model is sustainable at those prices. [from: JB Wifi] [ 04-Sep-03 4:10pm ] So old-skool it's cool. drx: Teletext Babez = German Teletext Porn in 40*25. Probably not work safe unless you're working as a programmer for a startup targeting cellphone porn in which case you can put it down to "research".
[from: JB Ecademy] DaveNet : Tips for Candidates re Weblogs : The Dean campaign made a big mistake, imho, by getting into the software business. (my link which appears in the same para on Davenet)
While I agree with the majority of Dave's points in this piece, I'm not sure I understand what point Dave is making here. The Dean campaign is aleady making excellent use of Wikis, Movable Type, Blogger, Meetup.com and many other existing technologies. Meanwhile a small group of programmers have taken it upon themselves to extend Drupal with modules specifically to support local Howard Dean campaign chapters. Drupal is GPL. It's widely respected. It supports all those good technologies like RSS, trackback, Blogger API. The code being written as modules is downloadable and useable by other Drupal sites. So who's being excluded and who's stopping Dean (or other candidates) supporters from using their own tools? I can see a clear need for a packaged community news/forum/group weblog software suite with some common branding. They could have chosen PHP-Nuke, Scoop, Slash or several others but they chose Drupal. And whichever platform they'd started with, you can just about guarantee that they would have found some function that was missing and needed adding. At least whatever they do is GPL, freely downloadable and could easily be used later by a Republican or even a Christian Democrat movement in Germany or Libe-Dem movement in the UK. I think there's a bigger issue here that I keep stumbling across. There are situations where centralization is necessary and where a group community website makes more sense than a loose collection of weblogs or websites. This is why the slashdot style community news site and the PHPBB or vBulletin style Forum site refuse to die even as many of them spin off individually managed weblog sites. We keep adding function to weblogs (trackback, Typepad and so on) to make loose groupings of them work almost like community news sites. We keep adding weblog and individual customization functionality to community software to make them more like individual weblogs. All this is good until you need to tr and make it generate some money. At that point the centralized approach wins hands down. 03 Sep 2003 Pretty good fluff piece with several good quotes from David Hughes about Our sponsors BT Openzone. BT is ready for WiFi explosion [from: JB Wifi]
[ 03-Sep-03 3:40pm ] 02 Sep 2003 Labor Day weekend is over, America is just waking up and turning on their PCs.
And the Virus and Spam emails have just started up again with a vengeance. Grrrrrr! [from: JB Ecademy] According to The Register who are reporting a poll by BT! Yahoo! Broadband! : one in ten Net users would even be prepared to dump a boyfriend or girlfriend to stay online
The mind boggles. [from: JB Ecademy] [ 02-Sep-03 6:40pm ] If you're interested in VoIP over the Internet, check out these links
http://www.freeworldialup.com Directory http://yabb.pulver.com/cgi-bin/yabb/YaBB.cgi Forum http://listserv.pulver.com/archives/fwd.html Mailing List http://freeworldialup.meetup.com Meetings http://www.voipwatch.com News http://www.dslreports.com/forum/voip Forum http://www.voxilla.com News http://www.thevoipforum.com Forum http://www.xten.com/ Free client This is an extremely disruptive technology that challenges the existing Telcos. It's moving fast and is already throwing up legal problems as states in the USA try to deal with "Virtual" VoIP based Telcos such as Vonage and their relation to the large amount of Telco regulations. What's quite puzzling is why MS removed the ability for MSN Messenger to use free VoIP services between v4.7 and v5. In V5 and V6 there is support for VoIP links to the POTS but only via paid premium services. BT had a service to do this and were an MS favoured link in MSN Messenger. But as of Aug 25, they are no longer accepting new customers. One of the big problems with the growth of VoIP is how hard it makes phone taps. Needless to say, many governments don't like this at all. One of the fastest growing areas is international VoIP. This has traditionally been an extremely lucrative market for national Telcos. More disruption. Whenever I raise VoIP someone starts talking about quality of service (QOS) guarantees or the lack of them. Well my experience is that right now quality is at least as good as cellphones. And as bandwidth availability increases this will only improve. Frankly it's good enough for non-emergency calls and close to being good enough for business calls where cost is an issue. Perhaps what's still missing is ease of use and widespread availability. If we can combine an always on client in the PC/Laptop with a bluetooth connection to a cellphone so that you're using the same device, that will happen as well. Is the killer app for Broadband and WiFi hotspots actually voice? If it is it's going to upset a few applecarts. [from: JB Ecademy] 31 Aug 2003 I'm on the second and worst day of a bout of flu. I'm cold, shaking, achey and not entirely here.
