Domain: nyud.net
Stories and comments across the archive that link to nyud.net.
Comments · 3,202
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Re:Holy broken Back button!
Wow. The webpage they released the list on - wow. Just - wow. So bad.
Indeed. In they day and age such lousy navigation is unforgivable. So I threw together a scraper and generated a single page for easy browsing, with CSV-files for both lists. Enjoy.
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Re:Coral Cache
The Coral Cache operates on port 8090. Here is a corrected link, though at this point, all that's cached is proof that the Internet Patrol's copy of WordPress has left a smoldering crater where their server once was...
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slides unavailable
But you can see them here: http://www.alex-ionescu.com.nyud.net:8080/wloo-ta
l k.pdf -
Coral Cache
The site isn't loading for me
Hit the Coralized link:
http://www.theinternetpatrol.com.nyud.net:8080/eno rmous-map-of-wifi-servers-including-yours-revealed -by-aol-and-skyhook-announcement
My only response to "ZOMG databse!!"
is that anyone could do this if they had time and money. -
This just in
For the benefit of the RIAA and MPAA, here's a picture of your typical filesharer.
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Re:Could somebody ...
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For those without Adblock
As the site has been Slashdotted already, have a Coralised, Printer-friendly version.
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Re: Slashdotted
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Re:Irony
Whatever happened to the obligatory Coral Cache Karma Grab?
http://www.itbusinessedge.com.nyud.net:8090/blogs/ rob/?p=9 -
Re:Super-Secret Uber Hacking Thing-a-ma-whatsit
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Mirror
Coral mirror here in case:
http://charrison.net.nyud.net:8080/projects/search clock/voyeur.html -
Single Page Thread
http://forum.doom9.org/showthread.php?t=122770&pp
= 40
Coral Link
&pp=40 works on most (all?) vBulletin boards.
(The default is 20 posts per page) -
May i say...
W00T!
what? no mention of http://free60.org?
anyway i try to go there and the wiki seems slashdotted or maybe just slow.
Coralized Link --> http://wiki.free60.org.nyud.net:8080/ -
Mirror
Coral cache mirror: http://www.steampunkworkshop.com.nyud.net:8090/ke
y board.shtml -
Re:Brazil
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Re:Brazil
Right now it won't make people remember much. I tried to load the page when there were only 3 comments, and 5 minutes later half the images didn't load yet...
coral cache
No Karma Whoring, posting as AC! -
Re:Maybe Not
That might have been true in the past. But not so now.
Read this which is a presentation from one of eBay's technical architects. It outlines the evolution of the technology and the challenges they face, as well as the huge volume of data! -
slashdotted
here is the coral cache http://www.tfot.info.nyud.net:8090/content/view/1
1 5/58/ -
Netcraft confirms it:
Clippy is dead.
No, really. He's dead. Honest. -
Re:Nice Suttle FUD in the article.
Heh. You seem to overlook the obvious crap that's inserted:
Windows Media Player
Internet Explorer
Windows
That's reason enough to avoid it, IMHO. :)
I am not particularly thrilled with how it glosses over OSS. I've learned over the years there are benefits to not being 100% compatible with everyone else, and not having a computing environment that's not identical to everyone else too.
I'll give you a tiny example: my wife and I combined have 6 computers in this house - we each have a desktop, I currently have two laptops (will change shortly) and a server. We're both IT people, I'm a network engineer and unix admin, she's a part-time unix geek and a Windows Network admin by day. It's not uncommon for her to sit down at my machine for one reason or another, usually because she manages her music library logged into her account on my box. Occassionally, she'll be lazy and ssh into the server from my machine on my account, and want to look something up on the web. She *hates* using Firefox on my account. I have JavaScript pared all the way down, I have NoScript, Flashblock, and Adblock all enabled. She'll go onto Amazon and want to check on something, and nothing works. Now, she could of course figure out how to "temporarily allow" amazon.com in noscript, and to check the adblock sidebar if a key graphic is missing, but instead she logs into her account, launches a second instance of Firefox view amazon in it's ad-encrusted glory.
What's my point? The point is I don't have anyone else, my wife included, screwing with my Firefox profile because it's unique to my tastes and preferences. My home directory doesn't get filled with crap, and this is a mac we're talking about, so virus and malware are nearly non-existent. This could be Linux just as easily, or FreeBSD for that matter.
Once upon a time I would have suggested they use Knoppix, and although that may work, I think everyone here can agree that Kubuntu or Ubuntu (I still prefer the former to the latter) would fit the need nicely. None of this BS of "it's not what everyone else uses" fits. Win32 binaries can and do run. You just don't want to do it more often than necessary. :)
The FUD has to stop, seriously. I hate the term, I really do "Linux is/isn't ready for the desktop." I don't care when it's ready. It works, it works at very least "well enough". If I had to give it a par rating on usability in the form of Kubuntu, it quite easily is up there with Windows 98 or Windows 2000. I take Windows XP as a step backwards in many cases, so that's not really fair. OSX still beats Linux in Desktop usability, but we're not talking the widest of gaps here though. There are huge benefits to be had when you determine precisely what hardware your OS runs on, and it shows.
