Intro to Geocaching

Added the new article to the MapToaster website, an introduction to geocaching.


Browser Wars

The  stats for one of our product websites has some interesting data on web browser use.

  • Internet Explorer has fallen below 60% for the first time – $58%
  • Firefox use has hit 30%
  • Safari is 6% and Google’s Chrome is 4%
  • Safari is pretty much only used by Mac owners. Safari use on Windows is negligible.

Uptake of new software versions differs markedly between Internet Explorer and Firefox.

Internet Explorer

The following tables show the percentage of users with each version and the release date for that version.

IE 8.0 25% Mar-09
IE 7.0 57% Oct-06
IE 6.0 18% Aug-01

After 8 years the much loathed (by web developers) IE6 is still used by almost 20% of IE users. A look at the IP addresses of these users indicates that about 60% of them are corporate or institutional. They are probably stuck with IE6 through cost of change or the requirements of legacy intranet applications.

The number non-institutional users with either IE6 or the three-year old IE7 is surprising, as you’d expect the updates to have been pushed through by Windows Update. You have to wonder if these PC’s have updates disabled!

96% of Windows users are using either XP (69%) or Vista (27%).

Firefox

FF 3.0.11 26% Jun-09
FF 3.0.10 57% Apr-09
Other V3 11% Jun-08
Older 6%

In contrast, with Firefox there is a very different pattern. 83% of the Firefox users had updated within the last two months and 94% of Firefox users were using a browser less than a year old.

Perhaps the difference is cultural. Firefox users have made a conscious choice to switch and are probably generally more aware of the need to stay up-to-date.


Web of Life

P6130045

Life is connected. We have a lot of small grasses growing in the cracks between the paving stones in our yard.  You might have an urge to “tidy” these up, but their seeds  are currently sustaining a flock of 20 or so finches…


Hans Rosling and Data Visualisation

Hans Rosling (blog), Professor of International Health at Karolinska Institutet and Director of the Gapminder Foundation, using data visualisation to explain poverty, health and economic development.

Swine Flu and Tuberculosis vs the news media

And two talks from TED. The first on HIV

And the second exposing preconceptions about the “developing world”


Ubuntu Netbook Remix

Put Ubuntu Netbook Remix on the AspireOne. Amazingly good.

The Windows XP installation on this machine was crumbling. Suspend/hibernate didn’t work. There would be no fixing that without re-installing Windows.  Even when it was working properly, the XP user-interface was kind of awkward on the small keyboard and trackpad. This seemed like a good opportunity to try out the latest Ubuntu release – 9.04.

Ubuntu Netbook RemixUbuntu Netbook Remix

Ubuntu Netbook Remix

The Ubuntu installation took about 15 minutes, using an USB CD-ROM drive.  As far as I could tell everything worked except the network activity light and the SD slot. Fixed by running this, in the terminal, then rebooting

  sudo apt-get install linux-backports-modules-jaunty

The next step was  to install the Netbook Remix (UNR). Execute this in a terminal window and re-boot:

  sudo apt-get install go-home-applet human-netbook-theme \
    maximus netbook-launcher window-picker-appletsudo apt-get \
    install go-home-applet human-netbook-theme maximus \
    netbook-launcher window-picker-applet

The result is brilliant. The UNR user-interface is much more manageable with a small trackpad and keyboard.

UNR replaces the standard Gnome interface with one more suited to a small screen. Instead of the usual Applications/Places/System menu, there is a full-screen “home” panel that shows the icons for the installed applications. The applications are organised in a series of tabs. Clicking the tab shows the application in that category. The tabs and icons are large and easy to hit.

UNR Main Screen

UNR Main Screen

The right-hand part of the the top bar has the usual status applets and you can add more from the standard selection

Status Bar

Status Bar

The task bar lives on the left of the top bar. The running applications are represented by 16×16 icons. Click the icon to bring the application to the front – much like the standard task bar. The front application gets a larger tab in the top bar.

ss-taskbar

Taskbar

Overlapping windows are gone.  All the applications run with their window maximised.  All the window decoration is stripped away leaving only the application, maximised against the top bar.  There is no title bar, minimise/maximise/close buttons or window resize controls.

