Domain: dhs.org
Stories and comments across the archive that link to dhs.org.
Comments · 593
-
The real power of /.
... is of course the S l a s h d o t E f f e c t.
Sooo... congresscritters are thinking of passing a nasty ole law? Rob could just threaten to post a story like "An anonymous coward writes: Streaming video of Natalie Portmans hot grit's posted to the US Congress Web site. "([sic] - TacoLexicon in force. my real grammar is better.)
Congress would naturally cave in and meet all our demands. Well, maybe not RMS's... -
Re:how to SLOW down the CPU
I got my generic speedstep thing from an oem laptop manufacturer. I bought Presario from compaq, installed win2k. Then I found the driver from apparently a local laptop maker in chicago.
I will put it on my server here, but it will be gone soon. Grab it here. -
Re:More information?I should probably mention that if (like me) you're logging Apache traffic to MySQL with apachedb, you'll probably need to change the query to whatever requestid corresponds to
/default.ida on your system. Going into MySQL and doing something like this:use apache2
select id from request where request="/default.ida";ought to work to get that info. Then again, if you're using apachedb, you've probably figured it out already, and I'm stupid for not having put this in the original post in any case.
:-) -
Re:Sluggy! Is it not nifty?
damn...
Flem! is http://flem.dhs.org/comic/new.htm not .html, bastards! Flem! Now with fixed link! -
Sluggy! Is it not nifty?
I've been reading Sluggy for a while now, it really is a good comic. Though lately I haven't been reading it as much. Instead I've been reading alot of Flem! Penny Arcade! and Sinfest. I'm sure most of us have heard of Penny arcade, and possibly Sinfest. Flem however is a little more unkown and uncommon. It's good though. I really do enjoy it, heh.
Here are some links.
http://flem.dhs.org/comic/new.html Flem!
http://www.sinfest.net Sinfest
http://www.penny-arcade.com Penny-Arcade
-
Funny."is designed to bring more choice and options to consumers, not fewer,"
of course. let's hardwire our os to only run our software. see you get *more* choices. remember that less = more!
in other news, i found this commercial that scares the living daylights out of me. You'll see why.
-
You want a case aganist Rogers?
After a year and a half of a VERY broken connect and refusals time and again from rogers to send anyone to my house to repair my connect, I threatened them with a lawsuit in order to talk to someone in a higher tier in tech support. (A benign threat- I didn't have the time or money to take on this sort of thing.)
I insinuated that they advertised that Rogers allowed you to do certain things with your cable modem, including surfing the web and playing games. However, I was told flat out by many of their techs that as long as my connect is up and they can ping it, they will do NOTHING ELSE to help me with my connect.
When Rogers left British Columbia and Shaw moved in, a tech came to my house to switch my Lancity modem with a Terayon model (thanks to Terayon and Shaw for the non-competition monopolistic contract). Apparently the wiring inside my wall was positively rotten. It was fixed by a Shaw employee that day.
Rogers deserves to rot for what I would call false advertising.
As a sidenote, if anyone is going through a Shaw to Rogers switch like I did, check out my experiences.
\\\ SLUDGE -
GnuCash 1.6.0 problems and solutions.The real problem with GnuCash 1.6.0 wasn't really it's large number of dependancies. It was the the binaries provided didn't seem to be built for a specific platform. It required some new things found in the latest Gnome 1.4 while also requiring an older version of guile, e.g. It wan't too bad to build the rpm's for the latest Ximian platform. I rebuilt them for Red Hat 7.1 against the latest Ximian packages:
Incidentally I think it's very worthwhile to upgrade to GnuCash 1.6.0. It's slick Play around with the reports for a few minutes and read the excellent documentation. The documentation gives an excellent summary of the principles behind handling your finances and covers the new features in 1.6.0.
-
Strangesearch lives.
A little OT, but a similar app already exists to search for shares over windows/samba. It's called Strangesearch, and is in development at sourceforge right now.
-
New Orleans Linux CoopWe are trying to do something similar here in New Orleans.
A bunch of guys from our local LUG (nolug.org) got together and decided to see if we could do a little Linux advocacy, and make a few bucks along the way.
-
NOT supposedly, here's the picture..
Cheggit out, here's the picture of the first computer bug ever:
Debugged.
