A page for randomness

April 30, 2007

Superman: Doomsday Trailer Now Online

Filed under: random — Mark @ 3:48 am

Superman: Doomsday Trailer Now Online
DC is entering the direct-to-dvd animated feature market with Superman: Doomsday this September. IMDB now has the trailer online, although it is only available in Windows Media and RealPlayer formats.

The cut of the trailer isn’t very impressive, but the animation looks excellent. It almost looks like an evolution of the Bruce Timm style, with just a hint of “The Batman” styled animation but not too much…calm down fanboys.

April 25, 2007

Welcome to Your New Earth! Beware of Red Sunlight

Filed under: random — Mark @ 8:41 pm

Welcome to Your New Earth! Beware of Red Sunlight - Science News - Playfuls.com - Science & Technology
Forget Mars or Titan’s icy hopes of extra-terrestrial life: scientists claim they have discovered the first planet that could allow the existence of liquid water on its surface.

Using the ESO 3.6-m telescope, a team of Swiss, French and Portuguese scientists discovered something they called “a super-Earth”- about 5 times the mass of our planet-that orbits a star included in the category of red dwarfs. The star, dubbed Gliese 581, is already known to be orbited by a Neptune-mass planet (fifteen to seventeen earth masses). The Neptune-mass exo-planet orbits just 6 million kilometers (0.04 AU) from Gliese 581, and so is estimated to have a surface temperature of 150 °C, despite how dim the star is. It orbits its host star in 5.4 days.

Virus Writers Target Googles Sponsored Links

Filed under: random — Mark @ 8:33 pm

Slashdot | Virus Writers Target Googles Sponsored Links
“It looks like the bad guys are gaming Googles sponsored links to spread their junk to people who click on the ads with unpatched versions of Internet Explorer. Attackers apparently bought the rights to several high profile search terms, including searches that would return results for the Better Business Bureau, among others. The story notes this was bound to happen, given the way Google structures sponsored links: “The bad guys behind the attack appeared to capitalize on an odd feature of Googles sponsored links. Normally, when a viewer hovers over a hyperlink, the name of the site that the computer user is about to access appears in the bottom left corner of the browser window. But hovering over Googles sponsored links shows nothing in that area. That blank space potentially gives bad guys another way to hide where visitors will be taken first.”"

April 22, 2007

So Ronery

Filed under: personal, random — Mark @ 5:56 pm

http://fattyfeelsleftout.ytmnd.com/

(06:53:55 PM) markus: oh man
(06:54:13 PM) MetiusFufetius05: Story of my life

MythTV/Install/WhatNext/WNCombined vnc

Filed under: personal, random — Mark @ 4:49 pm

MythTV/Install/WhatNext/WNCombined - Community Ubuntu Documentation
A very convenient method of remote administration of a Frontend is to install a VNC server. Credit to Mark Chang for the original information for this from the mythtv mailing list.

1 Install vnc server package

sudo apt-get install vnc4server

April 21, 2007

Dell offers XP again amidst Vista complaints

Filed under: linux, unix, and open source, news, random — Mark @ 10:34 am

Dell offers XP again amidst Vista complaints | Channel Register
At Ideastorm, users can create or vote on suggestions to the company (in the courteous and thoughtful manner the internet is known for). Most of the complaints on the site regard a lack of OS options.

The most popular Vista-phobic post and the one that got the company’s attention is “Dont [sic] eliminate XP just yet” which received 12,228 supporting “points.” (The scoring process on the site is extremely convoluted. According to the site, each vote bumps the score by 10 points. This would mean either there’s something else unsaid in the woodwork, or there’s 1,222 and eight tenths of a person who wants XP. On an slightly unrelated note, a post asking for Linux support is the most popular with 125,126 votes.)

Dell manager Lionel Menchaca noted the complaint on his Dell blog and announced customers can now purchases XP Home or Pro on certain Dimension desktops and Inspiron notebooks.

The models are: Dimension E520 and E521 desktops, and Inspiron 1501, E1405, E1505, and E1705 notebooks

The XP option is available only to US customers.

Meanwhile, Microsoft is showing its poker face regarding the development.

