Laptops also have smaller screens than the larger 1280x1024 LCD monitors. I have to set the fonts in my browser to 20 points to just be able to easily read web sites on my laptop.
So, I take it you don't want to know about legitimate bounces, so you can just believe that your mail always succeeds?
Sure I want to know; I just don't want those notices mixed into my inbox. The recipe only puts the DSNs into a separate folder so that they aren't mixed up with other mail. If you're getting hammered with 3000+ DSNs per day in your inbox like the article submitter is, then it'd help to filter them somewhere else so that you can deal with other mail that isn't from mailer daemons.
This procmail recipe will at least get them out of your inbox. I got this from someone here on slashdot and I forgot to write down who it was from. Thanks anonymous slashdot procmail guru.
# This recipe catches most DSNs :0HB * -1^0 * 1^0 ^FROM_MAILER * 1^0 ^Status: 4.2.0 * 1^0 ^Status: 4.4.1 * 1^0 ^Status: 4.4.2 * 1^0 ^Status: 4.4.6 * 1^0 ^Status: 4.4.7 * 1^0 ^Status: 5.0.0 * 1^0 ^Status: 5.1.1 * 1^0 ^Status: 5.1.2 * 1^0 ^Status: 5.1.6 * 1^0 ^Status: 5.2.1 * 1^0 ^Status: 5.2.2 * 1^0 ^Status: 5.2.3 * 1^0 ^Status: 5.3.5 * 1^0 ^Status: 5.4.7 * 1^0 ^Status: 5.5.0 * 1^0 ^Status: 5.7.1 * 1^0 ^554 5.0.0 Service unavailable.* * 1^0 ^Remote host said: 550.*User unknown * 1^0 ^Remote host said: 554.*doesn't have a yahoo.com account.* * 1^0 ^User.*not listed in public Name & Address Book * 1^0 ^Sorry, no mailbox here by that name. * 1^0 ^<.*>: Unkown user: * 1^0 ^User mailbox exceeds allowed size: * 1^0 ^.*No matches to nameserver query * 1^0 ^A message that you sent could not be delivered * 1^0 ^.*550 unknown user * 1^0 ^This is a permanent error; I've given up. * 1^0 ^The user(s) account is temporarily over quota. * 1^0 ^Receiver not found:.* * 1^0 ^Requested action not taken: mailbox unavailable. * 1^0 ^--AOL Postmaster * 1^0 ^I'm sorry to have to inform you that the message returned * 1^0 ^550 5.1.1 <.*>... User unknown * 1^0 ^550 <.*>\.\.\. User unknown * 1^0 ^Subject:.*failure notice * 1^0 ^did not reach the following recipient\(s\): * 1^0 ^The following recipient(s) could not be reached: * 1^0 ^.*550 Mailbox quota exceeded * 1^0 ^.*550 Access Denied * 1^0 ^550 5.0.0.*Can't create output * 1^0 ^.*There is no such addressee as * 1^0 ^Mail Delivery Failed... User unknown daemon-msgs
Instead of having to buy a book, isn't there an official Javascript reference on the net? Sort of like how php.net/manual is the definitive reference on PHP, is there anything like that for Javascript?
I use Spamvampire almost constantly. It works great. It sucks up their bandwidth, and while it doesn't DOS them, it does make the business of spam a hell of a lot less financially viable.
Wouldn't local, transparent HTTP proxies put in place by ISPs, such as DSL and dialup providers, prevent SpamVampire from being effective?
The web site looks veyr nice and professional. I think good web designs like this will help improve OSS image with the PHBs. But, why the fixed width at 800 pixels? I have so much screen that's empty when reading the site that could be put to use.
Because v2 is more powerful. Filter chains for one. You can have the output routed through various modules and even shell commands before it's served up to the user. For example, if you want the output of a CGI to then go through server side includes expansion, then gzipped and served to the user. Apache 1.x doesn't have that kind of flexability.
IIRC, it was a license issue. The AFS wanted the PHP project to switch to using one of the ASF licenses while the PHP folks did not. PHP is still listed as a sister project. It's just not under the official ASF umbrella.
The story that is told over and over again is convincing the musician to sign a contract on the spot without getting legal council and being promised things that are not in the contract, and getting screwed over because of it as none of the promised things will ever materialize, and the record company will hold them to the contract mercilessly.
