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WelcomeRichard's Digital Rag Daily is where I write when something amuses me, astounds me, annoys me, or might be useful to my customers and friends.
Please excuse the ads, but they're here for a couple of reasons:
- I'm researching various options for presenting ads - and various purveyors of ads
- I'm researching various "do it yourself" product creation sites - and since I'm making products I thought it might be interesting to actually sell some - the new site is "Now Pages" - coming soon to a computer near you :)
Enjoy
Richard
Monday, June 23 2008 @ 05:13 PM UTC
 Back in December I wrote to my MP, Randy Kamp, about the rumored new copyright act amendments. The bill has now been presented to the House of Commons as Bill C-61(PDF). Its first reading was June 12, 2008.
I'm a bit late into the fray with this comment, but my lateness allows me to reference some of the comments from others whose opinions I value highly.
In a nutshell, this bill completely unbalances Copyright in favour of "big business" interests, most of which are headquartered in the US. It codifies the use (and abuse) of Digital Rights Management (DRM) technologies in ways that allow so called "rights holders" to completely bypass the balancing aspects of copyright such as Fair Dealing, and imposes draconian fines and criminal penalties for "circumventing" such DRM even if what is actually done with the media so "released" is otherwise within the scope of the "rights" of the public that are supposed to balance the act of copyright in the first place - things like format shifting and time shifting - which have been held to be reasonable and necessary - and LEGAL.
Read on for some specific instances of what you have to date been able to do - and what will be denied you if this bill passes...
Monday, July 07 2008 @ 05:12 PM UTC
 As many of you may know, I have a lot of computers in my home. I deal with huge amounts of data (mostly video but a lot of other stuff too) and just having it all online means I have more than 10 systems here.
But I have a core of 4 systems that I work with daily and that make up my primary set of working files: My old workstation (pacdat), my new workstation (video), my file server (NFS1) and my backup and domain name master (NETFS)
A few months ago I decided to move much of the data that still resided on my old workstation (P4 2.0GHz- called "pacdat") to a NFS file server (NFS1), including my home directory which is huge.
The old machine had several sets of mirrored drives of various sizes - usually the "sweet spot" size for whenever I purchased them - from 160 Gigs to 300 Gigs. My home directory has grown to outstrip each of these and in fact now has links to several such pairs of RAID 1 arrays. It was my intention to build a RAID 5 array of 320Gig drives that would do me for at least a year or so of growth at present rate - and host them on a single computer that I could mount from several of the systems in my home as needed.
All was going well - until Mother Nature stepped in a couple of weeks ago.
read on for the tail of woe
Thursday, July 03 2008 @ 06:35 PM UTC
 A recent study found that at least 45.2% of web users were not using the most secure version of their chosen browser, be it Internet Explorer, Firefox, Safari or whatever. But it gets better... most of them (577 million out of 637 million in the survey) are using an old version of Internet Explorer. The rest include 38 million users of Firefox, 17 million users of Safari and about 5 million users of Opera.
You're not one of those with an old version - are you???
Friday, June 20 2008 @ 03:59 AM UTC
  I had the pleasure of having lunch today with my friend Gary Bannerman, with whom I've worked for a number of years now on all manner of business, web and internet projects. With Gary, and the reason for lunch, was artist Kerry Waghorn. Kerry's brand new web site has been created by my brother-in-law, Doug Cook, and has just recently been launched. We were together to discuss some of the marketing methods and for me to meet Kerry at long last after hearing of him over the past 4 years while Gary and Don Nixdorf created their Kerry Waghorn illustrated book, Squandering Billions, on the state of health care in Canada.
"Why does this fact rate a blog entry?" you might ask. Read on for the answer...
Wednesday, June 18 2008 @ 03:42 AM UTC
 At dinner tonight the major topic of conversation turned to whether or not the Billion-$-plu$ budget for the twinning of the Port Mann bridge and widening of Highway 1 through to Vancouver was justified, or whether the money was better spent on some other means of transportation.
Now I personally think that not only is it justified, but that it is over twenty years too late and probably not enough expansion to adequately deal with the problems we have here in the Vancouver Lower Mainland with traffic and congestion. But I found myself having to justify my opinion in light of the recent radical rise in gasoline costs; and that got me thinking that maybe others might be interested in why, since I've actually given this quite a bit of thought over the past few years.