So now that I've wasted my breath preaching to a choir that left already....ugh. Let me toss up my company's website-that-isn't-quite-ready-yet:
http://www.oss-solutions.com.nyud.net:8080/
Yes, it's coralized. I really am that afraid of Slashdot. :) -
Somebody took pictures of clippy's death...
It's kinda gross and gory, but
... *sniff* oh I can't say anything more! It was horrible! *SOB*
http://www.thenoobcomic.com.nyud.net:8090/daily/st rip089.html -
Privacy must-read
Warren and Brandeis on privacy. Take 15 minutes and read this, I guarantee you will thank me. Try to remember as you're reading that it was written in 1890.
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Re:Nothing new.
I think you totally missed the point here. While the ability to use the virtual phone while it's hooked a real phone is neat, but real benefit comes from being able to create and test phone applications with real connectivity, and without taking a chance on destroying a real phone.
I must say, though, the idea of hooking asterisk to a real cellphone for calls like this is intriguing already.
Also, for those looking for a mirror, These finally loaded:
http://gpe.linuxtogo.org.nyud.net:8080/
http://gpephone.linuxtogo.org.nyud.net:8080/ -
Re:Nothing new.
I think you totally missed the point here. While the ability to use the virtual phone while it's hooked a real phone is neat, but real benefit comes from being able to create and test phone applications with real connectivity, and without taking a chance on destroying a real phone.
I must say, though, the idea of hooking asterisk to a real cellphone for calls like this is intriguing already.
Also, for those looking for a mirror, These finally loaded:
http://gpe.linuxtogo.org.nyud.net:8080/
http://gpephone.linuxtogo.org.nyud.net:8080/ -
Coral Cache
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Re:Not a natural disaster.
Wow, that's really serious.
Here's a coral cached version of the link, the server was melting...
These before/after pictures show the damage this mud is causing:
http://www.crisp.nus.edu.sg.nyud.net:8090/coverage s/mudflow/index_IK_p3.htmlHere's links to the rest of the pictures:
http://www.crisp.nus.edu.sg.nyud.net:8090/coverage s/mudflow/index.html -
Re:Not a natural disaster.
Wow, that's really serious.
Here's a coral cached version of the link, the server was melting...
These before/after pictures show the damage this mud is causing:
http://www.crisp.nus.edu.sg.nyud.net:8090/coverage s/mudflow/index_IK_p3.htmlHere's links to the rest of the pictures:
http://www.crisp.nus.edu.sg.nyud.net:8090/coverage s/mudflow/index.html -
This gives me an idea!
I can't download zips at work, but would the linked application still work for mapping out how widespread the infection still is more than a year after the initial spread?
If nothing else, it would make for pretty pictures to show in court. -
Re:Mirror?
The main site is mirrored at Mirrordot and Coral Cache, and the pictures are at MD and CC.
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Re:Mirror?
The main site is mirrored at Mirrordot and Coral Cache, and the pictures are at MD and CC.
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Still no fusion prizeFusion energy prize legislation was drafted 15 years ago and submitted to Congress by one of the founders of the US Tokamak program, Robert W. Bussard. There is good reason to believe this legislative proposal was a precursor to resurgence of interest in technology prize awards later in the 1990s.
More recently, Dr. Bussard gave a talk at Google HQ about his currently favorite fusion technology and it has caused some commotion.
It's profoundly disturbing that the US is willing to spend a trillion dollars on war in the middle east getting negative results and not willing to devote even one tenth of one percent of that to fusion energy prize legislation that pays for positive results only.
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already alternatives exist
Right?
I mean, I have one program called "HashCalc" http://www.slavasoft.com.nyud.net:8090/hashcalc/in dex.htm
Which includes:
Support of 12 well-known and documented hash and checksum algorithms: MD2, MD4, MD5, SHA-1, SHA-2( 256, 384, 512), RIPEMD-160, PANAMA, TIGER, ADLER32, CRC32.
I don't even know HALF of those. I knew of SHA1, but not of SHA256 384 or 512. Let alone Panama, Tiger, Adler32.
Not sure how "Secure" these other hashes or checksums are. The longer the string of characters, the more secure?
I still see sites offer up a CRC32 to check on your downloads... -
***HERE IS the professors site***
With any generic news agency, highly technical things like this usually get boiled down to mush. However, here is a coral cache of Professor Xiaoyun Wang's site. I am using coral cache because it is faster than going directly to the chinese-hosted site.