If you are so ignorant that you would sign a document without even reading it, then you deserve what you get. People can say anything. If it's not written down it doesn't mean squat. Always read contracts before you sign them. Read every single word. If there's just a section or sentence that you don't agree with, line through it and initial it. If someone wants you to sign "on the spot" then they need to be prepared to wait for however long it takes for you to read the thing. If you have questions then don't sign and seek out an expert (lawyer) for advice.
This isn't complicated, although it can very well affect your life in significant ways if you don't pay close attention to what you are agreeing to.
Re:Custom Styles [was Re: Here's Why I Run Mozilla
on
Mozilla 1.7.5 Released
·
· Score: 1
Well, you can still edit the userContent.css file in Firefox, it just doesn't support specific websites.
Yes, I know that. However, supporting specific web sites is what I needed. That feature hasn't yet made it into Firefox.
However the `class="mbody"' attribute is probably very unique
I disagree. I want to err on the side of caution rather than screw up the legibility of other web sites. This feature allows me to "fix" the style sheets on various other web sites so that they work better for me without impacting the style sheets of other sites in unforseen ways. I gave the Google groups example as one of many such rules that I have in my userContent.css file. Before this feature my style sheet was adversely affecting my view of other sites.
And even if Firefox is behind in some core features, the ability to use extentions means that it has features the Mozilla Suit will probably never have, because they would look like bloat to most users. That's the power of extentions - everyone can have their cake.
Mozilla supports extensions, too. Roaming profiles is implemented as an extension, although one that ships with the browser. Mozilla and Firefox are already reaching parity. I expect that I'll be using Firefox instead of the Mozilla suite within the next 12 months. But for now I'm used to the suite and it has the features that I need.
I run Mozilla because it gets new development first. Two examples:
1. I, along with a bunch of other people, funded a developer to add roaming profile support. It's in the 1.8alpha builds but AFAIK hasn't made it into Firefox yet. Roaming profiles was a huge loss for me when I stopped using Netscape 4. I'm glad to have it back and I'm glad that open source allowed me to do something about it rather than just sit around and complain about it being gone.
2. The new Google Groups displays messages in a proportional font and doesn't have a setting to display it in monospace. This really screws up messages that are meant to be monospaced such as source code. Google has some kind of algorithm that attempts to see if the line should be monospaced but it works poorly and shows a mixture of proportional and monospaced lines in some messages. That can make things more difficult to read.
As of Mozilla 1.8a3 I can limit stylesheets to a specific web site which allows me to fix my google groups problem. The following code in my chrome/userContent.css file lets me show google groups messages in monospace:
/* Display messages on google groups in monospaced font */ @-moz-document url-prefix(http://groups-beta.google.com/) { DIV[class=mbody] {font-family: monospace ! important} }
Right now the Mozilla trunk is where the action is for new features. Eventually new development will focus on Firefox, at which point I'll probably switch over. Until then, there are new features that I need and those needs aren't being met in Firefox (yet).
I don't have anything against subversion and never said that I did. If you had actually read my comment you would have seen that I was saying that the complexity of managing the required cerificates for HTTPS is beyond that of dealing with SSH and SSH keys.
Except that with HTTPS you have to dick around with creating a certificate, getting it signed, or self signing it, making sure that you don't have duplicate serial numbers (which some programs abort on), etc. Not to mention all the different formats for certificates. Dealing with those certificates is a huge pain in the ass.
SSH is easy because it'll handle the negotiation of all of that automatically. It's also trivial to create a SSH key with or without a password and put that on the server you want to connect to.
The buzz word is not "email client" but "personal information manager". Of course, these are two different things. The later requires the former, but not the other way around.
I disagree. A personal information manager doesn't require an email client. It all depends on what sort of personal information you wish to manage.
But had he known one GODDAMN thing about OKC, he MIGHT have warned everyone ahead of time.
Isn't there a law in the US that if you know that a voilent crime, such as murder, is going to take place and do not warn the appropriate authorities that you can be held accountable? If so since this guy says that he predicted it, he should be arrested.
Then there were 14 minutes of commercials (Pepsi, hair mousse, cologne, etc.) followed by 13 minutes of movie trailers (which are also advertising, of course), followed by a few minutes of junk, followed by a 100-minute movie.
My personal policy is that:
If I've paid to see a movie, and
The theatre shows me commercials (Pepsi, hair mousse, cologne, etc.)
