00:00:50 quiet in here without the M thing 00:01:26 Heh. 00:02:00 Can't say I mind. It makes me feel productive. 00:02:14 it makes me feel bored 00:02:19 It doesn't like either. 00:02:33 well, get a better XSLT engine, then 00:02:46 what error message do you get? 00:03:19 xmlXPathRunEval: parameter error 00:03:19 xmlXPathEval: evaluation failed 00:03:29 $time isn't defined 00:03:44 I was wondering where that was set 00:03:56 I'm pretty sure it is. works fine. 00:04:12 oh, do I need to do a variable thingy? 00:04:21 try it without 00:04:29 without what? 00:04:36 doesn't that just insert the value of the element time? 00:04:53 Ah, so I need: 00:04:53 why not just use . instead of $time? 00:05:04 ugh 00:05:06 or time 00:05:16 i didn't know i could do that. 00:05:19 it's pretty difficult to debug without seeing the code 00:06:13 AaronSw: what are you matching against? 00:06:39 link 00:07:28 can you post the code online? 00:08:57 grep for archiveURL 00:09:27 what is "time" meant to be matching? 00:09:36 00:09:44 aha! 00:10:04 what? 00:10:10 so you were trying to replace strings... by passing it an element? Different 00:10:26 Well you told me a variable wasn't working... 00:10:30 you have to put the text value of the element by passing it into a variable first 00:10:37 well, the variable isn't set 00:10:53 why? nodesets can be converted into strings 00:11:00 are you sure? 00:11:46 do you have soe sample input we can run it on? 00:11:54 http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath#function-string 00:12:23 [url omitted] 00:13:16 funny, it works for me 00:13:48 Odd. 00:14:06 ah, perhaps it doesn't 00:14:53 oh, hmm, it does sorta work 00:15:01 aha! 00:15:13 why omitted? 00:15:20 s/{archiveURL}/{$archiveURL}/ 00:15:32 omitted: dunno... 00:15:48 cool. now i just need to fix chumpster to serve the permalinks 00:16:29 at least the chump is in Python. phew 00:20:00 AaronSw: try using just time instead of $time 00:20:46 cool, still works 00:21:30 then you can drop the $time variable 00:21:54 wow, Alexa just helped me out on three pages in a row 00:22:01 yep, done 00:22:09 one had moved to a "pay service", so I just ran it through Alexa :-) 00:22:22 heh. 00:25:24 hmm, is "bookmark" an appropriate type for a permalink? 00:25:54 probably not; as I recall, "bookmark" is an entry point 00:26:22 isn't that what a permalink is? 00:26:42 [[[ 00:26:43 Bookmark 00:26:43 Refers to a bookmark. A bookmark is a link to a key entry point within an extended document. The title attribute may be used, for example, to label the bookmark. Note that several bookmarks may be defined in each document. 00:26:47 ]]] - http://www.w3.org/TR/html401/types#type-links 00:27:12 does it constitute an "extended document"? 00:27:14 exactly 00:27:31 I presume so 00:28:09 cross your fingers... 00:28:14 chumpster has quit (Remote closed the connection) 00:28:28 hooray! chumpster's gone 00:28:39 it will be back... maybe 00:34:04 chumpster (~chumpster@xcdfddb76.ip.ggn.net) has joined #swhack 00:34:12 chumpster has quit (Remote closed the connection) 00:34:27 chumpster (~chumpster@xcdfddb76.ip.ggn.net) has joined #swhack 00:35:37 * AaronSw claims partial victory -- goes home 00:35:43 well to eat dinner 00:35:49 heh, heh, heh 00:36:19 bbl 00:37:39 Hmm... wouldn't it be cool if you could have a link to some RDF address book data about someone, and just cram it into your email program? 00:37:46 cf. http://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/Business 00:39:11 Aah, my AB will take text-separated values. I'm sure I could get CWM to do something like that 00:42:33 sbp has quit (Ping timeout: 180 seconds) 00:50:05 sbp (~sean@m982-mp1-cvx3b.pop.ntl.com) has joined #swhack 00:54:35 chumpster has quit (Remote closed the connection) 00:54:45 chumpster (~chumpster@xcdfddb76.ip.ggn.net) has joined #swhack 00:54:45 chumpster has quit (Remote closed the connection) 00:54:52 that didn't sounds good 00:57:11 sbp has quit (Ping timeout: 180 seconds) 00:57:31 sbp (~sean@m31-mp1-cvx4c.pop.ntl.com) has joined #swhack 00:57:54 chumpster (~chumpster@xcdfddb76.ip.ggn.net) has joined #swhack 00:58:09 chumpster has quit (Remote closed the connection) 00:58:22 chumpster (~chumpster@xcdfddb76.ip.ggn.net) has joined #swhack 00:58:25 ok, looks like we have permalinks! 01:03:30 good 01:03:44 [[[ 01:03:45 Error: 01:03:45 could not connect to "127.0.0.1:82" (opening connection) 01:03:49 ]]] - http://blogspace.com/swhack/weblog/ 01:03:59 i know, i know! 01:04:04 ah, it fixed itself... 01:04:06 blame AmphetaDesk 01:04:12 yeah, it fixes itself 01:04:22 quick, blog something! 01:04:26 @ http://blogspace.com/swhack/weblog/permalink.patch 01:04:28 A: http://blogspace.com/swhack/weblog/permalink.patch from AaronSw 01:04:46 A:|Permalink Patch for Daily Chump 01:04:46 titled item A 01:05:19 A::By Aaron Swartz himself 01:05:20 commented item A 01:05:43 great 01:05:49 A::Now you can link to things on #swhack, safe in the knowledge that your permalink will stay persistent until the next version of the Daily Chump comes out, or Aaron fiddles with the XSLT again, whichever comes first. 01:05:50 commented item A 01:06:12 * AaronSw emails patch to edd 01:06:18 heh, way to send out "don't link to us!" vibes 01:06:45 Heh. 01:07:11 .google cool uris don't change 01:07:13 cool uris don't change: http://www.w3.org/Provider/Style/URI.html 01:07:19 A::No, but really, link to us! It'll be fun and [cool|http://www.w3.org/Provider/Style/URI]. 01:07:20 commented item A 01:08:06 lol: """Historical note: At the end of the 20th century when this was written, "cool" was an epithet of approval particularly among young, indicating trendiness, quality, or appropriateness.""" 