Slashdot Mirror


User: nstrom

nstrom's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
125
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 125

  1. Re:Hey, I work in Brasil, Colombia, Argentina on Ask Slashdot: Trustworthy Proxy Services? · · Score: 1
  2. I'm not surprised... I was in China in the summer of 2001, and one of the things I vividly remember was riding the train from Beijing to Shanghai, and looking out the window at a factory with smokestacks belching bubblegum-pink smoke into the sky. That cannot be healthy, or likely legal, but in general in China rules and regulations are one thing on paper, and another thing in practice.

  3. Re:No engineering? on Shadow Scholar Details Student Cheating · · Score: 1

    You're probably thinking of Bézier curves.

  4. Screenshot with and without BCI on FreeType Project Cheers TrueType Patent Expiration · · Score: 3, Informative

    Here's a side-by-side screenshot of Linux font rendering with and without the now patent-free byte code interpretation: http://avi.alkalay.net/2007/01/freetype-with-bytecode-interpreter.html

  5. Wider target audience on Rogue PDFs Behind 80% of Exploits In Q4 '09 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Attacking Adobe Reader means that people who use Firefox are also at risk. For a long while, the popular security paradigm on Windows was that if you used IE you were at risk, but if you kept up with Windows Update and used only Firefox to browse the web you were pretty much safe from the majority of the exploits in the wild. Now that malicious PDFs are out there in force, users of Firefox are vulnerable once again.

  6. Gmail too on Hotmailers Hawking Hoax Hunan Half-Offs · · Score: 1

    I'm not too sure that gmail isn't a target... A couple weeks ago, my friend's Gmail account got hacked and the spammers sent the following message out to all his contacts:

    I am willing to give you a surprising happiness! Yesterday i had
    received the digtal camera which i ordered from ---www.wwooz.com--
    last week. its quilty is very good , and the price is very low.i am
    satisfied with it.

    If the products you expect is on the site, it is a wise choice for you
    to buy from this site.I believe you can get many surprising happiness
    and concessions.

    Incidentally,they import the products from korea.all of the products
    are brand new and original. they have good credit and many good
    feedback.they are worth trusting for us .
    Best wishes !

  7. Re:PDF Mirror on Dell Defect Turning 2.2GHz CPU Into 100MHz CPU? · · Score: 1

    Mirror doesn't seem to be working either :(

  8. Re:reason 1 down. reason 2 in que. on uTorrent To Build In Transfer-Throttling Ability · · Score: 1

    Closer makes no difference, effective transfer speed does (which BT already prioritizes peers based upon). I can get much better download rates from the guy in Finland with a 100mbit connection then I can from the guy across town on my same cable ISP with an already saturated 384kbps upload.

  9. What's new here? on ICANN Approves Non-Latin ccTLDs · · Score: 1

    Aren't IDNs already available via Puncode encoding? (For example the ones at http://www.w3.org/2003/Talks/0425-duerst-idniri/slide12-0.html) Or am I missing something?

  10. Re:Computational Problem on The Problem of Shards, Servers, and Queues In MMOs · · Score: 1

    Carnegie Mellon University, not Central Mich.

  11. More info on metafilter on New York Times Site Pop-Up Says Your Computer Is Infected · · Score: 1

    I was hit by this issue earlier today, more info with some malware URLs available on metafilter here.

  12. Re:URL Shortners Are Bad on URL Shortener tr.im To Go Community-Owned, Open Source · · Score: 5, Informative

    The original use of URL shortening services was to prevent link breakage in e-mail and nntp clients that linebreak after 80 characters. They still work great for this. http://tr.im/wGhA works a lot better in e-mail than http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&geocode=&q=1600+pennsylvania+ave,+dc&sll=37.0625,-95.677068&sspn=49.624204,58.359375&ie=UTF8&ll=38.898732,-77.038515&spn=0.012007,0.014248&z=16 . I've also heard shortened links used to good effect on internet radio, where it's easier to direct listeners to a tinyurl than a long forum URL, when there's discussion about a certain thread.

  13. WGA forum on Microsoft Uses WGA To Obtain Record Jail Sentences · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm betting that a good amount of the information used in this case came from posters on the WGA forum, where people can post if they're having issues with WGA. One of the tools available in that forum is a WGA diagnostic tool which will generate a sanitized text dump of a user's windows validation information. Most cases on that forum are people whose brother, cousin, or sketchy PC shop installed a common warez release of Windows on their systems, but several there are people who bought apparently legitimate software from resellers which failed validation and later turned out to be counterfeit. Microsoft got in touch with these users, identified the resellers, and I'm betting that this news story is the result.

  14. Re:Fujitsu actually makes laptops? on Fujitsu Offers Free Laptop Upgrades For Life · · Score: 4, Informative

    Fujitsu Siemens as a collaboration sells only to Europe/Middle East/Africa, not the US. I don't think this laptop or offer is available in the US.

  15. Re:Much ado about nothing on Comcast Discontinues Customers' USENET Service · · Score: 3, Informative

    Actually Comcast's usenet service was provided by Giganews, albeit with a 2GB/mo cap. So it wasn't just text groups, they had all the binary groups with excellent retention.

