Screencast (soon)


June 10, 2010

Hello fine readers. I would have a video below but a few things are stopping me. Since they are interesting, I thought I might tell you about them as well. The first thing is how slow I get when I am loopy from lack of sleep. If I was more with it, I would have finished my screencast in under 10 minutes. The next thing is the long-windedness that I have when it comes to some of my projects. If I wasn't so long-winded about my projects, I would have a 1 minute screencast that would awe some strange person who reads this blog. The next thing that is stopping me from posting this screencast is Youtube's 10 minute limit. If Youtube decided that 15 minutes was the new limit, I would have posted. If I trusted another video site as much as I do Youtube, I would have posted it elsewhere. Under the current climate I have not even looked for other video hosts, though there may be some out there with reasonable terms and rules. If there was a video editor that I knew how to use that worked better than LiVES (like VirtualDub) then I would have edited out a bunch of umm's and it would've been ~5 minutes long. If I had installed the latest version of LiVES and it worked with my file then I would've edited it.

And now for the more far fetched excuses: If bandwidth were be cheaper, I would buy more bandwidth, so I could host the 68MB ogg file on my own server. If Google supported Ogg Theora instead of H.264 video codec for the <video> tag, I could put the Ogg Theora video on my server and expect that people could properly view it with several browsers. If the H.264 developers considered Mozilla Firefox, Konqueror, and Webkit to be safe from any patent infringement when implementing x264 natively, then I would be happy to convert the screencast to H.264 mpeg-4 and put it in a <video> tag and buy more bandwidth.

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Strange


Jun 3, 2010

*nix have some strange concepts. This will be a brief blog because I have little to say. In the grep manual, I found a reference to an obscure option:

       -Z, --null
              Output  a  zero  byte  (the  ASCII  NUL  character) instead of the character that normally
              follows a file name.  For example, grep -lZ outputs a  zero  byte  after  each  file  name
              instead  of  the  usual  newline.   This  option makes the output unambiguous, even in the
              presence of file names containing unusual characters like newlines.  This  option  can  be
              used  with commands like find -print0, perl -0, sort -z, and xargs -0 to process arbitrary
              file names, even those that contain newline characters.

Did you read that? It's saying that you can have a newline in a filename, so I tested that out:

jvoss@localhost ~ $ touch 'blah
> yak
> dah'
jvoss@localhost ~ $ ls
Desktop                           j0anna1.crt           regdev
asos2l.txt                        j0anna1a.crt          src
blah?yak?dah                      j0anna1a1.crt         stage3-amd64-20090611.tar.bz2
emerge_kate1.txt                  libusb-1.0.8.tar.bz2  suzy_make.conf
emerge_kdebase-runtime-meta1.txt  lin2632.cfg           suzy_world.txt
emerge_kdebase-startkde1.txt      lin2632a.cfg          time1.py
emerge_konsole1.txt               media                 use1.txt
iwlist1.txt                       necessary.txt         wmii+ixp-3.9-2.tbz
iwlwifi-5000-ucode-8.24.2.12      portage-2010a.tgz     wpa_lev1.conf
iwlwifi-5000-ucode-8.24.2.12.gz   recent                xness.txt

See that blah?yak?dah file there? It's replacing newlines with ? because it doesn't want to display something else. That's probably very smart. Tab completion however, shows a completely different story:

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悪政


May 19, 2010

Now that AltSci is back up and fewer a few serious XSS bugs, I thought I would show you some awesome things that AltSci has given you in the past few years. AltSci Language AI is perhaps the most interesting, with gems like "悪政" and "День Победы", you may learn a lot more than a language or two.

Tonight I hacked on something for work and for humanity. At the same time a person I know worked for me on another project that will not so much advance humanity so much as prove something quite simple. Who did more for the world, who had more fun, and who did the most work are pretty much immaterial but I wished that everyone in the world could enjoy a fraction of the satisfaction that a programmer does when they create a piece of code. A piece of code that can be open sourced and that helps others, even better.

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AltSci is back up


May 13, 2010

AltSci is back up, with SSL as it should be. All the links that were broken (except one or two) should be working and shouldn't give any SSL warnings. Before AltSci went down in February, it had a really good uptime. My analysis of the hard drive was that age and not anything fishy caused the crash. I added a stick of RAM and a new terabyte (a thousand gigabytes) hard drive and AltSci is back up for business. I am looking at offering a few new services beyond the websites and shell for hackers. But when a person thinks of services, they must also think about their customer. So I ask you dear reader, would you use additional services? What do you think about each and would you be willing to pay for the service if it was offered by an allied service (not AltSci itself, but rather someone fully endorsed by AltSci)? If you would like a service but not be willing to pay for it, why not?




  • Forums
  • IPSec VPN
  • KVM Virtual Server
  • Open Source Software
  • BitTorrent Tracker
  • Web Hosting
  • GnuPG E-mail *
* Don't ask me how just yet.

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