Compared to a normal notebook, the netbook’s small trackpad and screen are quite fiddly. UNR’s simplification of the user-interface makes the netbook so much easier to work with.  The effect is surprisingly good and far better than using Windows XP.

Overall UNR has transformed the Acer from something that was tolerable to a device I actually like using….


ANZAC Day

Watched the Leopard Coach Lines Canterbury Brass play World War 1 era music outside the Canterbury Museum. Here’s what twitter said about ANZAC day.

Click on the image for a zoomable view (requires Microsoft Silverlight)

 

ANZAC Day 2009 - Canterbury Museum

ANZAC Day 2009 - Canterbury Museum


Stand by Me

Playing for Change


Gratuitous Packaging Award

This month’s award goes to SanDisk for the mountain of unnecessary plastic and cardboard surrounding these three USB flash drives.  At least most of the materials were recyclable and the drives themselves are excellent.

SanDisk packaging


(Much) Too Much Time on Their Hands

telnet towel.blinkenlights.nl


New Mapping Articles

Added some new mapping articles to the MapToaster website.


How to manually add a Windows printer for OS X

The printer preferences dialog on a Mac allows you to browse for Windows printer shares and add them by clicking.  If the share is not browseable, or the printer is on another IP subnet, then the printer wont show up.  On a PC, you can simply enter the server and share name.

On a Mac there’s nowhere to do this.  While waiting for Apple tech support to figure it out (they tried to give up on me a couple of times) I stumbled on the salient KB article. Turns out the Advanced tool button you need to do this is turned off by default.

Just Works If You Know How…


The Ides of March — Old School Gospel

David Byrne’s playlist this month  is a beautiful collection of old gospel songs.


Monarchs Emerge

After the 3 weeks the coccoons became transparent. This seemed to be triggered by a hot day, after a week or so of cooler weather.  

 

The following day the butterflies emerged. They under the empty coccoons for a few hours, waiting for their wings to straighten an harden. Then they were off into the garden.  Here’s the full gallery of photos.

 

wing


Monarch Butterflies

 

One of this summer’s science projects was growing Monarch butterflies.  A single Swan plant.  This yielded a dozen or so caterpillars. The plant grew to a good size, but was no match for the caterpillars’ ferocious appetite.  It held up for a while, but 4th instar caterpillars stripped the plant of leaves in a couple of days.  At that point we fed them on strips of butternut pumpkin until they pupated.

We now have four pupae.  The remainder of the caterpillars wandered off into other plants and couldn’t be found or were predated by wasps.

Pupae are two weeks old – should emerge any day…


Dr Who on Tesla Coils


Blackout

Speaking as someone who makes a living from selling intellectual propery, Section 92 of the Copyright Amendment Act provides nothing of value to the majority of New Zealand copyright holders. It creates a situation of guilt by accusation and in doing so endangers my business by exposing it to malicious accusations. Rather than using the courts, it places responsibility on ISP’s, who are ill equipped to make the necessary judgements.

This absurdly amateurish piece of legislation appears to be the result of lobbying by an industry that has forgotten how to be a business…

Update: the start date for this legislation has been delayed by a month….

New Zealand's new Copyright Law presumes 'Guilt Upon Accusation' and will Cut Off Internet Connections without a trial. Join the black out protest against it!


Leaving Money on the Table

On the one hand, HP is cutting 24,600 jobs. On the other, here’s the response I got, from their pre-sales team, to a simple question about the specs for a high-end (read expensive) laptop I’m interested in buying:

I would like to inform you that from the model number and product number I am unable to trace any specifications. Therefore, I request you to get back to us with the exact Model number of the PC. However, you can check the specification for any model PC by logging in to HP website :…

I had previously read the specification on their website and it didn’t have everyting I wanted to know. So I tried again including the link to their website for the model/options and this came back:

I would like to inform you that we, at HP Email support are dedicated to provided technical support to the HP PCs.   I regret to inform you that we do not have information regarding this. At this moment, I recommend you contact the nearest HP Reseller, so that they will provide you complete details about the pricing and the features.