“Dell is responding appropriately to a small minority of customers that had this specific request,” Microsoft product manager Michael Burk said in a statement. “But, as they have said before, the vast majority of consumers want the latest and greatest technology, and that includes Windows Vista.”

Manufacturers will only be able to pre-install XP on systems until Jan. 31, 2008 when Microsoft will force them to switch no matter what internet denizens ask for.

Super-tough material mimics metal and crystal

Filed under: random — Mark @ 10:24 am

Super-tough material mimics metal and crystal - tech - 19 April 2007 - New Scientist Tech
A super-hard material that is tough enough to scratch diamond could be made cheaply and easily, a new study suggests. The material is made from the metal rhenium and the element boron and resembles both a metal and a crystal in structure.

Diamond is the hardest naturally occurring material known, although researchers have synthesised other substances to rival its hardness. These are generally crystals made from combinations of light elements, including carbon, nitrogen and boron, and are structurally similar to diamond.

These materials are better than diamond at some tasks, such as cutting steel, since the carbon in diamond reacts with steel to form iron carbide, dulling the cutting surface.

April 19, 2007

Abortion ruling a turning point

Filed under: random — Mark @ 10:45 am

The Cincinnati Post - Abortion ruling a turning point
People on both sides of the abortion issue greeted Wednesday’s Supreme Court decision to ban partial birth abortions as a turning point.

“This is the first time since the Roe vs. Wade decision in 1973 (which established a woman’s right to an abortion ) that there has been a ruling by the Supreme Court that any type of abortion has been forbidden,” said John Willke, who with his wife, Barara, founded the Right to Life movement in America.

Video didn’t add much to investigation

Filed under: random — Mark @ 10:31 am

Irish Examiner> Breaking News> Sport
The disturbing manifest and videos of Cho Seung-Hui delivering a speech about rich “brats” and their “hedonistic needs” had some marginal value to police, but did not add much that investigators did not already know, officials said today.

The self-made video and photos of Cho pointing guns as if he were imitating a movie poster were sent to NBC on the morning of the Virginia Tech massacre.

A Postal Service time stamp reads 9.01am - between the two attacks that left 33 people dead.

University officials announced today that Cho’s victims would be awarded their degrees posthumously and that other students might have the option of ending their semester immediately.

Michael Dells Linux choice? Ubuntu

Filed under: linux, unix, and open source, news — Mark @ 10:26 am

Michael Dells Linux choice? Ubuntu
Yes, the head of Dell Inc., with a market-capitalization of just south of $56-billion, isnt just saying that Dell will be selling Linux-equipped PCs in the near future — hes already running Linux at home.

To be precise, Mr. Dell, in addition to running the latest version of Ubuntu, which is still scheduled for final release on April 19, is also running the VMware Workstation 6 Beta, OpenOffice.org 2.2, Automatix2, Firefox 2.0.0.3, and Evolution Groupware 2.10.

The only name that most Linux users may not recognize immediately on that list is Automatix2. Automatrix2 is a popular Debian, Ubuntu, Pioneer, and MEPIS Linux add-on program. With that application in place, it becomes mindlessly simple to install useful software that doesnt come with a vanilla Ubuntu installation. It includes access to Skype, Opera, Macromedia Flash, Google Earth, Picasa, Adobe Reader, DVD support, WiFi, and so on.

Mr. Dell is running all this on a loaded Dell Precision M90. The company describes this as a mobile workstation.

Certainly the model that Dell is running at his Austin, Texas area home qualifies as a mobile workstation by anyones definition. His machine comes with an Intel Core 2 Duo T7600 Processor, which runs at 2.33GHz and comes with a 4MB cache. It also comes with 4GB of DDR2 double-data-rate 667Mhz DRAM, a 17-inch WXGA Widescreen LCD, a 160GB 7200rpm SATA hard drive, a 8X DVD /- RW optical drive, and a NVIDIA Quadro FX 3500 512M graphics card.

While no WiFi card is specifically mentioned, Dell also offers both its own Dell Wireless 5700 CDMA EVDO External Express Card for Verizon Wireless data connections and an assortment of 802.11a and g WiFi cards.