Then I'm entitled to one free movie via Kazaa, BitTorrent, or whatever, for each commercial that I've been shown. My reasoning is that I've already paid to see the film. By showing me ads you are capitalizing on my captive eyeballs, much more captive than if I were at home watching TV and could change the channel or mute the TV. Therefore, my watching your commercial is worth more in the theatre than it would be elsewhere, at least $10 per ad. $10 is a small price to pay for the attention of someone who can't easily ignore your ad, nor easily go away and return at the cost of missing the beginning of the movie.
I don't count movie previews. I also don't count the still slides that are shown before the lights dim because at least there's no loud sound and you can still chat with your friends.
# Really give the Chinese Spammers a mouthful...
changequote([[,]])dnl
define([[confSMTP_LOGIN_MSG]], [[EFGIC: U.S. Congress Condemns China's Oppression of Falun Gong on\nU.S. Soil and in China\n\nHouse Concurrent Resolution 304 calls on China's agents in\n the United States to halt all operations being carried out against\n practitioners of Falun Gong on United States' soil, as well as the brutal\n persecution of millions inside China.\n\nLONDON (EFGIC) - Last week, the US Congress introduced a concurrent\n resolution calling on the Chinese government to end its brutal\n persecution of Falun Gong in China and stop all activities against Falun\n Gong practitioners inside the United States.\n House Concurrent Resolution 304 (full text), introduced by Congresswoman\n Ros-Lehtinen of Florida, references China's own constitution and\n international human rights accords in calling for China to uphold\n freedom of belief, assembly, and speech for the millions of Falun Gong\n practitioners in Mainland China.\n Resolution 304 also specifically mentioned section 401(a)(1)(B) of the\n International Religious Freedom Act of 1998 (22 U.S.C. 6401(a)(1)(B)):\n \"Whereas the Constitution of the United States guarantees freedom of\n religion, the right to assemble, and the right to speak freely, and the\n people of the United States strongly value protecting the ability of all\n people to live without fear and in accordance with their personal\n beliefs...\"\n Harassment, libel, and imprisonment have been widespread in\n Jiang Zemin's four-year campaign to eradicate Falun Gong. Torture and\n abuse in custody have led to thousands of wrongful deaths.\n]])dnl
changequote(`,')dnl
I don't have a solution to your USB boot problem, but until then why don't you keep a copy of the ultimate boot CD around. It'll be a good stopgap measure as long as the machines you work on have a CDROM drive.
You thought wrong. Considering that everything you mention can be implemented with less than a screen full of code in ARexx, I'd say the answer to all of your questions is yes.
People who haven't used Amigas don't realize how powerful ARexx was. ARexx made it trivial to extend the functionality of programs. Nearly every program had an ARexx port that you could connect to. Those programs exposed most, if not all, of their functionality via ARexx functions that you could access. With a couple lines of code you could tie programs together to do some powerful things. Think of it as shell scripting but with both large and small applications rather than just CLI based programs.
In the first Mario game I ever owned he worked at a cement factory so I'd say construction worker is close enough. If "construction worker" was wrong, what was the answer that you were expecting?
It'll be in the new Amigas. Just keep waiting!
Laptops also have smaller screens than the larger 1280x1024 LCD monitors. I have to set the fonts in my browser to 20 points to just be able to easily read web sites on my laptop.
That's why he said "imagine" as opposed to "i have"
That's a great idea. I'll add those as I get them.
Maybe you should roll out a new MTA first. Treating temporary failure codes as permanent failures means your current MTA is broken.
Instead of having to buy a book, isn't there an official Javascript reference on the net? Sort of like how php.net/manual is the definitive reference on PHP, is there anything like that for Javascript?
The web site looks veyr nice and professional. I think good web designs like this will help improve OSS image with the PHBs. But, why the fixed width at 800 pixels? I have so much screen that's empty when reading the site that could be put to use.
Because v2 is more powerful. Filter chains for one. You can have the output routed through various modules and even shell commands before it's served up to the user. For example, if you want the output of a CGI to then go through server side includes expansion, then gzipped and served to the user. Apache 1.x doesn't have that kind of flexability.
IIRC, it was a license issue. The AFS wanted the PHP project to switch to using one of the ASF licenses while the PHP folks did not. PHP is still listed as a sister project. It's just not under the official ASF umbrella.
This isn't complicated, although it can very well affect your life in significant ways if you don't pay close attention to what you are agreeing to.
