Integrated Application Level... Cheese?

Posted by Ade on Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009 at 10:12 AM
OSI Layer 8: Emmentaler!
OSI Layer 8: Emmentaler!

In my field of expertise, Radware is a widely known company who provides application delivery hardware.

On a recent trip to Germany to stock up on food not available at home, I found to my considerable surprise that they seem to have diversified. I suppose in this day and age, you get your money wherever you can…

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In da bun!

Posted by Ade on Saturday, August 29th, 2009 at 6:22 PM
Yo!
Yo!

I have almost given up on taking photos of English spelling errors… there are just too many. However, as an officially certified, card carrying grammar nazi with an extra spelling badge, this one just had to be preserved for… eh… prosperity.

I assume these guys sell normal hot dogs, I didn't order one to find out.

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Wiggle Mouse to ensure success

Posted by Ade on Monday, May 25th, 2009 at 2:18 PM

If the header of this post seems weird, check Microsoft's answer to problem XL97: Data Not Returned from Query Using ORACLE Data Source:

Between two resolution methods which at least sort of make sense, there's the following gem:

Method 2: Move Your Mouse Pointer

If you move your mouse pointer continuously while the data is being returned to Microsoft Excel, the query may not fail. Do not stop moving the mouse until all the data has been returned to Microsoft Excel.

NOTE: Depending on your query, it may take several minutes to return the results of your query to the worksheet.

In other news, Oracle users suffer significantly more RSI if they're also working with Excel.

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Power at all costs!

Posted by Ade on Friday, May 22nd, 2009 at 6:37 PM

The news today are full of the Irish scandal of ongoing horrific child abuse by the institutions of the Catholic church. Examples include about the full catalogue — ask the sickest mind to tell you what it can imagine, it probably happened.

Originally, I had planned to quote some examples of the findings here. I have quickly realised that while reading even only the executive summary, the amount of things that made me go “Whaaaaat?” was far exceeding the quotable. The summary — and indeed the full report — can be found at the relevant Website. Be warned though: This is about as far from light reading as you'll get.

Many people seem to be especially annoyed and disgusted that this was covered by the higher echelons of the church — up to bishops as far as I heard. The perpetrators were simply relocated to another parish, where they would often be free to continue their abuse.

Thinking about it for a bit, I have concluded that this is really the logical path for a bishop to take. After all, I see the church as an institution that seeks to perpetuate its power over its subjects by any means possible. Where else can you find an institution today that still has the nerve to claim absolute infallibility of its supreme leader?

I am convinced that this (perpetuating power, not abusing children) has been — and still is, to some extent — the prime purpose of religion. Many commandments and suggestions as to how to act and behave which would probably garner a cheerful “Feck off” if they came from a secular institution suddenly become law just because they are said to come from a higher being who doesn't directly communicate with his subjects, but uses a host of interpreters who, by convenient coincidence, are also those who hold power in the institution.

It's high time people stopped listening to them… But I'm convinced the Catholic church will escape the scandal, yet again, unscathed. Established power dies hard.

More information about the case can be found on the website of the Irish Child Abuse Commission

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Cafe negative-lookbehind-assertion?

Posted by Ade on Monday, May 18th, 2009 at 0:48 AM
use restaurant::parc::cafe;
use restaurant::parc::cafe;

Right. Let's start the renewed blogging with a small pseudo-psycho-test. These seem to be all the rage on certain unmentioned social networking sites.

Look at the picture attached to this post. Which reaction is it most likely to produce in your brain?
  1. Ooh, a café. I think I'll go have a cuppa.
  2. That certainly is a large amount of punctuation
  3. Hold on a sec, this regex will never work.

If you chose number 3, I don't have to explain anything. If you didn't, you wouldn't understand even if I did. If you say “What? There's no negative lookbehind assertion in this regex”, you'd be absolutely right, of course.

One comment:

magenta said on Monday, May 25th, 2009 at 4:34 PM:

4. This reminds me of the \:///*///\_Expo.02_//\\*_*\.

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New Blog engine

Posted by Ade on Monday, May 18th, 2009 at 0:28 AM

Right - after a long break, it's time to get this blag back up.

One of the reasons why there was a long silence is that I was never quite happy with the way the various blog engines handled things, so I decided to write my own one instead. This took considerably longer than I planned, but hey… here it is.

So, you can expect more things I've seen, heard, smelled, eaten or rode my bike over… eh… past.

One comment:

magenta said on Monday, May 25th, 2009 at 8:21 AM:

test, test, 1, 2, 3… Yep, it's working now. ;)

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