-
CD Player Link
Heres another example of reusing youre CDROM
Sometimes you by Force overwhelmed are. -
Re:Tangenitally related links
Something I created many moons ago
... -
BeOS...Yup, I'd go the BeOS route. Fast boot times, nice query related filesystem, and there's been a ton of work done on similar systems (try Scot Hacker's mp3box or go straight to Be In Your Stereo for web based interfaces.
Use CL-Amp for the tunes, go and grab an IRMan and BeInControl for the remote control, and you're set. CL-Amp also has a bunch of plug-ins that support LCD displays, monitors, etc... check BeBits
The only downsides are that BeOS can be a little fussy about hardware (/me = Asus P2B-S, SB-Live Value), and that Samba support is, erm... well, it's there, but it didn't work for me; but BeOS can happily mount your CIFS shares (or ftp in/out, or telnet in/out,
...)FWIW, I just used a standard Abit desktop case (hidden, quiet fan), with only the IRMan exposed...
-
Re:It's Too Broken To FixThe problem with replacing hierarchical domain names with a global string, however it's assigned, is that it breaks one of the advantages of the current system: You own a block, not a string.
Go over to dhs.org. There, you can register a 3rd level domain for yourself off of the dhs.org or wox.org domains, which they own. I have two such domains, and host them off of my Linux server which has a DNS server running. By doing so, ANYTHING.mydomain.dhs.org is mine. I can add one system, I can add a hundred systems. I can even dynamically assign them if I want to. That's not the case if it's simply one big string. I have to pray that a.mydomain.dhs.org is available, which is not guaranteed just because I am using b.mydomain.dhs.org.
While me running my own little domain for ego's sake is not the most important reason in the world to use a given standard, the same advantage exists for larger organizations. Everyone who uses AOL has a domain name assigned to them when the log on, based on their IP. It's something like dialup45-pool22.aol.com, or something equally obscure, but still unique. More importantly, still having symantic meaning of its own. You can tell right off that it's an AOL system (.com not meaning much any more), and that it's a temp dialup connection in modem pool #22. If everything was random strings, they couldn't do that, unless they registered EVERY possible permutation of *aol* just to make sure that no one else did. Can you imagine fuckme.aol.com, or ihate.ibm.com? Right now, those don't and can't exist (unless someone at IBM's network center is having an arguement with his boss).
It's the same logic behind IP address blocks. My university owns its own class B, so 123.456.*.* (real numbers withheld, of course) will always be something here at the school. That makes administration far easier, and makes tracking down a hacker far easier as well.
Even phone numbers use the same hierarchical system. Country Code, Area Code, Exchange (somewhat muddled now), and Extension.
And yes, even your own name is a hierarchical naming system, specifically because it's easier to understand. If your name is Frank Johnson, then you can name your kids pretty much any first name you want, but their last name will almost always be Johnson. It's then much easier to identify you as their father/mother, and vice-versa.
Hierarchical naming and numbering systems are so prevalent because they are so useful. It makes it very easy to control a given block, to determine what a given string really means by its component parts, and to whom it belongs, and even sometimes where they are (.uk). See also: Linux/Unix file system.
--GrouchoMarx
-
Re:..and in other news...
In this context, these screenshots are pretty cool!
-
Re:This is good but.....
Performance is adequate, but memory management -- oh my god. Check out Tube, a portable Hotline client I wrote last year. Uses anywhere upwards from 19MB of memory. The "official" client needs less than 1MB!
-
Re:Evaluation of JavaThe biggest problem with Java is not performance but memory use. A Hotline client I have written uses anywhere from 19MB up to 40MB of memory -- too much. And what good is garbage collection if Swing leaks references like NNTP drops articles?
Also, the usefulness of Java as an application programming language (Java on the desktop) is severely hindered by the fact that Sun hasn't solved the packaging / delivery problem; that remains a matter of platform dependant conventions and idiosyncracies, only now you have the added burden of catering to the requirements of some abstract "Java platform" layer.
Guess it's back to C for me.
-
There are ways around that one, you know...
As demonstrated here, there is nothing so bizarrely inexplicable in any game that it can't be explained in a reasonable fashion with enough misspent contemplation.
In all seriousness, it is good that most "representational" games are just a thin layer over an abstract game. Reality doesn't make a good game. Games where you blow up enemies and pick up the little piece of fruit they leave behind can be a lot of fun.
But I do agree in general that there should be a line drawn between special strangely hidden bonuses and strangely hidden essential parts of the game. However, look at Metroid! Everything is hidden, nothing is explained, yet it's one of the greatest classics around.