01:08:28 Heh. 01:08:44 Oops, I just realized a bug in my patch 01:08:50 cool 01:09:07 * AaronSw delays email to Edd. 01:09:17 Hi Edd, have a bug! 01:10:00 Heh. The bug would cause all future archives not to actually work. :-) 01:10:15 to be working actually not? 01:10:15 It'd sorta take the perma out of permalink. 01:10:34 come as you be, leave as you are. 01:10:40 wouldn't that just nibble your biscuit 01:10:59 bbiab, lighting candles 01:11:05 have fun 01:15:30 thanks 01:15:37 AaronSw has changed the topic to: It doesn't hurt to be alert! 01:16:47 It doesn't help to eat some kelp 01:17:05 heh 01:17:48 Our mum was warning us of IRA agents and we blew her off and that's what she said. 01:22:06 chumpster has quit (Remote closed the connection) 01:22:17 chumpster (~chumpster@xcdfddb76.ip.ggn.net) has joined #swhack 01:30:25 sbp has quit (Killed (NickServ (Ghost: SeanP!~sean@m20-mp1-cvx4c.pop.ntl.com))) 01:30:33 SeanP (~sean@m20-mp1-cvx4c.pop.ntl.com) has joined #swhack 01:33:15 Mark Bernstein: "Flash isn't bad, it's just different. Think of it as a distinct affordance -- a tool for doing things you wouldn't do otherwise." 01:37:58 SeanP is now known as sbp 01:38:16 tsk, I didn't even notice that 01:38:41 Bernstein really likes http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0735710740/coolbooks02/ 01:38:57 "This thoughtful survey has evoked far too little discussion; it deserves to be the most widely-discussed book on Web style since Siegel's Killer Web Sites." 01:39:08 "The most challenging and thoughtful Web design book of 2001" 01:39:18 He could write the back-of-book blurbs all by himself! 01:39:30 is my site reviewed? 01:39:57 I think you'd fall into "HTML Minimalism" 01:41:04 it's like, Zen, dude 01:54:12 Heh heh heh: http://sfstories.com/index.shtml?32 01:54:16 Cute. 02:02:03 Nice article on Eastgate: http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/343/business/On_SiteP.shtml 02:02:24 "Four or five years ago, there was a sudden burst of enthusiasm for ''push'' technology on the Web, the idea that Internet surfers would rather watch streaming media - mini movies and video segments - than click on links. It was a flop. ''People saw the push stuff and said, `That's really cool, but I've got stuff I have to do. So I'm going to go back to clicking,''' Bernstein said." 02:03:11 BLURB:Quickies: Assorted Interesting Links 02:03:34 * AaronSw pokes chumpster 02:03:47 B: Quickies: Assorted Interesting Links from AaronSw 02:04:05 B::[Fresh Styles for Web Designers|http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0735710740/coolbooks02/], Bernstein calls it "The most challenging and thoughtful Web design book of 2001". 02:04:06 commented item B 02:04:57 B::[twenty-five cents and counting|http://sfstories.com/index.shtml?32]: Derek Powazek checks up on how his new book is selling in his home town. 02:04:58 commented item B 02:05:30 B::[Eastgate in the Boston Globe]: "Four or five years ago, there was a sudden burst of enthusiasm for ''push'' technology on the Web, the idea that Internet surfers would rather watch streaming media - mini movies and video segments - than click on links. It was a flop. ''People saw the push stuff and said, `That's really cool, but I've got stuff I have to do. So I'm going to go back to clicking,''' Bernstein said." 02:05:31 commented item B 02:06:32 chumpster has quit (Remote closed the connection) 02:06:41 url there should have been http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/343/business/On_SiteP.shtml 02:07:38 chumpster (~chumpster@xcdfddb76.ip.ggn.net) has joined #swhack 02:09:50 @ http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/personaltechnology/134378512_ptmac16.html 02:09:54 C: The Seattle Times: Personal Technology: Entourage X integrates e-mail, contacts, calendar from AaronSw 02:10:28 C:|Glenn Says Entourage X's Power is in the Links 02:10:30 titled item C 02:10:34 C::I agree totally. 02:10:36 commented item C 02:13:22 oh, datatypes suck 02:13:43 .beats 02:13:43 The time is @135 at the tone. 02:14:00 uh oh - this is be- is this turning in swhackdot? 02:14:24 Heh heh heh. 02:15:15 zoom 02:15:27 damned lag 02:16:23 I was typing that immediately after 020445Z BLURB:Quickies: Assorted Interesting Links 02:16:29 I assumed so. 02:16:40 Your lag is that bad? 02:16:44 well, that's some lag 02:16:48 sbp, what's this about datatypes? 02:17:12 well, some sort of packet loss/timeout interaction 02:17:44 someone should just sit down, and say "this is how it's going to be". The current range if discussions appear to me to be rather silly. Discussions for the point of having a big debate about datatypes, rather than actually resolving the problem 02:18:54 Hmm, that's an interesting point of view, but I don't think it's true. 02:18:59 "... resolving the problem"? 02:19:21 I think many of the datatypes proposals are interesting, if a bit hard to understand at first. 02:19:25 or was that it? 02:19:32 I think that was it. 02:19:54 Certainly some seem more likely to be accepted than others, but I don't think people are debating over pointless minutia. 02:20:12 deltab: add "They are" in front of discussions, perhaps that will help 02:20:38 ah 02:20:42 where is the summary of the datatype proposals? 02:20:56 .google pat hayes mental dump 02:20:57 pat hayes mental dump: http://www.fox.uwc.edu/student.services/studentlife/clubs.html 02:21:15 heh, that's not it 02:21:17 search the archives for it 02:21:38 I don't even know where to begin. What's the thing called? 02:21:48 I just told you 02:21:53 "mental dump" by "Pat Hayes" 02:22:01 .google "mental dump" by "Pat Hayes" 02:22:02 "mental dump" by "Pat Hayes": http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/w3c-rdfcore-wg/2001Nov/0295.html 02:22:15 that's it 02:22:22 thanks 02:22:45 Then there's the PL proposal which says literals are literals and operations upon them get to decide what format they take. 02:23:05 And DanC hates the P* proposals, and they have model theory bugs that seem difficult to resolve. 