What it comes down to is that I believe that the personal automobile, at least here in North America, is not going to disappear, no matter how high the price of gasoline goes.
read on for why I think this way...
Tuesday, June 17 2008 @ 11:55 PM UTC
 Several of my daily reading sources have pointed out new attacks on popular consumer firewall/router hardware including those of Linksys and D-link although not limited in any way to these ones.
The malware changes the DNS hosts to ones the bad-uglies control - and so instead of going where you think you are going when you browse the Internet, you go instead where the crooks want you to go with no obvious way of knowing you are in the wrong place.
The attack works because the malware tries to (and is successful) hack the router's web interface from one of the "protected" computers inside your Local Area Network (LAN). How the malware (DNSChanger Trojan) gets onto the inside computer is not specifically stated, probably because there are several ways currently being used:
1 - infected legitimate web sites that a user visits
2 - lots of e-mail methods including "phishing" and "social engineering" to get people to visit an infected site or download the malware directly.
3 - trying to view a video the system (itself compromised) tells you that you need a new video CODEC - and the codec is instead the trojan
Saturday, June 07 2008 @ 07:16 PM UTC
 I was setting up one of my servers to be a workstation for my wife, and had to bring in some video drivers. The latest version of the drivers referenced a new kernel, and of course I have not been updating the kernel because on this machine I also run VMWare's free server instance. VMWare requires that their software be linked against the latest kernel development kit so updating the kernel all the time requires re-linking the software, so I use the "exclude=kernel-*" line in /etc/yum.conf to not automatically update the kernel each time I do other updates.
So I updated the kernel - version 2.6.25.4-10.fc8-i686 - and rebooted.
Then I went to re-link the VMWare software and it wouldn't link :(
I use the "vmware-any-any" patches - version 116 being the latest from http://www.miscreant.org/files/rpms/ - but in this case the compile failed and nothing I did would bring it back to working status.
So I put the incantation "vmware-any-any 2.6.25.4-10.fc8-i686" into Google and came up with a single hit - a French language blog entry at forums.fedora-fr.org which Google kindly offered to translate for me
It turns out I would have saved myself a whole mess of trouble if I'd kept up with the updates from VMWare - seems their latest version, 1.0.6, no longer needs the patches. Thank you REMI
I downloaded the Linux server file from www.vmware.com and the install went without a hitch.
Monday, June 02 2008 @ 12:13 AM UTC
 I was speaking to a friend of mine earlier this week and the conversation turned to motorcycles and the Can-Am Spyder he has placed a deposit for. He's waiting for the release of the semi-automatic version as he has problems with his legs and can't use a typical motorcycle shifter. He's looked at all manner of trikes and actually owned one that was being rebuilt for him - by someone with less than noble intentions it turned out, but that's another story.
This story is about how I came to try out the Can-Am Spyder for him and my impressions of it.
Sunday, June 01 2008 @ 05:19 PM UTC
 I read a bulletin from the Internet Storm Center http://isc.sans.org/diary.php?storyid=4465 a couple of days ago about the fact that there are active exploits (nasty advertising links and videos) already on the net for a vulnerability that has just surfaced with all current and previous versions of Adobe's flash player.
It turns out this is an old attack and that the affected player versions are still being used by many people. You should check your IE and Firefox (and other) browsers separately for the version of the Adobe flash player they use. This can be done by browsing to this address: http://kb.adobe.com/selfservice/viewContent.do?externalId=tn_15507
In my case my Firefox on Linux is 9.0.124.0 - which is the correct/latest one - my Windoze box is down for the count after a power burp a couple of days ago - but I'll check it as soon as I have it back up. It's a good thing I don't rely on Windows eh??? 
Tuesday, May 27 2008 @ 05:27 PM UTC
 I'm a little late getting to comment on this subject, but I was just spurred by an automated phone call from a local car dealership to look up the regulations on unsolicited telephone calls.
The subject has been buzzing about in my mind for several years but there never seemed to be time to do the research when I got the calls - usually around dinner time, and usually from a business that almost certainly was from the US and therefore far more difficult to deal with.
Today I'm working on various web sites and projects at my computer, so getting the call meant I was in position to do the research immediately. Google: "canada unsolicited automated telephone regulations" got me the top item about Telemarketing from Industry Canada which was modified in February this year.
Automatic Dialing, Do Not Call, Telephone spam - lots of good info here
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