--- -
News.com
The Real Media content on news.com used to play fine under linux + netscape and Real Player but they redesigned the site about a month ago and since than video content does not play on linux it just Stalls nicely. It just sits there doing nothing.
-
My effortI've always been a computer enthusiast, and for the last seven or so years I've also been a guitar player. I became interested in the idea of recording myself with my computer some time after I started jamming and I wanted to find counter melodies to lines I was writing without needing another human being around. I started experimenting with CakeWalk and some lame audio recorders, trying tricks out like throwing my mic in the soundhole of my hollowbody acoustic guitar.
I learnt pretty fast that recording maybe twelve seconds of music and looping it is a serious bitch with the hardware I had in that day, never mind multitracking a song for production. Back then, I had a SoundBlaster Pro, 16 megabytes of RAM and a p75.
Two years later I was at a friend's house clicking icons when I found out he had Cooledit Pro installed. I hadn't ever seen anything like this before. Although it was buggy and the filters were painfully slow, there was enough tech there to throw together a song.
Pretty soon after that, I hooked up with modplug (a win32 freeware mod editor) and I tracked this song. Modplug was used to do all of the background music and computer generated notes, and real guitars were layered overtop with the aforementioned multitracking software.
This was recorded on a celeron 300 w/ 128 megs of RAM, no SCSI hardware, a $50 guitar and a SB Awe32. I was learning how to use the software, and it took me about a month's worth of time that I had to steal off my friend's machine.
One of the biggest losses is the full duplex recording mode of the Awe32. The recording quality goes right out the window when you start playback. I ended up having to use noise reduction filters, which also sacrificed my overall audio quality.
I recorded all guitar tracks dry because my setup was so poor. Any overdrive/distortion you hear is the result of post-production. I hear you're supposed to do it this way so you can add or remove effects, but most pro musicians get to hear themselves playing overdriven guitar while recording dry to get themselves into the mood.
:)All in all, my hardware wasn't enough to produce a quality track, and it wasn't able to be done in a timely fashion. Nowadays, I've gotten out of highschool, and I have some more spending money. I've picked up an Ibanez RG Series guitar and an RP2000 effects modeling unit, as well as a k7-750 w/ 256 megs of ram and a SBLive (which does full duplex a lot nicer). I'm gonna give it another shot, after the CTF paks are released. (See homepage URL
:) )
-
MathML (and SVG) for Mozilla.
The M18 milestone of Mozilla has binaries with the MathML support compiled in, so you might like to give that a try. If you feel a little more adventurous, here are some pages with more recent binaries with MathML support - Linux and Win32. These also have SVG support compiled in as well for vector images and the Linux binaries have XSL as well.
For more general information, take a look at the Mozilla MathML page.
Cheers,
Toby Haynes
-
Re:Appealing for the masses
it's projects like this that provide a reason for having virtual frame buffers's in the kernel in the first place.
okay - it doesn't alter the usefulness of the kernel, but it *does* provide the perception of friendliness. if you can't see the confusing messages, you don't get confused - simple.
this is something i had wondered about a couple of years ago when i started using linux. in my opinion - it's pretty cool.
a similar project is aurora. -
Digital Cameras & Webcams
One of my friends was using his digicam as a webcam for a while. One of the problems that he had with it was that the camera would turn itself off after a period of time without human interaction and cease to work. It may be worth checking if your camera has this "feature". I've had very good success using a camcorder as a webcam. My last semester in college my roommates and I ran a webcam using this process. In this particular case, the video capture card lived in a Mac, but I could have done the same with my linux box and a shell script.
_____________ -
I Did This Too
Except I have it read my firewall logs in real time. My roommate is also posting a comment about it right now. Anyway, here's the info:
Required software:
festival (http://www.cstr.ed.ac.uk/projects/festival/)
speechd (http://www.speechio.org)
firewall-reader.pl (http://movealong.dhs.org/firewall-reader.pl
On startup, my loghost (the one with the soundcard and speakers) starts up speechd and firewall-reader.pl. speechd implements /dev/speech, which works like this:
$ echo "look who's talking now" > /dev/speech
The computer now says "look who's talking now"
speechd grabs the text from /dev/speech and passes it through to festival, a speech synthesizer.
firewall-reader.pl is the glue code (written in the ultimate glue language). It opens /var/log/messages read only and watches line by line for firewall packet logs. When it sees one, it formats it to be spoken, and appends it to /dev/speech (by the way, /dev/speech is a fifo).
