Dedicated to my late brave, beautiful and silly mummy, Debra Ross. I love you mumster.

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Doing my bit to advertise Wheatstalk 2008!

In case you haven’t checked out Whole Wheat Radio for a while, Wheatstalk 2008 is starting! Spread the word :-)

Wheatstalk 2008

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Hotlinking isn’t. Ruben arrested for bad heading

I’ve had web sites in various forms since mid 1997, but only recently it seems I’ve started to be affected by an infamous admin internet scourge which probably is almost as old as the graphical internet itself: image hotlinking.

ASIDE: For what it’s worth, Hotlink was the pre-paid mobile phone service I used when I lived in Malaysia. Despite the name, it has little to do with web servers, and given their spotty coverage outside the Klang Valley it doesn’t really do much "linking" either!

Hotlinking of course is embedding media on your own web page that resides on someone else’s server instead of your own, without their permission. The problem is each time someone accesses such a page, it adds to the load on your servers as well as theirs. When you’re a uni student who can’t afford web hosting plans with gigantic bandwidth limits, this becomes somewhat of a problem!

ASIDE: This post has the ID number 1212. If you split that up, it becomes 12 12. That’s spiffy.

For example, check out this post by a guy called Howard Jamieson, who apparently isn’t actually called Howard Jamieson, but wishes his name was Howard Jamieson. About a third of the way down he’s linking to a photo of a compactor that I uploaded on my post about compression algorithms (with a citation). He doesn’t provide a citation, but I guess he does link directly to the photo.

Howard Jamieson

For now I’ve put up with people linking media from my site because I figure anything that has my domain attached to it is free advertising… right? And I guess I’ve felt flattered in the past that people have thought my material was useful enough to include, not to mention happy that so much of my material is now showing up on searches. Searches rhymes with peaches. Wait, no it doesn’t.

ASIDE: Move into the country… gonna eat me a lot of peaches. Move into the country… gonna eat me a lot of peaches.

If you have a medium to high traffic website, how do you cope with people hotlinking your stuff? I certainly don’t want to implement a blanket ban that blocks everything because users who wish their name was Howard Jamieson aren’t causing any harm, but on the other hand I get the feeling this problem will only get worse with time. By far the biggest drain in terms of raw megabytes downloaded are the MP3s for the Rubenerd Show which reside on the same domain and web host, but hotlinked images from here are starting to amount to something.

For what it’s worth, as a common courtesy whenever I’m presenting media such as a picture of the very talented (and no doubt more acclimatised to the cold than I am!) David Francey from Whole Wheat Radio, I upload a copy to my server and link to the page containing the original, not the file itself. That way, if someone is interested they can look it up but otherwise I’m not hammering WWR’s servers with requests which wouldn’t translate into visitors.

David Francey, a Whole Wheat Radio artist
David Francey, a Whole Wheat Radio artist.

I miss the WWR streams. Playing ripped CDs in iTunes that I bought from it replicates some of the experience now that I have over 120 songs, but it still isn’t the same. Hotlinking is nothing like listening to the WWR streams either. Chuck Peddle.

Steve Dirr at Whole Wheat Radio!

You’ve still got half an hour to catch the hilarious, talented, down to earth and very entertaining Steve Durr live at Whole Wheat Radio!

Steve Dirr live at Whole Wheat Radio

Whole Wheat Radio Wireless@SG problems

UPDATE, 20:16: Jim talked about this issue on his latest audio magazine and posted a comment below. As Jean Luc Picard would say: "stand down red alert!"

One of the great things about Whole Wheat Radio, the internet radio station and collaborative wiki for independent artists and just damn nice music, is that you can listen to it anywhere where you have a stable internet connection! Unfortunately, recently it seems to have issues with Wireless@SG, Singapore’s free island-wide WiFi service. When I was at Starbucks yesterday evening at 23:30 having a well deserved Chai Latte (I figure it’s not good drinking coffee at that time of day!) I got the following error message:

Whole Wheat Radio IP address error

I was very used to seeing this message both at home and in public WiFi hotspots when I lived in Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia in 2006, but this was the first time I’d seen it here. I assume it was because in Malaysia the broadband provider TMnet shoehorns many customers onto the one IP address in places and uses some form of NAT system, and perhaps Wireless@SG in Singapore is doing a similar thing.

