BottomFeeder
November 20, 2003 21:19:13.018
If you downloaded a development build (the 7.2 one) of BottomFeeder recently - for a non-Windows platform - you got a broken build. I had loaded some beta code into the base image that is for Windows, and it was causing problems on non-Windows platforms. A new, fixed build is up. If you aren't having a problem, then you don't need to worry about this
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general
November 20, 2003 12:39:43.448
Spotted on Gizmodo:
You know how cellphones always seem to ring at the most inopportune moments? Well it can't get more inopportune than this:A Belgium newspaper, Gazet van Antwerpen is reporting that the family of a recently deceased motorcyclist are suing the funeral firm they chose, after the dead mans cell phone started ringing - from inside the coffin... The night before the funeral, the family gathered at the undertakers for a final private farewell, when they heard the sound of his cellphone ringing...
Dohhh
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tv
November 20, 2003 11:57:45.301
Turning from movies to TV, I was very pleased with last night's Angel episode. The season's story arc is now clear - we have a new enemy, and the gang has been misled as to who or what it is. Last night's episode saw Spike and Angel competing to prove which one of them is the prophesied champion. I won't post any spoilers on that, since I know that readers in Australia are behind the US episode wise - suffice to say that the season, which was looking a little muddled - seems to have taken a turn for the better
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movies
November 20, 2003 11:51:35.049
I ran right out and bought the Two Towers Extended DVD yesterday - and then proceeded to sit down and watch it. With the Fellowship DVD, I felt like a lot of the added material was not strictly necessary. I liked the extended DVD, but it didn't seem to me that it was a huge improvement over the theatrical release. With Two Towers, I do feel like that. There are new scenes with Pippin, Merry, and the Ents - and I think they add to the film. Interestingly, they have a scene that merges in a bit of the Bombadil material - old man Willow. While Pippin and Merry drink the Ent droughts (and get taller), there's a nearby Willow tree. When they get too close, it hauls them in, just as it happened in the old forest in the first book. In this case, Jackson has Treebeard rescue them. Not sure that adds a lot, but it was nice to see the Ent droughts.
There's also a few new scenes that show Eowyn's attachment to Aragorn - something the theatrical release hinted at, but really didn't do justice to. One of the nicest additions was a flashback for Faramir - in the scene where he's sitting alone, before he goes to question Frodo about the ring - there's a flashback to the retaking of Osgiliath. Boromir is the hero, and Denethor is shown denegrating Faramir - something the books went into, but was completely lost from the theatrical release.
I was very happy to see the Huorns march - When the Uruks flee Helm's Deep, they are destroyed by the Huorns sent by Treebeard. The theatrical release didn't even allude to that - the extended DVD shows the Huorns marching off, and shows the Uruks being destroyed - as the Rohirrim look on astonished. There's also a scene added between Gandalf and Aragorn where Gandalf explains that the Ents have woken up, and will play a role in the downfall of Saruman.
All in all, I really like the additional material. The only dark cloud I see is this news on the Saruman scenes being cut from the theatrical release of ROTK. on the one hand, as a huge fan of the books, I dislike this. On the other hand, I've wondered for quite awhile how the whole scouring of the Shire and Saruman's fall piece could be anything but an anti-climax in film terms. It'll be in the extended edition (another whole year of waiting!) - but I think I understand the decision. Maybe I'll have a different opinion after I see the third film; we'll see then.
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general
November 20, 2003 11:12:53.799
If you take a look at the main Cincom website, you'll see an announcement at the top:
Please note, our websites will be down Saturday, 10AM-4PM EST for scheduled maintenance. If you need assistance during this time, please call 1-800-2CINCOM.
So an FYI - we'll be offline for those hours on Saturday.
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cst
November 20, 2003 10:32:32.670
The Fall 2003 Non-Commercial release of Cincom Smalltalk is ready for download. If you haven't registered before, register here. If you have registered, then just use the link that came in the email you were sent when you registered.
We are working on a network installer, and should have something to post fairly soon - within a week or less, I'm hoping. That will be a small download - on the order of 3-4 MB. Starting the downloaded application will run a version of the VisualWorks Installer that will look for components from the website instead of from an ISO or CD.
