Spaceworms is a nice simple flash game, but fair warning! It will really suck you in.
The idea is you’re trying to out-maneuver the spaceworms. Use the arrow keys to move your ‘dot’. The worms are faster and more maneuverable than you, but have slightly slower reaction time. Use the edges of the screen to your advantage.
Avoid getting caught for 10 seconds, you go up a level, and get another Worm chasing you.
I got up to 7 worms chasing me, and almost wore out my arrow keys.
Thanks to Screenhead for the link.
Author: Dave Shevett
Coming as no surprise to anyone…
OkCupid hosts another good ‘where are you on the political / social spectrum’ quiz here. I took it, and came out, unsurprisingly:
- You are a SOCIAL LIBERAL (76% permissive)
- You are an Economic Liberal (21% permissive)
- You are best described as a: Socialist
Shocking. The entire results (With splufty display graphs showing how I show up on the grid), is available here.
Most marketable tech skills?
So while working with some other geeks this afternoon, the subject of Ruby on Rails came up. I’ve heard good things about it, but I voiced my skepticism about shelving my current workcycle (in Java) and learning Yet Another Language. I mean, how many folks can be looking for Ruby programmers nowadays?
Well. Gee. How many are looking? Good question!
So off to Dice, one of the better job / tech search boards out there, and I did a little keyword searching. The summary of what I found isn’t all that surprising, but still interesting…
Sampling 75,117 entries…
Keyword… Number of matches…
Java: 12210
C: 8235
C++: 6828
Basic: 6369
Perl: 3718
C#: 3516
Cobol: 1177
PHP: 639
Python: 383
awk: 138
REXX: 72
Ruby: 40
Pascal: 27
Lisp: 24
Interesting. How about platforms?
Keyword… Number of matches…
Windows: 10753
Unix: 11474
Linux: 4859
Mac: 461
VMS: 275
So apparently being a Java programmer on Windows is the way to go 🙂
Hard to talk down this reading.
I normally don’t comment on current events outside of politics, but this one struck me as worth bringing up…
According to AP via Yahoo News:
CHICAGO – A commuter train was going almost 60 mph above the speed limit just before it derailed, killing two people and injuring dozens, the acting chairman of the
National Transportation Safety Board said Sunday.
Mark Rosenker said the Metra train was traveling at 69 mph and should not have been going faster than 10 mph when it switched tracks at a crossover just before jumping the tracks Saturday.
Nothing wrong with the tracks or the train, it was just going ‘too fast’. Yeah, I’d say so. Sheesh.
Arrr. Arrr.
Break out the bandanas and eyepatches! A reminder that tomorrow (September 19th) is Talk Like a Pirate Day. Remember to brush up on your Pirate Vocabulary!
(And if you want to hear quality PirateSpeak, I played a pirate in a radio comedy called “The Fantastic Fate of Frederick Farnsworth the Fifth“. You can hear some of the choice bits on my Voiceover site, including the reason pirates say “Arrr!” all the time.
Happiness is… and another reason why I love *nix.
… a successful off-site backup.
Now, to flesh out that commentary – most of our services are colocated at various Undisclosed Locations around the US (usually one door down from Dick Cheney). This means it’s sort of difficult to trot over to the machine, pop in a backup tape, make a copy, and toss the tape in the storage vault. Sure, colo facilities provide this capability, but it tends to be painful to work with, not to mention costing extra money.
With broadband now as widely available as sand, it’s possible to take on the concept really put forward 10+ years ago. “Why not back things up over the net?” When I was first approached with the idea (oh, 1995-ish), network connectivity was just edging out of dialup, and if you were SUPER lucky, you could have a T1 line, but it would most likely run you $800 a month. That sort of connectivity at home? Not likely.
Nowadays folks have DSL and Cable modems that have huge amounts of bandwidth. We’re no different here at Chez Geek, happily slurping at the nozzle from Comcast.
Last night I finished noodling a 4-5 line backup script that synchronizes various Important Directories [tm, reg us pat off] on our server (things like, oh, say, /home), and a spare 160gig USB drive I picked up at Microcenter for $80.
What does this have to do with Linux, I hear you cry? Because all of this was done with free software, and it did it fast and efficiently. Using the rsync utility, it takes one command to synchronize one set of dirs on one machine with another. It even compresses and optimizes the transfers, only copying those files that need to be updated.
So we have free software, cheap bandwidth, cheap disk space, and cheap hardware. It’s Geek Nirvana.
For the detail-oriented folks in the crowd, here’s the end result:
sent 3756414 bytes received 7763330071 bytes 530665.56 bytes/sec
total size is 13301911159 speedup is 1.71
That’s some nice throughput.
A new ‘Grow’ game!
I haven’t had more than a few minutes to look at it, but the wizards at Eyezmaze have a new Grow game up on their site. More details later, but I wanted to drop everyone’s productivity as SOON as possible.
Thanks to rollick for the heads up. (Note – this link contains a SOLUTION. Click at your own peril!)
What I do…
In the midst of hyper-geekery today, Barb msgs me and asks what I’m working on.
So I answer…
publishing WSDL-driven servlets into an Axis environment to expose J2EE stateless session beans’ methods via webservices – then i don’t have to have the client apps deal with JNDI and RMI calls directly to the jboss server, they can just use SOAP calls, browsing via wsdl.
