Monthly Archives: June 2002

Not a New Problem

This article speaks of careless use of XML and of how the government wants a standard. This is not a new problem. Once upon a time, the Department of Defense wanted to standardize the way contract proposals were submitted. Thus VHDL (VHSIC Hardware Description Language – VHSIC means Very Speed Integrated Circuit) was born. Schematics were described using this standard. These days the reverse is true – hardware is "written" in VHDL first, then fabricated. Nowadays hardware can be synthesized much like how code is compiled. This is particularly useful when designing for FPGAs (Field Programmable Gate Arrays). Do a search on Google for any of these terms to learn more.

Government seeks accord on XML
Margaret Kane

"The federal government isn't known as a pioneering early adopter. But growing support within U.S. agencies for the popular XML data exchange format has raised concerns that, for once, things might be moving too fast."

Screen Chemistry

‘Casablanca’
Tops List of Movie Romances

By Bob Tourtellotte

When it comes to movies and romance, they don’t make them like they used to.

At least, that is what directors, writers, actors and other filmmakers polled by the American Film Institute think. They chose 1942’s “Casablanca,” starring Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman, as the best U.S. love story ever told on film.

I saw “Casablanca” for the first time recently, and while I found it to
be a very well made and interesting movie, I wouldn’t call it the best love story
ever. I’m also disappointed that “When Harry Met Sally” isn’t near the
top of AFI’ list.

Confirming Intuitions

This article doesn't say anything revolutionary, but it does confirm some intuitions about how men and women differ emotionally.

Men: Breaking Up Is Bad Only if Women Do It First
By Alison McCook

"When rating previous breakups, women view the process of ending of the relationship no differently if they are the dumper or the dumpee–but the same is not true with men, new research shows."

"According to researchers at Francis Marion University in Florence, South Carolina, men believe there was much more scheming on the part of their partners, less finality in the relationship and less working together during the breakup if they were dumped than if they ended the relationship themselves."

Spam Sucks

Ever wanted revenge against spammers? Well, now you might be able to get it. Check
these links out.

Wpoison Sets
Trap for Spam Weasel

by James Glave

Ron Guilmette is doing his part to help win what he describes as a technological arms race with spammers. The author of the forthcoming Deadbolt spam filter has released wpoison, a simple CGI script designed to trap and clog up the bots that traverse the Net gathering email addresses.

“It became obvious that spammers were using robots to scan Web pages [for email addresses], so I thought, let’s give ’em something to chew on,” said Guilmette.

Wpoison creates dynamically generated Web pages full of convincingly lifelike – but completely bogus – email addresses that spambots will pick up and add to their hitlists. But the page also contains randomly generated links that the bot inevitably follows – links that loop right back to the same page, now re-armed with a fresh set of random fake email addresses.

Caught in an endless loop, the bots “feed on [the addresses] until they are bloated and full,” said Guilmette.

WPoison Home Page