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Moving - I'm finally taking the plunge and switching to "MT". I'm not going to bother importing this weblog, at least not initially. Too much work for too little benefit. My archives can stay here indefinitely. My new home page and weblog. Feeds are available in RSS 0.91, RSS 1.0, and RSS 2.0 flavors. I'm not going to set up RSS redirects. I don't like Userland's solution because any aggregator that doesn't understand the format will barf on it. HTTP 301 redirects are better supported, but I don't feel like reconfiguring Apache to allow .htaccess files. For the couple of people that subscribe to my category feeds, I'll get around to re-cre...
Feed Source: radio.ntwizards.net

Distributed Tivo cracking - With the newest version of the TiVo software (Version 3.2), TiVo has once again changed the secret password to enter "backdoor" mode, which lets advanced users enable hidden features. Unlike last time, people were not able to quickly find the new code, so a distributed computing project was started to find the backdoor codes. You can read about it Here, grab the Linux or Windows clients and pitch in some CPU time for a good cause." [Slashdot]...
Feed Source: radio.ntwizards.net

Not moving Radio - Lots of things blew up while I was trying to move Radio to another PC. I'll give it another shot once I figure out why Radio is crashing whenever I try to compress weblogData.root....
Feed Source: radio.ntwizards.net

Peeve: Large Screenshots - Why am I seeing so many screenshots lately that are so large that I have to scroll my maximized browser window on a 1280x1024 display? Is there any application that truly requires 750,000+ pixels to demonstrate a single screen or task? Give my mouse hand a friggin' break. 800x600 ought to be enough for anything....
Feed Source: radio.ntwizards.net

Moving Radio - I'm about to try moving my Radio installation to another computer, including moving Radio.root. Crossing my fingers that this doesn't blow up ...
Feed Source: radio.ntwizards.net

More spam stuff - Microsoft Research published A Bayesian Approach to Filtering Junk E-mail way back in 1998. The Adaptive Systems and Interaction group has done quite a bit of research on filtering and classification. Amy Wohl is ranting about Spam and Irresponsible ISPs. I find it interesting that a web hosting provider is using a blacklist to reject incoming mail. Is this a transparent feature that nobody knows about, or do customers have to opt-in? In my experience, web hosting customers are an unforgiving lot when it comes to anything that interferes with email. I've always been anti-blacklist because they are subject to so much abuse. They've mostly been run by zealots demanding that commercial messages not be transferred across the Internet unless it was explicitly asked for, twice (doubl...
Feed Source: radio.ntwizards.net

POPFile, Part III - The mail parser has been updated to handle Outlook .MSG files. There's a thread on corpus drifting that covers my thoughts on using positive reinforcement to help POPFile to learn. On the mailing list I am training POPFile on, it has missed 3 of 22 messages today. I'm thinking that POPFile needs about 100 messages in the corpus to get accuracy into the high 90s for mailing lists. On the spam front, I seem to be in the middle of a drought. POPFile has missed 1 of 5 messages since yesterday. I've found another bug, POPFile seems to top out at 8 simultaneous connections. I have 10 POP accounts in three of Outlook's "Send/Receive Groups." They have staggered times for checking mail but every so often they all overlap ...
Feed Source: radio.ntwizards.net

Run D.M.C. - Anil Dash: You can't miss the music. Check out the current Top 5 on the Billboard charts, you'll find Missy Elliot's "Work It". The last minute of the song is a straight lift from Run-DMC's "Peter Piper". The incredible breakdown to Bob James' Mardi Gras, which Jay cut up for the song, is still so purely grooving and ass-moving that it can top the charts a decade and a half later. Chuck D said it best years ago in one of his rhymes, "Run-DMC first said a DJ could be a band." The "band" behind Run-DMC is still echoing out of people's rides in Queens today. There's no better legacy. I came across a Run D.M.C. timeline. In spite of being the first rap artists to go gold, platinum, and multi-platinum, they have no Grammy awards. Eminem has five....
Feed Source: radio.ntwizards.net

Jam Master Jay, RIP - I'm blacking out for the rest of the day in remembrance of Jason Mizell, aka Jam Master Jay. Jam Master Jay, the D.J. who provided beats and scratches to the rap group Run-DMC's groundbreaking records, was shot and killed in a recording studio in Queens on Wednesday night. [ ] For most of its history, rap has been criticized for promoting violence, and several rappers who sang the praises of the gangster life, including Tupac Shakur and the Notorious B.I.G., were murdered. But Run-DMC and Jam Master Jay, all middle-class natives of Hollis, Queens, a mile or so from where Mr. Mizell was shot, created rap with a social conscience, urging listeners (between boasts) to stay in school, fight prejudice and respect one another. [NYTimes via ...
Feed Source: radio.ntwizards.net

Airport security leads to topless checkpoint - A French tourist got so fed up with having her chest wanded by airport security in the USA that she took off her shirt and bra to demonstrate her bomb-and-boxcutter-free chestular region. The airport was closed for 10 minutes. Under the USAPATRIOT Act, she faces up to three years in jail. Link (German-English translation here: Link) [via Boing Boing Blog] This would be funny if it weren't so friggin' sad. America has become such a fearful place that even a half-naked woman threatens us. When I lived in Europe, I made a concious effort not to blend in. I was a proud American and rarely wanted to conceal that fac...
Feed Source: radio.ntwizards.net

