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Friday
Oct122007

Remove Certificate From Nokia E61

Somehow, people are directed to my website by queries which contain the following key-words; 'remove', 'certificate', and 'e61'. So, here's a quick certificate uninstall guide:

Menu -> Tools -> Settings -> Security Settings -> Certif. management -> Scroll down to the certificate you wish to delete -> Options -> Delete -> Confirm Delete -> Yes.

It's not that hard :) (the 'guide' is written for the e61i, but I doubt if it's much different on the e61)

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Oct102007

ISP's Blocking Childporn on the Internet

UPC, one of the bigger ISP's in the Netherlands, will start will the filtering of child pornography on the Internet. This resulted in a (public) debate about the how and why, etc. First of all, I surf the web (intensively) since the dawn of the Internets :) . And with surfing I don't mean the newspapers, and other general information most people search for and read. No, I mean the dark and far corners of the Internet, where every page you enter might be the last you visit (before you may have to reinstall your PC because of all the faul spyware and virusses you may attract). Searching for the leaked video's of Pamela Anderson and Tommy Lee Jones in the late nineties, and searching for warez, cracks, hacks, virus generators, and passwords for XXX-rated websites. During my 'quests' I've seen a lot. A lot more than the normal Internet user may ever see in his whole life. But during those 'quests' for certain content, I have never ever found one piece of child pornography. I did however stumble across a picture on a dutch forum (in the old days). This was the result of a vendetta between a forum user and the forum owners. The particular user started to post those images, which were removed almost immediately, and the user reported to the proper authorities and banned for life. This is something you can't prevent by filtering websites. It just results into Denail of Service attacks. Second. The filtering (at this moment) only concerns webtraffic (http), so the childporn might still be received through MSN, P2P networks (KaZaa, eDonkey, etc.), IRC, Newsservers, e-mail, etc. Third. Who decides what the to-be-filtered list may contain? Is this a private organization? The government, a judge? What are the criteria? A one time posting/sighting? Who decides what websites we can view and which websites we can't? Fourth. There a reasonably good services available (NetNanny, Cybersitter, etc.) who offer their service in filtering Internet content, which goes beyond the normal http filtering. Some of them also filter IRC, MSN etc. The downside is that you need to sign up, and PAY for the service. PAYING for something online is not something we (the Dutch) like to avoid. An alternative is to get an ISP, who offers this as a service (content filtering). There are a couple of those around. Mostly with a religious background. The only thing I see, is that the filter can easily be bypassed with a limited amount of knowledge on how the Internet works (proxies anyone??), and that it only 'protects' a very small piece of the Internet. Namely the WWW (normal webbrowser traffic). This still leaves a gap (with the size of the grand canyon) for the other Internet applications like IRC, MSN, AIM, etc. Which means that YOU (as a parent) still need to supervise/monitor the chatsessions from your kids on the Internet if you want them to be safe. The real perverts still know how to get their hands on it. This doesn't limit them in any way. This doesn't solve the problem, it only hides it from the public eye. The problem of pedophilia still exists. It just creates another way for the government to control what we are allowed to access on the Internet. The parents should take responsibility and teach their children what's good and bad on the Internet (and in real life off course). One shouldn't need a government (or a private organization) to make that decision for you...Got something to do with freedom of choice, freedom of speech, dictatorship, 1984, China, etc.

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Oct092007

Building Resistance

Monday
Oct082007

Change Nokia E61i Default Browser

A friend suggested the Opera Mini browser (v4 beta2) as a browser on my Nokia E61i. So I downloaded it and installed it. Great looking browser which renders some sites much better than the normal included browser (and it's still absolutely free!!). My online banking site seems to work a bit better anyway. One thing I haven't figured out is how to set the Opera Mini browser as the default browser. If I open a link in an e-mail it opens the original browser....

Click to read more ...

Monday
Oct082007

Google Search Results

By default, the Google search page is displayed in the language from the country you're in. You can change this in the 'preferences' on the Google page. The actual text near the language preference is:

Display Google tips and messages in: [<LANGUAGE>]

According to me that's only interface related and (at most) tips/local event related (like Queen's Day etc.). But it also influences the search results. Just try it by switching to several different languages.

Shouldn't search results be the same?

Click to read more ...

Sunday
Oct072007

Millstone 'Drama'

OK... I just finished my bottle of Millstone, Dutch Single Malt Whisky. A damn shame if I may say so (to finish it that soon, that is). My bottle characteristics are were;

Bottle number: 415 Cask number: 193.402.404 Date of distilation: 14-1-2002 Bottling date: 22-2-2007 Finishing date: today :(
Time to find me another bottle somewhere.

Click to read more ...

Sunday
Oct072007

Local Sunset

This week is gonna have lot's of these sunsets (if you're willing to belief the weather reports).

Sunset in Papendrecht

More on my Flickr page

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Tuesday
Oct022007

Dream Lens

[brainwave] Photo lenses come is different formats, shapes, specs, and prices. Higher prices means (on average) better lenses. And with better I mean better for special purposes. A US$6000.00 lens must have some special specs to make up for that huge price. These lenses are mostly primes b.t.w.. On average lenses start at 10mm and the mainstream ones go 500mm. Aperture goes somewhere between f/1.4 and f/6 (lower means more light). What if there was a 10-800mm f/1.8 VR/OS USM/HSM lens with the optical specs of a 800mm prime. I wonder; what would that cost, weight, and be the size of that monster.... I guess that it might be technically possible. I do doubt if it's financially feasible..... :) [/brainwave]

Click to read more ...

Monday
Oct012007

The Future of Gaming

Anyone who keeps (a bit) up with the world of computer gaming knows about the release about the new XBox360 game Halo3. Yet another game which appears on my list to buy if, and when, I get a XBox360 Elite. Other titles on the list are BioShock, and Gears of War. But after seeing this video, I wonder..... should I buy the game and help in creating the apocalypse halocast....

At least we end up with the greatest game of all time :)

Click to read more ...

Sunday
Sep302007

TV Season Has Started

It was a (relative) cold and wet summer here in the Netherlands. Chances are that autumn and winter will be equally depressing. Thankfully, my favorite TV series have started in the US, so not everything is bad. Both House M.D., and Stargate Atlantis started this week. House was great (as usual), and Stargate.... well they ended last season with a 'to be continued', and they started with a 'to be continued' episode :-( .

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