Now With Web 2.0!

Category "General" Archive

Feb
08
2008
On a shared hosting account? Ever wonder what other sites are hosted on that same server? 
 
A pretty handy list of 101 techniques developers use all the time. I still haven’t finished looking through it yet! 
 
The newest of a long string of books I really wanna get. 
 
I’m just a hobbyist when it comes to photography but this is a really neat idea, image stabilization for  less than a buck!
 
I feel like the last person that hadn’t heard of this site, so here it is for any other stragglers left behind. 
 
Pure eye-candy and a catchy campaign for healthier food choices

Feb
06
2008

23 and MeHave you ever seen something and thought "Wow, that’s going to change the future"? I can only remember feeling that way a couple times, one I can remember was when I heard about electric & hybrid cars. I was so amazed that I based a whole science project on it, ahhh those were the days.

Getting back on topic, I recently read an article about a relatively new company called 23 and Me. It’s a web based company that provides people with a way to map and understand their DNA. One of the most intriguing ways they do that is through what they call an Odds Calculator, it combines your genetic information, age and ethnicity to determine your risk for certain conditions such as diabetes and certain types of cancer. All in all it’s still a field in it’s infancy but I think this is a huge leap forward for individualized medicine. I can’t help but love their slogan ‘genetics just got personal.’ and their website is fantastic.  It’s well organized and shares a lot of what you’ll get with their service in layman’s terms with some helpful graphics. But for $1000 a pop it’s a luxury that many can’t afford…yet.


Jan
26
2008

http://www.breakingbad.com/ - Awesome advertising website for the new AMC show Breaking Bad.
http://www.txeff.com/ - The best automated flash text effects I’ve ever seen.
http://tools.pingdom.com/fpt/ - A great site to test the speed of your webpages, gives graphs on what loads and how long it takes.


