Category Archives: Technology

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So reading my RSS feed I came across an article from Mashablethe article was a poll that asked what was your first web browser. While many people are mourning the loss of Netscape, which AOL announced today would be discontinued, it was not my first web browser.

My first internet connection I could use regulary was at college and the connection was a shell connection not a PPP connection. For those that haven’t guessed yet, my first browser was lynx. The browser that originally powered the web back in 1994 when I first actually made it onto the Internet. I did previously have access to a local BBS that offered to be an e-mail relay so my Internet e-mail addressing days actually predates my Internet exposure by almost a full year.

The odd thing was that the 1994/1995 school year was the first time there ever was Internet publicly available to the students (great time to be a freshman) , it was also the year that there was the largest amount of students that flunked out in the school history as legend tells it. Who knew Internet addiction started so quickly. I can say that I don’t see college girls today hanging out in Talkers, MOO’s, MUSH’s, or MUDs, – but they did back then. Almost everyone student understood telnet.

I was still at college (didn’t understand PPP or what it was) and installed OS/2 warp since it came with Mosaic web browser that gave you a graphical Internet. Mind you I had a 368 DX40 and OS/2 literally took 28 minutes to boot – but graphical Internet would have been worth it. Alas since I only had shell access I couldn’t use the funky picture browser so I went back to windows/dos fired up telix and dialed into my shell account back to lynx.

Following year I had an account with delphi I believe – it was a shell account so more lynx for me at 9.95 an hour for dialup (after the first 10 hours for 14.99). I wasn’t go to go the AOL route even if it meant foregoing graphics. I then managed to get a PPP connection but i never actually managed to get Mosaic working on windows with it. More specifically I couldn’t get the PPP drivers to work.

Finally a few months later after I got my first computer tech job I managed to get a computer working on a 14.4 baud modem with Netscape Navigator 2.(something) and the world was graphical. I remember Internet Explorer coming out and being inferior to Netscape and laughing at the idea Netscape could be dethroned. A few years later when Netscape Navigator 5.x came out I jumped ship to Microsoft.

I stayed with Internet Explorer for a few years complaining about the problems and security issues with the product. I came to find something my Linux friends had latched onto. It was a new browser called Firebird, had some of the feel of the old Navigator browser without the problems of Internet Explorer. Sure I used Internet Explorer occasionally then (like I do now but less often) because some web sites didn’t support it. Firebird got sued over teh name and became Firefox.

The two web browsers I use most today are Firefox and Flock, both Mozilla derivatives. For those whipper snappers that are ignorant and don’t know though. Netscape eventually was purchased by AOL for 4.2 billion dollars in 1998. AOL knew the community was bothered by this so as good PR it gave the right to give part of the Navigator source code to the open source movement. The open source organization that went forward and was the main force behind the Netscape open source software was the Mozilla foundation. If you are interested in the exact licensing and history of this movement please visit Mozilla’s Website to find out more.

So if you are using Firefox or any other Mozilla derivative on your computer please a take a minute and mourn for your browsers biological grandfather has past away. It is a sad day and a long strange journey. Netscape you have inspired many of us and made the web as mainstream as it is today. You were a visionary of a company and a browser. You will be missed.

In the next week or so I’ll be moving from blogger to wordpress. One of the key differences that is nailing me right now is tags versus categories. So for the migration I’m eliminating some of my tags on my blogger site so it’s less work to import them into a style I like with the wordpress themes.

During the import they show up as categories – which for some weird reason of my own bothers me – so the tags that existed before will show up again as tags after the migration.

As for the current site -

RSS feed will be redirected so RSS users will lose nothing in the migration (cross fingers)

The DNS is being updated so people manually going to the site won’t have any issues.

The current blog on blogger will revert to creeva.blogspot.com which it was originally so the site is not being deleted – but this will screw up most of my google search results. This is a price I should pay now instead of after another year of links being aggregated to this blog.

I’m hoping to implement some new features – one would be to pull in RSS links of what I do manually instead of the messy web wandering dumps I do now. So when I digg a story it will hit the blog as a post instead of being saved up throughout the day. The people that read the site via RSS already get these notifications. I’m just going to have the website flow the same way that the RSS feed does currently.

The one thing I’ve struggled with the most if the theme. It seems some of the features I have on blogger I lose – since there is no easy way to do categories on the top bar that I have found. I may implement them in the future when I figure out wordpress’s method of doing it. Until then however I’m going to take this chance to have a new theme and see how that works out for me.

