I do hope the people over at Parallels sack the current developers working at ModernGigabyte. ModernBill was good about three years ago. Now though, its full of bugs and half baked ideas.
Also, I smell an IPO. Parallels has been on a buying spree of late, boasting its product offerings.
Something else must have happened to cause the Worldwide outage. Maybe Pakistan asked YouTube to implement some kind of blocking their end but accidentally setup a wildcard *.*.*.* :p
Pakistan's ISPs blocking access would have had no affect on routing of, say, UK Internet users to America.
I did wonder though why YouTube wasn't working, when on Sunday I was trying to find a clip of the tackle on Arsenal's striker Eduardo.
I shall be buying some of these when I purchase my house later in the year, they will go nicely in the garden. I spent many hours of my childhood on a Game Boy and this is a marvelous idea.
It looks like a pretty good laptop. I may consider buying one to replace my aging Fujitsu Siemens laptop.
If like me, you want something mobile when working away from home, but at the same time play the odd hour on a few games, then it seems like a good compromise.
But if they're bringing a model out with a high def drive, I may just wait for that.
Re: "Anaglogue TV's" - every TV I've ever bought has a scart socket. Freeview box = £30 and connects to a scart socket. I don't understand why people don't have either Sky or Virgin. Its far superior to anything Freeview can offer. You can get the whole lot (landline, mobile, broadband and TV for £40 /month. Bargain.
Mobile e-mail is pants. I receive 300 legitimate e-mails a day, of various natures. How can a phone deal with that load? It can't, because the network speeds are still pants virtually everywhere.
If you're able to use mobile e-mail then you don't need it, because what you're receiving is frivolous tosh.
"I challenge ANYONE to find useable parking in central London for that amount or under"
OK, so I didn't park in central London yesterday, but I did park in Stratford, an equally busy, if not foreign(er) part of London and it was £5.50 for four hours.
It's about time we had such devices introduced. The days of having to carry around cash to make small transactions should be numbered. All we need now is to convert every car park in the land to take these payments and we'll never need cash again.
I completely agree. There should have been no other changes, other than forcing everyone to use 3D Secure. But our existing ProtX integrations were completely broken by other changes, which were NOT communicated by ProtX, no information at all was provided about these changes. Their document states a load of stuff as "optional", but in the end it is actually required!
Also, they were not purchased by SAGA, it was Sage - Unless you're being sarcastic and I'm being pedantic by refusing to accept the sarcasm and correcting you :p
Today's outage is just half of the issue with ProtX.
Over the past two months we've tried contacting ProtX to learn about how their new payment system is going to work with all the "3D Secure" stuff Maestro are rolling out along with changes ProtX themselves are making to their recurring billing system (whereby a client signs up and we bill them monthly, quarterly etc without the client re-entering card details), but no one at ProtX seems to know what actually is changing.
ProtX is cheap compared to alternatives, namely the likes of WorldPay who charge an awful lot in transaction fees, but with 10,000 businesses using their system, ProtX need to get their act together. If they need to employ more qualified staff then for god sake do so, theres nothing worst than a company sticking their head in the sand ignoring the clients and they shouldn't be afraid to increase prices if we see real results. The next cheapest payment gateway we could use would be almost five times more than we currently pay ProtX.
James Smith
The spam list controllers seem to think they are above the law →#
RBL's can work, if the controllers are not overzealous.
Anyone involved in any small, medium or large ISP / Web Host will have had, at some point, a bad experience with one of the many RBL's. SORBS and SpamHaus in my experience are the worst offenders. SORBS even want money to be removed, how is that any different to the extortion methods a DoS gang would use?
The problem is they think they are above the law. They think the fight against spam is their god given right and who cares if legitimate mail is rejected, who cares if businesses are disrupted, loosing them money.
One of our clients has wrongly been listed as a ROSKO on SpamHaus and is in the process of seeking legal advice on taking action against SpamHaus, because SpamHaus refuse to listen to any arguments regarding the incorrect listing.
There’s a few precedents to legal action against SpamHaus, but they simply ignore the judgments and the fines imposed on them, as many of these judgements were outside of the UK.
