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Friends, Romans, BASIC, Perl…

When is the last time you had to look into converting a charset for data coming from an HP3000?

Luckily, I found this post where a guy wrote a program in BASIC. It weighs in at 56 lines.

Wait, what’s that? Someone else wrote a version in Perl, and it’s about a dozen lines?

It always comes back to my old friend Perl, doesn’t it…

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I’m a lightnet

Oh sure, you are left wondering, what is lightnet? It’s something Lucas Gonze is attempting to define, and I must say we are quite pleased to see that the tinkernet Usage page is considered an example of lightnet

A simple definition might be that a lightnet is the opposite of a darknet.

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I’m gonna hijack eWeek

I came across this entry titled RSS Hijacking? A threat to podcast and blogging infrastructure? which brought up an interesting issue. Of course, I was too late, and eWeek wrote some crappy story about it titled Podcast Hijacked, Held for Ransom.

I say “crappy story” because it has these two bits:

Those who posted responses to Vogele’s Weblog entry on the matter suggested other defensive strategies. One is to rename Podcast audio files on occasion and point to the new names in the legitimate RSS feed, thus causing the malicious site’s RSS feed to stop working and hence to cease gaining popularity.

Another tactic is to look at the referrer’s tags for Podcast downloads in a Podcaster’s Web server logs. Names of malicious sites that point to a Podcast will come up in the logs, and a large number of off-site listener referrals should raise flags.

Which I think are both bad ideas, and won’t work. I explained why in my comments on the original post. (Sorry, can’t point you directly to my comments, as the pages comment permalinks are broken.)

And I remember saying last year that the whole “podkeyword” idea was a bad idea, and always remember folks, try to be in control of your URI‘s, all the cool kids are doing it.

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Upcoming.org and Sunbird: Resolved

Remember my issues with Sunbird 0.3 alpha1 and Upcoming.org?

Resolved.

Luckily some of those yahoos at Yahoo! know what they’re doing, and are pretty on the ball.

Now, as soon as they get all the timezone stuff straightened out, we can start to see the calendar files support start and end time for events… I’ll give them a month or two before I complain about it again! ;)

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renko versus Renkoo

I’m not exactly sure what Renkoo is, but I should probably check out the Renkoo Blog and determine if I should take action to prevent them from using the name renko, which…. wait… they’re spelled differently. Never mind…