This stuff isn’t rocket science…


Warhol’s “Fashion”

From Andy Warhol’s Fashion TV series, Bianca Jagger interviews Steven Spielberg talking about picking up radio stations on his teeth, TV static ghosts and swallowing the future.


Nokia E71 vs iPhone

After having used an iPhone for almost a year, I’m now using a Nokia E71. In many ways the Nokia is an anti-iPhone. More powerful, but more complicated.  Here’s what I like about the new phone, compared to the iPhone:

  • Real keyboard – typing is much faster and more accurate than the iPhone touch-screen keyboard.
  • Background apps. Having software continue to run in the background transforms the mobile data experience. It’s a big deal. You don’t have to wait for an email to be sent, instant messaging continues to run, web pages don’t have to reload when you go back to them.
  • Better voice quality on phone calls.
  • Bluetooth DUN provides a 3G data connection for a laptop or N810
  • Voice dialling and speed dial. A lot quicker to make a call.
  • Can use one-handed for making calls.
  • Louder speaker – better for handsfree and listening to internet radio or podcasts.
  • User-interface is fast.  The iPhone animations are pretty to watch, but make the phone feel a little sluggish.
  • Instant messaging (gtalk) that really works.
  • VOIP client – can connect to the office asterisk server.
  • Skype. Interestingly Skype uses a standard local cellphone call for the “last mile”. 3G data connections aren’t really suitable for VOIP, so Skype uses your cell carrier to make the link between you and the Skype network.  If you have included minutes, there might not e a lot of benefit over a cellphone call, but you also get instant messages and presence.
  • I can write software for it using Python. No Objective C required.
  • No nanny-Apple looking over my shoulder.

Security on the Internets

Limit your trust and keep good backups…

Backups

The place to start is good backups. You can’t be sure the bad guys wont get through your defences, but you can take steps to make recovery easy. Good backups also protect you against a hard drive crash – the failure rate for hard drives is 100%!

External hard drives and backup software are cheap.

  • get several USB external hard drives (at least 3) and rotate your backups between them
  • do a full backup once in a while (weekly/bi-weekly/monthly) and do differential backups frequently. Ideally do backups daily, but it really comes back to how much you are prepared to lose.
  • keep one of your backup disks off-site to cover against theft or fire
  • keep backups going back several months.  If you get infected with badware and don’t notice for a while, recent backups may contain badware too.

Acronis True Image backup software has saved my bacon on a number of occasions. It can do “bare-metal’ restores.  All you need to get going again is the True Image CD and your backup disk to do a complete restore.

Your Computer

  • Use the latest operating system software for your PC. Windows Vista or Windows 7 for a PC, or the latest versions of Mac OSX or Linux.
  • Keep your patches up to date. Turn on automatic updates.  Don’t forget to update other software like Microsoft Office, Adobe Flash and Adobe PDF Reader etc.
  • Use anti-virus software. AV software is far from perfect, but it’s a lot  better than nothing.
  • Use a better browser. Don’t use Internet Explorer. Firefox, Google Chrome, Opera and Apple Safari are alternatives.
  • If you’re using FireFox, use the NoScript add-on. NoScript maintains a ‘whitelist’ of websites that are allowed to use Javascript. Using NoScript greatly reduces your exposure to web-delivered badware. You have to add the sites you use and trust to run Javascript. But the effort is well worth it.
  • If you use Firefox, use ad-blocking software like AdBlock Plus. Many webites that you visit display third-party ads. These ads have been known to deliver badware to users via well-known and trusted websites. AdBlock Plus also makes the Internet much nicer by removing all the flashing, pulsing ads.
  • Remove Administrator rights from your Windows login. Keep a separate admin login and use it only when needed.  If your account doesn’t have admin rights it’s a tougher target for badware.
  • Don’t recycle passwords across web sites – see the password section below.
  • Use a personal firewall that controls outgoing as well as incoming connections.
  • Only install software on your PC when you trust its source. Never use cracked software. It’s often infected with badware.
  • Put your computer in standby mode or turn it off when you’re not using it.
  • Laptops, cellphones and PDA’s all contain private information. Treat them like a wallet or purse.
  • When you do business on a website, check it’s a reputable company. Don’t give out unnecessary personal information.