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law
November 20, 2003 9:10:01.080
The Register reports that SCO is nothing if not ambitious - this year, they will be serving Linux customers (likely large shops that have been public about their usage). In particular, SCO mentioned that HP's indemnification of customers was going to get expensive. Now comes word that they plan to target BSD systems:
This week The SCO Group hinted that BSD distributions would be next under the Utah microscope. SCO carefully safeguards the intellectual property rights to UNIX
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java
November 20, 2003 9:04:42.342
Wired has a story about Sun's Java strategy:
From the beginning, Sun intended Java to be primarily a loss leader for hardware. The more Java-enabled Web sites there were and the greater the number of programmers using Java for ecommerce software, the bigger the (perceived) need for Sun's high-end Web servers. The company made the decision not to sell Java by itself for fear of cutting into server sales.
For a while, this strategy worked fine. In the late '90s, Java helped sell untold Sparc servers - untold because Sun's not saying. But then Dell came along and cut Sun off at the knees with cheap servers running Linux software. IBM and BEA Systems, meanwhile, latched on to Java and sold it in the lucrative market for application server software, which helps link computers to backend databases over the Web. Today, those companies own a majority of the $3.9 billion annual business. "When Java hit, it was the greatest thing since canned beer," says John Rymer, a vice president at Giga Information Group. "Sun began with the upper hand, but it lacked a software strategy that was worth a damn."
With all the losses and job cuts, I wonder if the financial types at Sun have finally started asking hard questions about JavaSoft? Loss leaders are great - unless they aren't leading to anything. The fascinating thing to me is that Sun is starting to get the same rap that I had to fight back in the day at ParcPlace:
Will the new approach work? Hotels.com director of architecture Brad Schneider likes the pricing scheme for the Java Enterprise System, but his bosses are freaked out about buying from a company they think could go under any day now. "People talk about Sun like it might have the doors chained," he says.
I can tell you from experience that it's extremely difficult to sell once people start worrying about your future. The toughest part is, reality doesn't matter - it's all about perception.
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general
November 20, 2003 8:41:35.843
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development
November 19, 2003 20:03:47.783
Novell is backing Mono - which makes it much, much more likely that Mono will be viable. If this works out, Sun will lose the cross platform space they currently dominate with Java.
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development
November 19, 2003 18:32:51.210
It's amusing that people still think of Smalltalk as big. The entire VisualWorks install - uncompressed - on this Windows box is about 300 MB. That's for the entire thing, all add ons, everything. So here I am, downloading the Oracle client libraries for Windows - 596 MB compressed. 596 MB compressed, for the client libraries? I think people need to look at other things when they use the word bloat
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news
November 19, 2003 17:06:05.981
Apparently you can get a grant for anything in some places: The Register reports on research into the dangers of walking and talking on a cell phone.
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security
November 19, 2003 16:57:10.065
A Whole Lotta Nothing reports that Lowes has some security problems with their Wireless networking. Kind of makes you wonder how safe any transaction is, if this is the kind of security stores use...
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marketing
November 19, 2003 12:36:03.529
Jonathan Scwartz on Longhorn:
SG: Notes and Groove creator Ray Ozzie says he's very excited about Longhorn " particularly its validation of Groove innovations in peer-to-peer and XML now baked in to the operating system.
Schwartz: That's a dangerous thing though. The fact that they're baking those things into the OS means that they don't need Ray's product.
SG: He sees the opportunity to build apps on top of that infrastructure.
Schwartz: No company has ever monetized Microsoft's infrastructure in the history of Microsoft.
Hmmm. You can extend that line of reasoning. What should and should not be shipped bundled with the OS? Networking? GUI Shell? File System? The answers to these questions change over time; they are different now than they were 10 years ago. The fact that Scwartz seems to not get that isn't a good thing for a supposed visionary. He goes on with this:
Schwartz: Java clearly presents an environment architected for networked delivery of code. Unlike the Windows environment, our assumption Day One was that we needed to build a network platform -- not a single destination platform -- one that assumed that code couldn't be malicious, that everyone would in fact have malicious intent " and therefore would have to be protected not only from others, but from themselves.
SG: You're saying Longhorn represents Windows getting to where you already are?
Schwartz: I think Longhorn represents an attempt to rearchitect Windows to achieve the same attributes that we have with Java. By the time they deliver, the danger they may face is that they've improved upon a problem space for which the marketplace has already identified alternate solutions.
