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Howto: Add custom color to directory listings. - Ubuntu Forums

del.icio.us (bash) - Mon, 2010-04-19 22:21
Categories: bash

COLORS Dircolors - Linux StepByStep

del.icio.us (bash) - Mon, 2010-04-19 22:21
Categories: bash

10 Tools To Add Some Spice To Your UNIX Shell Scripts

del.icio.us (bash) - Mon, 2010-04-19 22:20
Categories: bash

Fork my bash profile

del.icio.us (bash) - Mon, 2010-04-19 22:15
Categories: bash

Technical Note TN2065: do shell script in AppleScript

del.icio.us (bash) - Mon, 2010-04-19 21:53
Categories: bash

Roger Ebert On Why Video Games Can Never Be Art

slashdot - Mon, 2010-04-19 21:42
Roger Ebert has long held the opinion that video games are not and can never be considered an art form. After having this opinion challenged in a TED talk last year, Ebert has now taken the opportunity to thoughtfully respond and explain why he maintains this belief. Quoting: "One obvious difference between art and games is that you can win a game. It has rules, points, objectives, and an outcome. Santiago might cite an immersive game without points or rules, but I would say then it ceases to be a game and becomes a representation of a story, a novel, a play, dance, a film. Those are things you cannot win; you can only experience them. She quotes Robert McKee's definition of good writing as 'being motivated by a desire to touch the audience.' This is not a useful definition, because a great deal of bad writing is also motivated by the same desire. I might argue that the novels of Cormac McCarthy are so motivated, and Nicholas Sparks would argue that his novels are so motivated. But when I say McCarthy is 'better' than Sparks and that his novels are artworks, that is a subjective judgment, made on the basis of my taste (which I would argue is better than the taste of anyone who prefers Sparks)."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Fatal Flaw Discovered In Invisibility Cloaks

slashdot - Mon, 2010-04-19 21:00
KentuckyFC writes "Carpet cloaks took the world by storm last year because they were the first devices to hide objects at optical frequencies. The idea is that a thin layer of dielectric material placed on a surface can make light look as if it is reflecting off the original surface. In other words, the layer is invisible and anything embedded within it is invisible too. This trick is like hiding something under a carpet, hence the name. Carpet cloaks are relatively easy to make because the dielectric material does not need to be specially constructed to steer light in special ways; physicists call this an isotropic material. Now a group at MIT has shown that isotropic carpet cloaks have a fatal flaw. When viewed at an angle, the carpets don't hide objects at all. Instead, they simply shift their position by about the same distance as they are high. So when viewed from an angle of 45 degrees, an object 0.2 units high is shifted to one side by a distance of 0.15 units, says the team. That's a serious limitation for carpet cloaks."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


conque - Project Hosting on Google Code

del.icio.us (bash) - Mon, 2010-04-19 20:53
Categories: bash

ppss - Project Hosting on Google Code

del.icio.us (bash) - Mon, 2010-04-19 20:36
Nifty utility to run multiple parallel shell jobs in a distributed environment.
Categories: bash

10 Expert Ubuntu Tricks - PCWorld Business Center

del.icio.us (bash) - Mon, 2010-04-19 20:29
Categories: bash

Linux Set Date and Time From a Command Prompt

del.icio.us (bash) - Mon, 2010-04-19 20:18
Categories: bash

Network Solutions Sites Hacked Again

slashdot - Mon, 2010-04-19 20:17
CWmike writes "A week after Web hosting company Network Solutions dealt with a large-scale infection of WordPress-driven blogs, the company acknowledged that other sites it hosts have been compromised. 'We have received reports that Network Solutions customers are seeing malicious code added to their websites and we are really sorry for this experience,' said spokesman Shashi Bellamkonda in a blog post. 'At this time, since anything we say in public may help the perpetrators, we are unable to provide details.' Securi Security Labs said on Sunday that at least 50 sites hosted by Networks Solutions had been hacked, and that malicious JavaScript injected into those sites was redirecting unsuspecting users to a Ukrainian attack server. The same server was involved in the earlier attacks against Network Solutions-hosted blogs. According to the StopMalvertising blog, the attacks planted a rogue IFRAME on the hacked sites to shunt users to the attack server. That server then launches multiple exploits, including an attack kit of ActiveX exploits and three more leveraging Adobe Reader vulnerabilities, against visiting PCs. Several browsers, including IE8, Chrome and Firefox, display warnings when users are redirected to the attack site."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Hyperpolyglot: Scripting Languages: Bash, Tcl, Perl, Python, Ruby

