S E R V E R   S I D E
View current page
...more recent posts

I can't get Safari to accept cookies from localhost. I dimly recall having this problem before, but I can't find any reference to it here, so maybe I'm dreaming.

Anyone?
- jim 4-23-2003 7:51 pm [link] [7 comments]

More on my latest lust: +1 megapixel digital camera phones. Of course in Japan first. Nothing new in that article, really, but the last two paragraphs are interesting.

Some camera makers are nevertheless concerned that cell phone cameras with 3 megapixel quality would affect the markets of low-quality digital cameras of the 1 megapixel class and disposable cameras.

However, many of them expect that camera-equipped cell phones and regular digital cameras can coexist in the market. "Camera-equipped cell phones can be used for casual snapshots, while regular digital cameras are suitable for more formal photo sessions," an employee of a camera maker said.
"[M]ore formal photo sessions...," huh? Yeah right. The digital camera will be completely subsumed into the phone very quickly for all but the most professional applications. Those companies better move into the +10 megapixel pro range, or strike some deals with cell makers. Who's going to want to carry two devices? Especially when the added bulk gets you less functionality (can't send your picture to someone while in the field with your regular digital camera.)

Converge damn it, converge!
- jim 4-23-2003 6:41 pm [link] [add a comment]

Dave has been loaning us DVDs from his rather extensive collection. Last night we watched The Day The Earth Stood Still. I was not expecting too much from this 1951 sci-fi picture, but I remember Paul Laffoley mentioning that this movie had a huge influence on him as a kid. Especially the spaceship whose shape holds some sort of golden mean beauty to those with mathematical eyes. So I figured what the heck. And it turned out to be a great film. It's dated, sure, except not so much as you'd think. Very interesting.

Also we've seen a lot of crap. Not from Dave of course, but from the little video store across the street. One exception to those misfires was Secretary. Fun movie.

Not sure why I'm not putting this on the movie page.
- jim 4-23-2003 6:27 pm [link] [add a comment]

Chadler 0.1 is now available. Here's the release info. You can download it here (windows, linux, os x).

I'm excited about this, but don't have the time right now to play with it. I'll report back as soon as I do.

Here's Cory Doctorow's blurb which captures exactly why I have so much hope for this project.

Mitch Kapor and the Open Source Applications Foundation have released the first public alpha of Chandler, the serverless, P2P mailer/calendar/PIM that looks more and more like an application framework for displacing the OS as the primary tool of info-management -- I *already* use my mailer as a database layered on top of my OS, since I email almost everything I do to someone, somewhere. I've stopped sweating careful file-heirarchies for my archived docs on my HDD and started just using my mailer's search functions to find the documents I need to retreive. Looks to me like Chandler is being *designed* for that kind of use.
File system hierarchies are not something the average user should have to concern themselves with. This complexity is holding back adoption.
- jim 4-22-2003 6:25 pm [link] [1 comment]

Flight risk.

On March 2, 2003 at 4:12 pm, I disappeared. My name is isabella v., but it's not. I'm twentysomething and I am an international fugitive.

- jim 4-21-2003 9:10 pm [link] [add a comment]

Easter Sunday sermon.

I slept through the egg hunt on the first floor, although we did write a few of the traditional (around here anyway) rhyming clues last night over sushi. Hopefully it went well.

And hopefully this really is the start of spring because people are in some need. Ran into L last night in the bodega and he was typical of most people I know in the city. Smiling and trying to be happy, but admitting that this has been the worst winter ever. And I'm not talking about the weather. We can take it, sure, and even worse, it's just that we would rather not. Strong only goes so far.

Early Sunday dinner tonight with the extended NYC family plus some parts of my family who have never interacted. Should be interesting.
- jim 4-20-2003 7:05 pm [link] [6 comments]

Both my old friend Diana and my father wrote to inform me of the closing of the M&M bar in Butte Montana. I wrote about the M&M here, along with a couple of pictures. The passing of an era. Very sad news.

Supposedly there is a story in the Montana Standard, but I can't find it...
- jim 4-18-2003 7:27 pm [link] [9 comments]

How do I not notice these things? Nested comments were not ordering correctly in the comment threads. Should be fixed now.

I dislike this nested style more and more. I'm not going to remove the option, but I'm thinking of switching my page to flat comments (one sequence of comments, ordered by time posted - no indenting.) I really think that is the better way. If you need to reply to a comment some way up the page, just quote part of that comment in your reply.

Any feelings on this?
- jim 4-17-2003 7:57 pm [link] [22 comments]

aktiom.net is offering linux server colocation, with 40 GB of traffic, for $75 a month. How do they do it?

A common question concerns how we're able to provide such a high-quality service for $75/month. By using powerful hardware combined with a specialized Linux kernel, we can put multiple client servers on one physical machine. This is unlike virtual webhosting in a few ways: This is also different from a FreeBSD jail()configuration. Users inside a FreeBSD jail are unable to use tools such as ping, traceroute, and tcpdump (they require access to raw sockets), and are limited to one IP address. None of these limitations appear in our solution. Security-conscious people might be wary of allowing tcpdump, but please remember that other server instances are completely partitioned away from your data and network traffic.
I wonder how this works out? Price is right.

- jim 4-17-2003 12:14 am [link] [add a comment]

The U.S. government has appointed the former head of privacy at Doubleclick - the dot com company with the most sinister privacy track record - as the Department of Homeland Security's first privacy czar.

Don't they even try to convince anyone they are not evil anymore? This would be like hiring the former head of the KGB to advise the department on monitoring U.S. citizens. Oh wait, they already did that.
- jim 4-16-2003 11:58 pm [link] [2 comments]

older posts...