02:23:22 Wow, look at how many times Pat Stickler has replied to that thread. Eeek! 02:23:36 I don't really read any of the datatypes stuff, so don't take my word for much. 02:24:28 O.K. It's an interesting page... 02:25:07 "requires literals as subjects" isn't a CON! 02:25:13 PRO, PRO! 02:25:15 Heh heh. 02:26:23 I must say I think I like the PL proposal the best, since it basically says, "we don't need to deal with datatypes" 02:26:42 reference for the PL proposal? 02:26:55 http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/w3c-rdfcore-wg/2001Dec/0003.html 02:26:59 thanks 02:27:13 It also has a very funny FAQ from DanC. 02:27:26 heh:- 02:27:27 [[[ 02:27:28 Q: er... when I write 10, is 10 a string or a number? 02:27:28 A: yes. ;-) 02:27:28 ]]] 02:27:31 Yeah. 02:27:53 [[[ 02:27:56 Q: but I thought strings and integers were disjoint; that's 02:27:56 what the XML Schema spec says. 02:27:56 A: hmm... so it does: 02:27:58 ]]] 02:29:33 yeah, I like that proposal too 02:29:39 Cool. 02:29:56 and it's pretty much what we're all doing :-) 02:30:16 Exactly. It's a very nice combination of meeting the requirements while not actually making anyone do any work. 02:31:46 heh, heh, heh. Perfect, in that case 02:31:58 Patrick Stickler doesn't like it though. 02:32:06 Why not? 02:32:36 I think because it doesn't support local datatyping. 02:34:12 So there's no way to tell whether I meant "0" to be an integer, decimal, string or boolean. 02:34:25 Does it ever matter? 02:35:25 I don't think so, but Mr. Stickler wants to make sure that information is unambigous. 02:35:58 'tis the Stickler way 02:37:15 It's amazing how few home-spun SW apps. there are 02:37:32 What's home-spun mean? 02:37:46 everyday stuff 02:37:58 non-commercial 02:38:25 Jena, CWN, Euler, SWIPT, PlexRDF sort of thing? 02:38:34 s/CWN/CWM/ 02:38:40 no, not APIs - I mean appplications, as in uses of the Semantic Web 02:39:07 Ah. Like RDFWeb? 02:39:22 s/no, not APIs - I mean appplications, as in uses of the Semantic Web/no, not APIs. I meant applications: as in uses of the Semantic Web/ 02:39:38 yes. And "The Simpsons in RDF" (the only use I've had for the SW) 02:40:17 That doesn't sound like a legitimate use to me... 02:40:33 Hmm... to re-thingy that sentence once more: "no, not APIs. I meant 'applications' as in 'uses of the Semantic Web'" 02:40:42 how is that not a legitamate use? 02:41:04 what is it with me and vowel swapping, lately? 02:41:06 What do you use it for? 02:41:25 I used it to generate the list of quotes. It would have taken me ages by hand 02:41:34 don't you remember? did you look at it? 02:41:48 Yeah... 02:42:04 I had a list of quotes, and the episode number. I wanted to put a page up with all the information about the show with that episode number, and the related quotes 02:42:13 No, I understand. 02:42:21 (just for the log) 02:42:22 I'm just trying to sort things out in my head. 02:43:28 I don't think the Semantic Web is very useful. (for the sake of argument) 02:43:44 I' 02:43:47 ugh 02:44:26 I'd find it difficult to argue on evidence, except for: * The Simpsons in RDF * The possibilities raised by EARL * The fact that CWM continually surprises me 02:44:45 I'm not saying it has no uses. 02:45:14 But, I think on its own, it's not very useful. 02:45:21 The original Web was similar, I'd think. 02:45:41 yep... that's what I've been thinking about 02:46:25 If you only have one website, the cost of distributing a web browser is probably equal to that of some proprietary client. 02:46:48 it's the n^2 problem 02:47:25 n^2 isn't a problem, it's a feature 02:47:28 I'm aware of all that... I just think that progress is staggeringly slow, and with few benefits 02:47:40 how so? 02:48:07 n^2 says that networks grow extraordinarily fast. How is that a problem? 02:48:30 I think the problem might be that the Semantic Web isn't n^2... 02:48:51 I'm not sure that I follow 02:49:02 which part? 02:49:09 all of it 02:49:23 n^2 says that the network's value grows at the square of the number of nodes. 02:49:40 That's a really cool thing -- everytime someone joins the network, it gets more valuable for everyone. 02:49:54 no, I'm not thinking of it in terms of networking 02:50:05 I'm thinking in terms of deploying software to read data 02:50:11 The Web had this property: if everyone had a web browser already, it was much cheaper for you to make content for web browsers, since you could forget about the client side. 02:50:18 when you have n^2 formats, things feck up pretty quickly 02:50:27 Oh, I see what you mean. 02:50:37 and I see what you mean now... 02:50:57 the format problem is solved by having a format that's a superset of all of them, right? 02:51:04 but the early Web had the problem that is *wasn't* cheaper to publish in HTML and HTTP 02:51:25 the format problem is not solved by a universal format, but by universal tools for that format 02:51:38 I disagree strongly. 02:51:39 the proliferation of browsers made the Web 02:51:46 To start with, the costs were equal, no? 02:52:12 no. More people had word than WorldWideWeb 02:52:27 Oh, I wasn't thinking of Word... 02:52:34 and even if the cost were equal, it's still not cheaper. There's no advantage 02:52:41 I was thinking of apps, yeah, you're right... 02:53:05 I'm still not 100% sure how the Web overcame the problem 02:53:21 * AaronSw thinks out loud: 02:53:26 The Web had features: 02:53:28 - hypertext 02:53:29 at CERN, they replaced the phone-book system with HTML/HTTP, but what about elsewhere? 02:53:35 - URIs 02:53:44 Yeah, the phonebook was why I was thinking of apps and not documents. 02:54:28 sorry... carry on with the features :-) 02:54:46 I think that's it, really. 