38 posts • joined Monday 9th July 2007 11:21 GMT
James Smith
24GB? → #
Posted Monday 2nd February 2009 11:02 GMT
In Germany announces ITER fusion-reactor supercomputer
Hmmmm. 24GB per CPU or 24GB for the entire system? Doesn't sound right if its the entire system.
Our bog standard web hosting nodes have 16GB RAM each.
James Smith
Oi! → #
Posted Wednesday 30th July 2008 21:02 GMT
In Global Wii sales nearing 30m
Where's the conversion to £ for the lazy?
James Smith
Too many scratched disks → #
Posted Friday 25th July 2008 14:24 GMT
In Lovefilm 1, BitTorrent/iTunes/retail 0
I've used this service for a while and I can see the benefit - But, we had too many scratched disks causing films to freeze or not play at all.
People need to learn to look after things, it was immensely annoying, cancelled it in the end.
James Smith
Height Booster → #
Posted Friday 4th July 2008 03:22 GMT
In Chinese cops opt for Segways
We all know Chinese people are short, so the real reason for using Segways is to increase their height.
James Smith
PayPal is expensive and cumbersome → #
Posted Sunday 1st June 2008 04:00 GMT
In Metadata ruins Google's anonymous eBay Australia protest
For merchants, PayPal is very expensive when compared to alternatives. Its also very cumbersome to use, IMO.
James Smith
I don't see it ... → #
Posted Tuesday 22nd April 2008 14:35 GMT
In UK Office of Government Commerce cracks one off
Someone at El Reg must be desperate, because I can't see it.
James Smith
Yesterday's parts with today's miniaturisation → #
Posted Friday 4th April 2008 11:05 GMT
In Rock rolls out 12in, 1kg sub-notebook
*yawn*.
It has a parallel HDD? I've pretty much forgotten those things existed!
James Smith
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAHAHAHAHA → #
Posted Tuesday 1st April 2008 13:43 GMT
In Comcast acquires BitTorrent for $53bn
Chuckle Chuckle.
James Smith
Pity, because its rubbish → #
Posted Wednesday 26th March 2008 19:55 GMT
In Parallels pads hosting play with ModernGigabyte buy
I do hope the people over at Parallels sack the current developers working at ModernGigabyte. ModernBill was good about three years ago. Now though, its full of bugs and half baked ideas.
Also, I smell an IPO. Parallels has been on a buying spree of late, boasting its product offerings.
James Smith
Re: what about AMD? → #
Posted Wednesday 26th March 2008 14:32 GMT
In Intel slims low-power Xeon chips to 45nm
Gone with the wind they be.
Intel have well and truly outpaced AMD in recent years, certainly in the low to mid end server business.
Although I would like to see direct comparisons.
James Smith
Yummy → #
Posted Tuesday 18th March 2008 22:50 GMT
In Dell quads up single-socket rockets
Lots `o` memory.
However, the problem these days is not CPU power or memory capacity, its disk I/O.
James Smith
@ By P Henry → #
Posted Friday 14th March 2008 16:50 GMT
In Telehouse plans £80m London data centre expansion
I had two racks worth of kit in Telehouse East in Docklands for over two years with no loss of power.
@ Anonymous Coward: Out of the DC's my company has equipment in, Telehouse is by far the best on security.
The Spooks style tubes alone make it uber.
James Smith
They won't get it ... → #
Posted Wednesday 5th March 2008 14:00 GMT
In RIM out to patent BlackBerry slider
As has been mentioned above, HTC devices use this very concept, to great affect.
My branded Orange SPV M3100 (HTC TyTn I believe) uses this very system.
James Smith
Urm ... → #
Posted Monday 25th February 2008 11:59 GMT
In Pakistan blocks YouTube
Something else must have happened to cause the Worldwide outage. Maybe Pakistan asked YouTube to implement some kind of blocking their end but accidentally setup a wildcard *.*.*.* :p
Pakistan's ISPs blocking access would have had no affect on routing of, say, UK Internet users to America.
I did wonder though why YouTube wasn't working, when on Sunday I was trying to find a clip of the tackle on Arsenal's striker Eduardo.
