Small Mosaic


Categories:

books
career
codinghorrors
comics
events
geekstuff
justdont
languages
languages/bash
linkshot
magazines
meta
misctech
movies
nottech
operatingsystems
operatingsystems/linux
operatingsystems/linux/debian
operatingsystems/solaris
paranoidadmin
perl
python
ruby
security
security/apache
security/tools
serversmells
sites
specifications
sysadmin
tools
tools/commandline
tools/firefox
tools/gui
tools/network
tools/online
tools/online/greasemonkey
unixdaemon

Archives:

September 20084
August 200812
July 20089
April 20084
March 20081
February 20081
January 200815
August 20072
June 20079
May 20076
April 20078
March 200731
February 20073
January 200721
December 20061
November 20064
October 20066
September 200632
August 200617
July 200614
June 20069
May 200613
March 200611
February 200616
January 200611
December 20051
November 20056
October 200519
September 200525
August 200516
July 200516
June 200513
May 20052
April 200519
March 200531
February 200520
January 200531
December 200421
November 200430
October 200432
September 200418
August 20047
July 200414
June 20045

Fri, 25 Mar 2005

Externally Edit Your Command Line
Most people know you can change the readline settings to either vi or emacs style key-bindings, but far less people know you can actually open the current, or a previous, command line in your editor of choice using 'fc'.

If you type 'fc' on the command line then the previous command will be open in the defined editor; if you want to select a further back command you can use 'fc pattern'. When editing is complete the edited commands are echoed and executed.

The actual editor to be opened can be defined in a number of ways, you can pass the '-e' option to 'fc' to set the editor; but you don't want to do this. If no '-e' is given, the value of the FCEDIT variable is used, and the value of EDITOR if FCEDIT is not set. If neither variable is set, vi is used (which is fine by me :)).

This isn't functionality you'll use on a daily basis, occasionally however it makes some very awkward command line tweaks a lot easier. For full details see "man bash", the "SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS" section.

Like this post? - Digg Me! | Add to del.icio.us! | reddit this!

Posted: 2005/03/25 11:03 | /tools/commandline | Permanent link to this entry | This entry + same date


Mind Hacks at Foyles
Mind Hacks is an O'Reilly book that examines specific operations of the brain and presents simple experiments (do try this at home :)) to illustrate how it works and how, occasionally, you can fool it.

O'Reilly and Foyles held a join event in the Foyles gallery in London where they had both of the books main authors do a short introduction to the topic and explain what the book was about. While it started off a little nervous and seemly unprepared they soon hit their pace and had the audience roped in and laughing in all the right places; although the word leopard was seriously over-used.

The talk itself was quite interesting (one of their examples was covered in Malcolm Gladwells Blink which was only recently released.) and the gallery itself was packed, barely any standing room was left and people were in among the stacks watching from the back. All-in-all it was a good night. All I need to do now is buy the book.

Like this post? - Digg Me! | Add to del.icio.us! | reddit this!

Posted: 2005/03/25 10:49 | /events | Permanent link to this entry | This entry + same date


GLLUG March 2005 -- The Slides
There were three talks at the March GLLUG and I can now happily link to slides from two of them. Bruce Richardson's Linux HA and Martin Michlmayr's Quality Issues in Free Software projects.

Hopefully these will soon be linked to on the GLLUG website. The first talk of the day, by Pete Ryland, involved a live demo and no slides so there isn't really anything to link to on that one; until we get the audio recordings sorted anyway.

Like this post? - Digg Me! | Add to del.icio.us! | reddit this!

Posted: 2005/03/25 10:40 | /events | Permanent link to this entry | This entry + same date


F-Secure Blacklight Windows Rootkit Detector Beta
F-Secure has released a blacklight beta download that is available in both GUI and command-line versions. The full Blacklight details are now online and after a quick play it seems pretty nifty, and most importantly, has a command-line version for automated deployment and scanning. One to watch when it goes gold.

Like this post? - Digg Me! | Add to del.icio.us! | reddit this!

Posted: 2005/03/25 10:31 | /security | Permanent link to this entry | This entry + same date


jMemorize Flash Cards; Not Human Readable
Update: I was completely wrong about the cards being binary. Please see my jMemorize retraction for details.

I saw a piece on jMemorize over at unixreview and decided to have a little play. Quick download, runs from the Jar, OK GUI. Not bad on a cursory glance.

I then built a small set of cards as a sample and had a play. Finishing off I saved the card stack and decided to have a look at the file it created, I'd like to generate my flash-cards from existing docs I have so an easy to write format would be excellent. Except jMemorize saves its documents as a binary format! I'm assuming that it's just serialising the stack object out, which means I have no chance of ever exporting any effort I put in or mass generating decks.

Like this post? - Digg Me! | Add to del.icio.us! | reddit this!

Posted: 2005/03/25 10:25 | /tools/gui | Permanent link to this entry | This entry + same date


books career codinghorrors events geekstuff justdont languages/bash linkshot magazines meta misctech movies nottech operatingsystems/linux operatingsystems/linux/debian operatingsystems/solaris perl python ruby security security/apache security/tools serversmells sites specifications sysadmin tools/commandline tools/firefox tools/gui tools/network tools/online tools/online/greasemonkey unixdaemon

Copyright © 2000-2005 Dean Wilson XML feed logo