02:54:50 I think it was the URIs that did it. 02:54:52 heh, heh, heh 02:54:56 yeah 02:55:03 well, HTTP to some extent too 02:55:18 HTTP was just a slimmer version of FTP for most purposes. 02:55:53 but I still don't know how it got over the main barrier: getting out of the service/client loop. Perhaps it was just luck? 02:56:23 I think that's pretty obvious. 02:56:36 and with the Semantic Web, it's much more difficult. There's no "click a link, and another document appears!" 02:56:39 "The killer app for the Web was whatever got you hooked." 02:57:07 There were people like us who built things for the Web because we were idealists 02:57:17 and then there were people who downloaded the client software to see our stuff. 02:57:41 heh, that's true. But I'm wondering if there are enough idealists and projects for the SW 02:57:43 The idealists pushed the bobsled until things hit critical mass. 02:58:02 The real question is whether there's a bobsled for the idealists to push. 02:58:18 If I put my data up in RDF, what are you going to download to see it with? 02:58:27 CWM 02:58:36 s/see/process/ 02:58:43 But that's the point. 02:58:55 in fact, I already have it installed, so it'll save me the bother 02:58:59 If the only thing to do with RDF data is to process it, won't it be limited to idealists who want to process RDF data? 02:59:24 Hmm... good point 02:59:52 This is why I think the Plex is cool: it still has these network effects. 02:59:54 Is "sed" limited to idealists who want to process text data? 03:00:11 No, because sed was created after text data was the standard. 03:00:20 Not to make it the standard. 03:00:23 Plex will be kick-ass if/when it works 03:00:43 yeah, bad analogy 03:01:33 but I meant that I can still use CWM for some things, so it must be at-least-a-little-bit useful 03:02:05 yeah, but it's not going to drive RDF adoption like the Web browser did. 03:02:19 true 03:03:48 So what's RDF's use case? 03:03:57 Solving the formats problem, I think. 03:04:40 yeah, but I don't deal with data exchange much, and I'll bet that a lot of people feel the same way. Does that mean that RDF will be something with a niche market? 03:05:11 You don't deal with data exchange much?! 03:05:15 OTOH, TSIR gives me hope 03:05:24 TSIR? 03:05:50 logster, grep -i T.*?S.*?I.*?R 03:06:26 I'm logging. I found 12078 answers for 'T.*?S.*?I.*?R' (showing 0...4) 03:06:27 0) 2001-12-17 03:05:50 logster, grep -i T.*?S.*?I.*?R 03:06:28 1) 2001-12-17 03:05:24 TSIR? 03:06:29 2) 2001-12-17 03:05:15 OTOH, TSIR gives me hope 03:06:30 3) 2001-12-17 03:04:40 yeah, but I don't deal with data exchange much, and I'll bet that a lot of people feel the same way. Does that mean that RDF will be something with a niche market? 03:06:31 4) 2001-12-17 03:02:05 yeah, but it's not going to drive RDF adoption like the Web browser did. 03:06:34 that'll match a lot 03:06:34 .acronym tsir 03:06:34 tsir: Test Ship Integration Requirement 03:06:37 Pff... 03:06:41 The Simpsons in RDF 03:06:45 Ah. 03:06:59 That's just a simple database problem. 03:07:04 yep 03:07:24 but if someone had already published that data in RDF, it would have been a pretty quick thing to do 03:07:35 Yep. 03:07:45 That's the data exchange proposition, I think. 03:07:55 Querying a large store of data -- that's the Plex proposition too. 03:08:17 but data is pretty boring, don't you reckon? Documentation is where it's at 03:08:29 And who wants a data model for documentation? 03:08:48 I don't think data is boring. 03:09:04 reminder: this is coming from someone who currently generates his homepage from RDF 03:09:23 And your homepage is documentation. 03:09:32 well, there are bits of data 03:09:51 it's about a 30:70 mix, probably (based on line count) 03:09:51 Data is everywhere. Why do you think Ellison was worth almost as much as Microsoft? 03:10:07 s/Microsoft/Gates/ 03:10:30 but it's kinda boring. Really, what important data is out there? Think of some use cases for RDF for me :-) 03:10:39 Heh. 03:10:44 Organizing your email. 03:10:58 Finding people to come visit you. 03:11:14 Looking for jobs, universities, etc. 03:11:22 Finding the cheapest price for stuff. 03:11:46 Finding out when the Simpsons will be on. 03:12:00 Getting articles/books/+ you like. 03:12:22 A lot of stuff is data. 03:12:36 keep going - I was enjoying that :-) 03:12:41 Heh. 03:13:00 It's hard because almost everything is an answer! 03:13:53 Anything you've ever asked xena is a data question. 03:14:31 Let me see if I can refactor that: 03:14:33 Can I trust X? 03:14:36 Is X important? 03:14:50 Find me X 03:18:38 Well, I think I'm going to go watch Memento now... 03:18:44 have fun 03:19:21 when you come back, add --strings to the list of options at n3tordf. Cheers 03:19:27 Cool. 03:19:34 c'ya 03:19:38 * sbp likes to spring requests on people 03:19:39 c'ya 03:29:42 sbp has quit (Killed (NickServ (Ghost: SeanP!~sean@m220-mp1-cvx3b.pop.ntl.com))) 03:29:56 sbp (~sean@m220-mp1-cvx3b.pop.ntl.com) has joined #swhack 03:31:06 I thought of putting up a page that scrapes data from the Web as-is. A kind of syndication thing. It could show the last thing chumped at #swhack, stock quotes, T.V. schedules, weather information, and so on... but all of those feeds would need to be in RDF 03:31:54 I suppose that would make a great app - people could start running their own personal syndication home pages, with the information that matters most to them. All they'd need to learn would be N3 --strings, and perhaps that could be automated 03:32:16 but it relies upon the information being provided by someone in RDF. And that's not happening right now 03:54:43 wmf (wesf@cs242724-5.austin.rr.com) has joined #swhack 03:54:47 howdy 04:00:09 any swhackers around? 