I’ve upgraded my MT to version 2.65 now which won’t make that much difference to me, but will make the installation a bit more secure. I’d like to find out how to change the $MTVersion tag so that I can change this slightly, mainly so that hackers searching for a vulnerability in a particular version will not get my site. However I can’t find (at a quick glance) where this data is stored.
Update Cheers Neil. The daft thing is that I did a search on all files and it couldn’t find that string.
The BBC reports that thousands of shoppers flock for sales bargains, and I think they were all trying to get into John Lewis’s and Sainsburys at Cheadle. The carpark was *full* – I don’t think there was a single space available and as a result the queue to get off the Wilmslow bypass was horrendous and took about 20-30 minutes. We stopped off at TGI-Fridays, which was late opening due to technical difficulties, walked over to the two shops and got some Tesco vouchers to subsidise the meal at TGI’s. Then popped back to Handforth and we got a Kingsize duvet for me (as my old one wasn’t pocketed or feathered and kept clumping up at the bottom of the bed) from Allders. Fortunately they still had some left although the pile that was there earlier in the day was drastically reduced. I reckon the shops made a massive turnover yesterday (dread to think what it was like on Boxing day). Interestingly Allders had a sign up saying they were not doing returns and that this did not affect our statutory rights…..not quite convinced that is right!
After rebuilding the server at home, I had loads of unread, spam email in one of my pop mailboxes and didn’t really want to download and delete them with the mail client.POP3 Internet Mail Retriever came to the rescue by selecting all messages and deleting all.
Got my dad hooked on Geocaching yesterday when we all went out on a walk to a travelbug and then went on to a nearby cache which had it’s co-ordinates hidden in the first cache. Dad was the first person to find both these cache’s and I thinked he’s hooked. When we got home I logged the two finds and also tried to purchase some travelbug dogtags of my own but the server which takes the money was “unavailable – please try later”. So I’m still waiting to place the order.
Our church minister used this at the beginning of his sermon last week. It was very funny. If anyone would like to hear the full sermon then drop me a note and I’ll see if I can convert it into mp3 format.
From Spy magazine, comes a rigorous statistical investigation into the question of Santa’s existence. Be forewarned: you may not like our conclusions…
We begin our investigation by assuming that Santa Claus really does exist. Now, if you’ve learned anything about human nature, you know that it’s highly unlikely that a normal man would choose, for no particular reason, to devote his life to making toys and delivering them to boys and girls the world over. But this is an objective inquiry, and questions of motivation aren’t relevant. We want only to know whether such a man could accomplish his mission.
Santa’s first obstacle is that no known species of reindeer can fly. However, scientists estimate that out of the earth’s roughly 2 million species or living organisms, 300,000 or so have yet to be classified. So, even though most of these undiscovered species are insects and germs, we can’t rule out the slight possibility that a species of flying reindeer does, in fact, exist. And that no one besides Santa has ever seen one.
A bigger obstacle for Santa is that there are 2 billion children under the age of 18 in the world. The good news is that he needs to deliver presents only to the Christian children, of whom there are approximately 378 million. Let’s assume that 15 percent of these Christian children have been bad and are thus — like Buddhist, Hindu, Jewish, and Muslim children — ineligible for gift getting. Still at an average rate of 3.5 children per household, Santa has a backbreaking 91.8 million homes to visit on any given Christmas Eve.
Fortunately, Santa has 31 hours of Christmas Eve darkness to visit all these homes if he travels from east to west, thanks to the rotation of the earth. Unfortunately, this still works out to 822.6 visits per second. So, for each Christian household with good children, Santa has just over a thousandth of a second to land, hop out of his sleigh, jump down the chimney, fill the stockings, distribute the rest of the presents under the tree, eat whatever snacks have been left out, get back up the chimney, climb back into his sleigh, take off and fly to the next house.