It works very well. The only ongoing resource consumption is memory, because festival can get quite weighty. It's usually taking up about 10% on my loghost, which has 128MB RAM.
Oh, and by the way, firewall-reader.pl does need improving. Unfortunately my perl skills suck. -
Cliplay
I managed to get apache to play a sound whever someone hits my website, I wrote a little program called Cliplay that plays a
.wav speced in the command line, then used apache's exec SHTML command. The only problem is that the page stops loading untill the wave has finished playing, so you need to use something pretty short. -
Re:Solution is simple
-
Re:Better Idea
-
Re:40mb download? Get lost
For a more realistic view of the memory usage, look at this.
I wasn't doing anything but looking at Slashdot in both browsers.
-bZj
-
Re:Wow! I can't add helper apps!
I think you have the wrong version, as the option to ad mime types is in the final version I have:
See...?
-bZj
-
3COM
MAC addresses where not meant to be changed. However, you can on most cards. For some, there even exist linux-utilities to do so (You don't even have to reboot if your kernel have the card-driver as a module). For an example for 3com-cards, you can grab my modified version of Donald Becker's 3c5x9setup here.
-
The Old Mentality and the Sea
[...], filtering based on domain names is incredibly simple to bypass. [...] Just open up a dos box, ping the host, and it will give you the IP address. Put the IP address in the address bar in your browser, and you're there.
Look for censorware to block these IP addresses as well, as soon as someone at one of these censorware companies walks into a wall hard enough that he accidentally and temporarily has some sense knocked into him.
Before anyone starts frantically grabbing his pornography onto floppy at the local public library before even this loophole is closed, consider that even this slightly clueful measure is easily enough defeated by the use by site operators, of dynamic IP addresses connected with domain names via CNAME DNS records (in this context, aliases to such temporary subdomain names as are available at DHS). The practice therefore by censorware of blocking whole IP address ranges will accelerate the use of massive, dynamically switched IP address range pools (by overseas operators, probably), so that ultimately even IP addresses or ranges of IP addresses are no longer of much use as a guide to exactly from where data is arriving.
A world-wide information infrastructure based largely on immaterial information itself has by its very nature an almost infinite capacity for sneaky, slippery deception that makes a total mockery of any attempt to clamp down on it. One can easily envision for instance, an explosion of anonymous resurfers which themselves as needed use the techniques mentioned above.
The more the censorware tries to block off the sea, the more the sea will leak around every barrier placed in its path. In the end, as always, the sea will win.
-
An Open Letter to Digital ConvergenceAlso posted at kart.dhs.org, the home of Mr T. vs the CueCat.
To DigitalConvergence, or to "whom it may concern",
I run the website kart.dhs.org, which hosts the BeClueCat decoder, listed here:
http://www.bebits.com/app/1537/
DigitalConvergence has been visiting my website since September 15th. Certainly they know I exist.
I have yet to receive a 'cease and decist' letter from your legal consels, Kenyon and Kenyon, and I feel left out. So many other people have received FedEx'ed letters "WITHOUT PREJUDICE [sic]", yet I have not.
Kenyon and Kenyon's neglect to C+D me might be construed as "prejudice", since so many others have gotten scary letters. As a BeOS user I realize that I'm part of a minority. Don't you care enough to send your goons after me too? Do I need to agree to a special cease and decist EULA before you can send me one? Perhaps it's because you don't have any contact info. (name and address sent to Digital Convergence)
To put it in a nutshell:
Here I am. I'm looking for answers. If you have a beef with me, let's get in touch and I'll listen to your side of the story. If you want to play silly games, I and thousands of other individuals will continue to screw with you. Your business model is beyond flawed; it's despicable. Digital Convergence employees: get out now and cut your losses.
-- -
Re:xyu (in HTML no less!)
And if you'd use html properly, then we wouldn't have to get a 404, but could instead go to xyu.dhs.org.
-
I'm actually working on this
A few of my friends got together and started planning the protocol for such a beast. My roommate and I actually started implementing parts of this a month or so ago. Unfortunately, with school in the way, we haven't had much time to go very far. If anyone would like to check out what we have going as far as the protocol is conserned, most of our documentation can be found here. If you have any questions or comments, feel free to e-mail me (my e-mail address is on the above page).
-
MP3 jukebox...