04:00:21 Hi Wes 04:00:35 hey sbp 04:00:50 Aaron went to watch something; not sure when he'll be back 04:01:03 too bad, I was going to taunt him 05:14:10 wmf has quit ("wmf has no reason") 05:14:42 why does he have no reason? 05:15:56 heh, i dunno 05:16:29 BLURB:Memento 05:16:33 D: Memento from AaronSw 05:22:28 welcome back 05:22:30 Gotta run 05:22:44 sheesh 05:22:56 D::An incredible movie. Entertaining, and really made you think. 05:22:58 commented item D 05:23:19 D::Confusing as anything, though. I've been thinking about it all night and I still don't understand it. 05:23:20 commented item D 05:25:33 sbp has quit (Ping timeout: 180 seconds) 06:13:55 .email me@aaronsw.com todo: --strings on n3tordf // when you come back, add --strings to the list of options at n3tordf. Cheers 06:13:56 email successfully sent. 06:14:42 D::MAJOR SPOILERS: Salon seems to have [a nice analysis|http://www.salon.com/ent/movies/feature/2001/06/28/memento_analysis/] and these [images|http://phys.columbia.edu/~flame/memento/Images.html] are very revealing. 06:14:44 commented item D 06:16:17 D::Even Salon couldn't figure it out, so [readers stepped in|http://www.salon.com/ent/letters/2001/07/04/memento/] (more spoliers) 06:16:18 commented item D 06:31:49 GabeW (~gwachob@12.236.92.153) has joined #swhack 06:32:39 time for sleep... 06:32:42 nite 06:32:46 nite AaronSw 06:33:01 like ships passing in the night 06:33:09 heh 06:33:24 * AaronSw goes to sleep still piecing out the "Memento" puzzle. 06:33:29 I think I almost have it now. 06:33:47 c'ya 06:38:12 anyone else here? 06:40:50 hazmat (~ender@adsl-66-123-57-58.dsl.lsan03.pacbell.net) has joined #swhack 06:41:14 hey 07:07:30 GabeW has quit ("Client Exiting") 12:57:55 xena has quit () 12:58:47 xena (xena@mewtwo.espnow.com) has joined #swhack 13:28:46 em (~em@dhcp065-024-049-132.columbus.rr.com) has joined #swhack 13:39:44 Morbus (~Morbus@s94.terminal3.totalnetnh.net) has joined #swhack 14:16:04 Morbus has quit (Remote closed the connection) 14:36:44 Morbus (~Morbus@s121.terminal3.totalnetnh.net) has joined #swhack 14:40:00 the crowd returns 14:41:27 hmm? 14:41:57 Woohoo, Wes linked to us. 14:42:58 heh, cool! 14:43:51 its like famous. 14:43:57 second article came out this weekend. 14:44:08 Yeah, I chumped it. 14:44:09 and i'm trying to figure out a way to make a linux program run at reboot. 14:44:15 oh you did? shessh. 14:44:37 http://blogspace.com/swhack/weblog/2001/12/16/#i1008530018.051543 14:45:13 heh, heh. yeah, i thought youd' get a kick outta that python thing 14:46:21 any ideas on how to set up an os x box for dialin? 14:47:52 not really 14:52:44 So who're you voting for in the Scripting News Awards? 14:53:14 pfft. 14:53:18 i didn't even know about it. 14:53:23 Heh. 14:53:26 haven't had a moment to think lately 14:54:38 And to think -- you could have been Devil of the Year! 14:55:04 oh yeah? 14:55:09 wait, i shoudl check these out 14:55:12 link? 14:56:08 They're still secret... 14:56:31 so how did you find out about it? 14:56:41 URL-guessing. 14:57:11 * em points all swhack people to rdfig question... timeing on this appreciated 14:57:47 * em replays question here... but apprciate response in rdfig 14:57:49 Question: is there general concensus amoung this group regarding how best to associate metadata with an XHTML document? 15:18:10 Morbus has quit ("http://www.disobey.com/") 15:40:02 @ http://dailynews.yahoo.com/htx/ap/20011207/us/students_porn_1.html 15:40:07 E: Online Porn Mars Va. Laptop Program from AaronSw 15:40:28 E:|Students Find Innovative Uses for New Laptops 15:40:29 titled item E 15:41:46 E::"Edwards said the county has one of the best Internet filtering systems on the market. However, the filter does not block access to Web sites unless there is a reference to sex in the address or the site's text." 15:41:48 commented item E 15:42:01 E::Wow! What a clever filter. 15:42:03 commented item E 15:45:07 E::Well, I guess we better get rid of the Internet-connected computers in the cybercafes, libraries, friends houses, workplaces, homes, museums, hospitals and airports. 15:45:09 commented item E 15:55:23 Hee hee: http://iowa.weblogger.com/2001/12/03 15:55:26 "We're making a big change in our choice of kitchen platforms today. Out goes the old blue carpeting with its limited scriptability and lack of XML support. In comes the linoleum with its superior moppability and support for multiple milk-spills within a single supper session." 15:58:12 B::[John VanDyk gets a new kitchen platform|http://iowa.weblogger.com/2001/12/03]: "We're making a big change in our choice of kitchen platforms today. Out goes the old blue carpeting with its limited scriptability and lack of XML support. In comes the linoleum with its superior moppability and support for multiple milk-spills within a single supper session." 15:58:14 commented item B 17:01:38 sbp (~sean@m277-mp1-cvx4c.pop.ntl.com) has joined #swhack 17:02:04 heelo 17:02:12 Hi there 17:03:09 Is your son a computer hacker? http://home.dal.net/shrub/Adequacy_org%20%20Is%20Your%20Son%20a%20Computer%20Hacker.htm 17:04:36 @ http://home.dal.net/shrub/Adequacy_org%20%20Is%20Your%20Son%20a%20Computer%20Hacker.htm 17:04:37 lol! 17:04:54 F: http://home.dal.net/shrub/Adequacy_org%20%20Is%20Your%20Son%20a%20Computer%20Hacker.htm from AaronSw 17:05:02 F:|Is Your Son a Computer Hacker? 17:05:04 titled item F 17:05:09 F::"""Popular hacker software includes "Comet Cursor", "Bonzi Buddy" and "Flash".""" 17:05:11 commented item F 17:06:01 I like the comments at the bottom that take it seriously 17:06:05 Heh. 17:08:17 F::"""BSD, Lunix, Debian and Mandrake are all versions of an illegal hacker operation system, invented by a Soviet computer hacker named Linyos Torovoltos, before the Russians lost the Cold War. It is based on a program called "xenix", which was written by Microsoft for the US government.""" 