  16. Re:Well? on To Stet Or Not To Stet, That Is the Question · · Score: 1, Redundant

    This thing still cracks me up every time. I love it.

  17. In Soviet Russia... on Kaspersky Wins Important Ruling for the Anti-Malware Industry · · Score: 1

    Nice decision. I thought Kaspersky was a Russian operation though, was there really standing to sue them in a US court?

  18. Old-school hacker connection on Open Source Laser Business Opens In New York · · Score: 1

    Website hosted on 199.201.145.20 by the l0pht, if people still remember them.

    OrgName: L0pht Heavy Industries
    OrgID: LHI
    Address: 46 Waltham St
    City: Boston
    StateProv: MA
    PostalCode: 02118
    Country: US

  19. Mirror on RentACoder Losing Street Cred? · · Score: 1
  20. Story from a first-person perspective on Microsoft Tricks Hacker Into Jail · · Score: 4, Informative

    You can read about this arrest from a first person perspective at William Genovese's website here. An interesting read, and he lists some of the e-mail and snail mail addresses used in the sting against him.

  21. Full article on Making Ice Without Electricity · · Score: 2, Informative

    The full article seems to be available in the print-only version here:
    http://www.time.com/time/magazine/printout/0,8816, 1101299,00.html

    You're not missing much, though -- I'm guessing this one was a sidebar blurb, as it's only two paragraphs anyways.

  22. Re:How does this increase adoption rate? on IPv6 for the Linksys WRT54G · · Score: 1

    You can change port forwarding without a router reboot on Linksys routers. IIRC, D-Link routers do make you reboot, which is definitely annoying. Not sure about other manufacturers.

  23. @aim.com vs @netscape.net on AOL Launches Free Webmail Service · · Score: 1

    Couldn't you already get e-mail at your AOL screen name @netscape.net?

  24. Re:Some tech details, and a question on China Locks in its Net-Citizenry · · Score: 1

    Replying to myself.

    Slashdot ate my Unicode -- the domain name I was using was the first one in the "Chinese Domain Names" box here.

  25. Some tech details, and a question on China Locks in its Net-Citizenry · · Score: 5, Interesting

    These LGA people claim to require a browser plugin to use these Chinese domain names. However, it just seems that they're implementing the names using punycode and some new (presumably non ICANN-approved) TLDs.

    For example, the domain name "." resolves via punycode to xn--eqro3ot1fkxx.xn--55qx5d. Now we can check this domain via whois:

    $whois -h whois.i-dns.biz xn--eqro3ot1fkxx.xn--55qx5d

    i-DNS.net WHOIS Server Version 1-2-0

    This service may be used to query the availability of
    multilingual domain names. Please visit http://www.i-DNS.net/
    for more information about multilingual domain names.

    For help with the i-DNS.net WHOIS service, type 'HELP'.

    Domain ID: D1148313-IDNS
    Domain Name (Native): .
    Domain Name (ACE): xn--eqro3ot1fkxx.xn--55qx5d
    Created On: 14-Nov-2004 19:58:54 GMT
    Last Updated On: 02-Mar-2005 06:12:50 GMT
    Expiration Date: 14-Nov-2006 19:57:30 GMT

    ... [snipped to get past line-length filters] ...

    Name Server: ns1.i-dns.biz
    Name Server: ns2.i-dns.biz

    and we can actually resolve this name if we use the right DNS server:

    $dig xn--eqro3ot1fkxx.xn--55qx5d @ns1.i-dns.biz

    ; > DiG 9.2.2 > xn--eqro3ot1fkxx.xn--55qx5d @ns1.i-dns.biz
    ;; global options: printcmd
    ;; Got answer:
    ;; ->>HEADER ;; flags: qr aa rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 1, AUTHORITY: 2, ADDITIONAL: 2

    ;; QUESTION SECTION:
    ;xn--eqro3ot1fkxx.xn--55qx5d. IN A

    ;; ANSWER SECTION:
    xn--eqro3ot1fkxx.xn--55qx5d. 86400 IN A 203.81.44.27

    ;; AUTHORITY SECTION:
    xn--eqro3ot1fkxx.xn--55qx5d. 86400 IN NS ns1.universal-names.com.
    xn--eqro3ot1fkxx.xn--55qx5d. 86400 IN NS ns2.universal-names.com.

    ;; ADDITIONAL SECTION:
    ns1.universal-names.com. 117755 IN A 203.81.44.40
    ns2.universal-names.com. 117774 IN A 203.81.44.27

    ;; Query time: 821 msec
    ;; SERVER: 203.81.44.40#53(ns1.i-dns.biz)
    ;; WHEN: Tue Apr 26 19:49:06 2005
    ;; MSG SIZE rcvd: 148

    The question raised here then is the following: why use a browser plugin at all if all is needed is to configure the user's DNS resolver to consult alternate root servers for the new TLDs? The paranoid conspiracy theorist in me suggests spyware, or something else that's not quite kosher.