By our calculations, the total bill for Mr. Dells system, as described, comes to $4,703. It could have been more. He didnt splurge on the optional Blu-Ray drive.

Unfortunately, if you tried to order it yourself, your only operating system choices on that system today are Windows XP SP 2 and Vista. Sources close to Dell, however, tell us that pre-installed Linux on Dell systems may be coming before the end of April.

We still do not know which Linux Dell Inc. will be installing on its desktops and laptops. Among the distributions we know to be under consideration are: Novell/SUSE, Red Hat, Fedora, openSUSE, and Ubuntu. It would be safe to say now, though, that Ubuntu will be at least one of the Linuxes that Dell will be offering.

Of course, Mr. Dell also uses no fewer than four other high-end systems. Each of these is running Windows.

Still, while many millionaires, such as Ubuntus Mark Shuttleworth, Red Hats Matthew Szulik, and Novells Ron Hovsepian, are running Linux on their own machines, Michael Dell is almost certainly the first billionaire to embrace the penguin. And, far more importantly, hes the first one who also owns one of the worlds biggest PC vendors.

April 16, 2007

Taxpayer Information At Risk

Filed under: random — Mark @ 9:47 am

Taxpayer Information At Risk | The Onion - America’s Finest News Source
A recent government report concluded that the IRS has not adequately protected the data on 52,000 IRS laptops. What do you think?

April 15, 2007

This is How We Catch You Downloading

Filed under: random — Mark @ 11:44 am

This is How We Catch You Downloading | TorrentFreak
Since then, many people have been in touch with the law firm who sent the threatening letters, demanding evidence that they actually did something. TorrentFreak has obtained copies of the latest letters and within the claimed evidence is a description of how the anti-piracy system used by Logistep AG (the company hired to track the alleged pirates) is supposed to work.

The cleverly named “File Sharing Monitor” is the system being used by Logistep to gather evidence against file-sharers. It is actually just a modified version of the Shareaza P2P application that is configured to search for infringing files, and collect the information from the hosts that share these files.

The “File Sharing Monitor” only targets Gnutella and eDonkey users, so it is still unclear how they track down BitTorrent users. Here is how it works

Fuzz testing

Filed under: random — Mark @ 11:35 am

Fuzz testing - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fuzz testing is often used in large software development projects that perform black box testing. These usually have a budget to develop test tools, and fuzz testing is one of the techniques which offers a high benefit to cost ratio.

Fuzz testing is also used as a gross measurement of a large software system’s quality. The advantage here is that the cost of generating the tests is relatively low. For example, third party testers have used fuzz testing to evaluate the relative merits of different operating systems and application programs.

Fuzz testing is thought to enhance software security and software safety because it often finds odd oversights and defects which human testers would fail to find, and even careful human test designers would fail to create tests for.

However, fuzz testing is not a substitute for exhaustive testing or formal methods: it can only provide a random sample of the system’s behavior, and in many cases passing a fuzz test may only demonstrate that a piece of software handles exceptions without crashing, rather than behaving correctly. Thus, fuzz testing can only be regarded as a proxy for program correctness, rather than a direct measure, with fuzz test failures actually being more useful as a bug-finding tool than fuzz test passes as an assurance of quality.

Abstinence education doesn’t work, US report shows

Filed under: random — Mark @ 2:58 am

Reuters AlertNet - Abstinence education doesn’t work, US report shows
WASHINGTON, April 14 (Reuters) - Abstinence-only education programs meant to teach children to avoid sex until marriage failed to control their sexual behavior, according to a U.S. government report.

Teenagers who took part in the programs as elementary and middle school students were just as likely to have sex as those who did not take part in them, the survey found.

“We have been promoting ignorance in the era of AIDS, and that’s not just bad public health policy, its bad ethics,” added James Wagoner, president of Advocates for Youth.

Google buys DoubleClick for $3.1 billion

Filed under: random — Mark @ 2:43 am

Google buys DoubleClick for $3.1 billion
DoubleClick is one of the largest online advertising companies and certainly the most powerful. When word spread that the company was looking for a buyer, speculation about the identity of the bidders centered around Microsoft, as DoubleClick would give the Redmond, WA-based company some much-needed ammunition in its battle against Google for online advertising dominance. In fact, when it was also rumored that Google was in talks with DoubleClick, the common interpretation was that Google was merely driving the price up for Microsoft. So much for that theory.

