Windows Wireless Humor

I found a funny image over on the dot not blog. If you’ve ever had problems with wireless connections in Windows (and whom among us hasn’t), then you’ll probably appreciate the name of this access point… Go forth and click my little minions, erm, I mean readers!

August 19, 2005 at 11:37am | 0 Comments
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One Reason I HATE Mozilla Update

You want to know one reason I hate the Mozilla Update site?

Inconsistencies.

If they could keep all their ducks in a row and everyone on the same page, it’d work very well. Unfortunately, they don’t. You can often search for something, get a result, and then find that that plugin is “no longer available”.

So tell me how this could possibly happen? If you’re querying the table during a search, you should realize if there’s nothing there!

Sorry, just one of my gripes for the day…

August 18, 2005 at 1:53pm | 0 Comments
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The Things You Stumble Upon Online

It’s amazing some of the things you can stumble upon online. For instance, I stumbled upon this post this morning, which takes us on a tour of crazy HTTP Headers across the ‘net. Very interesting indeed. I’d also never have thought about using the DMOZ database as a starting point.

It’d be particularly cool if you took that database as your starting point and then slowly spidered out to linked sites (much like a search engine) and created an even larger database, containing relationships (agian, much like a search engine). But that’s a little more work than I would be willing to put into a pet project like this…

August 18, 2005 at 10:21am | 0 Comments
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Keeping My Head Above the Blogging Waters

Ever since getting back from vacation, I’ve had a nearly impossible time keepnig my head above the blogging water… While gone for several days, over 400 blogs accumulated, and since then I’ve found it nearly impossible to keep my aggregator sub-400 unread items for more than a few hours.

I hate to do it, but I think I’m going to have to clean my aggregator out again, or at the very least make a fresh start by randomly marking everything as read to get a “clean slate”.

I guess I could also hire a secretary to read blogs for me and point out the highlights… That’s kinda sad…

August 18, 2005 at 9:10am | 0 Comments
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Windows Bigotry

It always amazes me how bigoted and hateful Windows-haters can be. If you’ve read my recent post about the comment I left on Ed Bott’s blog, you’ll no doubt find that I was very level-headed and open-minded. I was very reasonable about my approach (I think), and willing to accept any proof to the contrary. Nowhere did I explicitly refuse to accept that Windows may in fact have more native security vulnerabilities, nor did I do the opposite, insisting that it most certainly did not have more native vulnerabilities. My exact quote? “I have never seen any hard proof that there are in fact any more / less bugs in one operating system versus another.” That means that everything is subjective, because there is no empirical data present to support either arguement. How then, did I get this reaction? (Notice in particular the areas I have bolded.)

“As for Praveen’s comment about Windows bugs: I have never seen any hard proof that there are in fact any more / less bugs in one operating system versus another. … If we actually ratioed everthing out and did our math, we may well find that Linux / Mac OS X / Your Toaster has exactly the same ratio of bugs as Windows in relation to its scale of adoption / publicity.” Wishful thinking by the Windows apologists. Just look at security exploits for the Apache web server vs. Microsoft’s IIS — despite being deployed in greater number, Apache *still* has fewer holes than IIS does. The simple truth is that the development of Windows is driven first and foremost by Microsoft’s business goals, and security is an afterthought. If opening a security hole makes it easier to track your web-surfing patterns (making it easier to gather demographic data and sell you more ads), or makes it easier for Microsoft to check what software you have on your PC (gotta watch for piracy!), then it’s TFB for you. Such practices wouldn’t work with Linux, since the open-source nature means these flaws get spotted quickly and squashed. They also don’t work with MacOS X because Apple isn’t led by a bunch of opportunistic dipsticks. But keep repeating the mantra about “Windows gets more flaws because it’s popular” if it helps you sleep at night. Everyone should have a favorite fairy tale or two to cherish.

His point about IIS vs. Apache is somewhat relevent. Of course one could also claim that it’s because Apache is generally more complex to setup and is therefore run by more knowledgeable people than its Windows counterpart. I’m not saying I personally believe that, I’m simply trying to point out counterpoints that may open someone’s eyes and get them to stop blindly hating Windows because it’s Windows and manufactured by Microsoft…

I guess it is true what they say: It’s lonely at the top…

Got a response? Post it in the comments here.

August 17, 2005 at 7:50am | 0 Comments
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