Nov
05
2007
I came back to work today after the weekend “fall back” and noticed that my Dreamweaver CS3 was starting to act up. Ever since we got it it’s been running like a champ so I googled “dreamweaver CS3 crashes” and lo and behold one of the first results is a TechNote posted today on adobe.com that links the frequent crashes on the DST ending. Of all the things I thought it could be, changing the clocks back an hour wasn’t even considered. That’s why i’m posting this in the attempts to spread the word about this odd error. Here’s a quote of the Issue as explained in the Technote.
Adobe Dreamweaver CS3 crashes when working with certain PHP or ASP files in Code view or Design view after the clock goes back one hour, when Daylight Savings Time ends. The crashes only occur when selecting certain lines in Code view, or selecting certain objects in Design view. The crashes only occur in files that have PHP or ASP code, intermingled with HTML code. The crashes do not occur in Dreamweaver 8 or earlier (Ref. 229536).
Click Here to read more and to find out how to fix this issue.
Feb
28
2007
AJAX - miniajax is a showroom of nice looking simple downloadable DHTML and AJAX scripts. A great resource for those uf us that sometimes lack the time and/or experience to develop these things ourselves. Beauty - the dailyslurp is a daily updated collection of beautiful websites that people submit to the site. A great reference to go to for an instant shot of design inspiration. Heck perhaps you’ll even learn something new from a site you find here. Web Standards - w3csites is a collection of web sites created by designers that conform with the W3C standards. We all know it can be difficult to design and develop according to these standards but it really is worth it in the long run. The site even lists what about the site is standard compliant like CSS2, tableless and HTML 4.01 Check them out!
Dec
05
2006
This awesome website 2Prong.com somehow magically creates a legitimate email address for you to use temporarily to avoid getting on spam lists. The thing that sets this apart from all the others is that emails received will pop up instantly in that same webpage. Great for sites that require email validation. Definitely a must bookmark!
Nov
21
2006
I’ve recently discovered the single best PHP mail script ever. Some of you may have heard of PHPMailer but for those of you that haven’t, you must go over to http://phpmailer.sourceforge.net/ and get it. It wasn’t the fact that it’s all wrapped up in one neat and tidy folder that intrigued me, it wasn’t even the ease of use and multitude of options. The thing that impressed me is its ability to not only deliver html and plaintext emails but somehow deliver them reliably. Whenever i try to create a web email form it always seems to deliver to the Junk Email folder in my tests. I don’t know how they did it, maybe there’s some additional headers in there or something. But maybe that’s another reason I like it, I don’t have to know how they did it, just that it really works.
Aug
02
2006
A friend and I are performing an SEO experiment over at Astromusicologie 101 We’ll see how it goes…
Jul
25
2006
Here’s another list of websites I feel are inspirational in thier magnificence. These sites range from a crisp cleanliness and attention to details to an in-your-face graphics intense design but they all have something in common, my admiration. Give them a look-see and let them know what you think about their awesome sites… Grapefruit Tetsoo Production Thanea TokiDoki New Ezra
Jul
18
2006
When i first saw the headline “First mockups of Firefox 2 theme released” I was worried, i was horrified at the thought of anything changing the already perfect browser but i was happily surprised that there were only minor changes and updates to the already popular default theme. When i saw it the only thing that came to mind was “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it”. Check it out at http://www.neowin.net/index.php?act=view&id=34067 and let me know what you think!
Jun
28
2006
Absolutely loving all the links over at http://www.kayodeok.btinternet.co.uk/favorites/webdesign.htm. It seems that some were broken when I tried but all in all another great bookmark resource!
Apr
26
2006
By Gregg Keizer, TechWeb News A dirt-cheap, do-it-yourself hacking kit sold by a Russian Web site is being used by more than 1,000 malicious Web sites, a security company said Monday. Those sites have confiscated hundreds of thousands of computers using the “smartbomb” kit, which sniffs for seven unpatched vulnerabilities in Internet Explorer and Firefox, then attacks the easiest-to-exploit weakness. For $15 to $20, hackers can buy the “Web Attacker Toolkit,” said San Diego-based Websense in an online alert. The tool, which uses a point-and-click interface, can be planted on malicious sites — or on previously-compromised computers — to ambush unsuspecting users. “It puts a bunch of code on a site that not only detects what browser the victim is running, but then selects one of seven different vulnerabilities to exploit, depending on how well patched the browser is,” said Dan Hubbard, senior director of security and research at Websense. Both Firefox and Internet Explorer vulnerabilities are among the seven. Websense has detected the kit being used about 1,000 sites, which then plant a Trojan horse on vulnerable computers. The Trojan is installed in a silent “drive-by download” that doesn’t require any user intervention; in fact, it installs in the background, so the user has no idea her computer has been hacked. The Trojan can log keystrokes, download additional code, or open backdoors, said Websense. “What’s interesting is that these sites all have an administration console on them with statistics. We’ve managed to capture a couple of screenshots.” Those screens, posted with Websense’s advisory, detail the browsers running on the compromised computers and keep a running tally of the most successful vulnerabilities. According to the screenshots, the single site that Websense illustrated had attracted 51,896 computers, the bulk of them — 76 percent, in fact — running Microsoft Internet Explorer. (About 12 percent ran Firefox; the remainder were unspecified.) This site, however, only used 4 of the 7 vulnerabilities, all of them directed at IE. The most successful of the quartet as one tagged as MS03-11 to match the security bulletin MS03-011, which published a patch for a bug in Microsoft Virtual Machine in April 2003. The malicious site managed to compromise 1,773 PCs using that three-year-old flaw, a 3.42 percent infection rate. “And this is just one site,” Hubbard said. “Together, these sites have compromised tens if not hundreds of thousands of systems.” The next-most useful vulnerability was dubbed “0-day” (zero-day), but was actually the “createTextRange” bug that was discovered last month and patched April 11 by Microsoft, said Hubbard. That vulnerability was used to compromise 1,507 PCs (2.9 percent success rate). “Everyone knows they should patch their browsers,” said Hubbard, “but this is further evidence that that’s not happening as much as it should be.” The trend toward hackers sharing attack code, even selling simpleton software “kits,” has been well-documented. Just last week, in fact, McAfee’s research labs reported a major increase in the use of rootkits to cloak worms, Trojans, and spyware; the boost is largely due to cut-and-paste-style tools that automatically add rootkit components to other malicious code, Stuart McClure, chief of McAfee’s research lab, said in an interview last week. “The use of multiple vulnerabilities isn’t commonplace,” added Websense’s Hubbard. “But this [toolkit] shows how hackers are becoming more and more organized.”
Apr
21
2006
By Antone Gonsalves, TechWeb News The U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team is advising people to upgrade to the latest versions of the Firefox Web browser and the Thunderbird email program to plug numerous critical security holes. Issued this week, the warning from the agency within the Department of Homeland Security said failing to use the latest versions would leave computers open to malware that could enable an attacker to commandeer a PC. US-CERT said some of the vulnerabilities involved the way Firefox and Thunderbird handle URLs or images. “By taking advantage of one or more vulnerabilities in Mozilla products, an attacker may be able to take control of your computer,” US-CERT said. Last week, Mozilla Corp., maker of the open source browser and email client, updated Firefox to patch two-dozen vulnerabilities, most of them critical. Firefox 1.5.0.2 debuted just days after rival Microsoft Corp. fixed 10 security problems within Internet Explorer. Mozilla also has released fixes for Thunderbird and for the Sea Monkey browser suite, the replacement for the now-defunct Mozilla suite.
Apr
12
2006
We’ve always been told that you can find the beauty in and draw inspiration from anything. Well here’s one interesting place, Japanese Manhole Covers displays tons of simply beautiful manhole covers. Another resource to draw inspiration from is Speak Up’s Word It. According to them Word It is…
your opportunity to express in as many words, and as many other graphic elements as you need, what best describes each monthly topic. Each month we will choose a specific topic, idea or theme. For example: the first theme was “inspiration.” So you would go home, or do it at work, and find words, images, artwork, whatever that best describes what inspiration means to you. It could be anything: music, cats, chocolate, museum, love, laundry. Anything that reflects what inspiration is to you. You can do whatever you want to it: vectorize it, photoshop it, scan it or build it and then send it to us.

Mar
21
2006
A few sites to draw inspiration from… http://www.okaydave.com/ http://www.mylkhead.com http://www.starvingeyes.com