One thing I have noticed about Wireless@SG is the number of IP addresses you’re served at any given time. Sometimes I can be sitting at a Starbucks, Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf, San Francisco Coffee or Dome for several hours at a time (coffee shops are so much nicer to study and work in than a study hall, and they’re a nice change from sitting at home all day) and I’ve noticed my MacBook Pro will be served 20 or so new addresses in that time period. In that case, I certainly can’t blame WWR for blocking me, I’m sure from their end such activity looks pretty sus.

I guess just like my detailed documentation on Whole Wheat Radio audio players for Linux and FreeBSD, this information would probably not be useful to most people, but just letting potential Singaporean listeners know that it’s not their fault, or WWR’s fault, it’s the WiFi system. Perhaps WWR here is best listened to at home.

Jim is back, my own go at philosophy

If you haven’t checked your Whole Wheaty pages in the last few days, Jim Kloss has returned from his mother’s funeral in Ohio. He’s back on the air in Alaska, is receiving parcels at home for Esther, and is even having fun with domain registration scammers according to his latest audio magazine!! It’s great to hear his voice again, I’m glad those really, really difficult weeks are over, and that his family was there for him. Now if only people would stop sending him damned hate email he’d be well on his way to recovering!

ASIDE: As with my post on Ed Craver, I’m finding it hard to figure out what to say let alone how to say it, so I get the feeling this will be a post that’s just one disjointed thought after another. I decided not to create a Rubenerd Show about it because right now I’m in the typing zone instead, plus it’s easier to delete, rearrange and clean up all the nonsense!

In particular I wanted to talk about a few of the ideas he brought up.

For me it was interesting to hear how he perceives the human body as largely a vessel that merely contains the soul or essence of a person, and how disconnected they really are at times of great hardship or when they eventually pass on. The inevitable result of which is being able to see a close person to you in said periods of time or at those inevitable milestones and not feel so upset or hurt.

Despite my best attempts and my own journey to understanding perceptions and spirituality, I’d say for the most part I’m a still a materialist; not in the sense that I value possessions over humans or the other negative connotations people have with that term, but just simply that I don’t see the difference between life force and physical objects.

The way I see it at my own current level of personal exploration, when I see a flower I don’t think of the energy contained within as being distinct and the plant is merely the object we see and use to interact with it, I see a breathtakingly complex organism that has been the result of an incomprehensible time period of natural selection that has given its own species’ unique physical characteristics and abilities. When the flower dies, the cells in the flower stop dividing and the organism no longer sustains its own existence. What I mean is: without the flower there is no flower life, nor the potential to evolve to something even higher or more beautiful.

Perhaps this was what Jim meant by a container. In this case the flower is merely the container that has evolved to support the flower’s life. My issue is that I see a container as more of a apparatus that just happens to hold a particular substance. Water in a bucket when spilled on the floor is still water; its properties and characteristics haven’t changed. Again harking back to my limited materialistic perceptions, as a human being I feel intimately attached to my body to an extent where I couldn’t feel as though I could exist without it. My body is not a container that could easily be swapped for another one, this body is me. In a sentimental way, this body has been with me though various iterations throughout my whole life, when I think about it it’s the only thing in this entire universe that has.

I also feel as though my body is more than a container because it defines what I can and cannot do not only physically, but also in how I perceive things, remember things, feel emotions. The human brain, for all it’s breathtaking complexity is still made of physical material that when changed chemically or physically affects what I feel, see and do.

To be very cold, unromantic and blunt (here we go!), I’d say if I were truly just being contained in this vessel, my thoughts shouldn’t be affected by what happens to it. Quite the opposite, I know that if I drink a few Red Bulls, a cup of coffee or a few pints of Guinness my thoughts and perceptions change drastically. I’m not independent of my container, I am my container!