Microsoft is now faced with the prospect of building its own service from scratch if it wants to get into the same markets as DoubleClick or acquiring a lesser-known and less valuable competitor. Yahoo was also rumored to be in the race for DoubleClick.

DoubleClick went public in 1998 and saw its share price rise and fall with the rest of the dot-com sector. In April 2005, it was acquired by Hellman & Friedman, a private equity firm, for $1.1 billion. Since that acquisition, Hellman & Friedman have spun off parts of DoubleClick to other companies.

“It has been our vision to make Internet advertising better—less intrusive, more effective, and more useful. Together with DoubleClick, Google will make the Internet more efficient for end users, advertisers, and publishers,” said Google cofounder Sergey Brin in a statement.

April 12, 2007

New study links dinosaurs to living species

Filed under: random — Mark @ 10:37 pm

CTV.ca | New study links dinosaurs to living species
The discovery of collagen in ancient fossils by researchers could prove to be a major breakthrough in exploring an evolutionary link between dinosaurs and birds.

The study, published in Fridays edition of the journal Science, used the unexpected discovery of collagen in dinosaur fossils to make its link between living and extinct species.

“Its extremely surprising that you have all this organic content after all this time,” John Asara, a Harvard Medical School researcher, told CTV.ca.

By using a sophisticated technique called mass spectroscopy, Asara and his team were able to obtain genetic information from dinosaurs that had been preserved for millions of years, linking them to species that currently inhabit the planet.

It also brings to mind the sort of possibilities explored in the science fiction book and film “Jurassic Park.”

“Really, most of the ideas in Jurassic Park are, I think, improbable — but I dont think Im willing to say impossible anymore,” said Dr. Philip Currie, a paleontologist based at the University of Alberta.

Researchers say the discovery helps them link dinosaurs to a much smaller animal currently walking the earth.

“We have a protein sequence that we can compare to the protein sequence of other organisms that have had their genome. It looks like chicken may be its closest relative,” Asara told CTV.ca.

“But we also found matches to newt, and also to frog. So you can really start to make this evolutionary relationship.”

Scientists had believed there was a link between dinosaurs and birds, but this scientific research delivers more credence to the hypothesis.

“The door just opens up to a whole avenue of research that involves anything extinct,” said Matthew T. Carrano, curator of dinosaurs at the Smithsonians National Museum of Natural History.

Researchers came to their conclusions after testing the 68 million-year-old femur of a Tyrannosaurus rex, which they suspected contained internal soft tissues including blood vessels within its bone. Their analysis revealed the presence of collagen 1, the main organic component of bone.

Collagen is a type of fibrous connective tissue and is an abundant protein in the bone of all types of animals.

“Its always been assumed that preservation does not extend to the cellular or molecular level,” said Mary Higby Schweitzer of North Carolina State University, who recovered soft tissue from the bone.

The lack of water and light and microbes that could degrade bone rapidly in the arid Hell Creek formation in Montana, where the femur was found, is thought to have been a factor in preserving the protein.

Further analysis of the Tyrannosaurus rex femur, along with various bones of a mastodon which were between 160,000 and 600,000 years old, was undertaken by Asara and his team. Their analysis and research lead to their ability to make a link between dinosaurs and birds.

The researchers were supported by NASA, the David and Lucille Packard Foundation and the Paul F. Glenn Foundation in their work, and will continue to explore the links between living and extinct species.

Lewis Cantley of Harvard Medical School, a co-author of the study, is optimistic that more links will be made between living and extinct species in the future.

“Knowing how evolution occurred and how species evolved is a central question,” Cantley said.

April 10, 2007

Girls Gone Wild Creator Ordered To Jail

Filed under: random — Mark @ 3:15 pm

Girls Gone Wild Creator Ordered To Jail | The Onion - America’s Finest News Source
Joe Francis, the man who created the Girls Gone Wild home-video franchise, has been ordered to jail for failing to appear in court for a hearing. What do you think?