17:08:18 commented item F 17:11:46 Heh, the one about girls is funny. 17:21:45 F::It's extremely important to keep your children away from [l33t hacker s1tes|http://wmf.editthispage.com/]. Make sure they don't get involved with the malicious [ring-leaders of the Hacker Underground|http://felter.org/wesley/]. Avoid this *at all costs*. 17:21:47 commented item F 17:22:25 F::I also suggest boycotting the [Scripting News Awards|http://www.scripting.com/awards/2001/] for their [support|http://www.scripting.com/awards/2001/#bestTechnologyWeblog] and [recommendations|http://www.scripting.com/awards/2001/#bloggerOfTheYear] for these evil hackers! 17:22:28 commented item F 17:24:00 F::Pff... why weren't we nominated? 17:24:01 commented item F 17:24:18 F::Yeah, that's possibly another reason to boycott them... 17:24:19 commented item F 17:24:30 Heh, heh, heh 17:24:42 * AaronSw emails Wes thanking him for the link and letting him know that we "returned the favor" 17:25:23 neat 17:26:43 .google hacker 17:26:43 hacker: http://www.tuxedo.org/~esr/faqs/hacker-howto.html 17:26:58 .google hack 17:26:58 hack: http://wmf.editthispage.com 17:31:23 Wow according to CNET HTTP Basic Authentication is so secure even search engines can't crack it. 17:31:35 @ http://www.guardian.co.uk/internetnews/story/0,7369,617650,00.html 17:31:38 heh, heh 17:31:44 G: http://www.guardian.co.uk/internetnews/story/0,7369,617650,00.html from sbp 17:32:05 They also say Google made the critical mistake of allowing their users access to public documents without thinking of the security costs! What if someone stored their password files on the Web? 17:32:48 G:|Will Consumers Pay for Music They Used to Get for Free? 17:32:49 titled item G 17:33:28 sbp has quit (Killed (NickServ (Ghost: SeanP!~sean@m745-mp1-cvx3b.pop.ntl.com))) 17:33:42 sbp (~sean@m745-mp1-cvx3b.pop.ntl.com) has joined #swhack 17:33:45 G::See also [the band that found success in a PayPal account|http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,49103,00.html]. 17:33:47 commented item G 17:33:58 G:: 17:33:58 http://www.guardian.co.uk/internetnews/story/0,7369,617650,00.html 17:33:59 Will Consumers Pay for Music They Used to Get for Free? 17:34:00 (AaronSw) See also [the band that found success in a PayPal account|http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,49103,00.html]. 17:34:34 thanks 17:34:42 connection folded again... 17:35:34 "The two decided anyone who donated over $20 would get a free copy of the album when it was complete"? 17:35:46 GabeW (~gwachob@12-236-92-153.client.attbi.com) has joined #swhack 17:35:51 Give us $20 and get a free album? What's that about? 17:36:11 Heh. 17:36:32 Ever seen those TV drives... oh wait, you have the BBC. 17:36:54 Basically they give you incentives for donating, but the stuff is too overpriced to be an actual purchase. 17:37:07 yeah 17:37:20 Like seeing Steve Nicks naked 17:44:27 t figure out how to delete it it... 17:44:30 oops 17:45:07 heh, heh 17:45:10 delete what? 17:45:23 nothing 17:58:02 Now here's an interesting problem: Who do you appeal to when you disagree with a decision in the TAG? 17:58:29 The Chair is TimBL, so you'd appeal to the director... which is also TimBL. So you could go to the team contact, which is also TimBL. 17:58:53 Oh, no Ian is the Team Contact. 17:59:34 Invited Experts could talk to their AC Rep, which apparently is TimBL. 18:02:49 sbp has quit (Ping timeout: 180 seconds) 18:16:18 whump (~whump@A17-212-22-236.apple.com) has joined #swhack 18:16:28 whump! 18:16:37 Yo. 18:16:39 Good to see you here! 18:16:50 Thanks. 18:17:05 Everyone, this is whump of whump.com. and the More Like This Web Log: http://www.whump.com/moreLikeThis/index.php3 18:18:34 so what brings you here? 18:18:37 Thanks for the into, Aaron, it's good to be welcomed. 18:18:43 No problem. 18:18:56 * AaronSw adds a link to "More Like This" from the Swhack Weblog... 18:19:25 I was doing my morning 'reading blogs before starting to be productive' and saw Wes' pointer to Swhack. 18:19:54 sometimes reading blogs prevents productivity for me altogether 18:20:00 Heh. 18:20:21 whump - you another bay arean? 18:20:49 Hmm, I wonder where Morbus is today... he's usually around here stirring up trouble. 18:21:54 Gabe - yes, I'm in RWC. 18:22:06 heh 18:22:12 i'm in redwood shores 18:22:42 I work in Cupertino, however. 18:22:48 ahh 18:22:55 yes, the domain does say .apple.com 18:22:59 Heh, yeah. 18:23:24 i work at home =) 18:24:55 Kevin's had a couple of articles come out on O'Reilly. I'm psyched to see all the support OS X is getting from the developer community. I almost stopped to thank a random person I saw working on his TiBook on a flight Thursday night. 18:25:16 Heh heh. 18:25:42 nobody calls him Kevin here - nobody will know who you are talking about ;0) 18:25:51 sbp (~sean@m17-mp1-cvx4c.pop.ntl.com) has joined #swhack 18:26:15 we all call sbp slappy around here though 18:26:17 ;-) 18:27:30 Okay... I'm going to lurk. 18:27:46 * AaronSw goes back to playing Breakout on his iPod. ;-) 18:28:36 * sbp wonders what's going on 18:29:23 * sbp had read the logs, and is actually partially aware of what's going on... wmf has a lot to answer for 18:29:34 Heh heh. 18:31:58 logster, grep 1-2 18:32:35 I'm logging. I found 10075 answers for '' (showing 1...2) 18:32:36 1) 2001-12-17 15:18:10 Morbus has quit ("http://www.disobey.com/") 18:32:37 2) 2001-12-17 14:56:31 so how did you find out about it? 18:32:38 .seen Morbus 18:32:38 Morbus seen leaving #infoanarchy [ ] ~ 3 hr(s) 29 min(s) 50 sec(s) ago 18:32:38 .seen Morbus 2 18:32:38 Morbus seen leaving #syndic8 [ ] ~ 3 hr(s) 32 min(s) 47 sec(s) ago 18:33:09 ah, missed that 18:33:38 * sbp finds Question: is there general concensus amoung this group regarding how best to associate metadata with an XHTML document? 