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User: mikl

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  1. Good, Fast, or Cheap? on Things To Look For In a Web Hosting Company? · · Score: 1

    As the old saying goes,

    Pick any two:
      - Good
      - Fast
      - Cheap

    Good hosting is not cheap; cheap hosting comes with sacrifices. Most people can live with cheap hosting (does your site REALLY require 99.999% uptime?) and the choices are endless for decent, affordable hosting. If you need more than that, you are going to have to spend for it.

    Bandwidth, disk, redundant power, CPU cycles - those things are all finite and all still cost money.

  2. Re:A warning about 1 and 1 on Things To Look For In a Web Hosting Company? · · Score: 1

    I posted above about an experience I had with 1and1, while still holding an open and current (paid in full) account -- they turned me over to collection for an amount that I did not owe, had already paid, and had records (credit card bills) proving I paid it.

    Took days spending hours on the phone and sending a lot of faxes and letters via email to get it resolved. Nobody at 1and1 seemed to care or be bothered to do anything about it; it was always someone else's problem. The collection agency would only cease action if they got notice from 1and1 that it was resolved... Wash, rinse, repeat.

  3. Re:1and1 on Things To Look For In a Web Hosting Company? · · Score: 1

    I also recently switched from 1&1 to Dreamhost. I had been with 1&1 since around 2002 when they came on the scene with a lot of promotions.

    I had little downtime but the few times I did need support, I also had significant hassles and long hold times. It was a very "corporate" feeling, like dealing with AT&T or the government.

    I had a major issue with billing circa 2005 where they turned me over for collection, on an account that was paid in full and current! It took hours on the phone over multiple days, along with a lot of official-sounding faxes on letterhead to get that resolved and I should have canceled then.

    The 1&1 control panel got continuously more proprietary and locked into their own services instead of more popular standards. I just got tired of it. I still have the account open and one client domain on it because I haven't had time to stage them on the new host and verify all the old code is going to work - I had to make minor updates on a few of the older sites while moving to Dreamhost due to some deprecated PHP.

    Anyway, I've been with Dreamhost now for about 6 months and have no complaints. I don't know that I would put something mission-critical there, but for my unimportant blog/personal space, our small business ecommerce site and my tiny consulting site and some free hosting for church & friends it works fine.

  4. Re:Make the damn fisherman get driver's licenses on The Men Who Fix the Internet · · Score: 1

    I'm American (although an admitted Anglophile), but I've never heard or used "preventive" - always "preventative"

  5. Re:Um, or... on Laboring Longer a Growing Trend For Americans · · Score: 1, Interesting

    My grandfather is almost 82, and still works and travels for his business. He had a 40 year career with a major food company and retired, but started a small business to have something to do. He also farmed on the side. He doesn't work because he needs the money (he was wise and invested, saved, and has social security and a company pension as well as his own investments and hundreds of acres of land) but he works to stay active. He's in better health than many people half his age. My grandmother is 78 and also still active. They just returned from a 10 day trip to Ireland, and travel every year to somewhere nice.

    My dad is 51 and retired from his own business and now on his second career as a minister. He's not sitting around waiting on social security or a pension, and he's not working because he has to.

    The moral: take care of yourself and don't expect the government to fund your retirement vacations to Europe. I'm in my mid-20s and I've been pumping into a 401(k) since the day I started working. I never expect to see a dime from Social Security, and I wish I could opt out of the broken system so I could put that tax money in my own retirement investments where it would do me some good. I have no interest in funding the retirement of those who were too lazy or unwise to save for themselves.

  6. Re:You've got a little evil there on your mouth... on Google Sued for $1B Over Outlook Migration Tool · · Score: 2, Funny

    *Slap*

    (Even lower UID than the first slap you got. Yeah.)

  7. Vanilla Sky on What's the Worst Movie You've Ever Seen? · · Score: 1

    Vanilla Sky was the absolute worst movie I have ever seen. Hands down.

  8. Re:The only way to change things. on Senate Unanimously Passes Anti-Camcorder Bill · · Score: 1

    Great idea, but could we do it somewhere besides New Hampshire? Maybe somewhere tropical that people would WANT to live?

  9. Re:Linux-based similar setup in Jetta on Ultimate Automotive Computer Installation · · Score: 1

    Correction -- he's in Florida.

  10. Linux-based similar setup in Jetta on Ultimate Automotive Computer Installation · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Chris Bergeron did very much the same thing in his VW Jetta. He lives in Georgia, US. He's shown it at several southeast-area cons.

    http://www.dashpc.com/

  11. Located in Vincennes, Indiana on Build Your Own Roller Coaster · · Score: 1

    Located in Vincennes, Indiana

    Wow, I actually know where that is. Even though I live in southern Tennessee, I have some friends who live in Illinois about 40 minutes from Vincennes. I've passed through there on the way to visit them several times. Guess I'll have to look this roller coaster up next time I venture north. Not a very large town by any means, so it can't be too hard to find.