Oh, you mean the market embraced Java for client side apps? Which planet does this guy live on? Java mostly lives on the server - it's been a roaring success there, but it's failed on the client for the same reason that our product, VisualWorks didn't get that much traction on the desktop - end users really, really want apps to look and feel the same. We are addressing this by moving towards Pollock - which will ultimately yield native widget interfaces in a cross platform fashion. Schwartz still hasn't figured out something I learned a long time ago - people don't want a portable LCD interface.
Read the rest of the article as well - I think Schwartz is off in la la land. He has a whole riff on how the Java phones are (and will continue to be) more popular than the MS SmartPhones - apparently, he's forgotten all about the whole Palm/WinCE thing. I wouldn't bet against MS on the SmartPhone; that's why it's one of the platforms we intend to support soon.
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BottomFeeder
November 19, 2003 12:04:51.068
BottomFeeder in 7.2 is on the site for download. If you grabbed it yesterday, you may have noticed a problem viewing images - there was a change in the way mime entities were decoded by the VW http framework, and I had to adjust my usage of the API - grab the update with the update tool, and images will be working again.
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security
November 19, 2003 9:22:15.120
Scoble notices that people are still angry over Blaster, and begs for indulgence, since they are working on the problem. Hmm. maybe if Outlook and Outlook Express hadn't shipped in default to script kiddie heaven mode, we wouldn't have this problem, now would we? I'm glad MS is thinking about these issues now - but I refuse to cut the complete bozos on the Outlook team any slack for the stupid security decisions they have been making for years now. What were they thinking??
Yes, all software ships with bugs and issues - Cincom Smalltalk is no exception (I have already reported a few bugs to engineering for 7.2, which is going to be shipping to customers tomorrow). However, the decision to ship Outlook and Outlook Express in bozo mode for years is a much bigger problem. The internet will be plagued by that mistake for years to come, since many users will never apply patches or toggle the settings to safe. I'm not normally in favor of class action suits, but in this case - I think it's the sort of thing that would wake MS, and the industry as a whole, up. Ask yourself whether hardware with similar problems wouldn't have generated lawsuits by now...
In the meantime, do the world a favor - next time a non-technical person asks you for advice on a new system, steer them to a Mac. Maybe that will get Microsoft's attention
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BottomFeeder
November 19, 2003 0:09:30.824
If you take a look at the BottomFeeder downloads page - down under the dev builds - you'll see that there are some new platforms - Windows CE (4) on the ARM and x86 cpus. These builds (and the rest of the dev builds) are based on VisualWorks 7.2 (which will be formally released on November 20th). If you are a current BottomFeeder user and would like to try the dev build, you'll need to re-install (make sure to backup all the files in the btfSave directory first). The new build will read the same files; this is basically the 3.2 version ported to VW 7.2. If you do try this out, please email me with any problems
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blog
November 18, 2003 15:07:16.492
John Porcaro illustrates the value of corporate blogs - it's a way to get in past all the layers of support/marketing/sales people that normally talk to (and sometimes unintentionally impede) customers and prospects. Blogs - and the contact with real insiders they allow - form a hole in the firewall as it were.
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law
November 18, 2003 9:06:01.648
The Register reports that SCO's forward looking reports admit the obvious - their anti-Linux stance is hurting their existing business, and is likely to hurt it more. Don't everyone feel sorry for them all at once now....
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news
November 18, 2003 9:00:35.662
Diebold voting systems are getting some much deserved scrutiny. However, this looks more and more like a case of incompetent software development and poor corporate development practices, and less and less like some grand conspiracy. The big problem? Painting it as a conspiracy is likely to cause the very real problems to be ignored, as the conspiracy theorists will be painted as nuts.
Never attribute to conspiracy what can far more easily be attributed to stupidity or laziness
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development
November 18, 2003 8:31:12.654
Mike Sanders says that businesses are clamoring for web based apps:
SEPTEMBER 29, 2003 ( INFOWORLD ) - Web applications rule the enterprise. That's the indisputable conclusion to be drawn from this year's InfoWorld Programming Survey. Despite directives from Microsoft Corp. and others that developers abandon server-based HTML applications for fat desktop clients, the ease of "zero deployment" through the browser continues to win the day.