Why is the influenza virus so unpleasant? [from: JB Ecademy] [ 31-Aug-03 9:40pm ] 30 Aug 2003 A couple of reporters went on a tour of London's hotspots and wrote up their findings. ZDNet UK - Special Reports - Hot (spot) in the city - a Wi-Fi tour of London. Curiously I've used almost all the hotspots they did and can report similar success. Here's a couple of additional notes.
- Benugo's system needs an always open IE6 window. Once this was in place, I could use Firebird as well but if you close the IE6 window you have to re-login. - The variation in pricing is interesting. £6 per hour, £5.50 per hour, £5 per day and 30 minutes per £2 sandwich. - If you go to the IOD, ask reception for the WAP key. They have SSID turned off so you have to put in the detail blind but it then just works. It's free to members or people leaning against the wall outside. - The Media Centre have WiFi downstairs in the bar. Go and hassle the IT people to let you use it. - There's a free hotspot near the Starbucks and Pret a Manger just north of Soho Sq on Oxford St. This is believed to be from the iLink kiosk put up by Westminster Council. So what's people's favourite cafe or location for using WiFi Internet in London? Can anyone fill in more details? [from: JB Wifi] 29 Aug 2003 Very interesting article in Kuro5hin about private currencies. Here's a couple of bits that caught my eye.
kuro5hin.org || The future of money: private complementary currencies : I am afraid that if the United States had to live by the rules that are imposed on, say, Brazil, the United States of America would become a developing country in one generation. ... We can produce more than enough food to feed everybody, and there is definitely enough work for everybody in the world, but there is clearly not enough money to pay for it all. The scarcity is in our national currencies. In fact, the job of central banks is to create and maintain that currency scarcity. The direct consequence is that we have to fight with each other in order to survive. It's almost enough to make you think that usury (the lending of money for profit) is evil. [from: JB Ecademy] [ 29-Aug-03 2:40pm ] 28 Aug 2003 Here's a big old article from Doc Searls in the Linux Journal that's a must read whther you're into Linux or not. Linux Makes Wi-Fi Happen in New York City. Particularly interesting is a discussion with a Verizon Architect about their plans to WiFi enable public telephone boxes. The service is free to Verizon's business and residential DSL customers. This is something that ought to be attractive to Telcos worldwide. BT, are you listening? [from: JB Wifi]
[ 28-Aug-03 6:10pm ] 26 Aug 2003 Taking cover. BANG, BANG innit! Is this sad or hilarious? A real life renactment of The Getaway complete with side by side pictures from real life and from the game.
Shame more of them weren't dressed as Reservoir Dogs. Playing a gangster in a white cheese cloth shirt hanging out of your trousers just doesn't cut it. There should have been a gratuitous "White Merc with Fins" as well. [from: JB Ecademy] [ 26-Aug-03 5:10pm ] A few people have had problems logging in to the site post the move.
If you see "Untitled document" instead of "Ecademy - Connecting business people" in the title bar of the browser window, then you are viewing the site though a redirect page and not direct. This is happening because your ISP has not yet picked up the DNS changes. This apparently causes a problem with IE accepting the login cookie. The simple answer is to wait until the DNS is picked up correctly. You may be able to solve this temporarily in IE6 by going to Menu | Internet Options | Privacy tab and setting privacy to minimum "Accept all cookies". If you end up in a state where everything looks ok, you've changed your password and you still can't login, then send a message to webmaster@ecademy.com and I'll reset your password. [from: JB Ecademy] Unwire Destination Home announces a free wifi day in the USA with participating hotspot providers. Now there's an idea for the UK. How about it BT? [from: JB Wifi]
AOL launches blogging service Just one catch. You have to have an AOL account. So that's Google, AOL, and coming soon Yahoo. Wot? No Microsoft? [from: JB Ecademy]
25 Aug 2003 Danny has a good analysis here. Assuming they can solve the problems this is one of the most amazing things I've heard in months. Here's the key part of Greg Dyke's speech.
We intend to allow parts of our programmes, where we own the rights, to be available to anyone in the UK to download so long as they don't use them for commercial purposes. Under a simple licensing system, we will allow users to adapt BBC content for their own use. But then it's not really our content - the people of Britain have paid for it and our role should be to help them use it. [from: JB Ecademy] |
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