Forbes: Windows Spyware on the up and up..

Here is another reason why those of you running Windows should not use Internet Explorer.
Forbes reports Spyware problems are increasing, and a lot of these tend to arrive via Internet Explorer on unpatched Windows systems.


The people who call Dell Inc.’s customer service line often have no idea why their computers are running so slow. The ones who call America Online Inc. can’t necessarily explain why Internet connections keep dropping. And those who file error reports with Microsoft Corp. don’t always know why their computers inexplicably crash.

Sometimes, the company that gets the complaint is rightly to blame. But with alarming frequency, officials at these and other technology companies say they are tracing customer problems back to one culprit: spyware.

Of course, I’m not saying this is the only way for spyware to arrive, those folks who have installed some legitimate software have unknowingly installed Spyware as part of it. TechNewsWorld reports:



One major legal point so far gives spyware companies the upper hand. Many of the companies distributing spyware products have lengthy end-user license agreements. These are legal contracts. Some of these user agreements exceed 20 pages and contain hyperlinked references to additional terms and conditions.

For example, said English, buried in the middle of the document in fine print, the license agreement could state, “and, furthermore we can do whatever we please to your computer.”

Here are my helpful hints:

AberMUD 1


There’s an interesting thread on AberMUD 1 going on over on Alec Muffetts blog where I wrote the following:


It was created as an extension of the Honeyboard BBS talker that itself was the result of a challenge from the Computer Unit sysman Rob Ash (immortalised as Rotash Burt the mobile in AberMUD1) that you couldn’t do it because there was no IPC.
So folks (I think Alan, Leon, possibly Jim, not sure as I hadn’t discovered them then) decided to create an IPC mechanism out of shared files.

And thus a legend was born, and a number of degrees ruined.

You could argue that without AberMUD 1 Linux would be in quite a different state these days.. 🙂

Alec has an article about his first experience of AberMUD when it was still part of the talker of HoneyBoard on the Honeywell L66 at Aberystwyth.

For those who’ve seen early AberMUD sources the reasons that rooms had numbers was because they started off as talker channels which you could go to for a chat with someone away from the hoi polloi of channel 0. 🙂

From a personal point of view without that experience in using and programming on a big multiuser system, and the people I got to know both inside and outside of the Computer Unit, I would not be where I am now, having fun with big Linux clusters!

Some interesting science stories..

Two things from the New Scientist newsfeed..

First off is a story that newborn rats given Prozac grow up depressed, although I must say if I’d just been born and found out I was in a lab I’d not be too happy either..

The other is about something I’d heard described at CCGrid 2004 regarding creation of the “National Lambda Rail” network in the US, basically a massive network allowing 40 10 GigE channels over different wavelengths. For SuperComputer geeks like me that translates into “Yummmm….”. 🙂

Some new websites

I’ve been helping Donna out with some new websites.


One is still under construction, though it has some information about what it’s aims are. It’s called Auties.org and describes itself thus:




Auties.org is a website to promote the entrepreneurial (self employment) skills of people diagnosed on the Autistic Spectrum Australia wide (and in some cases display these skills to those overseas). Auties.org is run by a committee of people formally diagnosed as being on the Autistic Spectrum…



The other is Nobody Nowhere, an enigmatic website with quite a story behind it (literally!).

British armed forces recognise first ever Satanist

From the ABC news report on this:


A technician in the Royal Navy has become the first serviceman in Britain’s armed forces to be officially recognised as a Satanist, the Defence Ministry said today.

Chris Cranmer, 24, has been given the go-ahead by his captain to perform Satanic rituals on board the HMS Cumberland and is reportedly lobbying his employers to register Satanism as an official religion in the armed forces.

I guess that will liven things up a bit on board.. Be a pain keeping all the goats under control though.

The Platypus becomes even stranger


Came across an interesting report on the ABC News website saying that Platypus has 5 chromosomes determining gender as opposed to virtually the rest of the animal kingdom which makes do with 1. There are further articles on this at the ABC Science News website and at New Scientist.



There was this interesting quote in the New Scientist article:


Another intriguing discovery from the study is that one end of the platypuses’ chromosome chain shares similarities with mammalian sex chromosomes, while the other end shares characteristics with the sex chromosomes of birds.


Robin Williams was right.. 🙂

New photos in the Gallery

OK, finally gotten around to adding more photos to my gallery!

There are snaps from our recent holiday in the Grampians where we were miles from anywhere with no mobile coverage, no computers, no people, just lots of wildlife, trees and mountains!

I’ve also started a new album called Historic Australia which now has its first entry, the homestead of James McClay near Moolart in Victoria. The house has a prominent name/data over the door which helped me track down this entry about Scots who emigrated to Australia. He is also mentioned in this document as being the secretary of an Anti-Dredging Committee in Maryborough, 1905.

CD Baby milestone – US$10 million paid to artists!

I don’t usually put press releases up here, but this is something I believe in, and it’s good news for music and musicians!

CD Baby is an independant on-line store selling CD’s directly from independant music artists.
There are no distributors involved, the musicians send their CD’s to CD Baby and they sell direct to the public.

They’ve just announced that they’ve now payed over US$10 million to artists from the sales of their CD’s as well as from their deals with people like Apple’s iTunes.

While record labels are blaming piracy for a lack of sales, music sold through CD Baby has almost doubled every year for the past six years. “It’s easier than ever for music fans to find great non-mainstream music,” says CD Baby founder Derek Sivers. “So what’s reported as a sales decline for a huge pop star is actually a sales boost for the less-famous but more-talented musicians of the world. We sell thousands of CDs a day by artists you’ve never heard, but will love when you do.”

Their “about” page says:

Current Numbers:

  • 74,654 artists sell their CD at CD Baby.
  • 1,254,336 CDs sold online to customers.
  • $10,047,762.14 paid to artists.

All pretty impressive!

Donna has her CD “Nobody Nowhere” with them. They’re nice friendly people who are doing the right thing by making it simple for independant artists to sell direct to the public.

Read on for the press release.
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