Email

  • Your email software probably will have options to allow Javascript and HTML in emails. Turn both off. Javascript and HTML make it easier for scammers to deceive you or exploit flaws in your software.
  • Use anti-virus software that automatically scans your incoming email and attachments.
  • Don’t open attachments from untrusted sources. Doubly so for spam.
  • Don’t open attachments from trusted sources unless you know the person who sent it was also the author.  i.e. the ha-ha look at this type of stuff can spread badware.
  • Protect your email account – access to your email account gives access to many other areas of your life. If you use web-based email, like GMail, treat it like your online-banking.
  • Banks etc shouldn’t send you email relating to your accounts. Ignore anything from them that isn’t just general advertising.  Ignore any email that asks you to click on a link and login to one of your accounts.
  • Never click on links in emails.
  • You can’t trust the “From” address in any email.  Emails are easily forged.
  • Delete spam, don’t read it. Never open attachments.
  • If you use GMail, there is an option called “Browser connection”. Set it to “Always use https”.  Other web-based email services probably have a similar encryption option.
  • Delete any emails that contain paswords.  Move passwords, account information, domain registration details, etc into secure storage – see PasswordSafe, below. If your computer is lost or cracked, doing this will greatly reduce your exposure.

Banking

  • Always type the url into your browser.  Never click on a link in an email or on another website. Don’t use your browser’s bookmarks – malware can rewrite these.
  • Logout as soon as you are finished.
  • Use a separate web browser for banking.  I use Google Chrome for internet banking and a few other secure sites and Firefox for all other browsing. Safari and Opera are other choices.
  • Don’t use internet banking unless you need to.  Set up long term savings or trust accounts that have large deposits in separate accounts without internet or phone banking access.
  • If your bank offers two-factor authentication, like a code sent via SMS, or a code card, use it.  It wont protect you from if your PC is infected with malware, or from phishing, but it will stop password sniffing software giving access to your bank account.
  • Never do Internet banking from a computer you don’t trust, e.g. from an Internet cafe

Credit & EFTPOS Cards

  • Read the terms and conditions for your credit card.  If you follow the rules, you’re probably well protected from fraud. My experience is that if there’s a problem with an internet transaction it is pretty easy to get your money back.
  • Stick to reputable e-commerce websites.  Check out other customer’s experiences by using Google.
  • Only use EFTPOS cards in places you can trust, e.g. banks and ATM’s. Hotwired EFTPOS terminals are not unheard of and it’s probably going to be a lot harder to get your money back compared to using a credit card.

Wireless

  • Your wireless access-point has built-in security. Turn it on.
  • Use a long password – at least 15 characters and not a dictionary word.
  • Use the WPA or WPA2 Personal (aka PSK) security option. Select the AES encryption option. Do not use WEP or TKIP options.
  • When using a public access-point (e.g. at a cafe), it may be possible for other users of the access-point to snoop on what you are doing.  If you use public access-points, it’s vital you have a firewall installed on your laptop.

Passwords

  • Make them long – 6 letters is inadequate for anything you care about.
  • Don’t use cat’s names, birth dates or anything someone could guess if they know something about you. Same goes for the security questions websites use to let you recover your password – remember Sarah Palin.
  • Don’t use dictionary words. Substituting number for letters (e.g. l3tt3rs) or miXiNg up the case on dictionary words doesn’t help much, as passwords crackers will do the substitutions as well.
  • Use random letters or a long passphrase.
  • Don’t re-use passwords or security questions on different websites.
  • Bruce Schneier’s PasswordSafe software is a great way to create and manage passwords securely. Use 1Password on a Mac.

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