May 2006 Archives

Results "1 - 100 of about 87"? You printed 100 right there! You know there's more than 87! WTF?
I had 4 hits on a page all from the same IP address with completely different user agents. Two of the referrers were of the form http://mail05.abv.bg/app/j/openmessage.jsp - visiting them just resulted in an error, so it's hard to see what use they'd be. The other two were Google searches for "freesmscenter" and for a phrase in Russian. Seems sorta odd to me, seeing as most stats software seems to represent hits from Google searches as just the search text itself. Presumably the spam was promoting the sites at the top of the results for those phrases, but it seems a very roundabout way of doing it...
I haven't been happy with previous methods I've been using for hotlink prevention, because usually they result in a broken graphic on the other site which, depending on the browser, may not be visible.
Method 1: If a user hits a graphic with a referrer from another site, they get a 403 error and an HTML error page. Drawback: this results in a broken image on the other page.
Method 2: If a user hits a graphic with a referrer from another site, they get an HTML page which includes the actual graphic in an <img> tag, and a "hosted by tetrap.com" message. Drawbacks: results in a broken image on the other page, and the hits are recorded as traffic in my server statistics.
So I decided to try a new method: If a user hits a graphic with a referrer from another site, they get a 100x100 black and white image which looks like this*:

That allows them to see instantly what the problem is instead of giving them a broken graphic with no indication as to why, and it still registers as a 403 error in my server statistics. I've achived this by using a Perl script for my error 403 page. It detects whether the user is trying to load a web page (in which case it gives them an HTMLerror page) or a graphic (in which case it gives them the graphic shown above. I think it's nifty. :)
* Except myspace.com users, who still get tubgirl. Bwahaha.
The liquor store down the road from work recently renamed itself from "The Mill" to "liquor.co". Looks like whoever put up the sign on the side of their building may have been sampling their wares beforehand:
![[picture of liquor store]](/g/liquor.jpg)
I hadn't noticed before, but they put the "u" up backwards...
When TSV 37 first popped through my mail box back in 1994, it gave me a huge surprise to find that a picture I'd drawn of a Dalek had ended up on the front cover (I'd drawn it to accompany a story I'd written for the issue called The Last Words). I was also proud of my picture of the secondary TARDIS console which is to date the only piece of artwork I'd done for TSV that I was completely happy with.
In fact, that issue's artwork was generally well praised in the next issue's letters column. I like Chris Girdler's illustration for the New Adventure Shadowmind. Illustrations for the novels (outside of the covers of the books) seem to be rare, which is a shame because I like seeing how other people have visualised the characters and events.
I also got a cartoon published called Good Omens which suggested we should watch out for things like flying pigs and hell freezing over to signal that the BBC was bringing Doctor Who back. Sadly, Russell T. Davies has somewhat taken the wind out of that by actually making new episodes. I intend to write him a letter of complaint.
There's also a couple of piece resulting from Jon Preddle's trip to the UK: an interview with Gary Russell and some behind the scenes for the 30 Years in the TARDIS documentary (he stumbled on the filming!).
There's lots of other cool stuff too, like another installment of Beyond the Book covering three of the New Adventures, and Graham Howard on Witch Mark, so go read! :)
If you installed Blue Security's Blue Frog software, you should uninstall it ASAP. Spammers may be able to get control of it any use it to attack other sites or do other nefarious things.
On a somewhat lighter note, I love this cartoon. :)
I'm shocked! The NZDWFC general message board got a spam post! Usually spammers don't bother because the forums are blocked from search engines. Of course the anti-spam measures in the board software caught it before it could appear on the site.
The URLs spammed included a smattering of beam.to, some MSN spaces, a rapidforum, a bravenet guestbook, a Chinese wiki, and a number of subdomains on sekob.com and osarex.com. Both of these domains are registered to one Jar Duchovni who claims to live on 127 Duane St, New York, but the IP address the spam came from appears to be in Israel (on bezeqint.net). Don't know any more information on this spammer, other than he seems to be spamming mainly guestbooks and message boards.
A couple of weekends ago, I had the pleasure(?!) of seeing the last story of the original 70s Tomorrow People series, titled War of the Empires. This brings me to...
Xtra are so great, right now their DNS server is buggered. I can't resolve any domain names at all. To even post this, I had to get someone overseas to do a dnslookup on DNS Stuff so I could stick it in my hosts file, and then use DNS stuff to lookup the IP address for Tetrap.com. Worst ISP ever.
Edit: I stuck some public DNS servers into the router and can surf the net again!