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HERE's the coral cache:
Coral cache here. Sorry, the original link was from the chinese server.
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Coral cachehttp://en.epochtimes.com.nyud.net:8080/news/7-1-1
1 /50336.html
I guess she cracked any encryption schemes, but found some loopholes. Great job indeed, given she has all those encryption schemes to her name, but the linked article is full propaganda, and less on detailsAccording to a Beijing digest, this SHA-1 encryption includes the world's gold standard Message-Digest algorithm 5 (MD5). Before Professor Wang cracked it, the MD5 could only be deciphered by today's fastest supercomputer running codes for more than a million years.
However, professor Wang Xiaoyun, a graduate of Shandong University of Technology's mathematics department, and her research team obtained results by using ordinary personal computers.
and
Within ten years, Wang cracked the five biggest names in data encryption. Many people would think the life of this scientist must be monotonous. However she said, "That ten years was a very relaxed time for me."
During her work, she bore a daughter and cultivated a balcony full of flowers. The only mathematics related habit in her life is how she remembers the license plates of taxi cabs.
Duh... -
Site down
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Re:Ouch...
Works fine for me. If you really can't get to it, try the Coral Cache mirror:
http://www.1up.com.nyud.net:8090/do/feature?cId=31 56339
I wouldn't worry too much, though. It's just another "look at all the free games!" list with very little time spent on trying to separate the wheat from the chaff. Some of the "games" are expansion packs, some are flash games, some are OSS games that everyone knows about, some are clear copyright violations, some are just plain weird, and some are repeated more than once.
The worst part of it all is that they missed a huge number of great games. For example, Privateer Remake is not on the list, but a Babylon 5 expansion pack is? Go figure.
If you're looking for a smaller list of free game recommendations, try my Top 10 OSS Games You've Never Played article. I have personally played all of them, and enjoyed them to a varying degree. Not everyone has the same tastes as I do, but it might be an interesting list for you to check out in addition to this article. :) -
The server, she canna' take any more..
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Re:"Ach! Capt'n!!!"
Damn it Scotty. Reroute main power through the Auxiliary nyud Pathways.
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Anshe vs Furries
I was present back when Anshe pulled some nasty underhandedness with some a group of "furries" and removed all their content from an area they rented from her for disagreeing with her. This sparked a full on second life riot in the said area.
Hillarity ensued."
You know Anshe wouldn't get this treatment is she wasn't such a stuck up shark who abuses her position. No one has a problem with her being a business woman. The real problem is her attitude and her bad business practices.
I'd highly recommend that people simply stop renting from her, because the true cost (her attitude and DMCA crap like this) is really not worth it. -
Re:Well she has a point...
DAMMIT! I forgot the link! Now I look as stupid as the GP for misspelling.
Suitable for vegetarians
DugUK -
Re:40,000 developers with 100,000 lines of new cod
what's the big deal with upgrading a live site?
eBay has millions of visitors every day. So eBay's architecture is complex and it would be a nightmare if any error happens.I write software that builds and packages itself and then deploys it's own code to itself in production while it's running. No issues here...
Since the website is developed for few thousand visitors the architecture will be simple even if it involves multi million dollar transactions. Probably you will host your website in a single server and the upgrade process will be replacing the files in that server. But that is not the case with eBay. -
This slideset is more slashdot friendly
http://bitworking.org.nyud.net:8080/news/The_eBay
_ Architecture has way more detail than the buzz-text. -
Slashdotted
Unfortunately, it does not include the mysterious liquid that prevents servers from being slashdotted.
Coral cache link -
Re:So isolated, but so populated
Here are the images from NASA and the Royal New Zealand Air Force.
http://www.ulb.ac.be/sciences/cvl/homereef/homeree f.html
Mirror: http://www.ulb.ac.be.nyud.net:8080/sciences/cvl/ho mereef/homereef.html -
Re:Web 2.0 Url Please
Here's a good article that explains Web 2.0
http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/oreilly/tim/news/2 005/09/30/what-is-web-20.html
Coral Cache Link:
http://www.oreillynet.com.nyud.net:8090/pub/a/orei lly/tim/news/2005/09/30/what-is-web-20.html -
Re:Now we know
32MB of Coralized video goodness:
http://www.ee.washington.edu.nyud.net:8090/researc h/seal/projects/seal_robot/media/robot_video_1.avi -
Slashdotted already
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Roland!
I must say, I've never been one of the Roland haters on slashdot, but then I never knew that he wears orange glasses with a matching shirt
-Grey -
It's slashdotted already!
Try the Coral: http://www.attrition.org.nyud.net:8090/postal/z/0
3 3/0871.html
For those interested in making your own Corals sometime when an article has already been slashdotted, head over to http://www.coralcdn.org/ and follow the instructions or just put the URL in the textbox. :)