Monday, July 17, 2006

More Junkmail from Bob!

More Junkmail from Bob!

See that latest at

http://xpda.com/junkmail/junk182/junk182.htm

More Junkmail from Bob


More Junkmail from Bob!

Monday, July 17, 2006



Important Stuff.






Big Waves

How big do ocean waves get? Aside
from rogue waves sometimes formed by interference or combining waves,
regular wind-formed waves can get close to 100 feet high. In February
2000, the Royal Research Ship Discovery measured them, somewhere
between Iceland and Britain I think.



Strong westerly winds had blown across the Atlantic for two days. A
front followed the waves at about their same speed, building them up
over time. Those were the largest waves ever recorded on the open
ocean. The significant wave heights (2/3 median) were 18.5 meters, and
the maximum waves measured were 29.1 meters. The people on the
Discovery enjoyed the big waves for about 12 hours.



Here's the article, published last March:



      http://xpda.com/junkmail/junk182/waves/2005GL025238.pdf





Human Computer Security


Suppose you are a crook. Or a politician. Or, more likely, both. You
need access to a computer file. It's on a computer system you have no
access to. It is encrypted with 1024-bit RSA encryption. How do you get
it?



You could hack in through the internet, copy the file, and decrypt it.
It is highly unlikely this would ever work, however, because the target
system has a good firewall and your current PC is not likely to break
1024-bit RSA encryption any time in your lifetime.



Stumped?  All you need is a little human engineering. Since
the advent of computer passwords, people have been known to do things
like write down passwords on paper and leave them on their desks. But
you don't have physical access to the building, so you can't walk in
and copy down someone's password.



Here are some possibilities:


  1. Look in the windows for password, data, etc. Maybe you can see
    someone type a password, or maybe you can see a password and username
    sticky-noted on a monitor. You might want to use binoculars.




  2. Email phishing trojans to selected employees at your target
    organization. You can con them into unknowingly installing a key
    capture program that emails or FTP's the data back to an anonymous web
    site.




  3. This method is one of the best I've seen. A security company was
    tasked with breaking into a company's computer network, in order to
    find the soft spots. They wrote a trojan, put it on 20 USB thumb
    drives, and scattered them around the company parking lot. Employees
    picked up 15 of them, put them on their computers, and unknowingly
    installed trojans. The security company had complete unauthorized
    access to the computer system in short order.



      http://www.darkreading.com/document.asp?doc_id=95556&WT.svl=column1_1



If, by some odd twist of fate, you happen to be a law-abiding citizen
instead of a malicious computerist, maybe you can use this information
to deny interlopers access to your computer instead of using it to
break in to other systems.





NASA Spending


I think NASA generally tries to spend money on constructive research
and projects. However, The U.S. Congress isn't known for such
discipline. In fact, Congress has ordered NASA to spend their money on
things like a sprawling headquarters building for a non-profit research
group in West Virginia (created by U.S. Rep. Alan Mollohan), and a
website and laboratory for the Gulf of Maine Aquarium. Maybe that's why
we don't have a space plane.


      
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science/space/2006-06-11-nasa-pork_x.htm





Microsoft Genuine Advantage


The Microsoft Genuine Advantage is something you're pressed into
installing during a Windows Update. It's not required, but if you don't
read the details you'd think it is. The Microsoft Genuine Advantage is
some kind of anti-piracy tool that Microsoft is spreading around. Every
time you boot your computer, it contacts Microsoft to make sure you're
running a legitimate version of Windows.



I had installed it, but I uninstalled it when I figured out it's not
required for anything, and can really slow down a computer on dial-up
or cell phone access. Ever since Microsoft killed my Office 2000 and
Front Page just because I added RAM to my computer, I've tried to avoid
any Microsoft software authentication or similar schemes. Office 97
works fine.



      http://news.zdnet.com/2100-3513_22-6081286.html



      http://blogs.zdnet.com/BTL/?page_id=3170



I hope I can avoid Vista!





Oops!


In June two brothers in east London were arrested in a raid involving
250 police officers. They shot one of the brothers, for no apparent
reason. The police were looking for a "chemical device." (A battery,
maybe?) The didn't find anything illegal. The brothers were
interrogated and then released. Then the police apologized, something
unheard of in the U.S.



      http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/5077198.stm



In the U.S., Homeland Security would say something like, "The two were
arrested on suspicion of terrorism. We are not at liberty to give the
details of an ongoing investigation for reasons of national security."
Homeland Security does not make mistakes.