James Smith
FreeBSD → #
Posted Thursday 14th February 2008 15:43 GMT
In Major Linux security glitch lets hackers in at Claranet
FreeBSD for the win.
Linux is the ghey.
James Smith
@ Anonymous Coward → #
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 20:28 GMT
In Pave your patio with... er, Game Boys
Sounds like a good idea.
James Smith
WOW! → #
Posted Monday 11th February 2008 15:47 GMT
In Pave your patio with... er, Game Boys
I shall be buying some of these when I purchase my house later in the year, they will go nicely in the garden. I spent many hours of my childhood on a Game Boy and this is a marvelous idea.
James Smith
Don't leave it until the last minute! → #
Posted Thursday 31st January 2008 15:07 GMT
In Reg readers bring down HMRC website
Its simple, don't leave it until the last minute - It only takes 15 minutes and then its done.
James Smith
Bunny hopped by the net → #
Posted Monday 28th January 2008 15:01 GMT
In Germany flicks off-switch on DAB
I listen to the radio in the car or in the office.
In the office, I'll stream the station over the net ...
In the car, standard FM is good enough.
James Smith
Looks good → #
Posted Wednesday 23rd January 2008 14:21 GMT
In Dell XPS M1330 laptop
It looks like a pretty good laptop. I may consider buying one to replace my aging Fujitsu Siemens laptop.
If like me, you want something mobile when working away from home, but at the same time play the odd hour on a few games, then it seems like a good compromise.
But if they're bringing a model out with a high def drive, I may just wait for that.
James Smith
Oh Goody → #
Posted Tuesday 22nd January 2008 13:33 GMT
In Star Trek XI teaser trailer beams onto web
Nothing quite like a good star trek movie :)
I shall be dragging the missus along to watch this one. Revenge time, I was forced to endure Pride and Prejudice.
James Smith
Storage is a bit weak → #
Posted Saturday 19th January 2008 01:32 GMT
In Rackable kicks Xeon 7000 chips into fresh, beefy server
With 1TB SATA disks on the market, surely the unit can support those?
James Smith
Riiiiiiiight → #
Posted Thursday 3rd January 2008 15:46 GMT
In USB 'compact cassette' promises 1980s nostalgia, home taping
64MB?
Piss off.
James Smith
So you can hear → #
Posted Thursday 3rd January 2008 14:21 GMT
In Mobile phone users should drive faster says prof
If I'm using a bluetooth headset while driving I will usually slow down, if on a motorway, to properly hear the other person.
There's an awful lot of noise while driving on the motorway and you'll struggle to hear otherwise.
James Smith
I'll have it → #
Posted Monday 3rd December 2007 13:32 GMT
In Laptop power cranks up a gear
I sit at a desk all day and its not good on the waist line.
I'll happily use one of these a few hours a day!
James Smith
Without ... → #
Posted Tuesday 20th November 2007 19:04 GMT
In DNS security improves as firms tool up to tackle spam
Without recursion, no one would be able to resolve anything.
James Smith
Coma → #
Posted Wednesday 14th November 2007 13:55 GMT
In Dutch teen swipes furniture from virtual hotel
I laughed myself into a coma after writing this.
James Smith
What do they do with it? → #
Posted Monday 29th October 2007 16:46 GMT
In Barracuda skydroid to make comeback?
It does worry me somewhat the amount of money continental Europe spends on their armies. Because they dont do anything with them.
If they sent some stuff over to Afghanistan and actually did something that would be nice.
James Smith
Rubbish → #
Posted Wednesday 17th October 2007 09:37 GMT
In Digital Switchover: town to lose BBC 2 tomorrow
Whats all this rubbish about Sky and poor signals? I've had it for seven years in a built up urban area with no problems.
James Smith
You don't need to change your TV → #
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 18:57 GMT
In Digital Switchover: town to lose BBC 2 tomorrow
Some people are missing something here.
You don't need to change your TV, just get a set top box and connect it to your scart socket.
James Smith
Re: Sweden → #
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 14:58 GMT
In Digital Switchover: town to lose BBC 2 tomorrow
Population of Sweden: 9,142,817
Population of Britain: 60,587,300
Go figure.
