Skip to content

National Geographic Adventure magazine

I stumbled across this page: One Day at a Time on the Five-Million-Step Program. I read the article, but at the end of the page was told to read the rest I should buy the June/July (2004!) issue of the magazine. Nice. This is what I asked the editors at the magazine:

I just stumbled across the article at http://www.nationalgeographic.com/adventure/0406/excerpt3.html. At the bottom of the page it says to read the rest of the article I should “pick up the June/July issue of Adventure.” You really expect me to find an issue of your magazine in a library from nearly two years ago? That’s really quite unrealistic. Who’s going to go through that effort? What you should be doing is adding the text to the page when the next issue comes out. So when you published August/September 2004, the June/July 2004 articles should have been posted in their entirety. I’d love to know your thinking about why you don’t have old articles online. Thanks, Mike

Gmail Collection

Back in January I set one of my ancient domains to forward all of it’s spam to a Gmail account. (original post: Comparing Gmail, Yahoo, and Hotmail) I just today looked at the Gmail account to see how it’s doing. Argh! My ancient domain has filled up its hard drive with spam, so it’s been generating error messages for a few days. The Gmail account has collected 49,627 messages in the inbox, and 165,939 messages in the Spam box.

The spam box gets emptied of messages over 30 days old, which I guess is a good thing, since I am using 1,580MB (58%) of my 2,722Mb of space. There aren’t any attachments on these messages either, I strip them when the message comes into my old domain.

I’ve also had to stop forwarding messages to Gmail, Gmail has been refusing the messages since there were too many coming in. [—@gmail.com]: host gmail-smtp-in.l.google.com[72.14.205.27] said: 450-4.2.1 The Gmail user you are trying to contact is receiving 450-4.2.1 mail at a rate that prevents additional messages from 450-4.2.1 being delivered. Please resend your message at a later 450-4.2.1 time; if the user is able to receive mail at that time, 450 4.2.1 your message will be delivered. f14si1822916qba (in reply to RCPT TO command)

<head> has to be on its own line?

What’s the deal with the <head> command having to be on its own line on a web page? One of my older sites is busted in Mozilla, Firefox, and Safari. It only shows the page source code, until I move the head to its own line. Ugh. I thought whitespace was irrelevant.

Block 64.62.228.x

Wow, I upgraded one of my blogs (ShowBizRadio.net) to the enwest WordPress earlier this week. The spam fighting system is very different from earlier versions of WordPress. I received 50+ comment spam attempts starting just a few hours ago. As I was typing this entry, I received 9 more! The attempts are all registering as one of these IP addresses: 64.62.228.2 64.62.228.3 64.62.228.4 64.62.228.5.

D-link sucks

David vs. Goliath story of the day: Open Letter to D-Link about their NTP vandalism

WashingtonPost.com spams

Amazing. On a day a when the FTC fines a millionaire spammer a pittance of the fine due, the Washington Post ignores its privacy policy and spams me with an offer to buy their stupid dead tree paper. But yeah, the spam tells me I can opt-out! Like I should trust that, after all, my preferences are already checked to NOT receive their garbage. But that’s ok, they aren’t members of TrustE or the BBB privacy seal programs, so what recourse do we have? None. Jerks. What’s the purpose of having a privacy policy if it can just be ignored? I’d love to have some big wig at the Post tell me it was an accident, and send me an apology. But that won’t happen. You have to be trustworthy and worried about what people think of you to offer an apology for lying.

I wouldn’t subscribe to the Post now if it were free. Who needs an extra couple hundred sheets of paper (newsprint nonetheless) cluttering up the house? It’s no wonder the newspaper subscription count is in freefall.

Never mind

Never mind.

Blocked XMR3 family of domains

I’ve just blocked these domains, all related to each other, based on message content, message headers, and whois searches:
messagereach.com premiereglobal.com venturedirect.com xmr1.com xmr2.com xmr3.com xmr4.com xmr5.com xmr6.com xmr7.com xmr8.com xmr9.com xmr10.com xmr11.com xmr12.com xmr13.com xmr14.com xmr15.com. They are sending out drivel (spam) with subject lines like “Savvy IT Pros Are Great Responders!” and “Ministry Values from VentureDirect -Postal Names New to Market!”

Happy April Fool’s Day!

I hope you liked my little prank. Here it is (my home page reversed entirely):

kralC leahciM (Click to embiggen.)

My Webloc Archiving Script

I cleaned my Powerbook’s desktop off this morning. The script is now posted at: Making Webloc Archives. My script merely reads the .webloc files, extracts the url, grabs the site’s favicon if there is noe, then uploads the link to a web site.