Or Maybe Homeland Security would just squash the whole story.



Last May, the New Jersey attorney general quietly issued subpoenas to
five telephone companies to determine whether they violated state
consumer protection laws by providing records to the National Security
Agency. Last June, the Justice Department filed a lawsuit to block
those subpoenas. They said that compliance with the subpoenas would
"damage national security." Right.



http://www.nj.com/news/ledger/jersey/index.ssf?/base/news-3/1150351507188700.xml&coll=1



Last month in Beautiful downtown Plymouth, Indiana, guests at the Swan
Lake Resort narrowly avoided being blown up by terrorists. The hotel
was evacuated and the police were called when a bomb was discovered in
the bar. The bomb turned out to be a light on a Pabst Blue Ribbon beer
sign, suction-cupped to a window. Whew!



local article



http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory?id=2104973



With terrorist attacks constantly occurring all over the country, the
Department of Homeland Security has installed terrorism hotlines to
governors in all 50 states. The secret phone numbers are to be used in
the event of a national (or state?) emergency.



The funny thing is that some telemarketers have gotten ahold of these
secret phone numbers and the secret hotline numbers are now being added
to the federal Do Not Call Registry.



http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2006-06-15-security-hotline_x.htm



Terrorists are everywhere!  In Tallahassee last month, 470
people narrowly escaped being blown up by a jar of Tupelo honey, a
package of "Byron's Butt Rub" and an oyster shell.



article



How do we win the War on Terror? It's easy. We just have to get people
to stop being afraid. But that could really ruin some campaign
strategies. Terrorism is what the big to-do is really about. Maybe it's
just too hard for politicians to say "ism."









Terror:  a state of intense fear.




Terrorism:  the systematic use of terror especially as a means of coercion.




These are not the same thing.





New Lunar Crater


In case you missed it, there's a new crater on the moon, in the Sea of
Clouds. A meteoroid hit the moon on May 2, making a new crater between
40 and 50 feet in diameter and about 10 feet deep. The meteoroid was
probably about 10 inches in diameter and flying along at around 85,000
mph. I'm not sure whether that's faster than the speed of sound.



Is there enough atmospheric matter to propagate weak sound waves on the
moon? The moon has "no atmosphere," which means almost none, and there
is a little bit of dust flying around.



      http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2006/13jun_lunarsporadic.htm





Scammed!


Last Junkmail I mentioned a pyramid in Bosnia. I was tricked! It's a hoax!



      http://skepchick.org/blog/?p=90





The Minnow


Mike and I have a sailboat (http://viaboat.com).
I sailed it from Key West to Georgia, and Mike took from Georgia to
Maryland. The boat has a reverse osmosis desalinization system called a
watermaker. That way we can drink seawater.



In five or ten years, they should have new carbon nanotube membranes
for reverse osmosis that will make them a lot more efficient, both
large scale and small scale systems.



      http://www.technologyreview.com/read_article.aspx?id=16977&ch=nanotech



I passed this boat off the coast of Florida. I thought it was a little
odd looking

      P1080263.jpg



...although not as odd as a sailing catamaran -- here's the
Minnow at anchor:

      P1060974.jpg



I was curious, so I looked it up on the internet. That is a very good
way to learn things, because everything on the internet is true. The
boat is the Dolores Chouest, as you can see on the side. If you take a
close look at the emblem on the side, you can see that it says Research
- Rescue - Recovery, and underneath it says "Mystic - Avalon."



      http://xpda.com/junkmail/junk182/P1080272a.JPG



The Dolores Chouest is a "Deep Submergence Elevator Support Ship" for
the Navy. It helps in deep water search and rescue, and is used as a
submarine test support escorts. Last November the Dolores Chouest
helped with ABC's Good Morning America broadcast from U.S. Attack
Submarine USS Scranton, handling the live communications between New
York and the submarine.