18:33:43 aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaargh! 18:34:34 We decided on I think. 18:39:03 is there a way to put metadata inline -- e.g. RDF? (forgive me if thats a stupid question, I don't always pay attention) 18:39:24 no, there is not 18:39:44 Well there is, but Sean doesn't like it. 18:40:02 there is not a way which is consistent with Web architecture => there is not a way 18:40:28 How is it inconstent with Web Architecture? 18:40:47 * GabeW is sorry for picking at this scab 18:40:53 Heh. 18:41:00 * Meaning is defined by document's root namespace - XHTML says nothing about what embedded RDF means * Try validating it 18:41:35 That's what I thought. I think that just means it's incompatible with XHTML 1.0, not web architecture. 18:42:10 well... yes. But those are both axiomatic principles (grounding meaning, and validating) 18:43:18 * GabeW hears the words "axiomatic principles" and eyes glass overf 18:43:39 heh, heh, heh 18:58:22 sbp has quit (Ping timeout: 180 seconds) 18:59:54 * AaronSw wanders off 19:41:06 GabeW has quit ("Client Exiting") 20:06:25 kmacleod (~ken@kmacleod.static.iaxs.net) has joined #swhack 20:14:45 Morbus (~Morbus@morbus.totalnetnh.net) has joined #swhack 20:15:06 love me, love me, say that you love me. 20:15:29 eek 20:15:37 heh, hey ken! 20:15:51 did i just interrupt some great conversation? about how serios the constituents of swhack are? 20:16:04 nope. I missed that convo. 20:16:10 ah. ok. so did I. 20:17:26 I popped by to duel Aaron re open relays and the dg on Hack the Planet ;) 20:17:26 anything exciting going on? 20:17:34 heh! 20:17:43 any more development on that? i just know it exist(ed?) 20:18:31 man, i have so much crap to read. 20:18:39 i have like 30 uncategorized bookmarks in my root folder. 20:18:42 I commented! 20:18:58 oOoh. got the url handy? 20:19:12 http://wmf.editthispage.com/discuss/msgReader$6671 20:19:42 on a completely different note, I think I may like Gnome better than MOSX... 20:19:56 gasp!? 20:20:12 yeah, we had a customer that had an open relay - he was using authenticated smtp with it so it was "ok". 20:20:42 I've had the good fortune over the last week to have received a PII 350MHz big and fast enough to run RedHat 7.2, and it's, uhm, pretty nice ;) 20:20:52 for a little while, i was blocking all .ru people. 20:21:48 it's nowhere near as polished as MOSX, which means I wouldn't recommend it to anyone but geeks, but for a geek, it has most of the niceties of MOSX 20:22:14 and if they get better with components, I may be a really happy geek 20:22:50 better with components == more like OpenDoc, but alas I don't see that happening. 20:25:41 hehe, and the really wierd thing is that Interviews (now Fresco, and incorporated in Berlin) is exactly the sort of OpenDoc-like thing that would please me, and it is not only Unix-and-X-Windows-based, but precedes OpenDoc by years 20:26:17 sadly, it's based on C++, which sucks for dynamic parts :( 20:27:51 catching up... 20:28:10 ah... 20:28:21 have you gotten X working on os x? 20:28:35 no, not yet. 20:28:40 i've got fink 2/3 of the way with it, but i'm on a 56k, so the last 50 meg dl for it keeps getting cut off. 20:28:52 not sure I will, now that I've got a real X box 20:29:05 or, you know, you could run VPC with rh 7.2 ;) 20:29:23 i've got an old rh 5.0 box, but haven't really messed with it much. 20:29:35 never went to 7.0 cos i kept hearing evil horrors about cpan 20:30:04 hah! I can *just* get Xine to zero dropped frames with a real PII 350MHz, no way a 300MHz PPC running VPC is gonna cut it ;) 20:30:17 heh, heh :) 20:30:25 yeah, its pretty damn slow on a dual 450 too. 20:30:41 i use it only for cross plat code testing right now. 20:32:29 I haven't run into the 7.2 problems yet, I'm still glowing with the new features (particularly the up-to-date Gnome and a slew of new now-installed-by-default packages) 20:32:48 what do you think about the "don't distro our cds" thingy? 20:33:37 hard to say. it's not clear yet whether it's "don't distro our cds" or "don't say you're selling RedHat Linux" 20:33:58 the latter I agree with, the former isn't clear 20:41:14 bah. i hate mondays. 20:41:20 hey, been reading my o'reilly articles? ;) 20:41:43 I think I saw the link... 21:08:50 heh, while I agree that "open relay" != "open SPAM relay", this article goes deeply into conspiracy theory: http://www.dotcomeon.com/ 21:23:00 hehe, Dan Lyke is running his own awards with, hold on to your hats, *public* nominations! 21:25:42 heh! 21:25:46 dan lyke's a good guy. 21:26:41 it'd sure be a hoot if a dozen other sites helped him ;) 21:30:30 if i have time, i'll send him off my thoughts tongiht. 21:30:41 got so much stuff to do, its pathetic. 21:35:04 sbp (~sean@m906-mp1-cvx3b.pop.ntl.com) has joined #swhack 21:36:05 Hi 21:36:19 Is anyone out there 21:36:27 nope 21:36:33 I'm not here. 21:36:35 ????!!!!!!! 21:36:44 sbp is now known as Stu 21:36:48 whump has quit (Remote closed the connection) 21:36:52 that is alie 21:37:09 huh? 21:37:16 sorry a lie 21:37:49 Stupid PC keyboard, a mac man you see 21:37:59 imacs rule!!!! 21:39:37 confused????? 21:40:00 I know the feeling 21:53:48 Does anyone know how to change imovie recordings into mp3's and not Aiff? 21:54:06 not me 21:54:20 save to aiff and then convert using sound recorder ;) 21:54:32 hmm, does iMovie import dvd VOBs? 21:54:49 sorry, sound recorder? 21:55:06 I don't know; interesting though 21:55:07 just a generic sound util. get it from versiontracker.com 21:55:27 Is it free? 21:55:42 um. think so. not sure. 21:56:02 My music is taking up over 1.2GB 21:56:21 that's nothing. 21:56:23 i'm at 3 gigs :) 21:56:39 Wow!!! 21:56:53 why the hell are you stu? 21:57:33 I am Sean's friend back home from Uni 21:57:58 aahh. ok. 21:57:59 sbp: screw you, Morbus, I have friends! 