I've got a little pentium 166 that is serving as my mp3 jukebox, and it is doing well. It is running Linux as its OS, has a 200 meg hard drive to hold the basic stuff to get it running and uses Samba to mount my mp3s from my main linux box. Why samba instead of nfs? So I can easily mount other peoples mp3s too. It then has thttpd running on it with a few scripts serve up a listing of what mp3s I have available, as well as the tracks on any CD that may be in the cdrom (looked up with cddb). Xmms running in a VNC session does the actual playing of the music, meaning I can control it from anywhere I want, and the nice Xmms::Perl module allows complete control of it from a perl program. Sometime I plan to put some icecast abilities into it so it can stream to other people, which would make the multi-room thing possible. In the end, it all works rather well for random hardware I managed to pull up.
Take a look at it at: arlo.dhs.org -
Geek ApartmentMy senior year in College I lived in an excellent Geek Apartment. The documentation of this place can be viewed at http://orangenet.dhs.org/lll. I will now describe some of the features of this abode that I found most necessary.
- Computers - I believe that we had ~14 between the 4 of us. Having one on the coffee table in the living room is very useful.
- Food - Try your best to make sure that at least one of your roommates is a good cook and keep snacks on hand.
- Bandwidth - We had a 7 Mbps DSL connection that worked well for us.
- AV equipment - Plan ahead and run sound and video wires to every room. We had a really sweet AV system in the bathroom, it's great to watch the news in the morning while you shave or not miss the movie when you get up to use the toilet. A cheap way of running AV is to use speaker wire. This can then be spliced to RCA cable ends for easy connections, you do gain a bit of noise since they're not shielded coax, but it's usually acceptable.
- Refridgerators - Used dorm fridges can be picked up on the cheap. Make sure to put one near each couch and desk.
- Web Cam - What good is any geek dwelling without one? Also provides a good way to archive any interesting events/personalities that may occur in your geek dwelling.
- Good Roommates - It is very important for such a project that you are living with people you trust and that you enjoy spending time with. Ideally you should all have somewhat different areas of expertise. This way at least one of you should be able to take the lead on any new project that may come along and you'll have others to hand you beers while you work.
- X10 - Yes, I know that they have really irritating banner ads. But, the home automation stuff they sell is very cool and fairly cheap. There is no reason why you should have to get off the couch to turn on and off the lights.
Upon moving in a big priority should be laying out the furniture in such a way that the addition of more cables will not be greatly difficult in the future. To that end, you may wish to consider the purchase of some of those 6' sections of half round rubber cable guides. These can by purchased for only a few $ at any home improvement store.
________________
They're - They are
Their - Belonging to them -
Small OpenGL demo's
More fun like that at the OpenGL Challenge.
Most entries are GLUT or near enough to compile on Linux, Mac etc. Lots of cool ideas. -
Re:It's all about freedom.I think they've made their statement pretty well out there.. "We'd prefer it if you didn't rip off our music"..
just saying that if you listen to the ad in the music, they say that once the cd is released, the whole track without the ad will be available on napster too.. just some food for thought
:)--- Slashdot burned your story? XYU won't!
-
Re:TechnoPagan?
great... I'd like to host some of your writings on this subject...
if you haven't allready could you subscribe to the technopagan list? -
Re:OpenReligion
HEY!
here's an open religion for you!
technopaganism! what is it? I'd like to know, you'd like to know... so talk about it!
Help define a developing beliefs system!
project definition and scope available on my website... come define your own pantheons and put your own spin on this stuff! -
Re:Misunderstanding of what IP is at stakeActually, there are two different CueCat models. One has two LEDs, and the other has only one. You can see them both (along with a little Perl script to interpret input) here.
--
-
Re:Not yet...
