Archive for January, 2008

Speaking of malicious code

Saturday, January 26th, 2008

I’m about sick of seeing spam comments showing up here, so I’ve retired ol’ Dr. Dave, who used to be my junkyard dog, but is getting a little old in the tooth.  I loaded up Akismet, which I never really used before (although its the default wordpress spam filter), so we’ll see if it does any good.

So, for those of you excited about seeing great opportunites for home-allstate-insurance-new-jersey, well, hopefully you’ll have to go somewhere else.

Salut.

Malicious Wordpress Code

Saturday, January 26th, 2008

I’m not surprised.

Warning for new and existing WordPress users: DO NOT download WordPress themes from 3rd party “galleries”. Identify the original source of the theme and download directly from the authors website.

It seems that some savy folks are putting in malicious code that will do nasty, udesirable things should you use the theme template.

Read the rest of the article here.

The jist is that you should only download a wordpress theme from the author.

Say Argg Matey, It’s Patriotic!

Friday, January 25th, 2008

I saw a link on my googlie homepage that caught my eye. The link was to a Wired magazine article about how Sci-Fi is the last bastard bastion of big ideas literature.

If you want to read books that tackle profound philosophical questions, then the best — and perhaps only — place to turn these days is sci-fi. Science fiction is the last great literature of ideas.

I think the guy is spot on, especially when he starts poking at high-brow, realistic fiction.

From where I sit, traditional “literary fiction” has dropped the ball…. Why? I think it’s because I was reading novel after novel about the real world. And there are, at the risk of sounding superweird, only so many ways to describe reality. After I’d read my 189th novel about someone living in a city, working in a basically realistic job and having a realistic relationship and a realistically fraught family, I was like, “OK. Cool. I see how today’s world works.” I also started to feel like I’d been reading the same book over and over again.

Anyhow, I’d never really heard of the Sci-Fi author referenced in the wired article. So I plugged his name, Cory Doctorow, into google to see what I could find. Lo and behold, he has his own website! Imagine that. Turns out Doctorow’s soap box is digital rights information type stuff. He even lets you down load his books for free which is great!

Digital rights is an old saw here at the Tumor, but why not have some food for thought.

Cory Doctorow:

I believe that we live in an era where anything that can be expressed as bits will be. I believe that bits exist to be copied. Therefore, I believe that any business-model that depends on your bits not being copied is just dumb, and that lawmakers who try to prop these up are like governments that sink fortunes into protecting people who insist on living on the sides of active volcanoes. [citation]

Doctorow, again:

 …as Woody Guthrie said:

This song is Copyrighted in U.S., under Seal of Copyright #154085, for a period of 28 years, and anybody caught singin it without our permission, will be mighty good friends of ourn, cause we don’t give a dern. Publish it. Write it. Sing it. Swing to it. Yodel it. We wrote it, that’s all we wanted to do.

Here’s the quote from his book, After the Siege, that really got me thinking.

The USA was a pirate nation for the first 100 years of its existence, ripping off the patents and trademarks of the imperial European powers it had liberated itself from with blood. By keeping their GDP at home, the US revolutionaries were able to bootstrap their nation into an industrial powerhouse. Now, it seems, their descendants are bent on ensuring that no other country can pull the same trick off.

Hmmm, Thoughts? The US of A, a pirate nation?? Was the Stars and Stripes once just a glorified jolly rodger? It’s hard to believe.

Music for Monday

Monday, January 21st, 2008

Andrew Bird, “A Nervous Tic Motion of the Head to the Left”

Next-mom haiku

Sunday, January 20th, 2008

One day at his school
Juicebox told one of his friends
“This is my next mom”

Told AT bout it
We decided that it works
Next instead of Step

So, I’m the “next mom”
It has been an awesome ride
Can’t wait for the rest.

Last night was real neat
First time for me with all this
New things intrigue me.

Interrupted sleep
A little voice at the door
At 2:10 am.

It is rewarding
To give comfort when needed
Every parent’s job.

I’ve never had this
OMG! It’s so awesome.
Fulfilling and real.

Laying back in bed
All I did was treasure it.
I love my three boys.