21:58:03 where's sean? 21:58:05 hehe! 21:58:17 not outside #swhack, luser ;) 21:58:21 I apologise for Sean 21:58:27 yeah, hit him for me. 21:58:48 bitter rival a 21:58:56 He ran away 21:58:56 oh yes. 21:59:00 me and sean hate each other. 22:00:52 you would not have guessed 22:01:08 i know. we kept it relatively hidden. 22:01:11 even AaronSw doesn't know. 22:01:34 I have to go now, see ya and thanks for the advice 22:01:39 ciao. 22:02:28 * kmacleod tries to figure out the memory usage of a process in Solaris 22:10:09 AaronSw` (~aaronsw@xcdfddb76.ip.ggn.net) has joined #swhack 22:10:25 * AaronSw` waves from library 22:11:14 I disagreed with your post re. Gilmore and Open Relays 22:12:01 Really? Why is that? 22:12:29 * AaronSw` notes that IRC thru the Web like this is painful... 22:12:43 in general, I agree with blacklisting. 22:12:51 same here. 22:12:57 i blacklist with spamcop's rbl. 22:13:19 I do agree that Gilmore's case is the exception, and should be treated that way by blacklisters 22:13:32 Hmm, I don't understand why? Do you think we should stop spam at the network level? The router level? 22:13:41 yes. 22:14:01 and for reference, it has been treated at that level in a few cases 22:14:55 Do you think we should censor inappropriate (illegal) webpages at those levels too? 22:15:15 webpages don't come to you without your asking. 22:15:34 * Stu waves 22:15:36 er... 22:15:38 Stu is now known as sbp 22:15:41 * sbp waves too 22:16:00 what morbus said 22:16:00 hey AaronSw`, get this, sbp had a friend over his house. 22:16:02 Hi Stu, sbp 22:16:11 i think he's just testing a new bot and lying about it. 22:16:15 POP mail is requested... I'm not sure what the point is. 22:16:15 Hi, it's just me. Stu is in the lounge chatting 22:16:22 heh, intelligent bot techniques 22:16:41 No, Stu's visited here before. 22:17:06 * AaronSw` checks to see if they have any books by the esteemed Mr. Palmer at this library 22:17:07 * sbp notices that it's the mustachioed library version of AaronSw 22:17:14 heh, they damn well better 22:17:33 Hmm, the catalog recommends "Search Gay" instead. 22:17:39 * sbp had better go mingle 22:17:40 lol! 22:17:50 damn thing. Hit it with something 22:18:11 Doesn't look like they do. 22:18:24 Oh, cool! The Web IRC thing seems to be working... sure took it a while. 22:19:14 Hmm, maybe it isn't working. 22:20:02 Man, their online catalog software is awful. 22:20:45 Ugh! I gotta go. c'ya 22:20:49 AaronSw` has quit ("CGI:IRC 0.4.1") 22:22:14 Morbus has left #swhack 22:25:12 Morbus (~Morbus@morbus.totalnetnh.net) has joined #swhack 22:27:13 hmm, I'm missing where web pages came into the spam discussion. I remember seeing one message, but now I can't find it. 22:31:26 AaronSw` (~aaronsw@xcdfddb76.ip.ggn.net) has joined #swhack 22:31:45 * AaronSw` notes not to go on IRC when he has a train to catch 22:32:02 I missed it by literally 3 seconds. The door closed as I got there. 22:33:14 .email rs@interaccess.com directions // lake forest library is across the street behind the train station. i'm in the computer lounge which is to the left as you walk in 22:33:15 email successfully sent. 22:34:58 Morbus has quit ("Trillian (http://www.ceruleanstudios.com)") 22:47:41 where is documented where blacklisters escalated from blocking SMTP to blocking URLs and DNS? Gilmore mentions it in reference to MAPS, but MAPS doesn't say anything like that, afaics 22:48:58 I've heard that MAPS has a subscription service that changes routing, advertising false routes for listed addresses 22:52:00 "BGP feed" - http://mail-abuse.org/feestructure.html 22:56:52 hmm, it's not clear where that involves non-SMTP traffic 22:57:29 changing the route affects *all* traffic, not just SMTP 23:00:48 iirc, at that level the routing can be port-specific, ie. "drop all SMTP packets from IP x.x.x.x." 23:01:18 so I'm still trying to find a reference that contradicts that 23:01:34 does BGP support that? 23:02:15 I believe so 23:03:36 there's no mention of ports in the RFC, except that BGP uses port 179 23:04:00 AaronSw` has quit ("CGI:IRC 0.4.1 [EOF]") 23:05:15 AaronSw` (~aaronsw@xcdfddb76.ip.ggn.net) has joined #swhack 23:05:58 * AaronSw` uses the end-to-end argument (among others) in http://wmf.editthispage.com/discuss/msgReader$6673 23:08:37 note: I have no argument with properly operating open relays! 23:08:55 the router configuration example given in http://mail-abuse.org/rbl/usage.html also makes no mention of ports 23:09:12 neither does:  23:09:19 http://www.pch.net/documents/tutorials/maps-rbl-bgp-cisco-config-faq.html 23:10:35 ok, time to go 23:10:40 AaronSw` has quit ("CGI:IRC 0.4.1") 23:13:40 yup. subscribing to the BGP service cuts all traffic from the blacklisted IP 23:18:28 Morbus (~Morbus@s102.terminal3.totalnetnh.net) has joined #swhack 23:19:21 man, oh mn, i'm getting my ass kicked 23:20:21 I'm not seeing it as a blacklist requirement so much as a technical approach 23:22:13 sbp has quit (Ping timeout: 180 seconds) 23:23:02 heh! you're stioll talking about bl's? 23:31:21 am not! 23:31:25 * kmacleod ;) 23:31:30 heh. 23:34:43 * AaronSw gets home 23:35:07 sbp (~sean@m509-mp1-cvx3b.pop.ntl.com) has joined #swhack 23:35:47 aaron: the link is razor.sf.net, not vipul.sf.net 23:35:56 oops 23:39:46 Bit of TAG discussion going on; quite interesting. Most interesting that MB referenced Aaron's article - I had always thought that those two were in cahoots 23:39:57 Heh heh heh. 23:40:06 The fragments article? 23:40:22 I worked very hard to restrain myself from bringing that up. 23:40:35 heh, heh 23:42:13 ugh, Entourage has gotten sort of slow -- I wonder why. 23:42:36 heh, heh. 23:43:43 actually, maybe it's my IMAP server that's getting slow 23:47:07 deltab, can you think of any reason for that?