Only a fool what count Microsoft out. But only a fool would ignore what businesses are proclaiming loudly from their desktops - we want more browser apps now
Did anyone stop and ask what the users of those apps might want? All I have is anecdotal evidence, but it comes up pretty heavily against browser based applications. In my experience, people don't really like them. Of course, they don't really like the supposedly "rich" client apps they get from their IS groups either. Either way, user information would be very useful here - there's clearly business value in thin client applications - the question should be whether or not there's user productivity
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examples
November 17, 2003 21:31:41.849
One of the things you have to deal with when building an HTTP aware application is proxy user settings. VW has a settings tool within the environment for setting and managing proxy settings - the trouble is, it's not necessarily set up for simple reuse within a free standing application. Fortunately, it's not terribly difficult to set up programmatically (building a simple UI to go with this code is left as an exercise for the reader). First off, you need to define a network user:
user := NetUser new.
user fullName: 'First Last'.
user username: 'username'.
user password: 'password'.
user savePassword: true.
Now that you have a user, you'll need to actually add that user to the system registry. If your application is single user, you can go ahead and make that user the default user. If it's not single user, you'll need a way to switch users, and just toggle which one is the default. Here's how to set a user up as the default user:
Net.Settings addIdentity: user.
Net.Settings defaultIdentity: user.
Now you've got a user defined, and registered with the system. But what about setting the proxy server, and enabling proxy usage? Here's how you define a proxy server and hand it the appropriate user:
netSettings := Net.Settings.
netSettings httpUseProxy: true.
netSettings httpKeepAlive: true.
netSettings httpRedirectRequest: true.
netSettings httpProxyHost:
(HostSpec new
name: serverNameString;
port: port asNumber;
type: 'http';
netUser: user;
yourself).
That will set your application up to use a proxy server, with the appropriate user. To disable proxy usage without getting rid of the settings, all you need to do is toggle the httpUseProxy setting. That's pretty much it; it's not hard to do. This code is what BottomFeeder uses to set up proxy services.
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java
November 17, 2003 20:11:06.259
Matt Croydon points to two Java GUI designer projects - Sun's and a new Eclipse effort. And after only 8 years too....
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rss
November 17, 2003 20:05:27.935
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BottomFeeder
November 17, 2003 14:06:06.229
I'll be posting a 7.2 based BottomFeeder soon. The only real change so far is componentization - I've split a number of the non-Bf specific components out of the BottomFeeder parcel, so that they can be independently updated. The version information available in the "about" box is also going to be a little cleaner.
This will all be done in a new directory structure - moving will require a new base image - and the new parcel structure isn't completely compatible with what's deployed right now. When I get it all on the server, I'll post an update
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open source
November 17, 2003 10:23:52.231
Linux Today is cheering a story on Brazil's CTO wanting to get the entire nation using Open Source software. The correct question is, why should he care? Let people decide what works best for them. Having schools and Universities move that way makes a lot of sense, but trying to push harder than that is likely to backfire.
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cst
November 17, 2003 9:30:05.069
The Fall Release of Cincom Smalltalk will start shipping to customers on November 20th. That's also the date when NC downloads will cut over to VW 7.2 and OS 6.9. This is a great release, and I want to congratulate the entire Cincom Smalltalk team for making it happen. Great work! On to the next release cycle, after our post release planning meetings. Since there's a bit of a development lull between now and the end of our planning meeting (i.e., stuff that is mostly on auto-pilot right now) - now would be a good time to send suggestions and comments to us.
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blog
November 17, 2003 9:10:17.394
Mark Pilgrim lays out what the future of spam fighting in web logs will look like. Over time, comments are likely going to require registration and passwords, or simply be discarded - commenting will happen on other people's blogs. Yeah, that's going to cut out the people without blogs - go blame the spammers.
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development
November 17, 2003 8:28:25.593
If you're into regular expressions, check out this group blog, which is devoted to the subject. Via Scoble
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development
November 17, 2003 8:21:26.772
Ted Neward talks about a new C# feature - being able to partially define a class in a new file. Yet another thing people are all excited about as new, simply because they haven't spent any time looking at Smalltalk (or Lisp)....
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blog
November 16, 2003 21:47:37.082
Joi Ito links to a post by Dan Gillmore on censorware. Apparently, many of the "nanny" programs you can buy for filtering web content will filter blogs out - Surf Control, for instance, categorizes them the same as Usenet, and blocks them. Jon Udell reports on a bizarre conversation with one of the Surf Control folks. Entropy increases...
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blog
November 16, 2003 21:34:24.134
Matt Haughey is getting tired of comment spam in blogs - I just pointed out another uprising today. This is one of the better reasons to use homebrew blogging software; the liklihood of getting spammed is that much lower. The non-technically inclined will likely just have to do without comment systems...