The ship is owned by Edison Chouest Offshore and leased to the Navy.
Dolores is Edison Chouest's wife. The boat is operated by a civilian
crew of 7 or 8, and has quarters for 30 or 40 more people.



      http://xpda.com/junkmail/junk182/Vol_20p6.pdf



The Mystic and Avalon are Deep Submergence Rescue Vehicles. They have a
crew of 4, can go down 5,000 feet, and can carry 20 rescuees.



Here is the Mystic DSRV being launched from the Kellie Chouest last December:



      051214-N-1577S-003.jpg      hi resolution



Here's the Mystic being loaded onto a Russian-built AN-124.



      040429-N-7949W-003.jpg      hi resolution:



      http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/systems/ship/chouest.htm



Further along up the coast of Florida, I anchored off Cape Canaveral to
see the Space Shuttle launch. I radioed the Coast Guard and asked them
if I was OK if I stayed three miles offshore, and they said that would
be no problem.



The next morning, the Fourth of July, I woke up to a honking horn. I
eventually realized I was on a boat and not in a big city. Then I
remembered I was anchored offshore, miles away from anybody. I
staggered outside and saw a Coast Guard boat. When I finally woke up
enough to operate the radio, they told me I needed to go south a few
miles. I asked if I could go north. They said I'd have to go pretty far
(past "charlie alpha"). I asked them to wait and tried to figure out
whether to go north or south. Then the range control officer said I
could go three miles southeast. So I did. They were all very polite and
professional. And patient.



When I anchored, there were no boats anywhere around me. The Coast
Guard was patrolling behind me. Once I heard the Coast Guard or Range
Control people ask on the marine radio, "Are you going to let that
sailboat stay there?" They did. I was still a few miles away, but I was
happy to be that close.



I listened to the marine radio part of the day before the launch. I was
impressed with the Coast Guard, and the efficient and courteous way
they kept boats out of the off-limits areas. Those guys are good.



I waited around until 2:38 and the shuttle went up. It was really,
really impressive. It was bright and loud. There was an interesting
contrast between their speed and mine.



Here are some of my shuttle photos.



      http://xpda.com/shuttle



NASA had a little better view:



      151613main_lift-l.jpg   hi resolution           151605main_best-l.jpg   hi resolution





Canceling AOL


I cancelled my AOL account several years ago. I was really mad because
they refused to cancel it because I didn't know what credit card I used
to pay for the account when I set it up. I had to yell at them a lot
and threaten legal action in order to disconnect from AOL.



It may not be that bad any more, but it's still pretty tough to escape from AOL. Here's a funny example:



      http://media.putfile.com/AOL-Cancellation



AOL has lost 4 million subscribers over the past two years. Now they're
going to offer free email accounts and try to make money on advertising
instead of subscriptions.



      http://news.com.com/2100-1038_3-5501107.html





An Employee Review by Bill Gates

     
http://www.joelonsoftware.com/items/2006/06/16.html





AT&T policy change


AT&T got tired of being sued, so they changed their privacy policy.
Now they own your phone records and they can do whatever they darn well
please with them. Incidentally, if you are an AT&T customer, you
have already agreed to this policy change.


     
http://www.realtechnews.com/posts/3192


     
http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/telecom/2006-06-21-privacy-usat_x.htm





Windmill Radar


Wind Farms are interfering with military radar.


     
article





Business as Usual


Chicago has long been known as nation's premier city as far as political ethics are concerned.



      http://msnbc.msn.com/id/13743118/



About three years ago the Mayor decided he wanted a park where Meigs
Field airport was. So he had it bulldozed. In the middle of the night.
With airplanes still on the field.



The FAA fined the city of Chicago $33,000 for violations. So the City
of Chicago spent $200,000 on outside lawyers (Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw
Pittman LLP) to fight the fine. So far. Chicago paid another $350,000
to the same lawyers to fight the FAA on whether Chicago illegally used
$2.9 million in airport development money to close Meigs Field.



      http://www.chicagobusiness.com/cgi-bin/news.pl?id=21104



Are they complete idiots, or am I missing something?