del.icio.us (bash) - Mon, 2010-04-19 20:09
Comparison chart
Categories: bash

http://www.panix.com/~elflord/unix/bash-tute.html

del.icio.us (bash) - Mon, 2010-04-19 19:49
Categories: bash

Manipulating Strings

del.icio.us (bash) - Mon, 2010-04-19 19:45
Categories: bash

Arrays

del.icio.us (bash) - Mon, 2010-04-19 19:45
Categories: bash

EU Piracy Estimates — Just How Inaccurate?

slashdot - Mon, 2010-04-19 19:33
Last week we discussed news that a US government report questioned the reliability of piracy statistics from the media industry. Reader superapecommando sends in a follow-up written by Glyn Moody that examines a similar problem in Europe. Quoting: "As far as I know, no similar analysis has been carried out for European reports. So I thought it might be interesting to look at one particular European report on the subject — not least because I've heard that its findings influenced some of the MPs voting on the Digital Economy Act. ... the net result of this 68-page report, with all of its tables and detailed methodology, is that four out of the top five markets used for calculating the overall piracy loss in Europe draw on figures supplied by the recording industry itself. Those apparently terrifying new figures detailing the supposed loss of money and jobs due to piracy in Europe turn out to be little more than a re-statement of the industry's previous claims in a slightly different form. As a result, as little credence can be placed in the report as in those criticised by the US GAO."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Why Computer Science Students Cheat

slashdot - Mon, 2010-04-19 18:51
alphadogg writes "Enrollment in undergraduate computer science courses is at an all-time high at colleges nationwide. But this trend that's been hailed by the US tech industry has a dark side: a disproportionate number of students taking these courses are caught cheating. More students are caught cheating in introductory computer science courses than in any other course on campus, thanks to automated tools that professors use to detect unauthorized code reuse, excessive collaboration and other forbidden ways of completing homework assignments. Computer science professors say their students are not more dishonest than students in other fields; they're just more likely to get caught because software is available to check for plagiarism. 'The truth is that on every campus, a large proportion of the reported cases of academic dishonesty come from introductory computer science courses, and the reason is totally obvious: we use automated tools to detect plagiarism,' explains Professor Ed Lazowska, chair of computer science and engineering at the University of Washington. 'We compare against other student submissions, and we compare against previous student submissions and against code that may be on the Web. These tools flag suspicious cases, which are then manually examined.'"

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


US House Passes Ban On Caller ID Spoofing

slashdot - Mon, 2010-04-19 18:09
smarek writes "The 'Truth in Caller ID Act' passed the US House of Representatives on Wednesday. The legislation is trying to outlaw caller ID spoofing. In some cases, this spoofing has led to individuals giving out information that has led to identity theft. Last year the NYPD discovered over 6,000 victims of caller ID spoofing, who together lost a total of $15 million. A companion bill has already been passed by the Senate, and the two are on their way to 'informal conference to reconcile any differences.' The bill that results will most likely pass." PCWorld's coverage notes that callers will still be able to block their information entirely, and that the bill may have negative consequences for legitimate phone-related services, like Google Voice.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Palm WebOS Hacked Via SMS Messages

slashdot - Mon, 2010-04-19 17:26
gondaba writes "Security researchers at the Intrepidus Group have hacked into Palm's new WebOS platform, using nothing more than text messages to exploit a slew of dangerous web app vulnerabilities. The white hat hackers found that the WebOS SMS client did not properly perform input/output validation on any SMS messages sent to the handset, leading to a rudimentary HTML injection bug. Coupled with the fact that HTML injection leads directly to injecting code into a WebOS application, the attacks made possible were quite dangerous (especially considering they could all be delivered over an SMS message)."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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ICT users' rights

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Debian Security

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Drupal Security

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EFF

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