April 7, 2007

Iran Releases British Sailors

Filed under: random — Mark @ 8:46 am

Iran Releases British Sailors | The Onion - Americas Finest News Source
Iran released 15 sailors it had held captive for nearly two weeks, claiming they had entered Iranian waters. What do you think?

Raginbot (Cajunbot II) Video submission for the DARPA Grand Challenge

Filed under: darpa uc 2007, personal — Mark @ 8:10 am

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QtHv4RK1ogo

April 6, 2007

Finally up to date…

Filed under: personal — Mark @ 2:44 pm

On the home computer front, I’ve recently just ordered some more ram, and it came in last night. I installed it, bringing my system up to 2GB of dual-channel ddr400 memory, which is not too bad. In the process, I believe I fried my power supply, and I believe it was kind of a crappy one too. So today, I went to best buy and got a new power supply that is for 430W, and has a ton of connectors on it. In addition, I bought a new 80mm case fan, and it just so happens to have a blue LED in it (didn’t realize this), but hey, looks nice. Lastly, I bought a new microsoft keyboard that is supposed to be ergonomic or something like that. In short, they got some like these at work and I got to get one at work, and it felt really comfortable to type with. So I decided I would buy one for home as well.

On the work computer front, the lab was hacked into and some mischief was performed. It was most likely a bot doing the attacking (we viewed some logs), and also the attack was because the server kernel hadn’t been updated in quite some time. One of the guys at work actually very quickly found the script online that allowed a common user to gain root access to the server. We tested it and sure enough it worked. In the coming weeks, it has become my duty to backup all of the user logins (about 20) totaling about 75GB, and (supposedly) supposed to copy those logins to dvds. In addition I need to backup the cvs repository, the cbsupport folder with libraries, cbwiki, copper, and all those fun things. Not looking fun…

April 2, 2007

Speed of light

Filed under: random — Mark @ 7:19 pm

Speed of light - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The speed of light is of relevance to communications. For example, given that the equatorial circumference of the Earth is 40100 km and c = 300000 km/s, the theoretical shortest amount of time for a piece of information to travel half the globe along the surface is 0.0668 s.

The actual transit time is longer, in part because the speed of light is slower by about 30% in an optical fiber and straight lines rarely occur in global communications situations, but also because delays are created when the signal passes through an electronic switch or signal regenerator. A typical time as of 2004 for an Australia or Japan to US computer-to-computer ping is 0.18 s. The speed of light additionally affects wireless communications design.

Another consequence of the finite speed of light is that communications with spacecraft are not instantaneous, and the gap becomes more noticeable as distances increase. This delay was significant for communications between Houston ground control and Apollo 8 when it became the first spacecraft to orbit the Moon: For every question, Houston had to wait nearly 3 seconds for the answer to arrive, even when the astronauts replied immediately.

This effect forms the basis of the Global Positioning System (GPS), and similar navigation systems. One’s position can be determined by means of the delays in light signals received from a number of satellites, each carrying a very accurate atomic clock, and very carefully synchronized. It is remarkable that, to work properly, this method requires that (among many other effects) the relative motion of satellite and receiver be taken into effect, which was how (on an interplanetary scale) the finite speed of light was originally discovered (see the following section).

Similarly, instantaneous remote control of interplanetary spacecraft is impossible because it takes time for the Earth-based controllers to receive information from the craft, and an equal time for instructions to be received by the craft. It can take hours for controllers to become aware of a problem, respond with instructions, and have the spacecraft receive the instructions.

Got crontabs up and running, and it is pretty nice

Filed under: linux, unix, and open source, personal — Mark @ 7:00 pm

me: nice
know how to use crontabs?
gk: crontabs?
me: yeah
gk: wtf is that?
me: unix utility
automating tasks
to be run in regular intervals
ring a bell?
gk: never heard of that
by this point, you have way more unix knowledge than i do
me: in short, i have set up a script that will once a week, remove the old cajunbot code (on the specific machine), check out from cvs new code, and then compile it, then start up a testing sequence, at which point the results of this process are emailed to me, while the results of the simulations are being published to the cajunbot server
pretty sweet
gk: wow
nice
hardcore
me: yeah
gk: to the max
me: lol
nifty actually
frees me up for other things
lol
gk: haha

