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User: TDScott

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Comments · 86

  1. Whoops - sorry, to head off any criticism: on A Piece of CherryPy for CGI Programmers · · Score: 4, Informative

    that's a referral link in the parent post. To be honest, I'd recommend them anyway, but it's probably best to disclose it.

  2. So, we now have on A Piece of CherryPy for CGI Programmers · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Regular CGI, mod_perl, mod_python, the newcomer Ruby on Rails, and now CherryPy. Granted, some webhosts handle the first four (even Rails) without any problems, but how many do we really need?

    I suppose the answer is "as many as it takes" — whatever's easiest for some users will be utterly impenetrable to others, and it's good to have choice. But at what point does it start to become a burden to keep up with all these — either for programmers looking to keep their CVs up to date, or hosts wanting to stay current?

  3. Of course, if you don't want to pay... on Cell Phone Ringtones Give Music Industry Another Headache · · Score: 2, Informative

    there's this handy site I made,which will take any MIDI file, put it on a WAP server, and let you use it as a polyphonic ringtone, for free.

  4. Re:Lets face it though.... on New Dr Who Actor Named · · Score: 1

    There are some quite entertaining expletive-ridden audio outtakes from Tom Baker doing a voiceover for a company called Symphony...

  5. A quick parody... on U.S. Begins Digital Fingerprinting In Airports · · Score: 4, Funny

    The Department of Homeland Security put out a PDF leaflet about the program, which contained their normal, almost incomprehensible pictograms like those on ready.gov

    I thought they needed some better, and funnier, subtitles.

  6. A clue-in for the people who modded 'informative': on SETI Project Scientist Discusses Prospects · · Score: 3, Informative

    that's not SHGb11+15a...

    that's the sound of the signal from Contact.

    Spooked me a little before I realised what it was, though.

  7. Re:Talk Like a Pirate on Dave Barry Strikes Back Against Telemarketers · · Score: 1

    Arr, and I be obliged to be postin' a link for the British HQ for the day, yarr.org.uk. We be havin' pirate ringtones for yer phone, too, an' a guide on how to be proper takin' like a pirate. Yarr.

  8. Been around Europe lately? on The Sentient Office Is Coming · · Score: 3, Informative

    The first mobile videophones are already on sale and in use. We're not quite there with the flying cars yet, though.

  9. Sterling Hughes' blog says on Introduction to PHP5 · · Score: 1

    "this [the talk] is hosted on NYPHP's servers... and is running Apache 1.3.27 + PHP5. PHP5 leaks worse than the Titanic..."

    And you linked to it from Slashdot and expected it to survive long enough so that any non-subscriber could click on it?!

  10. Go with POPFile. on NYTimes: Tangled Up in Spam · · Score: 4, Informative

    SpamAssassin's a great idea, but for the non-technically minded user, POPFile's the best choice. Bayesian filters, learning, kickass UI, and a Windows installer (and Perl for other platforms.)

  11. Uh... that's what I said. on Milestones in the Annals of Junkmail · · Score: 2

    I said: "That [you] was (and still technically is) the respectful version."

    You said: "The familiar version of "you" in Middle/Early Modern language is "thou." "

    Aren't we saying the same thing?

  12. Yep - it'd be "you"... on Milestones in the Annals of Junkmail · · Score: 2

    That was (and still technically is) the respectful version. The monarch would reply using "thou".

    Wow. I actually learned something useful out of my English course...

  13. Nope... that would be "Your Majesty". on Milestones in the Annals of Junkmail · · Score: 4, Informative
    "Your Highness" denotes royalty other than a King or Queen. "Your Majesty" denotes a King or a Queen. (Source)

    Just nitpicking...

  14. A book recommendation for the submitter: on Scotland: Aliens' Official Favorite Destination · · Score: 5, Informative
    "The Demon-Haunted World" by Carl Sagan does an excellent job of debunking such myths and mysteries, as does the Skeptic's Dictionary.

    Funny what people believe, isn't it?

  15. If you need help convincing people... on More on Kazaa and Brilliant Digital Spyware · · Score: 4, Informative
    Just a quick note - as I always do in these topics - I've written an under-600-word guide to the problem and how to fix it, designed for the uninitiated.

    Pointing people there could save hours of explanation...

  16. If you need help convincing people... on General Public Realizes KaZaa is Spyware · · Score: 3, Informative
    ...then I've written an under-600-word guide to the problem and how to fix it, designed for the uninitiated.

    Pointing people there could save hours of explanation...

  17. Re: Close, but not quite... on The Internet Shifts East · · Score: 1

    I normally use Opera, but for this I had to switch to IE6: the Fish outputted the right codes and IE6 could copy and paste them, in their original Japanese form, straight into the text box.

  18. Well, it may mean we have this... on The Internet Shifts East · · Score: 1, Funny

    ÚÒÚ!

    (That's Babelfish's Chinese translation of First Post.)

  19. How true that is... on Broadband Is Dead (Or At Least Very Ill) · · Score: 3, Informative
    In the areas in the UK where it's available, broadband works well and is cheap, with ADSL and cable offerings (from BT and NTL respectively) are around 0.5Mbps for £25 ($40)/month. That's respectable, even if takeup is a little lower than they hoped.

    The trouble is that the market here has been hoisted on its own petard - when no subscription, toll-free, ad-free dial-up is available (though for how much longer, no-one knows), Joe User can't see the point in broadband.

  20. Alas, it's not possible... on Songfile (lyrics.ch) Trails Off · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Since the first copyright dispute, they've used a Java applet that doesn't allow cutting and pasting, or paging through...

    It can't be copied unless you somehow intercepted the packets - and even then, that's a lot of work when some other website will probably have printed the lyrics anyway.

    So long, lyrics.ch. We hardly knew ya.

  21. Um... ow. on New (More) Annoying Microsoft Worm Hits Net · · Score: 1

    Yep, agreed. This thing is nasty.

  22. Re:This is the EML file headers... on New (More) Annoying Microsoft Worm Hits Net · · Score: 1

    Apart from the fake MIME headers, there is this little gem:

    Content-Type: audio/x-wav;
    name="readme.exe"

    IE interprets this as 'I'm a WAV file, I'm harmless', ignoring the fact that the extension is quite clearly an EXE file.

  23. This is the EML file headers... on New (More) Annoying Microsoft Worm Hits Net · · Score: 2, Informative

    ...and it's actually quite clever if you look closely...

    MIME-Version: 1.0
    Content-Type: multipart/related;
    type="multipart/alternative";
    boundary="====_ABC1234567890DEF_===="
    X-Priority: 3
    X-MSMail-Priority: Normal
    X-Unsent: 1

    --====_ABC1234567890DEF_====
    Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
    boundary="====_ABC0987654321DEF_===="

    --====_ABC0987654321DEF_====
    Content-Type: text/html;
    charset="iso-8859-1"
    Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable

    --====_ABC0987654321DEF_====--

    --====_ABC1234567890DEF_====
    Content-Type: audio/x-wav;
    name="readme.exe"
    Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64
    Content-ID:

  24. How to stop Internet Explorer executing said wav on New (More) Annoying Microsoft Worm Hits Net · · Score: 1

    I'm fairly sure this will work, but IANAMSCE...

    Go to Tools > Internet Options > Advanced.

    Uncheck 'Play sounds in web pages'.

  25. 13:26 London time. Damn, this thing is fast. on New (More) Annoying Microsoft Worm Hits Net · · Score: 2

    ...but then, as it's trying everything, it would be...