    No surprise that he works with grain elevators either, considering that there's a LOT of corn, wheat, and soybean farming in that region.

  12. Re:My letter to Verio and Mr. Gilmore on Open Relays, Free Speech, and Virus Propagation · · Score: 1

    Dear Nameless Coward,

    In fact I'm not at all ashamed or embarrassed to put my name and email address beside what I posted/wrote. I know it isn't hard to find my email address and even my telephone number (it is on the site as well). Furthermore, my uid is based on a phonetic spelling of my name. Very clever of me to try so hard to stay an "Anonymous Coward", isn't it?

    I initially posted the message verbatim which included my e-mail signature, which contains my web site, email address, phone number, and AIM/MSN screen names. However, the Slashdot Junk Buster rejected it due to two lines of '---' characters. I'm not afraid of being "found out" like it appears you and so many other blathering idiots on the Internet are.

    Thank you for making it easier for others to contact me. I hope you will devote the same energy into writing Verio or Mr. Gilmore, and sent me a copy of it, even if you don't agree.

    -Michael

  13. Re:John Gilmore is lying on Open Relays, Free Speech, and Virus Propagation · · Score: 1

    > I think he is just trying to stubbornly make some
    > minor point of personal philosophy, and hiding it
    > with his words.

    That is almost exactly the case, except he isn't even hiding it with his words. If you find time to read the entire page, I think he makes it pretty clear that he's making himself a "martyr" of sorts (by having his machines killed from the Internet at large) to make his point.

    While I respect what the man has done in the past, I think he is indeed a stubborn old fool in a lot of his latest undertakings.

  14. My letter to Verio and Mr. Gilmore on Open Relays, Free Speech, and Virus Propagation · · Score: 3, Interesting

    From: Michael Merritt
    To: drg@verio.net
    Cc: gnu@toad.com
    Date: Thu, 7 Mar 2002 12:47:17 -0600

    Mr. Darren Grabowski
    Verio Security

    Mr. Grabowski,

    I write to you in response to the web page located at
    http://www.toad.com/gnu/verio-censorship.html

    I encourage you to continue your actions against Mr. Gilmore in response to
    his refusal to comply with the terms of your company's AUP.

    Let me state that I firmly uphold Mr. Gilmore's RIGHTS to run an open mail
    relay as "free speech". Yet, I also firmly uphold your company's ("Verio")
    RIGHTS to deny him service if he does not adhere to the terms of the service
    contract which you offer him. Mr. Gilmore's continual payment of the service
    charge for his T1 connection is acceptance of the terms of Verio's service
    contract.

    Furthermore, I firmly support the RIGHTS of Internet users, system and
    network administrators, and blacklists to REFUSE to accept mail from Mr.
    Gilmore's server/connection/domain.

    I am exercising my RIGHTS to freedom of speech and expression in this
    message, as any American citizen is permitted. I also respect the fact that
    you have a RIGHT to disregard, ignore, or otherwise disagree with my views,
    beliefs, and practices.

    If Mr. Gilmore is truly concerned about everyone having the freedom to
    exercise their RIGHTS, he will accept the fact that Verio has the RIGHT to
    deny him a connection, and he has the RIGHT to seek a connection to the
    Internet elsewhere. I do not find a law or governing statute anywhere that
    declares every free man has a RIGHT to access the Internet.

    Thank you for your time and consideration of this matter,

    --
    Michael Merritt
    SPAM filtering by SubLimeMail -- http://www.sublimemail.com/
    (remainder of signature snipped for /. "junk filter")

  15. Just like Slashdot Journalism on News Media Scammed by 'Free Energy' Hoax · · Score: 1

    Hmm, looks like the media that uses news feeds from the AP may verify their sources ALMOST as much as the Slashdot editors do.

    -miklm

  16. Exclamation points? on Post-mortem of a DOS Attack · · Score: 1

    There are only ten (10) exclamation points in the article, excluding the ones during the IRC chat log. Considering the article is SEVERAL pages long, I find it hard to consider this *excessive* use of exclamation points!

    -Michael

  17. It isn't FOR gaming! on Half Keyboard, Full Bore · · Score: 1

    The think that people are not realizing that this keyboard was not designed for gaming - look at the material on the web site, and you see that they are targetting for PDA users.

    As the user of a Jornada, I can definitely see where this would have advantages. A keyboard on which I could achieve 30-some odd words per minute would be FAR superior to the pen-based input. THIS is where this keyboard will find its market. The person who is playing games is not going to want to use this mini keyboard, but the travelling sales rep would very much want to tuck this in his brief case to use on his Palm or PocketPC.

    Different products appeal to different markets. Obviously this one would flop for gamers, but there are other applications where it would shine, making it a cool product in general. Just because it doesn't increase your scores in online games doesn't mean it sucks!

    -Michael
    Geek for hire

  18. Re:tip of the iceberg on Security - Logitech Wireless Mice & Keyboards Can Be Sniffed · · Score: 1
    > MOst consumer grade products aren't shielded
    > nearly enough, because, obviously, that would
    > drive the price up for a benefit most people
    > wouldn't even be aware of..