Wish me luck – I’ll post more on this if I run into any issues other then themes as they come up.

Currently where I work we are implementing the to role the NIST’s FDCC guidelines. All government agencies are mandated to be migrated to the “one desktop” architecture across the board. Meaning each agency whether it be DHS or the Department of Agriculture will have the same settings applied to their machine.

All in all I believe this a good first step in encouraging some basic changes that need to be done across the federal level. Treating the government as a private industry would do wonders to improve it’s image, security, and income. We can go into the debate on why or why not treating the government as a business is a good thing, but I would prefer not to at this time.

Currently however most of the changes being swept in via the FDCC are already implemented in most private business arenas. Bring the culture of modern policies and enforcing them instead of waivering every exception will raise the security level of hte federal government across the board.

When most people read the changes though they flip out. They assume that they couldn’t possibly operate under those conditions. Things they have been able to (wrongly) do all these years is going away. They also may *gasp* have to learn new methods for doing things that has changed for the first time in 20 years.

If people would just sit down and read, analyze, and test the changes instead of knee jerking at them this would go alot smoother. Everyone immediately assumes “my stuff will break with this” they haven’t tested it. They don’t fully understand the setting. They assume they should be special. People need to realize that they don’t own their work computers if they work for someone else. The computers belong to the company or government that hired you. They make the mandates on you and you truly are not special.

This leads into the cry wolf scenario where “Bob” says this will completely break everything he does. “Linda” hears “Bob” and thinks of herself equal to or more important task wise then what “Bob” is, so she starts screaming. “Fred” hears “Linda” and the same thing happens, etc. etc. etc.

People – to your place of employment you are just a tool. You essentially are no better then a computer. Effectively to your place of business a lot of time you are worth less then a computer since your role would be easier to replace then the computers. Remember you are no better then “Bob”, “Linda”, or “Fred”. Change is coming to all of them and that is a good thing.

I’m still happily enjoying Ubuntu. For an update – the webcam is working in the new skype beta. My scanner is working but I have to sudo the scanning application to root for it to work. The only lingering issue is that the microphone is not working – the irony since I have the webcam working in skype.

Some random thoughts though I’m currently away from my laptop.

One thing I noticed last night is that things consistently downloaded faster on Ubuntu compared to Vista (and I had better speed in vista then XP). So points are definitely on the TCP/IP stack in Ubuntu compared to Windows. The difference I noticed was so significant for me that I wonder why more of the power game that attempt to squeeze every last kilobit out of their network connection for latency and speed doesn’t migrate over for some games.

Issue I don’t like – some sites (like my blog) don’t render the same way – not terrible or nec. wonky but different – my blog for example doesn’t look right. It’s not just the fonts which are slightly different – the site’s CSS is slightly off in Linux compared to windows. The irony of this ordeal is that I’m using Firefox in both environments. You would think that there would be the same rendering engine in the back-end, but I’m not so lucky. So this will go into hunting down CSS fixes.

I did get unlucky that Star Wars Galaxies managed to upgrade to a new launcher while I was in the middle of this – guess I’ll have to login via the desktop until I manage to get the launcher working.

WoW is working but is slow – I need to reduce the resolution from the size it’s using since that’s is causing most of my issues – it just crashes when I change it – I found some answers on correcting these issues online today though.

All in all successful – video rendering looks better then Vista – I’ll keep posting as I have findings.

Well I managed to get the sound working on my Toshiba laptop by following the steps in this thread.

So that’s part is done – I think my wireless card is working – but I have a key issue I need to work out with the encryption tomorrow.

SO sound and possibly NIC is working (I’m on a wired collection right now)

I managed to get World of Warcraft working but I need to figure out how to lower the resolution without WINE crashing on me since I don’t need it maximized.

Star Wars Galaxies however moved over to the new launchpad on me today, so that is not currently working correctly in WINE – I’ll play more with that this weekend – but I still have a desktop I can handle that on.

ABC.COM wouldn’t stream it’s episodes saying I needed windows or OSX – I worked around this by starting the windows version of Firefox in WINE – then it worked fine – Foo on You ABC.

So all in all I think this migration is going to be a success but it’s only been a couple hours so far – I’ll keep writing about my experiences and list how it goes for another Windows to Linux switcher.