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general
November 16, 2003 15:56:02.109
Richard Monson-Haefel writes about a nasty, barely noticed issue on Amazon - reviews posted by authors and/or friends of authors using famous names. The people who do such things should be ashamed.
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blog
November 16, 2003 11:12:51.457
I've not had any comment spam here yet, but a number of the blogs I read have been slammed hard. I noticed this morning that Sam Ruby's blog was slammed - there was spam for all his recent posts. It looks like the spammers are targeting Moveable Type systems and the API it uses for comment forms. I'm not using that, so I think I'm getting saved by obscurity for the moment. The good news - at least with a news aggregator, I can just unsubscribe from a comment feed if it looks like it's being overrun.
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tv
November 16, 2003 11:07:38.277
I've been mailed links to this news - Farscape is going to get a mini-series:
The Henson company would not comment on the information but a source close to the production has confirmed that the new project will be a miniseries, not a new season as originally hoped for by the fans. While no plot details are available, sources have also confirmed that the new project will be independent from the Sci-Fi Channel, the network that broadcast the series. No information is currently available about just where the new miniseries will be appearing or when.
hmm - maybe if the Sci-Fi channel isn't involved, it won't suck...
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BottomFeeder
November 15, 2003 11:58:29.310
In the dev stream for BottomFeeder, I've added support for Headline news feeds - you can enter your own search parameters, and BottomFeeder will grab the relevant feed. Handy for customizing your news consumption
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news
November 15, 2003 11:00:07.526
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development
November 15, 2003 9:56:16.947
Ted Leung explains what his recent post on Longhorn was getting at. He summarizes here:
The problem with almost all of the commenters is that they are looking at what is instead of what could be. Think of the vapor Longhorn as an example. Really, the only reason to say Longhorn is because so few people would know what I was talking about if I said Lisp Machine, or Xerox Dorado. Now Longhorn's no Dorado or Lispm, but its moving in that general direction, which is more than you can say for anybody else.
You can get that now, in any of the Smalltalk systems out there, and - although I don't have any personal experience with them - I'd warrant that you can get it in any of the existing Lisp development environments as well. It's a sad thing that so many people seem to know that they could be more productive, and then just blithely turn away from it and stick with what's popular.
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analysts
November 15, 2003 9:50:50.266
John Dvorak just gave a big, huge raspberry to The Cluetrain Manifesto. Now, a lot of what he writes is guilty of the same kind of "you don't get it" smugness that he accuses the blogosphere of - a good for instance:
In fact the brown-nosing that goes on between bloggers singing each others' praises makes the worst office kiss-ups look tame by comparison. I mention this anomaly since these Cluetrain folks all believe the opposite to be true. Somehow networking like this, according to the Cluetrainees, reveals truth"when in fact it supports and forces the worst kind of conformist behavior. Try to find a blog that is ever critical of another blog. I've never seen it.
Apparently, he's not actually reading blogs - a goodly proportion of what I see in my reading is people knocking down the assertions of other people. In a sense, blogs are an escape from Usenet, now that the trolls have overrun the commons.
Now, that's not to say that Dvorak doesn't make some good points here - I've had much the same reaction to a large part of Cluetrain. In any case, it's always a good idea to see sacred cows get peed on - if nothing else, it forces some actual thought on the topic.
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general
November 14, 2003 20:25:04.019
I was out all day chaperoning a 5th grade field trip to Baltimore. We went up to see the various historic ships docked there - the Constellation, the Torsk, the Taney - as well as some educational ships run by a local foudation. The kids had a great time - the foundation ships ran a great set of activities for them. It was way to blustery and cold to be without a hat - fortunately for me, one of the other parents was kind enough to loan me an extra he had - a real life saver! The trip itself was fine, after I got the hat. The ride home by bus (about 40 minutes) with a bus full of worked up 10 and 11 year olds though - whoa, that was tiring....
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management
November 14, 2003 20:20:08.764
This piece is angry - but at the same time, it makes some excellent points about things to consider when outsourcing.
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security
November 14, 2003 20:16:37.839
CNET News reports that Exchange servers that were infected with Code Red - even if cleaned - might still be open for spammers:
"If the guest account is enabled (on Exchange 5.5 and 2000), even if your login fails, you can send mail, because the guest account is there as a catchall," he said. "Even if you think you've done everything (to secure the server), you are still open to spammers."