- http://xgov.net/dvd/DeCSS.zip and http://xgov.net/dvd/decss.tar.gz
- http://www.2600.com/news/1999/11 12-files/DeCSS.zip/ and http://www.2600.com/news/1 999/1112-files/css-auth.tar.gz
- http://douglas.min.net/~drw/css-auth/
- http://www.devzero.org/freecss.html
- http://www.chello.nl/~f
.vanwaveren/css-auth/css-auth.tar.gz - http://www.geociti es.com/ResearchTriangle/Campus/8877/index.html
- http://www.angelfire.com/mt/popefelix/
- http://www.vexed.net/CSS
- http://members.brabant.chello.nl/~j.vr eeken/
- http://www.dvd.eavy.de/css-auth.tar.gz and http://www.dvd.eavy.de/DeCSS.zip
- http://www.eavy.net/stuff/dvd/css-aut h.tar.gz and http://www.eavy.net/stuff/dvd/DeCSS.zip
- http://frozenlinux.com/local/decss/in dex.html
- http://www.unitycode.org/
- http://dirtass.beyatch.net/decss.zip
- http://decss.tripod.com/index.html
- http://www.free-dvd.org.lu/
- http://www.angelfire.com/in2/mirror/
- http://batman.jytol.fi/~vuori/dvd/
- http://www.zpok.demon.co.uk/deCSS/CSS.ht ml
- http://plato.nebulanet.net:88/css/
- http://www.logorrhea.com/main.html
- http://people.delphi.com/salfter/LiVi d.tar.gz
- ftp://193.219.56.32/pub/dvd/LiVi d.CVS-11.06.tar.gz and ftp://193.219.56. 32/pub/dvd/LiVid.CVS-11.06.css-stuff-only.tar.gz
- http://merlin.keble.ox.ac.uk/~a drian/css/index.html
- http://www.dvd-copy.com/
- http://www.zip.com.au/~cs/dvd/css
/css-auth.tar.gz and http://www.zip.com.au/~cs/dvd/css/DeCSS .zip - http://www.sent.freeserve.co.uk/css -auth.tar.gz and http://www.sent.freeserve.co.uk/DeCSS.zip
- http://www.lemuria.org/DeCSS/
- http://members.theglobe.com/avoiderm an/dvd.htm
- http://humpin.org/decss/
- http://www.twistedlogic.com/htm l/tl_archive_map.htm
- http:/
/munitions.polkaroo.net/software/algorithms/stream ciphers/decss.tar.gz - http://muni tions.dyn.org/software/algorithms/streamciphers/d
e css.tar.gz - http://uk1. munitions.net/software/algorithms/streamciphers/d
e css.tar.gz - http://muni tions.firenze.linux.it/algorithms/streamciphers/d
e css.tar.gz - http://www.irgendeinedomain.de/decs s/index.html
- http://therapy.endorphin.org/DVD/
- http://killer.discordia.ch
/Politics/Copyprotection.phtml - http://linuxvideo.org/
- http://www.geocities.com/SiliconV alley/Port/3224/
- ftp://ftp.one.net/pub/user s/dmahurin/files/software/dvd/
- ftp://ftp.charm.net/pub/usr/home/dutch/ or http://www.charm.net/~dutch/
- http://dsl129.drizzle.com:2001/downlo ads/DVD/
- http://perso.libertysurf. fr/ortal98/dvd_rip/decss_12b.zip
- http://users.drak.net/bem ann/software/css/css-auth.tar.gz and http://users.drak.net/bemann/so ftware/css/DeCSS.zip
- http://www.angelfire.com/movies/decss
- http://www.angelfire.com/myband/decss/
- http://josefine.ben.tuwien.ac.at/~davi d/dvd/
- http://www.c0ke.com/DVD/
- http://rockme.virtualave.net/
- http://amor.rz.hu-berlin.de/~h0444t2v/
- http://www.quintessenz.at/q/index.html
- http://www.dvdlinks.co.uk/css/
- http://www.fortunecit y.com/tinpan/tylerbridge/679/dvdcss.html
- http://www.crosswinds.net/~valo/DeCSS/
- http://members.home.com/christopherlee/ dvd/
- http://members.xoom.com/freedecss/
- http://63.225.181.97/decss/
- ftp://alma.dhs.org/pub/DVD/
- http://www.dynamsol.com/satanix/DeCSS.zip and http://www.dynamsol.com/satanix/css -auth.tar.gz
- http://mun itions.cifs.org/software/algorithms/streamciphers
/ decss.tar.gz - http://www.able-towers.com/~flow/
- http://www.cgocable.net/~jdionne/css/
- http://people.mn.mediaone.net/bojay/s lashdot/
- http://www.capital.net/~mazzic
- http://24.108.23.121/DeCSS/
- http://ananke.hack.pl/
- http://www.geocities.com/donotsueme/
- http://members.tripod.com/donotsueme/
- http://donotsueme.homepage.com
- http://www.homestead.com/donotsueme/ index.html
- http://donotsueme.freeservers.com/