Today I’ve decided I’m moving to Ubuntu Linux on my primary computer, my laptop. The journey is fraught with challenges in the sense of getting my nic and sound card to work. I highly doubt my built in web cam is going to work though. I am however determined.

I was originally going to migrate my laptop to be a hackintosh – and OSX non apple PC hybrid. I thought though if I was going to migrate off of the windows platform that I should move off to the free world. Later I will eventually get a mac book pro – but I’ll do it the right way. If I can migrate from vista to linux I can move to OSX later with ease.

Currently while I’m typing this I am downloading the Ubuntu 64 bit torrent and ghosting fully backing up my laptop so I can do a system restore if things don’t pan out.

It seems that most of what I want to do these days is online anyways, but the few things that I use that require windows like Star Wars Galaxies or World of Warcraft can both run under WINE. Most of my excuses for not switching are no longer valid and as long as I can get a functional laptop out of this – this includes wireless and sound – I think I’ll be a true convert.

I’ll be blogging about the challenges and trials – I do know that choosing Ubuntu’s newest release and going 64 bit will bring about it’s own issues, but I need to confront them at some point. Choosing to do the hard way and hopefully succeeding will steel my determination to keep it as a linux laptop.

I did do a few considerations in choosing my platform of migration. I did almost for FreeBSD – but someone made the point that it’s already hard enough to find linux software sometimes and FreeBSD software would be a nightmare if I needed something specific.

All of you can wish me luck.

My previous post about Palantir Technologies intelligence sorting tool brought up the fact that they used netflix’s data as part of their dataset analysis. Further research shows that netflix routinely releases their full dataset with the user’s private information scrubbed. So for a brief minute here Netflix is in the clear. This goes on further though from issues that have been discovered about this. Netflix didn’t stay clear very long.

Arvind Narayanan and Vitaly Shmatikov from The University of Texas at Austin on November 11, 2006 released a paper on how to break the anonymity of the Netflix dataset. This information is aggregate and the method is quite complex. There is however the fact that this data can be found and linked back to you with the correct tools. Palantir releases tools for the intelligence community and having tested it I have no confirmation but since it’s public data at this point has no reason not to include it in their sample data set they provide to costumers.

Before I go further I would like to say I don’t think Palantir has done anything wrong. The problem is that Netflix has released this data to the public even after they learned that the anonymity can be broken. With Palantir’s strengths there is very little effort to link these rentals to you in your private records. Now I will be the first to dismiss government paranoia but in this case with such little effort would the intelligence community really pass up this information? Data by itself is meaningless, but data in aggregate can be very powerful.

If you are concerned with the government or anyone else tracking your rental history I would suggest leaving netflix as soon as possible.

The Intelligence Community’s New Analysis Platform is the webinar I am attending today. It is hosted by Carahsoft – the same people that hosted the Symantec Webinar I attended. The company whose products this is about is called Palantir Technologies. They have wide spread financial and government data analysis tools. Todays webinar focuses on the government sectors.

From a side note while we are waiting for this to start Palantir, according to wikipedia, is an artifact from the Tolkien mythos. specifically: A palantír (sometimes translated as Seeing Stone but actually meaning “Farsighted” or “One that Sees from Afar”) is a stone that functions somewhat like a crystal ball.

Webinar started

They start with the standard thank you to their host carahsoft.

Palantir was started in 2004 by Alexander Carr (sp) and the paypal team. They pointed out that the main part of Paypal was anti fraud and that’s how they relate to the intelligence community. They spent sometime discussing Paypal and their competitors. The reason paypal succeeded compared to their competitors was that they had analysts to sort the data compared to using pure computer work. The analyst then built tools to work with the data at the conceptual level compared to the data level. This allowed the analysts to help fight fraud better then the competition which allowed them to succeed.

Paypal then looked at what areas they could fit these types of tools. They recognized that they would fit best in the high finance and the intelligence community. They worked and created tools and today’s webcast was about the intelligence community tools. Planatir is a front end and backend tool

Data Integration – takes all your records and puts them into one unified view that allows an analyst to have an easy view of unified data.

Search and Discovery – see who the user communicated with – persistent search which alerts the analyst when new information becomes available.