The guest account is a way for administrators to let visitors use a mail server anonymously, but because of security issues, the feature is generally not enabled. Exchange servers that had been infected by the Code Red worm and subsequently cleaned will still have the guest account enabled, Greenspan said.
So you might not be done with this one after all...
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rss
November 14, 2003 19:29:53.299
Scoble just doesn't get out enough:
By the way, average users don't think RSS is the Web. Just cause Instant Messaging uses TCP/IP protocols, does that make it Web technologies? No. Most users see the Web as everything that comes to their browser.
I have a news flash for you - I'd guess that 90% + of the people using RSS not only know it's the web, but have a fairly decent grasp (from a technical standpoint) as to what RSS is. Heck, RSS simply hasn't gotten that widely exposed yet. Most developers I talk to have no idea what RSS is, and think a news aggregator is a tool for following usenet. Expand outside the tech arena, and RSS knowledge is virtually non-existant. I ask a fairly wide spectrum of people about RSS - most have no idea, some have maybe seen the little XML tag, and most of the ones who have seen it have no idea what it's for. Right now, RSS is in early adopter mode.
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general
November 14, 2003 8:42:10.739
Then sign up for myLastEmail.com - a service that will send out pre-set emails after you die. Morbid....
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development
November 14, 2003 8:29:21.409
Ted Leung (and others here and here) are worried about Longhorn taking over, especially from Linux. Now, everyone step back and take a deep breath.
- Longhorn won't ship until 2006
- Everything I've seen so far is very client-centric
Pay attention to that last part especially. While MS may be moving a lot of things to managed code, they aren't rewriting things like SQL Server and IIS. So anyone wanting to run a secure server is still likely to look at Apache and a non-Windows platform before they look at Windows. The game isn't on the client; that war is over, and MS won it a long time ago (quick, someone tell Sun). I'm utterly uncomvinced that the new stuff MS is doing will have a lot of server impact
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education
November 14, 2003 8:14:43.361
Simberon will be running two VisualWorks open courses in Ottawa in early 2004:
An Introduction to VisualWorks (Jan 26 - 30, 2004)
Introduces the Smalltalk programming language and the basics of GUI programming in VisualWorks
Internet Programming in VisualWorks (Feb 2-6, 2004)
Covers low-level and high-level aspects of Internet programming in VisualWorks including TCP/IP and sockets, Smalltalk Server Pages, SOAP
For full descriptions and registration information please visit http://www.simberon.com/Services/training.htm
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general
November 13, 2003 21:02:24.861
Cincom finally bought me a new notebook. It's a pleasant update from the old one - not as fast as I'd like, but much, much better. Now, if only I'd gotten a DVD drive....
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rss
November 13, 2003 15:41:29.637
InfoWorld reports that Cape Clear is now pushing press releases via RSS. That's a great idea - it would make it so much easier to track news on firms you want to track.
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travel
November 13, 2003 15:27:17.837
Unless airline clubs come to grips with WiFi (or even wired broadband), they are going to start losing customers in droves. Why? Well, here I am in Pittsburgh, at the airport food court - enjoying a WiFi connection. I've updated my blog, I'm grabbing feed updates, checking mail. Convenient access to the net is most of the reason I joined an airline club, and now there's better access at a growing number of airports. So why exactly would I want to join a club now, with free WiFi available in the general area?
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law
November 13, 2003 15:22:47.502
Linux Today reports that SCO is serving subpoenas on everything that moves near a Linux box. What's next, a team-up with the RIAA so that 12 year olds standing near Linux boxes can get served?
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development
November 13, 2003 15:22:35.506
Scoble implicitly makes a useful point to bear in mind when developing a product and/or solution - what is "good enough"
Here's a question for you. Go over to Tim Bray's site where he displays browser share. His readers are all geeks. My mom would never read his site. Now, ask yourself "if geeks won't upgrade to the latest standards-based browsers, why should mom?"
Why bother is the correct answer. If you use Windows, then IE qualifies as "good enough" for the vast majority of users. Why bother changing - there's no compelling reason to. Devlopers really, really need to keep that in mind, because technical merit doesn't tnd to count for much in the face of an 80% solution
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travel
November 13, 2003 12:43:53.685
I'm headed back home, with the new notebook - which I'll need to get et up, configured, and loaded with my software. In the meantime, there are a lot of things stacked up that I intend to post on; I'll likely do that on the plane. I may have loads of time in Pittsburgh; the wind on the east coast may screw up my travel plans...
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