How to Swing


A few years ago a patent attorney in Minnesota named Peter filed for a
patent in his 5-year-old son's name on how to swing on a swing set. He
was awarded the patent.



      http://www.slate.com/id/2144722/entry/2144723/





Safe Lighters


The Transportation Safety Administration has decided that cigarette
lighters, which were safe on airplanes and then weren't safe on
airplanes, are now safe again on airplanes. Their parent company,
Homeland Security, might not agree.



http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2006-06-28-lighter-ban_x.htm?csp=1





Impact


About 250 million years ago most of the animal life on earth became
extinct. This was 185 million years before the dinosaurs were wiped
out.



Ralph and Laramie from Ohio State University led the team that fond a
big crater under the Antarctic Ice Cap. It looks like this is from a
meteor impact that caused the big Permian-Triassic extinction 250
million years ago.



      http://www.spaceflightnow.com/news/n0606/04ancientimpact/





Spyware and Trojans


Here's a good article. This material will be covered in the exam.


     
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/06_29/b3993001.htm





FBI Push for Internet Wiretapping


The FBI has drafted a law to help it tap the internet. Court orders are not required. Some fun-filled features of the new law:


  1. A requirement for router manufacturers to offer "upgrades" on all
    routers to support internet wiretapping. The proper term for this is
    actually downgrade, since it downgrades speed and efficiency.

  2. Expansion of wiretapping requirements to Instant Messages and VoIP.

  3. Elimination of the current legal requirement making public the number of "communications interceptions" per year.




It makes a person feel safe.



      http://news.com.com/2100-1028_3-6091942.html





Fun with Root Kits


A rootkit is some software that lets programs run on a computer without
being detected. It modifies some of the low-level system files. The
term originally came from Unix systems, and got famous last year when
Sony put a rootkit on computers that played its CDs.



Now rootkits are getting better. There is one called Rustock that is
essentially undetectable when it's installed. That's a little
irritating. I don't like other people cluttering up my computer.


     
Symantec info





The Suncook River


There was some flooding in New Hampshire last May. Some people in
Epsom, NH don't like it. Their river moved and they want it back.



      http://www.nhpr.org/node/10963



      http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NewImages/images.php3?img_id=17333





Ted Stevens, Techno-Guru and U.S. Senator










I just the other day got, an internet was sent by my staff at 10
o'clock in the morning on Friday and I just got it yesterday. Why?





Because it got tangled up with all these things going on the internet commercially...





They want to deliver vast amounts of information over the internet.
And again, the internet is not something you just dump something on.
It's not a truck.





It's a series of tubes.





And if you don't understand those tubes can be filled and if they are
filled, when you put your message in, it gets in line and its going to
be delayed by anyone that puts into that tube enormous amounts of
material, enormous amounts of material.





U.S. Senator Ted Stevens





I think I'm beginning to understand why there are all those stupid laws
are coming out of Washington. Even if his analogy was anywhere near the
realm of reality, his reasoning is completely off. The scary part is
that this guy is prominent enough to have the largest international
airport in Alaska named after him.





Lawyers vs. RIAA


Some people are beating the RIAA in file sharing lawsuits. More
probably could. Over 4000 people have knuckled under and paid the $3750
settlement to the RIAA for sharing music. The legal tactics of the RIAA
are questionable, but most people don't have the money to fight it in
court. Sounds almost like extortion, doesn't it?



      http://recordingindustryvspeople.blogspot.com/





We Interrupt this Phone Call...


In 1951, the government instituted the emergency broadcast system to
warn Americans of a Soviet nuclear attack. Now FEMA, the world famous
bureaucracy, is expanding the emergency broadcast system to include
"situations of war, terrorist attack, natural disaster, or other
hazards to public safety and well-being." I'm pretty sure that includes
malicious Pabst Blue Ribbon signs.



They are also expanding the emergency broadcast system to cell phones
and PDA's. I don't mind too much when the government listens to my
phone calls, but it's going to far when they want to butt-in and talk.



That seems to me the worst thing that can happen in a real emergency --
shutting down all the cell phone communications and forcing people to
listen to a message. After the message, everybody will make a phone
call at the same time, overloading the system. But at least they'll
know to put powdered milk and tuna fish under the bed.



      http://www.cnn.com/2006/TECH/ptech/07/12/alert.system.ap/index.html





MySpace, Firefox, and Slashdot


Myspace passed Yahoo, Hotmail, and Google as the most visited site (for the week ended July 8).



      http://news.com.com/2100-1026_3-6092859.html


Firefox use has increased from 8.7% to 13% of total browser use
since
April 2005. I like Firefox better than Internet Explorer, and it only
costs half as much. I read this on slashdot, which has 65% Firefox
traffic. They noted that 18% of those Firefox users need to upgrade.



      http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/07/12/1232249





Pictures of Today!