As Jim said himself, we might see things in this huge world in very different ways, but it is fascinating to hear how others perceive such life fundamentals, and damned f*cking comforting to know that no matter what we all do in this life, that we all have each other and that there are other people who can and do feel the same things we do. Just sometimes though (I know I speak from my own view especially): we need reminding of that fact.

And at the end of it all, the mortality rate of all humans is a perfect 100%. Well, unless Duncan MacLeod was really onto something. Black humour, both Jim and I are entitled to it right now. ;-)

ASIDE: Is it any wonder why I couldn’t bring myself to look at mummy and we needed a closed casket at her funeral? Perhaps I’ll grow, change and mature as I get older. I just wish I had been given the time to do so before she left.

Message to James Kloss

James Kloss Taken from the current chat page over on Whole Wheat Radio:

I’m so sorry, hugs from Elke and I. I’ve read what you posted on this site about your mum over the years, she sounded like a upstanding, warm, beautiful and very special person.

Having just lost our mummy recently we know probably the last thing you want to read is sad words, so all we’ll say is that we know you’ve damn well done your mum proud. Have a safe and speedy journey to Ohio, we’ll all keep the Wheaty fires burning until you get back.

Peace and love to you and your family James.

Love Ruben and Elke

Setting up MediaWiki for registered user edits only

UPDATE: The Whole Wheat Radio wiki is back online again.

With the Whole Wheat Radio outage in effect I decided to create some mockup pages outlining some ideas over on my university intranet’s [sic] MediaWiki installation, but after some vocal opposition I decided to whip up a temporary WWR wiki testbed over at http://rubenerd.com/projects/wwr. Feel free to mess around there with WWR related whatnot while the mothership is offline and you have a Sunday morning to kill as I do right now!

If you’re using a wiki under similar circumstances and you don’t need or want anonymous edits compared to a bigger, more collaborative effort like Wikipedia, all it takes is appending one line to your ./LocalSettings.php file:

# Block edits by anonymous users
$wgGroupPermissions['*']['edit'] = false;

I know, I know… that was actually TWO lines, but the point is only the last line actually invokes the functionality described, the first is just a comment… which you should always include. Okay, okay I see your point.

They paved paradise, put up a parking lot

Isn’t it oh-so-human-nature to only notice how important something is, or how much it shaped and affected your life, when it’s gone? And isn’t it a shame when some people can’t see it at all?

Case in point for the former, the current outage over at Whole Wheat Radio has forced me to temporarily consider other music sources I can listen to over the period of a day in the background while I do studies. It’s a pickle of a dilly.

Whole Wheat Radio

I tuned into three different terrestrial radio stations: one was playing Fergie (what an insult to ears everywhere!), the second the two DJs were discussing an up and coming concert by a group who can’t sing, and the third was playing a Glenn Miller Orchestra song. At the risk of sounding like an old fart already, take a guess which one I stuck with!

If you’re in Singapore, Gold 90.5FM is a poor substitute to WWR, but they do play some good stuff. Even if their website sucks harder than an industrial vacuum cleaner! Damn I miss the Wiki.

For some smooth evening chill, also check out An Evening with Dadaist Cabaret. The shows are long enough to be interesting and full of good stuff, while still being a manageable enough size to fit on an iPod, or whatever other portable audio device you may be using. I’m still waiting for a music wristwatch that’s also a coffee machine. That would be sweet.

For the time being too I’m also listening to my Whole Wheat Radio iTunes playlist which includes all the CDs I’ve got so far from it including Kevin So, Greg Brown, The Philadelphia Jug Band, The Renovators, Guy Clark and hopefully soon Marian Call when the latest parcel arrives! There’s only so many times I can listen to these fine folks mashed up together and on random before it starts to feel like a scaled down WWR though. And what if I want to say hello to Jimbob, Kelli, Atuuschaw, RubenBot5000 (he’s my robot who chats after midnight Singapore time), Sparkit, FlyingTrout and more… damn I feel like some of my family has gone!

Here’s hoping Whole Wheat will be able to get back up soon. Give ‘em hell Jim!

RichardDawkins.net