It’s here… I wrote about this a while ago, a tabbed terminal app for Mac OS X – here’s iTerm. (If I can get my Mac to mount .dmg files today I’ll give it a try…)
Category: Uncategorized
link rel publickey
Ok, I’ve implemented the following into the head of this document: <link rel="publickey" type="text/plain" title="Public Key" href="http://rasterweb.net/raster/pgpkey.txt" /> Which means if there is an agent smart enough to do auto-discovery of a public key via the url of this site, well, then we may be on our way to verification of commentation… or something like that…
Ugly HTML
I ended up using HTML::Template in a project at work, but I had to actually create a template as well. A filty, dirty, ugly, invalid template with nasty font tags and tables for layout. While I did managed to match the look of the site (and only had 4 lines of HTML in the code) it felt like quite a step backwards… I’m so used to writing XHTML and CSS that going back to the old methods actually hurt my brain a bit. Not to mention the fact that it was a mess to deal with. Please people, make the move to clean, structural markup using XHTML and CSS. You won’t be sorry…
(Note to self: Remember to set die_on_bad_params = 0)
Identity Ideas
I like good ideas.
As mentioned previously here, pb implemented PGP/GPG signing into his commenting system. I thought this was a good idea. My idea, following up on that idea, was an easy way to sort of auto-discover someone’s public key. While I’ve got a pretty prominent link on my site to my public key, most people don’t. I suggested a <link rel="publickey"…> type of tag, so that given a person’s URL, you could get their key. I thought that was a good idea. Ben then followed up with Verifying PGP Signatures which talks about a web-based verification service with a trust web.
This seems to be the way to get things done nowadays… What’s next?
Oh, pb also has a nice little explanation of how to use PGP/GPG in a commenting system.
pbox update
Well, it looks like Jaguar (aka Mac OS X 10.2) on the PowerBook won’t happen. I tried to install last week, and got the dimmed screen effect. So actually I might be able to install it, I just won’t be able to see anything. I’ve searched and searched and it seems that Wallstreet users can either get it to work, or not get it to work, but there doesn’t seem to be a fix for the ones it doesn’t work on. On the upside, looks like I’ll be getting a working battery soon, so even though I can’t currently put it to sleep, it shouldn’t think it’s the 1970’s every now and then.
So it looks like we’re stuck at Mac OS X 10.1.5, which isn’t so bad, considering what I paid for it. Sure, we’d like features like S-Video out to work, but we can’t afford to be picky right now…