1. I, along with a bunch of other people, funded a developer to add roaming profile support. It's in the 1.8alpha builds but AFAIK hasn't made it into Firefox yet. Roaming profiles was a huge loss for me when I stopped using Netscape 4. I'm glad to have it back and I'm glad that open source allowed me to do something about it rather than just sit around and complain about it being gone.
2. The new Google Groups displays messages in a proportional font and doesn't have a setting to display it in monospace. This really screws up messages that are meant to be monospaced such as source code. Google has some kind of algorithm that attempts to see if the line should be monospaced but it works poorly and shows a mixture of proportional and monospaced lines in some messages. That can make things more difficult to read.
As of Mozilla 1.8a3 I can limit stylesheets to a specific web site which allows me to fix my google groups problem. The following code in my chrome/userContent.css file lets me show google groups messages in monospace:
Right now the Mozilla trunk is where the action is for new features. Eventually new development will focus on Firefox, at which point I'll probably switch over. Until then, there are new features that I need and those needs aren't being met in Firefox (yet).
I don't have anything against subversion and never said that I did. If you had actually read my comment you would have seen that I was saying that the complexity of managing the required cerificates for HTTPS is beyond that of dealing with SSH and SSH keys.
SSH is easy because it'll handle the negotiation of all of that automatically. It's also trivial to create a SSH key with or without a password and put that on the server you want to connect to.
- If I've paid to see a movie, and
- The theatre shows me commercials (Pepsi, hair mousse, cologne, etc.)
Then I'm entitled to one free movie via Kazaa, BitTorrent, or whatever, for each commercial that I've been shown. My reasoning is that I've already paid to see the film. By showing me ads you are capitalizing on my captive eyeballs, much more captive than if I were at home watching TV and could change the channel or mute the TV. Therefore, my watching your commercial is worth more in the theatre than it would be elsewhere, at least $10 per ad. $10 is a small price to pay for the attention of someone who can't easily ignore your ad, nor easily go away and return at the cost of missing the beginning of the movie.I don't count movie previews. I also don't count the still slides that are shown before the lights dim because at least there's no loud sound and you can still chat with your friends.
# Really give the Chinese Spammers a mouthful...
changequote([[,]])dnl
define([[confSMTP_LOGIN_MSG]], [[EFGIC: U.S. Congress Condemns China's Oppression of Falun Gong on\nU.S. Soil and in China\n\nHouse Concurrent Resolution 304 calls on China's agents in\n the United States to halt all operations being carried out against\n practitioners of Falun Gong on United States' soil, as well as the brutal\n persecution of millions inside China.\n\nLONDON (EFGIC) - Last week, the US Congress introduced a concurrent\n resolution calling on the Chinese government to end its brutal\n persecution of Falun Gong in China and stop all activities against Falun\n Gong practitioners inside the United States.\n House Concurrent Resolution 304 (full text), introduced by Congresswoman\n Ros-Lehtinen of Florida, references China's own constitution and\n international human rights accords in calling for China to uphold\n freedom of belief, assembly, and speech for the millions of Falun Gong\n practitioners in Mainland China.\n Resolution 304 also specifically mentioned section 401(a)(1)(B) of the\n International Religious Freedom Act of 1998 (22 U.S.C. 6401(a)(1)(B)):\n \"Whereas the Constitution of the United States guarantees freedom of\n religion, the right to assemble, and the right to speak freely, and the\n people of the United States strongly value protecting the ability of all\n people to live without fear and in accordance with their personal\n beliefs...\"\n Harassment, libel, and imprisonment have been widespread in\n Jiang Zemin's four-year campaign to eradicate Falun Gong. Torture and\n abuse in custody have led to thousands of wrongful deaths.\n]])dnl
changequote(`,')dnl
I don't have a solution to your USB boot problem, but until then why don't you keep a copy of the ultimate boot CD around. It'll be a good stopgap measure as long as the machines you work on have a CDROM drive.
People who haven't used Amigas don't realize how powerful ARexx was. ARexx made it trivial to extend the functionality of programs. Nearly every program had an ARexx port that you could connect to. Those programs exposed most, if not all, of their functionality via ARexx functions that you could access. With a couple lines of code you could tie programs together to do some powerful things. Think of it as shell scripting but with both large and small applications rather than just CLI based programs.
In the first Mario game I ever owned he worked at a cement factory so I'd say construction worker is close enough. If "construction worker" was wrong, what was the answer that you were expecting?