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Monday, April 24, 2006

A daytime post... well I never!
(posted at 04:27PM BST)

It isn't very often that I post here during the day as I tend to do most of my important thinking and wibbling late at night; don't know why but I just get more done when the sun has gone down and I don't have those lovely (albeit annoying) people called 'customers' calling me every so often.

The DSPAM cluster is working wonderfully well - most customers should now be aware of it but I have had a few calls already asking why they haven't been receiving any mail over the weekend (apparently, they know if their mail isn't working if they haven't received any over the weekend - 99.9% of it is usually spam).

On the other hand, the new DNS 'admin' at my ex-employer obviously has yet to read and actually comprehend RFC821/RFC1035.

I'm going to be in London on May 12th to do some work on arkanoid.spilsby.net and some other co-located servers belonging to one of my customers; the only problem being that the entire trip is having to be planned with military precision (Interesting Thought: Can you buy 802.11-enabled watches that can NTP sync ?) but most of the planning is done, I just need the day to go as planned. ... which is easier said than done!

Saturday, April 8, 2006

I'm not asleep...
(posted at 09:58PM BST)

An interesting few weeks, to say the least!

After enjoying some quality time in Ireland, I'm now back in the 'seat' as it were and as of yesterday, spilsby.net's new mailserver platform has been rolled out to my production servers.

The first impressions are good; average delivery times have dropped from 6 seconds to just under 3 seconds (which includes virus scanning and spam filtering during the SMTP transport stage; the old system didn't do any of this and if any customers are reading this, virus/spam stuff is optional).

The changeover took less than 25 minutes, throughout which, no mail was delayed for any longer than 5 minutes and through the use of distributed filtering logic, each MTA will dynamically change its' behaviour based on what happens to the any of the others - i.e. if a specific IP starts flooding one of the MTAs with spurious SMTP connections, it will earn itself a 24-hour block and that will replicate to the others within a matter of seconds.

I also have a few surprises for those customers who subscribe to my backup MX service... but those surprises will have to wait until the official service announcement goes out!

As a sidenote, it is quite intriguing to see a lot of hits from a certain former employer (regular readers will know who I mean when I say 'Muppet Central') and I didn't realize that my journal was still read quite avidly there - one would have thought that all of my netblocks would have gone the way of my old Demon Super Showroom netblock and been shoved in their border firewall as 'persona non gratia'.

I owe a lot to them... perhaps more than they will ever know and certainly more than I will ever let on because if certain events hadn't unfolded in October 2003 like they did, I would probably still be there and the events which have taken place since then would never have happened and I wouldn't be in the absolutely heavenly position that I am in now.

Life is strange like that, innit ?

 
slashdot

'ArcaneDoor' Cyberspies Hacked Cisco Firewalls To Access Government Networks

Taser Company Axon Is Selling AI That Turns Body Cam Audio Into Police Reports

Meta Opens Quest Operating System To Third-Party Device Makers

Updating California's Grid For EVs May Cost Up To $20 Billion

Lenovo First To Implement LPCAMM2 in Laptop

HashiCorp Reportedly Being Acquired By IBM [UPDATE]

Adobe's Impressive AI Upscaling Project Makes Blurry Videos Look HD

Google-Backed Glance Pilots Android Lockscreen Platform in US

Steam Closes Early Access Playtime Loophole

Apple Releases OpenELM: Small, Open Source AI Models Designed To Run On-device

Framework Won't Be Just a Laptop Company Anymore

'The Man Who Killed Google Search'

Windows 11 Now Comes With Its Own Adware

Diamond Market Shows Serious Cracks From Man-Made Stones

Biden Signs TikTok 'Divest or Ban' Bill Into Law

the register

Australia’s spies and cops want ‘accountable encryption’ - aka backdooring encryption

Governments issue alerts after 'sophisticated' state-backed actor found exploiting flaws in Cisco security boxes

With Run:ai acquisition, Nvidia aims to manage your AI kubes

Apple releases OpenELM, a slightly more accurate LLM

Musk moves Tesla's goalposts, investors happily move shares higher

Shouldn't Teams, Zoom, Slack all interoperate securely for the Feds? Wyden is asking

Now all Windows 11 users are getting adverts to 'make the Start menu great again'

Lenovo and Micron first to implement LPCAMM2 in laptop

Microsoft cannot keep its own security in order, so what hope for its add-ons customers?

US Chamber of Commerce to sue FTC for banning noncompetes in most jobs

Another Boeing whistleblower comes forward – with receipts

Management company settles for $18.4M after nuclear weapons plant staff fudged their timesheets

Google cools on cookie phase-out while regulators chew on plans

US charges Iranians with cyber snooping on government, companies

Oracle changes its tune with HQ move to Music City

Tesla misses the mark on all fronts in quarter of chaos

Euro cloud group blasts Broadcom over VMware licensing maneuvers

European Parliament votes to screw repair rights in consumer toolkits

Law prof predicts generative AI will die at the hands of watchdogs

Strong electric car sales expected for 2024, but charging grid needs work

Rapidus US chief says AI chip crunch, supply chain paranoia make for an ideal growth climate

Graph databases speaking the same language after ISO gives GQL the nod

If Britain is so bothered by China, why do these .gov.uk sites use Chinese ad brokers?

Japanese and Singaporean devs battle over gamified crowdsourced telco maintenance app

China's mega-telcos are spending billions on AI servers

Senate passes law forcing ByteDance to sell off TikTok – or face a US ban

US government reportedly ponders crimping China's use of RISC-V

White House tweaks HIPAA to shield medical files of those seeking reproductive care

Intel Foundry ticks another box in quest to fab mil-spec chips for US DoD

Using its own sums, AMD claims it's helping save Earth with Epyc server chiplets

Waymo robotaxi drives down wrong side of street after being alarmed by unicyclists

Banned Nvidia GPUs sneak into sanction-busting Chinese servers

Miles of optical fiber crafted aboard ISS marks manufacturing first

Seagate joins the HDD price hike party, blames AI for spike in demand

SpaceX workplace injury rates are rocketing

Miracle-WM tiling window manager for Mir hits 0.2.0

GM shared our driving data with insurers without consent, lawsuit claims

iPhone sales dive 19.1% in China as Huawei comeback hits Apple in the high end

Microsoft shrinks AI down to pocket size with Phi-3 Mini

Digital Realty wants to turn Irish datacenters into grid-stabilizing power jugglers

Microsoft really does not want Windows 11 running on ancient PCs

SAP cloud swells its topline, but profits slide

Mandiant: Orgs are detecting cybercriminals faster than ever

UnitedHealth admits IT security breach could 'cover substantial proportion of people in America'

Voyager 1 regains sanity after engineers patch around problematic memory

Leicester streetlights take ransomware attack personally, shine on 24/7

Silicon Valley roundabout has drivers in a spin

Don't rent out that container ship yet: CIOs and biz buyers view AI PCs with some caution

Over a million Neighbourhood Watch members exposed through web app bug

Meta comms chief handed six-year Russian prison sentence for 'justifying terrorism'

 

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