It seems like about twice a month that I receive an email from a friend or client with nothing but a link to a .cz, .ru or other questionable site. So far, every one of these has been a mass email from their account (sent to all their contacts) after their account password has been compromised. My guess is that some malware takes hold in the machine, captures their password the next time they log in to (usually Yahoo) email, and uses an API after that to send out spam with the newly-acquired credentials.
It's time to sell my bike, so rather than keep posting this same information all over the place, I'll list it all here, one time, and link back to it. For Sale is a 2007 Suzuki SV650 (naked, not the 'S' model), with about 14,700 miles on it. I'm asking $3,900. It's a GREAT learner bike; very quick, light weight, and agile. Small enough to learn on, but large enough to be fun (and useful) for a more experienced rider. Fuel injection is a very nice plus.
I've finally committed some small piece of time and mental bandwidth to "solving" the problem of making my (and our clients') web sites more mobile-friendly. For a couple clients, this is a huge issue and we need a solution. Here's a great article on Responsive Web Design, which is my current favorite solution: http://www.alistapart.com/articles/responsive-web-design/
For less than $10, I bought a USB bluetooth dongle for my laptop. Ubuntu recognized it right away as a bluetooth radio and started using it. For a test, I paired my laptop with my Android phone, which was also easy and flawless. What I didn't expect was that immediately after the pairing, a dialog popped up on the laptop telling me about a new network that had been detected. The system automatically uses the Android Internet connection (cell data) without any effort on my part. Sweet! Bottom line.
One of our Droid X phone's had a problem yesterday, where it wouldn't respond to anything. On shutdown/reboot, it got stuck at the red Motorola logo and wouldn't move past it...even after being on the charger for 10 hours. I started looking closely at the phone, and noticed that the buttons along the bottom didn't feel like they were 'clicking' when pressed...they gave no response at all, like they were part of the case instead. I started 'flicking' at the edge of the buttons with my fingernail, and got them to pop back into place.
I'd been using this script to tether Android to Linux via Azilink, but that has stopped working for some reason, so I found another solution, boiled down and re-documented here for posterity:
- Install Connectbot on your phone, connect (via ssh) to your server, and login