Re: "Anaglogue TV's" - every TV I've ever bought has a scart socket. Freeview box = £30 and connects to a scart socket. I don't understand why people don't have either Sky or Virgin. Its far superior to anything Freeview can offer. You can get the whole lot (landline, mobile, broadband and TV for £40 /month. Bargain.
James Smith
It's Pants → #
Posted Thursday 13th September 2007 19:29 GMT
In You bought into mobile email - what have you got to show for it?
Mobile e-mail is pants. I receive 300 legitimate e-mails a day, of various natures. How can a phone deal with that load? It can't, because the network speeds are still pants virtually everywhere.
If you're able to use mobile e-mail then you don't need it, because what you're receiving is frivolous tosh.
James Smith
Re: Great idea, but limited... → #
Posted Wednesday 12th September 2007 11:41 GMT
In Oyster card evolves into OnePulse
"I challenge ANYONE to find useable parking in central London for that amount or under"
OK, so I didn't park in central London yesterday, but I did park in Stratford, an equally busy, if not foreign(er) part of London and it was £5.50 for four hours.
James Smith
I've applied → #
Posted Tuesday 11th September 2007 12:05 GMT
In Oyster card evolves into OnePulse
It's about time we had such devices introduced. The days of having to carry around cash to make small transactions should be numbered. All we need now is to convert every car park in the land to take these payments and we'll never need cash again.
James Smith
Whats he on about → #
Posted Friday 31st August 2007 15:35 GMT
In Cops seek 179mph net vid biker
Whats the yank on about? Here in glorious Britain we've had MPH since the dawn of time. No silly KPH here.
James Smith
Re: Still problems, 36 hours later... → #
Posted Thursday 2nd August 2007 20:32 GMT
In UK payment service outage leaves users fuming
I completely agree. There should have been no other changes, other than forcing everyone to use 3D Secure. But our existing ProtX integrations were completely broken by other changes, which were NOT communicated by ProtX, no information at all was provided about these changes. Their document states a load of stuff as "optional", but in the end it is actually required!
Also, they were not purchased by SAGA, it was Sage - Unless you're being sarcastic and I'm being pedantic by refusing to accept the sarcasm and correcting you :p
James Smith
Just the half of it → #
Posted Wednesday 1st August 2007 20:25 GMT
In UK payment service outage leaves users fuming
Today's outage is just half of the issue with ProtX.
Over the past two months we've tried contacting ProtX to learn about how their new payment system is going to work with all the "3D Secure" stuff Maestro are rolling out along with changes ProtX themselves are making to their recurring billing system (whereby a client signs up and we bill them monthly, quarterly etc without the client re-entering card details), but no one at ProtX seems to know what actually is changing.
ProtX is cheap compared to alternatives, namely the likes of WorldPay who charge an awful lot in transaction fees, but with 10,000 businesses using their system, ProtX need to get their act together. If they need to employ more qualified staff then for god sake do so, theres nothing worst than a company sticking their head in the sand ignoring the clients and they shouldn't be afraid to increase prices if we see real results. The next cheapest payment gateway we could use would be almost five times more than we currently pay ProtX.
James Smith
The spam list controllers seem to think they are above the law → #
Posted Monday 9th July 2007 11:43 GMT
In Time to blacklist blacklists
RBL's can work, if the controllers are not overzealous.
Anyone involved in any small, medium or large ISP / Web Host will have had, at some point, a bad experience with one of the many RBL's. SORBS and SpamHaus in my experience are the worst offenders. SORBS even want money to be removed, how is that any different to the extortion methods a DoS gang would use?
The problem is they think they are above the law. They think the fight against spam is their god given right and who cares if legitimate mail is rejected, who cares if businesses are disrupted, loosing them money.
One of our clients has wrongly been listed as a ROSKO on SpamHaus and is in the process of seeking legal advice on taking action against SpamHaus, because SpamHaus refuse to listen to any arguments regarding the incorrect listing.
There’s a few precedents to legal action against SpamHaus, but they simply ignore the judgments and the fines imposed on them, as many of these judgements were outside of the UK.