And just realized how much that looks like total gobbledygook. No wonder I sometimes feel like I’m in my own little world.
What is up with Garison Keillor?
Apparently the extremely liberal and well spoken host of Prairie Home Companion is suing a blogger for making a parody t-shirt.
The blogger tried to make simple amends with the lawyer, saying this is a ridiculous lawsuit, but Mr Keillor apparently wants to pursue legal action against this guy.
Does this make ANY sense?
Mambo patching – a brief interlude
So one of my many hats involves helping out running the Arisia website. We changed the site over to being managed by Mambo several months ago, and have been ‘mostly’ happy with it, though it has its quirks.
One quirk raised its head today. We couldn’t upload files via the media manager other than graphics and pdfs. One of the users wanted to punch up a preformatted HTML page, and the system was not allowing it.
After digging around the code, I found the culprit. The system was hardcoded to only accept certain extensions, and I have to admit, the code that did it was… er… painful:
if ((strcasecmp(substr($file['name'],-4),".gif")) && (strcasecmp(substr($file['name'],-4),".jpg")) && (strcasecmp(substr($file['name'],-4),".png")) && (strcasecmp(substr($file['name'],-4),".bmp")) &&(strcasecmp(substr($file['name'],-4),".doc")) && (strcasecmp(substr($file['name'],-4),".xls")) && (strcasecmp(substr($file['name'],-4),".ppt")) && (strcasecmp(substr($file['name'],-4),".swf")) && (strcasecmp(substr($file['name'],-4),".pdf"))) {
Ew. Just. Ew. Bleah. Ick. In the immortal words of Tim Allen… “So I rewired it!” :
# The valid file extension list is:
$validList="fluff|gif|jpg|png|bmp|doc|xls|ppt|swf|html|htm|rtf|";
$fileInfo = pathinfo($file['name']);
if (! strpos($validList,$fileInfo['extension'] . '|')) {
Muuuuch better. This patch goes around line 139 of admin.media.php, if folks are looking for an update.
The Fake Dr. Pepper Collection
This is just too funny. A fellow has, in full and complete detail, documented all the Dr. Pepper clones he could find. Sample cans and pictures and taste-tests and everything.
As a long time Dr Pepper fan, I was shocked to hear that he ranked Mr. Pibb (the most popular Dr Pepper clone) only 2 out of 5 pepper points. It’s one of the few that is regularly on tap around here in the northeast.
Anyway, check out FakeDrPepper.com.
Carl and Phil – Monkey Ninjas!
Okay, okay, I admit it. I like going to Chuck E. Cheeses with Zach on occasion. It helps that there’s an open access point nearby. I get to geek on the laptop, Zach gets to play skee ball and run around in the hamster tubes.
I chanced to catch site of a video on their ubiquitous monitors. A very silly and somehwat simplistic animated piece called “Carl and Phil – Monkey Ninjas!. It was silly enough for me to remember to look it up when I got home.
Well worth watching a couple of these.
Firefox trick du jour: Blocking popups from plugins
Here’s a neat trick. Firefox has outstanding popup blocking in by default. I’m always amazed watching IE users as they close popup after popup, and take it in stride as ‘normal’.
Recently Firefox has started showing popups. The clever (?) ad writers are now writing their annoying functions in plugin-based languages, such as shockwave and flash. The page runs a flash program, which generates a popup. A popup blocker in HTML misses this, and you suddenly have a blinking bouncing button on your screen. Ew.
To tell Firefox not to allow popups from plugins, do the following:
- Type ‘about:config’ in your tool bar
- Right click anywhere, and select “New->Integer”
- Type in: privacy.popups.disable_from_plugins
- Set the value to ‘2’
Voila! The fellow who showed me this simply said “Hey, not my trick.” 🙂
Day 1 with an iPod Nano
For my birthday, my sister bought me a 2gig iPod Nano, the latest offering in the iPod line from Apple. I’ve never owned an iPod, and in fact haven’t really purchased anything directly from Apple for myself in perhaps 10 years. I’ve avoided them because I disagree with many of their business practices, but you can’t argue with the sexiness of their products.
At any rate, I found myself stuck with an Apple product in a Linux world. Of course Apple wouldn’t consider supporting Linux directly, so the question was, how was I to use my new little iPod with my Debian Linux laptop?
Content Managers for generic websites?
I’ve sort of fallen into a task where I need to set up a website for a small group of people. The site will be used for general marketing, schedule information, and as a resource the group will use to pick up materials and information to share between themselves.
As someone who has been pretty active in the Content Management arena, I’m finding myself stymied at how difficult it is to find a simple web-based content management solution that will allow other users in the group (a limited number – onlye 1-2 other technical folks) to maintain the site.
We already know we’ll use a Wiki for the ‘internal community’ aspects – we’re doing this now – it’s allowing uploading, downloading, content editing, etc. But using a wiki to drive the main site seems… out of sorts. Wikis are not made for general-consumption-by-the-public websites.
So I’m looking around. I haven’t found what I’m looking for yet, but I’d like to hear from other folks what they’d recommend.
What I’ve looked at so far, and my feelings on each, follows…