    ...nor would it really help them. Seriously, I doubt it really matters to my grandmother if someone "sniffs" her monitor and sees her reading her email and browsing genealogy sites!

    Face it, the average person who is using a wireless keyboard is NOT going to be doing anything that significantly matters in the realm of privacy or security. If you are THAT paranoid, surely you knew LONG, LONG ago that wireless kb/mouse was a bad idea.

    -Michael
    Shameless plug: http://www.miklm.com/resume.html

  19. Re:I wonder if I could... on Got Tracks? · · Score: 1

    Actually..... The truck on the front page (white 4-door with blue paint accents) would be a Ford F-250 or F-350 Super Duty crew cab.

    -Michael

  20. Re:I wonder if I could... on Got Tracks? · · Score: 1

    Sorry, I've been working with VB/ASP too long. (Trek|Wars) or [Trek||Wars] should work to get the point across. How about just "Trek" OR "Wars"?

    :-)

    -Michael

  21. Re:Pricing transparency on the Net on Dynamic Pricing Returns · · Score: 1

    Agreed, for the most part. It would be nice to see a "pricing history" on Dell's site, so perhaps you can see if the system you are quoting is $10 cheaper than it was yesterday, and $45 cheaper than last week, and the price drop is caused by CPUs going down $5.50 and memory dropping $4.50. But, I doubt it will happen :-(

    -Michael

  22. Re:I wonder if I could... on Got Tracks? · · Score: 1
    Fact is, many of us "nerds" are very interested in automotive technology. Slashdot is a site that posts a wide variety of news topics, and while many of them don't interest me, I don't expect all of them to interest you, either. So, you pass over the ones that you don't find intriguing, and I'll quitely pass over all the Star [Trek|Wars], etc., article that do not interest me. Just because we have the common quality of being "nerds" doesn't mean we all have the same periperial interests also.

    BTW, Chevy's rock! My Z71 will out-pull on your Ford any day! ;-)

  23. Re:Pricing transparency on the Net on Dynamic Pricing Returns · · Score: 1
    > What would be good from the customer perspective is if websites actually provided
    > some pricing rationale and history. You could click on an item's price and see that yes, it
    > is $100 more expensive today than yesterday, but that's because the price of RAM has just
    > gone up, say.

    http://www.pricewatch.com tells you whether prices went up or down for certain parts. I've seen similar things for other industries also.

    I know that isn't exactly what you are talking about, but some companies do provide this info, or there are other 3rd parties that help.

    --Michael

  24. Re:But do I trust it? on "Cheese Worm" Fixes Broken Linux Systems? · · Score: 1

    > so what harm could it do?

    The harm is this: after Cheese patches your system, it starts scanning other systems. Meaning, your IP address could very well show up in the logs at no-telling-what-Big-Company-that-keeps-very-good-l ogs. The next thing you know, the FBI is knocking on YOUR door wondering why you are scanning Company's IP-block.

    With all the prevalence of DoS attacks now-a-days, I know we keep a lot closer tabs of our logs and security stuff than we did a year ago. I'm sure other companies are doing this as well, and your IP address showing up in a security log is not generally a good thing.

    So, while directly doing some good by patching holes, it maintains all the same appearances of a malicious worm, and if the people you end up scanning don't KNOW this already, you could end up getting reported or checked out really close.

    Of course, if ppl would apply patches on a regular basis, you wouldn't have to worry about the Lion worm, and as a result, Cheese. :-)

    -Michael

  25. Re:But do I trust it? on "Cheese Worm" Fixes Broken Linux Systems? · · Score: 1

    > I dont think anyone would "let" any worm into
    > thier system on a voluntary basis, but if you
    > read the story I believe it will tell you that
    > the Cheese worm enters via a port that the 1ion
    > worm leaves open. So, if you get the Cheese worm
    > you have already been attacked and most likely
    > didnt know about it.

    Understood. I did read the article. :-) However, my concern is based on the fact that a LOT of people are lauding this as a great thing. "Hey, free security updates!" and such. However, regardless of whether the worm's payload is harmful or helpful, it is still using unauthorized resources.

    I have a hard time saying unequivocably that "this is a BAD THING(tm)", but I'm not exactly sure that it is exactly a Good Thing(tm) either. After all, it still takes advantage of a security flaw in an unauthorized manner. GRANTED, this will only affect people THIS TIME that a.) haven't patched systems for the Lion worm and b.) could have had Lion on their systems for MONTHS proving their incompetence at security. To those people, THIS worm is probably a good thing, since it will do the work that lots of people are either too lazy or stupid to do.

    My concern is, NEXT TIME, somebody might release a worm that fixes one hole, while making two or three others. I just think it is a bad precedent for us (sysadmins) to say, "Hey, this Cheese worm thing is a good thing", because if we take a step in that direction, we'll get taken advantage of in the future. Trust no one, keep your guard up!

    -Michael