- http://www.angelfire.com/punk/donotsueme/
- http://www.rz.uni-frankfurt.de/~marsie/
- http://209.178.22.9/protest/
- http://www.bard.org.il/~marc/dvd
- http://www.geocities.com/RainFor est/4360/decss.zip
- http://www.altern.com/tfagart/decss.zip
- http://www.itouch.net/~jm/dvd.html
- http://ils.unc.edu/inls183/resources
.shtml#DVD - http://avdira.cc.duth.gr/~kkonstan/css/
- http://www.multimania.com/sxpert/decss/
- http://www.posexperts.com.pl/peopl e/wrobell/css/
- http://www.koek.net/dvd/
- http://www.cyberchrist.org/freecss.html
- http://www.ozemail.com.au/~cybe rchrist/freecss.html
- http://www.planet.net.au/~coram/
- http://www.geek.co.il/css/
- http://www.datacomm.ch/adrien/decss/ index.html
- http://home.rmci.net/bert/fuckthelawyers/
- http://unimatrix.dyndns.org/fucklawyers/
- http://www.isn.net/~dsimeone/DeCSS.zip
- http://logical-solutions.com.au/DeCSS.zip
- http://www.sarahandcasey.com/decss/
- http://www.fsp.com/
- http://www.warren-wilson.edu/~echerry/dvd
- http://www.mafkees.com/dvd
- http://dB.org/dvd/
- http://dcwi.com/~wench/decss
- http://dvdcss.newmail.ru
- http://www.subcor.com
- http://www.frankw.net/decss
- http://danger-island.com/~dav/any.lawyer.who/quot
e s.this.url/gives.permission/for .his.residence.to.be.searched/any.bootleg.audio/vi deo/tape.found/nullifies.legal.and.moral .standing/ - http://www.fortunecity.com/vi ctorian/parkwood/95/DVD/
- http://www.asleep.net/dvd
- http://members.xoom.com/NiKeX
- http://www.geocit ies.com/ResearchTriangle/Station/2819/index.html
- http://www.execpc.com/~unicorn/dvdmirr or.htm
- http://members.xoom.com/chapter3/Mamma No.htm
- http://wiw.org/~drz/css/
- http://merlinjim.freeservers.com/dvd/
- http://www.visi.com/~adept/liberty
- http://mikedotd.penguinpowered.com/deccs
- http://www.ct2600.org/2600-DVD.html
- http://magic.hurrah.com/~fireball/dvd/
- http://www.jonhanson.com/dvd
- ftp://ftp.foon.net/pub/decss
- http://osiris.978.org/~brianr/css/
- http://earnestdesigns.com/dvd
- http://www.satl.com/~satlpop6/
- http://xempt.darpa.org:81/decss/
- ftp://cm-d0415.resnet.ucsc.edu/p ub/css-auth.tar.gz
- http://www.mit.edu/afs/sipb/user
/mycroft/css-auth/ - http://www.eyrie.demon.co.uk/derek/dvd/c ss
- http://ananke.hack.pl
- http://budice.ancients.net/www.free -dvd.org.lu/
- http://defiance.darktech.org/decss/
- http://kesagatame.tripod.com
- http://www.angelfire.com/pokemon/decss
- http://www.gnosis.cx/download/DeCSS.zip
- http://bone.powersurfr.com/DeCSS/
- http://wakeupthe.net/dvd/
- http://everest.yooniks.org/dvd
- http://cubicmetercrystal.com/decss/
- http://analyzethis.acmecity.com/triboro
/90/ - http://homepages.together.net/~ib nzahid/DeCSS.zip
- http://www.save2600.8m.com
- http://people.ne.mediaone.net/dantepsn/
- http://members.xoom.com/mxpxguy/dvd/
- http://decss.fall0ut.com
- http://vedaa.tripod.com/decss.html
- http://members.xoom.com/iox
- http://www.hackunlimited.com/dvd/
- http://hem.fyristorg.com/police/css.htm
- http://elknews.netpedia.net/dvd/
- http://www.idrive.com/decss/web
- http://quintessenz.at/q
- http://www.clug.com/~vodak/dvd/
- http://www.nacs.net/~vodak/dvd/
- http://ny2600.iwarp.com
- http://www.wpi.edu/~nassar/dvd/
- http://www.glue.umd.edu/~castongj
- http://www.geocities.com/cold_dvd/
- http://www.projectgamma.com/deccs/
- http://members.xoom.com/mogreen/decss/
- http://thrash.webjump.com/decss.zip
- http://www.angelfire.com/de2/decss/dec ss.htm
- http://www.krackdown.com/decss
- http://www.ithink.org/dvd/
- http://www.fortunecit y.com/skyscraper/motorola/1415/decss.htm
- http://chaz.fsgs.com/misc/DvD/
- http://www.linuxstart.com/~kv ance/projects/decss.html
- http://www.darkkingz.com/DeCSS.zip
- http://come.to/intelex
- http://ebmedia.net/dvd/
- http://www.geocities.com/decss_forever/
