A little knowledge is a dangerous thing.

I got two emails today with questions about my CoPilot Waypoint Generators from this guy. I answered one as best as I could, and tried to get him to clarify what he meant in the other. Except both messages bounced. So I looked at his original mail messages. His “From:” address is foo@sbcglobal.com, but he has a “Reply-To:” of foo@earthlink.net. I know a bunch of earthlink people went to sbcglobal a while back – I guess one got sold to the other or something. So he set up a Reply-To that he didn’t need back when he was on earthlink, and then didn’t change it when he changed over. And now he probably wonders why nobody ever replies to his messages.

Did a spam test

I was interested to see what WordPress did when I attempted to post a comment through a spam proxy – I didn’t know if the option under “Options->Discussion” to block posts from open proxys would catch it silently, or if it would be caught by and presented under the menu on “Options->SpamKarma”.

I did a “grep poker /var/log/httpd/access| tail -1” and grabbed the IP. A quick telnet showed that it was running an open http proxy server on port 80. So I set that as my proxy server, fired up Safari and attempted to comment on my last entry. SpamKarma got it and presented a warning to the comment poster that it was doing so, which meant that I could go to “Manage->Comments” and review it and delete it.

Ok, so it’s nice to know that when the spammers finally figure out where to spam my blog comments, SpamKarma will be on the case. It’s interesting to see that it’s not silently deleting spam now, which means that the spammers still have not figured out how to attempt to blog spam me. That’s just a little weird.

Still spam free…

As I wrote over a month ago, in Rants and Revelations » Hit me, spammers, I haven’t had any comment spam from random comment spammers since switching from MovableType to WordPress. So far it falsely accused a couple of legitimate comments as being spam for various reasons, and I’ve had to remove comments from my ex-wife, but I haven’t seen anything that you could count as spam.

I’ve looked at my web server, and I don’t see any hits on wp-comments-post that I couldn’t account for. Still seeing lots of hits on the non-functional MovableType comment cgi, though.

Either the comment spammers haven’t figured out WordPress 1.5 yet, or the option that says “Blacklist comments from open and insecure proxies” is silently preventing the comment spammers from even getting to wp-comments-post.

Now if only the referrer spammers would stop hitting every link in my site in spite of the fact that there is no where anyone can see my referrers so they aren’t getting any benefit from chewing up my bandwidth.

MBNA been very good to me…

Back on March 15th, I ordered a Linksys WRT54G router. I know, I once vowed never to by Linksys products again, but that was before they were bought by Cisco, and before they came out with a router that was actually a small and very cheap Linux computer. There wasn’t much wrong with my old router except every now and then people coming to my web site would instead get the login screen for the router’s web interface (which would correct itself on a refresh). But this one, because it’s Linux and GPL, has many third party patches available to do all sorts of fun things.

Unfortunately, I ordered the router from a company called “BestBargainPC”, which also does business as “US-Depot.com”. They charged my card immediately, and their order status page said “Product will ship within 24 hours”. Unfortunately, it was still saying “…will ship within 24 hours” 15 days later. I attempted to email them, and didn’t get a response for a couple of days. So I attempted to phone them, and they never answered the phone even during their advertised business hours. That’s when I called up MBNA.

I have an MBNA credit card that I use for most of my on-line purchases, for reasons I talked about in What is the matter with this credit card? I’m glad that I’m still using it for on-line purchases, because they’re great. I phoned them up, and they said they’d take care of it, and now, about a week later, I get a letter saying that they’ve reversed the charge and any accumulated interest and late fees.

The router, which I ordered from Amazon the same day I called MBNA about the other company, arrived yesterday and I installed it already. Amazon charged me about a dollar more than the other place did.

I also went to Reseller Ratings to put in my feedback for bestbargainpc, and found that somebody else had the same experience during the month of March, after mostly favourable reviews before then.

First kayaking of the season

kayaking/DSCN1853I went kayaking for the first time this year. Actually, except for the day of the sale, this is my first time kayaking in my own Skerray RMX. And it’s a great boat. In the narrow twisting sections and while trying to photograph the numerous kayaking/DSCN1856geese and kayaking/DSCN1874swans, I could put the skeg up and make it maneuverable, and when I went out on the lake to visit kayaking/DSCN1879Mike’s plane, I could put the skeg down part way and get a lot more stability.

kayaking/DSCN1861I probably went a little too far. My elbows are complaining a bit. I’m going to take some more ibuprohen and ice them down a bit. But man, it felt good. I went up to the weir, which was running pretty strong and I got splashed quite a bit when I side-ferryed into the tounge of the water coming through from the eddy beside, and suddenly I had to paddle like crazy just to stand still.

kayaking/DSCN1871There was almost nobody on the creek today. I saw two people setting off just as I was arriving, and they returned just ahead of me too. There were two people milling around looking for somebody who worked there, and I saw them later on the water so they did manage to find somebody to rent them kayaks. But otherwise it was just me, a few turtles, geese, swans, redwinged blackbirds, and one great blue heron. It was glorious.