Newbie: Intro to cron

Filed under: geek, linux, unix, and open source, personal — Mark @ 6:20 pm

Newbie: Intro to cron

minute hour dom month dow user cmd

minute	This controls what minute of the hour the command will run on,
and is between ‘0′ and ‘59′
hour	This controls what hour the command will run on, and is specified in
the 24 hour clock, values must be between 0 and 23 (0 is midnight)
dom	This is the Day of Month, that you want the command run on, e.g. to
run a command on the 19th of each month, the dom would be 19.
month	This is the month a specified command will run on, it may be specified
numerically (0-12), or as the name of the month (e.g. May)
dow	This is the Day of Week that you want a command to be run on, it can
also be numeric (0-7) or as the name of the day (e.g. sun).
user	This is the user who runs the command.
cmd	This is the command that you want run. This field may contain
multiple words or spaces.

If you don’t wish to specify a value for a field, just place a * in the
field.

e.g.
01 * * * * root echo “This command is run at one min past every hour”
17 8 * * * root echo “This command is run daily at 8:17 am”
17 20 * * * root echo “This command is run daily at 8:17 pm”
00 4 * * 0 root echo “This command is run at 4 am every Sunday”
* 4 * * Sun root echo “So is this”
42 4 1 * * root echo “This command is run 4:42 am every 1st of the month”
01 * 19 07 * root echo “This command is run hourly on the 19th of July”

Notes:

Under dow 0 and 7 are both Sunday.

If both the dom and dow are specified, the command will be executed when
either of the events happen.
e.g.
* 12 16 * Mon root cmd
Will run cmd at midday every Monday and every 16th, and will produce the
same result as both of these entries put together would:
* 12 16 * * root cmd
* 12 * * Mon root cmd

Vixie Cron also accepts lists in the fields. Lists can be in the form, 1,2,3
(meaning 1 and 2 and 3) or 1-3 (also meaning 1 and 2 and 3).
e.g.
59 11 * * 1,2,3,4,5 root backup.sh
Will run backup.sh at 11:59 Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday,
as will:
59 11 * * 1-5 root backup.sh 

Cron also supports ’step’ values.
A value of */2 in the dom field would mean the command runs every two days
and likewise, */5 in the hours field would mean the command runs every
5 hours.
e.g.
* 12 10-16/2 * * root backup.sh
is the same as:
* 12 10,12,14,16 * * root backup.sh

*/15 9-17 * * * root connection.test
Will run connection.test every 15 mins between the hours or 9am and 5pm

Lists can also be combined with each other, or with steps:
* 12 1-15,17,20-25 * * root cmd
Will run cmd every midday between the 1st and the 15th as well as the 20th
and 25th (inclusive) and also on the 17th of every month.
* 12 10-16/2 * * root backup.sh
is the same as:
* 12 10,12,14,16 * * root backup.sh

When using the names of weekdays or months, it isn’t case sensitive, but only
the first three letters should be used, e.g. Mon, sun or Mar, jul.

Comments are allowed in crontabs, but they must be preceded with a ‘#’, and
must be on a line by them self.

April 2, 1845: Photographing the Sun, Measuring Speed of Light

Filed under: random — Mark @ 3:27 pm

April 2, 1845: Photographing the Sun, Measuring Speed of Light -
1845: French physicists Armand H. L. Fizeau and J. Leon Foucault take the first photograph of the sun.

Photography was in its infancy — and the widespread use of photography in astronomy was still decades away — when Fizeau and Foucault turned their camera toward the brightest object in Earths sky.

A few years later, Fizeau and Foucault were both experimenting with methods to determine the speed of light. Fizeau, bouncing a beam of light off a mirror and through a cogged wheel, determined a speed of 313,000 kilometers per second. Foucault ran essentially the same experiment but used a rotating mirror in place of the wheel. He concluded light traveled at 298,000 kilometers per second.

In 1926, a more precise measurement, taken using a rotating prism, accurately fixed the speed of light at 299,796 kilometers or 186,285 miles per second.

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