- http://revolution.3-cities.com/~spack/dv d/
- http://www.geocities.com/Sili conValley/Software/8762/
- http://members.xoom.com/s_o_sam/help.html
- http://smokering.org
- http://www.sent.freeserve.co.uk/css -auth.tar.gz
- http://dlsf.org
- http://home.rmci.net/bert/dvd
- http://thrash.webjump.com/decss.zip
- http://linux.uci.agh.edu.pl/~outlaw/ decss.html
- http://debian.mps.krakow.pl/mirror/css/
- http://www.fission.org/~mangino
- http://212.187.12.197/decss/
- http://www.clarkson.edu/~andrixjr
/decss/DeCSS.zip - http://www.geocities.com/Capitol Hill/1583/dvd.html
- http://members.xoom.com/freedecss/
- http://www.csd.net/~cgadd/dvd.htm
- http://www.members.home.net/normanlorrai n/
- http://home.swipnet.se/~w-18931/decss/
- http://home.soneraplaza.nl/qn/prive/v alhalla/
- http://www.robotslave.net
- http://www.angelfire.com/punk/freedom/
- http://www.corova.com/dvd/
- http://2600.dk/mirrors/css/
- http://dvdcrack.homepage.com
- http://www.copkiller.org
- http://www.worldcity.nl/~frank/dvd
- http://members.xoom.com/iamkeenan/master/
- http://www.adulation.net/css/
- http://homepage.interacces s.com/~mycroft/decss/DeCSS.zip
- http://underground.pl/dvd/
- http://members.xoom.com/nyc2600
- http://zerosoft.hypermart.net/warez/ DVDcrK.txt
- http://www.deforest.org/CSS
- http://nickd.org/decss
- http://www.xenoclast.demon.co.uk/main.ht ml
- http://www.ctol.net/~ross/css-auth.tar.gz
- http://www.xenoclast.demon.co.uk/main.ht ml
- http://www.ctol.net/~ross/css-auth.tar.gz
- http://www.geocities.com/SiliconV alley/File/3635/
- http://members.xoom.com/a1010_2000/
- http://decss.globalservice.hu/
- http://xgov.net/dvd/DeCSS.zip and http://xgov.net/dvd/decss.tar.gz
-
Re:Ignore Them
Seems like the song has been taken down...I've got it mirrored at http://trisomy21.dhs.org/descramble.mp3
-
Mirror
Seems the site is *really* bad right now, Might have something to do with the fact that they are serving all of their pictures through a cgi script ?. Oh well.
Mirrored HERE -
Re:no!
The question about my fair lady actually made the wall of fame here. I kept a copy at http://trisomy21.dhs.org/f2k.html in case the one on their server disappears. Anyways, have fun all,
/me is going on vacation for a week, bleh. -
Defcon Pics
For those of you that weren't there, I put some pictures up of our trip up. There's not a lot, I haven't updated it since sat night (I should be putting up some more pics after lunch). Also I should probably consider replacing the page with html that's written while sober. Hmmmm.....
-
Let a Computer Class use it...
Why not let your computer class use the box, they could set it up and learn the basics of UNIX. This year in my high school class a couple other students and myself were able to "borrow" a couple of boxes to put Linux on and setup a free web site hosting service for the students at the school (as well as message boards, chat, streaming radio and live camera images from the school). The result was CHSS Realm (sorry the school's network seems to be down today, hopefully it'll be back up in a day or two!). I'm sure at least a handfull of the students would like to learn to use that computer you have! It's not like they can wreck it or anything, if all else fails just reinstall everything!
-
Re:Movies I would recommend
Younger audience:
Slayers (magic, comedy, adventure)
Slightly older audience:
DNA^2 (romance, comedy)
Kenshin (romance, some action, comedy)
Bubblegum crisis (action)
Lodoss War (a chronicle of an ADND game)
More Drama:
Macross 7 (available on SenshiTV (music, soul-searching stuff))
If you like this stuff, check out Anipike or Anime on DVD
-
Re:the new rip off artists
about musicians maintaining their own pages with mp3s and content
san diego's Superficial