MIME stuff

Earlier this week someone (hi Marcos) notified me that one mailer apparantly breaks up attachments in RB. I traced the problem to the following difference:

[RB]
Content-type: ….[cut] Name=RB settings mods.txt

[Npop]
Content-Type: application/octet-stream
Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=”readme.txt”

I’m totally confused. When attaching files, do I use the Content-type field to add my filename as ‘Name=xxxx’. Or do I use the Content-disposition with the ‘filename’ entity? The RFC isn’t clear. Study time.

Posted in RoundAbout | Comments Off on MIME stuff

Oh. Good news then.

Apparantly the asteroid that was supposed to hit us in 2014, isn’t going to hit us. False alarm, say the scientists from NASA’s JPL (sorry for the pop-ups). After extensive simulations the JPL was able to plot a more ‘detailed’ course for the asteroid which led to the final conclusion of ‘impact possibilities to go to zero’.

MSNBC’s article also has the (now famous) Torino scale that is used to classify asteroid threats. That scale is supposed to be printable, but results in a meanie black area in my browser.

Posted in Scientifically | Comments Off on Oh. Good news then.

Calendar stuff

I added the navigation to the calendar: See the little ‘arrows’ in the calendar?

Note: clicking that arrow actually brings you to the ‘Monthly archive’ and as you can see, I had to add the sidebar to that template.

Continue reading

Posted in Moveable-Types | Comments Off on Calendar stuff

CSS-2 specs

Over at the W3 organization the best introduction to CSS-2 with good practical examples.

Normally, I find W3’s explanations pretty boring, but their Visual Formatting Model document (part of above introduction) on boxes, floats beats any other document out there.

Posted in Hyperlinks | Comments Off on CSS-2 specs

Five years after flight 111

Today marks the fifth anniversary of the crash of Swissair Flight 111. The plane crashed near Peggy’s cove, killing all 229 passengers.

This year’s anniversary kicked off at 11:00am, but apparantly most families of the passengers wish to end this yearly ceremony:

   “I always encourage family members . . . to come to Nova Scotia outside the anniversary date anyway. I think it’s not healthy to have an accumulation of human energy concentrated on a negative date.”

Posted in Provincial-Scotia | Comments Off on Five years after flight 111

Earth hits 2,000 year heat peak

Scientists say that the earth appears to be warmer since 1980 than in any other century.

The scientists (professor Philip Jones and Professor Michael Mann) say that their findings seem to support the latest commentaries from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Their study is backed by three main sources of information: trunks of ancient trees from different regions, cores drilled from Antarctica and historical records from countries like The Netherlands, Switzerland and China.

   “The climate sceptics are flogging a dead horse. You can’t say the whole world was once warmer than it is now just because Europe was warmer.
You have to aggregate the records together, as we’ve done. We’d like more records, especially from the tropics – but we do think we have enough information to say the world is now warmer than it’s been for 2,000 years.”

Posted in Scientifically | Comments Off on Earth hits 2,000 year heat peak

KAL 007

Today it’s exactly 20 years ago the Russian airforce downed a South Korean airliner. All 269 passengers were killed.

I remember when the news broke in Europe and (of course) the accusations forth and back. The Russians claimed that the plane was spying for the American military. The Americans suggested that the Russians were too trigger-happy.

The truth is always somewhere in-between: apparantly the Korean crew never noticed the deviation of their plane while the Russians weren’t able to identify the plane as a civilian aircraft.

Posted in Those-wonder-years | Comments Off on KAL 007

Bike, rollerchain and stopsigns

Today I finished cleaning up the bike’s rollerchain and deraillers, using WD-40 and other utensils. Although, I didn’t have the right tools to get the wheels off, I think I got pretty far.

Yesterday, when driving back home after picking up some AC&C at the local pharmacy, I ignored a stopsign. Naturally, there’s only police when I happen to drive my bike and they kindly asked me not to ignore that sign the next time. Luckily I was wearing my helmet.

Posted in Truro NS | Comments Off on Bike, rollerchain and stopsigns

E-mail strikes back

BBC’s article ‘When e-mail bites back’ details mankind’s obsession with e-mail and how it encourages people to drop ‘their guard’.

   “It combines the convenience and the invitation to be open that a telephone conversation does with the permanence of the written word and that’s quite a trap”

Naturally, the article comes with a funny picture (Particularly, the caption underneath the picture). I wonder if the BBC’s policy is to make fun of modern technology.

Posted in Ordinateurs | Comments Off on E-mail strikes back

Any Given Sunday (1999)

Any Given Sunday, directed by Oliver Stone, features actors Al Pacino and Cameron Diaz in a rather unusual movie: a sports movie. Better yet, an American Football movie.

Pacino plays a manager who has too many conflicts with a (young) club owner, as played by Diaz and it does get predictable, pretty often. Better yet, Pacino naturally, conflicts with any of the younger players, the ones that prefer to be famous instead of working things out together as a team. And ofcourse, Pacino’s contract is at stake: pretty Diaz makes that clear from the beginning.

Still, Stone squeezes something out of it, in his particular style. Random flashes inserted here and there reach the climax when manager and (potential) star player skirmish. Their arguments are superimposed on scenes from the movie ‘Ben Hur’. And Stone wouldn’t be Stone without a couple surprises: later in the movie Charlton Heston (Ben Hur) appears as the commisioner, presiding the ‘battle of the Gladiators’.

Although it gets predictable, it looks like Stone made a good movie on Football: good for an hour amusement, but that’s it. Naturally, if you’re an Al Pacino fan, this one should be on your list of movies to see.

Posted in The Chest Desire | Comments Off on Any Given Sunday (1999)

Bird tests positive for West Nile

A dead bluejay tested positive for the West Nile virus. The bird was found in Kings county, NS, and is the first known bird to have died from the virus this year.

On a positive note, researchers expect that the numbers of insects (particularly musquitos) is rapidly declining as the nights are getting cooler and shorter.

Posted in We-reflect-news | Comments Off on Bird tests positive for West Nile

From revolution to reconstruction

Interesting set of pages covering American history, surprisingly hosted and created by people from the Dutch RUG (Rijks universiteit Groningen).

Covers presidents and their most important speeches, biographies of historical persons and more stuff you won’t find at your local Library of Congress.

Posted in Hyperlinks | Comments Off on From revolution to reconstruction

Gas consumers turn to web

The Herald carries an article that suggests that car owners flock to the web to find ways to cut their gas bills.

Sites like Gasbuddy.com and NewBrunswickGasPrices.com have seen the number of visitors rise after the Great Blackout. Says one of the proprietors of GasBuddy.com:

   “What better way to send a message than to basically boycott the high-priced gas stations?”

Continue reading

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