Link Analysis- the database includes historical and auditible revision analysis – I assume this is it help ensure the integrity of the database. Includes meta data for source, who added it, and where it came from, who updated it, essentially every step of change and data you could want. This also allows the revisioning database to look quickly at the data history. They then go on to show different views and history tracking they can utilize.

He shows how you could do different information extractions to track terrorist activities (once again using the terrorist threat to try to drive the point home /rolleyes). While this would be a great tool in general I think this could have been done another way instead of driving the terrorist angle. The data set that it can pull from is quite large and very interesting.

Very interesting drag and drop interface for entity resolution and analysis. Very Web 2.0ish but yet seems they put too much emphasis on the fisher price like interface. It’s not a bad thing just overly rounded – but I assume this may help things work faster – I have nothing to compare it to though. They are offering a video at the end so I’m not going to describe all of the interface and his interaction with it.

This does make Jim Cropcho’s discovery of a flaw in the ohio voting records a very trivial discovery for this software and makes how we maintain our records especially our voting and documents that should be private (no your phone is not really considered private sorry) otherwise data discovery with tools like this is trivial.

The platform does support plug-ins.

When asked how many entities they can handle they stated over 100 million entities – they have pulled in all of IMDB, Wikipedia – and NETFLIX!!!! – so this company is looking at user checkouts and ratings on netflix – I’m going to follow up with netflix and find out what of my private data is available to these other companies.

More links

here
here
Flash Demo

For more carahsoft webinar’s go here for sign up.

The Intelligence Community’s New Analysis Platform is the webinar I am attending today. It is hosted by Carahsoft – the same people that hosted the Symantec Webinar I attended. The company whose products this is about is called Palantir Technologies. They have wide spread financial and government data analysis tools. Todays webinar focuses on the government sectors.

From a side note while we are waiting for this to start Palantir, according to wikipedia, is an artifact from the Tolkien mythos. specifically: A palantír (sometimes translated as Seeing Stone but actually meaning “Farsighted” or “One that Sees from Afar”) is a stone that functions somewhat like a crystal ball.

Webinar started

They start with the standard thank you to their host carahsoft.

Palantir was started in 2004 by Alexander Carr (sp) and the paypal team. They pointed out that the main part of Paypal was anti fraud and that’s how they relate to the intelligence community. They spent sometime discussing Paypal and their competitors. The reason paypal succeeded compared to their competitors was that they had analysts to sort the data compared to using pure computer work. The analyst then built tools to work with the data at the conceptual level compared to the data level. This allowed the analysts to help fight fraud better then the competition which allowed them to succeed.

Paypal then looked at what areas they could fit these types of tools. They recognized that they would fit best in the high finance and the intelligence community. They worked and created tools and today’s webcast was about the intelligence community tools. Planatir is a front end and backend tool

Data Integration – takes all your records and puts them into one unified view that allows an analyst to have an easy view of unified data.

Search and Discovery – see who the user communicated with – persistent search which alerts the analyst when new information becomes available.

Link Analysis- the database includes historical and auditible revision analysis – I assume this is it help ensure the integrity of the database. Includes meta data for source, who added it, and where it came from, who updated it, essentially every step of change and data you could want. This also allows the revisioning database to look quickly at the data history. They then go on to show different views and history tracking they can utilize.

He shows how you could do different information extractions to track terrorist activities (once again using the terrorist threat to try to drive the point home /rolleyes). While this would be a great tool in general I think this could have been done another way instead of driving the terrorist angle. The data set that it can pull from is quite large and very interesting.

Very interesting drag and drop interface for entity resolution and analysis. Very Web 2.0ish but yet seems they put too much emphasis on the fisher price like interface. It’s not a bad thing just overly rounded – but I assume this may help things work faster – I have nothing to compare it to though. They are offering a video at the end so I’m not going to describe all of the interface and his interaction with it.

This does make Jim Cropcho’s discovery of a flaw in the ohio voting records a very trivial discovery for this software and makes how we maintain our records especially our voting and documents that should be private (no your phone is not really considered private sorry) otherwise data discovery with tools like this is trivial.

The platform does support plug-ins.

When asked how many entities they can handle they stated over 100 million entities – they have pulled in all of IMDB, Wikipedia – and NETFLIX!!!! – so this company is looking at user checkouts and ratings on netflix – I’m going to follow up with netflix and find out what of my private data is available to these other companies.

More links

here
here
Flash Demo

For more carahsoft webinar’s go here for sign up.