How fast is Santa moving? Assuming all 91.8 million stops are spread evenly over the earth’s landmass, Santa must travel 0.79 miles per household — a total trip of 72,522,000 miles. (This is a conservative estimate. It doesn’t include trips across oceans, feeding stops for the reindeer, etc.) Given the 31-hour time period, Santa’s sleigh must maintain an average speed of 650 miles per second, or more than 3,000 times the speed of sound. To give you an idea how fast that is, the fastest man-made vehicle ever built, the Ulysses space probe, travels at a relatively poky pace of 27.4 miles per second, and conventional, land-bound reindeer travel at a top speed of 15 miles per hour. But let’s assume that Santa’s flying reindeer are somehow able to reach hypersonic speeds — thanks, say, to the magical spirit of Christmas giving.
Let’s take a closer look at Santa’s vehicle. First of all, assuming a cheapo 2 pounds of presents per child (that’s like one crummy Lego set), the sleigh must still be able to carry a load or 321,300 tons — plus Santa, an overweight man. On land, a reindeer can’t pull more that 300 pounds of freight, and even assuming that flying reindeer could pull ten times that amount, Santa’s massive sleigh has to be drawn by 214,200 beasts. They increase the weight of the overall Santa payload to 353,430 tons (not including the weight of the sleigh itself). This is more than four times the weight of the Queen Elizabeth ocean liner. Imagine: Santa skimming over rooftops in a gargantuan hypersonic aircraft with even less maneuverability than a Big Wheel.
Here’s where things get fun.
Three hundred fifty-three thousand tons of reindeer and presents are going to create an enormous amount of air resistance — especially at 650 miles per second. This air resistance will heat up the reindeer in the same way that spaceships are heated up when they reenter the earth’s atmosphere. According to our calculations, the lead pair of reindeer will absorb 14.3 quintillion joules of energy per second each. This means that they will burst into spectacular, multi-colored flames almost instantaneously, exposing the reindeer behind them. As Santa continues on his mission — leaving defeaning sonic booms in his wake — charred reindeer will constantly be sloughed off. All 214,200 reindeer will be dead within 4.26 thousandths of a second.
As for Santa, he will be subjected to centrifugal forces 17,500.06 times greater than gravity. A 250-pound Santa will be pinned to the back of his sleigh by 4,375,015 pounds of force (after we deduct his weight). This force will kill Santa instantly, crushing his bones, pulverizing his flesh, turning him into pink goo.
In other words, if Santa tries to deliver presents on Christmas Eve to every qualified boy and girl on the face of the earth, he will be liquified.
Our conclusion: if Santa Claus does exist, he’s dead.
Hope you all have a great Christmas day and for those of you travelling today hope you have a safe journey. Enjoy the time with family and remember the real reason we celebrate Christmas
Upgraded the bios of my axim last night to a later version. Had a fright when I tried to restore my data and got an error message “The selected backup file was created from a different type of mobile device” when really what it should have said is “upgrading your bios resets the regional settings. Please reset them back to what they were and retry the restore”.
Orange have details on what to do with spam sms messages including a free number (7726/spam) to forward them onto. They will collate and then forward them onto the Telephone Preference Service to investigate. Now I just wish Vodafone and T-Mobile will do the same thing.
One of our servers suddenly stopped doing its backup properly. When I watch the (scheduled) backup routine running the selection that it backs up is not the selection that is listed in the .bks file. I’m not sure what it *is* backing up as the (full) log file doesn’t tell me the details and the gui interface is not available for me to poke around on when the job is scheduled. Turns out that the @ in front of the backup selection (as per Microsoft’s XP backup article) did the trick. Why I should need one in Windows2000, when it’s not documented anywhere else that I can see, I don’t know. I’m just glad the backups are all working again in time for the Christmas break. Our mail server was also refusing to backup, but this was because there was more data on the disk than would fit on the tape drives. Swine consultants keep backing up their hard disks using ghost or even just an xcopy onto the server and taking it over the tape drive capacity.
No flames telling me to use BackupExec or any other third party software please, unless you are going to give me a cheque to buy the third party software at the same time.