There are lots.



Birds of the Dry Tortugas...



This is either a pteranodon or a frigate bird. I'm not sure because Serge took these:



      DSC_0846.jpg      DSC_0849.jpg



Here are some birds nesting on Bush Key, near Fort Jefferson. I took
these pictures from a kayak. If it looks a little wavy, it's because it
was!



Frigate Birds:



      P1070088.jpg      P1070093.jpg      P1070104.jpg



Lotsa birds:



      P1070129.jpg      P1070140.jpg      P1070143.jpg



      P1070146.jpg



Loggerhead Key:



      P1070165.jpg      P1070168.jpg



Another bird roost:



      P1070180.jpg      P1070181.jpg



This picture isn't that great, but I like it for some reason:



      P1070111.jpg



Here are my brother Mike and I with a friendly barracuda.


     
DSC_0776.jpg



Mike with a fish he caught. A barracuda bit off must of it just has he
was pulling it out of the water. Serge wouldn't swim after that.



      P1070084.jpg



Some sea life from Glacier Bay National Park. My baby daughter Melinda took these pictures. You can check out her blog at http://alaskaw.blogspot.com . It's pretty funny.



      P1060863.jpg      P1060872.jpg      P1060876.jpg



      P1060880.jpg      P1060884.jpg      P1060893.jpg



This is the world famous "tall pointy thing" in Washington DC:



      P1060896.jpg



Washington Squirrels. They're not all in the Capitol.



      P1060911.jpg



Fort Jefferson at Sunset:



      P1070018.jpg      P1070020.jpg



...and the ocean, shortly after Sunset:



      P1070062.jpg



The end of the road:



      P1070504.jpg



This lenticular cloud formed as the thunderhead was rising through a
layer of faster-moving air. Within two minutes, the thunderhead had
swallowed the lenticular cloud. The cloud was over 30,000 feet high.



      P1070427.jpg      P1070428.jpg



More Thunderstorms -- South Florida:



      P1070527.jpg



South of Florida:



      P1080212.jpg      P1080210.jpg      P1080217.jpg



East of Florida:



      P1080279.jpg



Georgia:



      P1080540.jpg



Weekend boaters:



      P1070515.jpg



Towboat and barge:



      P1080237.jpg      P1080238.jpg



This is me, towing the Minnow.



      P1060923.jpg



Saint Simon's Island, Georgia:



      P1080481.jpg



Here's an NOAA survey boat. I'm not sure how this works:



      P1080489.jpg      P1080487.jpg



      P1080484.jpg      P1080486.jpg



Here is a new bridge across the Turtle River, near Brunswick, GA:



      P1080510.jpg      P1080518.jpg      P1080534.jpg



I took some pictures of that bridge from the Aircam, when they were building it in 2001.



      Img_8617.jpg      Img_8618.jpg      Img_8619.jpg



      Img_8620.jpg      Img_8621.jpg      Img_8623.jpg



Saturn and Titan, taken by Cassini.



      PIA08196.jpg



Titan is the name of my new hard drive. Terabytes used to be Star Trek
material, not home computer terminology. (Mine only half a terabyte.)







(~) 1956, no rights preserved. Any illicit copying of this material
without prior written permission would be very easy and quite nice.
Copy the heck out of it!


The opinions contained herein are not the opinions of anyone else
on
earth, near as I can tell. But you all will come around eventually.
This Junkmail I decided to put the photos at 1600 resolution. Let me
know whether you prefer the higher resolution and slower download speed
to the 1200 resolution photos.



If you'd like to sign up for your very own Junkmail, go to



      http://xpda.com/junkmail



You can also read, use, peruse, and search the archives there.



If you would like to stop getting Junkmail, please select from these easy-to-use choices:



1. Go back to CP/M.

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4. Send me an email with "Kangerlussuaq" as the subject.


I'm Bob Webster from Earth. I can occasionally be reached at bob@upperspace.com

Have a nice day!