POPFile, Part II - I got "POPFile" working, at another user's suggestion I exported some mail folders as .csv text files instead of individual .msg binary files. So far I've put 5500 messages into the corpus, with about 5% being known spam and half of the remainder coming from 16 mailing lists. I'm keeping all of my Outlook rules in place until I am confident in POPFile's classifications. I've added two rules for POPFile, for spam and a mailing list that I just joined. The new list is a good test of how quickly POPFile can be taught. The intial corpus was just 15 messages, so far it has correctly classified 3 out of 5 new messages. One problem I see with teaching POPFile is that the web interface only allows for negative reinforcement, ie: this message is classified wrong, it should be this. For a small corpus, my gut feeling is that positive reinforcement would be more beneficial. There's probably a tipping point where that sort of feedback loop would have a negative affect on accuracy,...
Feed Source: radio.ntwizards.net

POPFile - Decided to give POPFile a whirl tonight. Exported a few thousand messages from Outlook 2002, upgraded to the latest version of Perl, uninstalled SpamNet. The program that builds the corpus doesn't seem to like me. It acts like it is importing my messages but the corpus file winds up empty. I suspect that it has problems with Outlook's binary message format, in spite of the documentation saying otherwise. Tried the latest version from CVS, no difference. I filed a bug report, we'll see what happens ...
Feed Source: radio.ntwizards.net

I Have a (Backup) Dream - A few months ago I wrote about the pains of backing up large drives. I use a 60GB drive for backups of important files from my main 120 gigger, but I think that I'll outgrow this solution in 6 months. Fortunately I have a pair of 30 giggers lying around Looking at the files I am backing up, well over 90% of the space used is static -- changes are rare, additions are infrequent. I need a long-term archiving solution. Burning those files to CD isn't very appealing, I would need about 100 of them (I'd want two copies of everything because I have little faith in CDRs for long-term storage). DVDs would be more practical, I could probably find a Firewire burner to borrow What I'd really like is a hybrid online backup service. My upstream bandwidth is about 8KB/s on a good day, doing an initial backup of this data over the Internet would take an insane amount of time. NetFlix has the right idea for moving lar...
Feed Source: radio.ntwizards.net

Client-side Spam Filtering - I've always wondered why client-side spam filters for Windows are designed to work only with certain mail clients. SpamNet and Spam Assasin Pro only work with Outlook 2000+, SpamNix for Eudora 3+, etc These tools could reach a wider audience if they were built as generic POP/IMAP proxies. Open Source to the rescue. POPFile is a POP3 proxy that uses "Naive Bayes" for classification, written in Perl but geared for Windows users. Pop3proxy and IMAPAssasin use the Spam Assasin engine....
Feed Source: radio.ntwizards.net

"It doesn't have a Wienie!" - Old man Disney was no fool. After he and his Imagineers had completed the GE "Carousel of Progress" for the 1964 World's Fair, Walt invited a gaggle of GE executives to the studio for a peek at the show. They ...
Feed Source: www.hear2.com

More than 1 out of 4 of your Listeners may be outside Arbitron's reach - According to a study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 22.3 percent of U.S. households with both landline and cell phones receive almost all of their phone calls on their mobile phone. That's 13.1 percent of all households ...
Feed Source: www.hear2.com

Kill your Radio Station's "Sacred Cows" - Beau Fraser is co-author of the new business bestseller, "Death to All Sacred Cows: How Successful Business People Put the Old Rules Out to Pasture." Fraser is also managing director of the international advertising and corporate identity firm The Gate ...
Feed Source: www.hear2.com

Passion, Pop, and Radio - From Seth Godin: That bell curve [above left] represents acceptance by the focused/excited/tastemaking community. Those are the people who love microbeers and haute couture and Civil War memorabilia. Like all market curves, there's a sweet spot. Go too nutsy on ...
Feed Source: www.hear2.com

Does your station REALLY have a position? - I feel almost silly going so far back to the marketing basics that I'm actually writing a post on positioning, but this graphic says so much in so few words, that I wanted to share it with you. So complete ...
Feed Source: www.hear2.com

CBS fights new media fire with fire - Yes. New, from CBS Radio: CBS Radio Station unveils the Player.Play.It media player, which will offer a [way to] group stations together. The player will also feature large space for contextual ads that displays marketers? slides. It will also feature ...
Feed Source: www.hear2.com

Former Rogers Media Radio CEO Gary Miles on Radio's Future - "20% of your revenue should come from digital media within the next five years." That's one of many messages from Gary Miles, the former CEO of Radio for Rogers Media, one of Canada's largest radio broadcasters. Gary now works with ...
Feed Source: www.hear2.com

The CW uses the Web to get viewers back to TV - At least, that's how they hope it works. Why don't you do this more with your radio station? From Advertising Age: The CW is already trying to herd its online audience to the living-room screen. The network has refused to ...
Feed Source: www.hear2.com

How to Ruin your Listener Database - Last week I heard that some companies who work with radio stations are convincing those stations to use their digital media assets to provide either the emails or telephone numbers of station VIP listeners (or whatever your database is called) ...
Feed Source: www.hear2.com

I finally figured out how to Profit from HD Radio - So I'm meeting with a wonderful Christian radio client who relies on direct financial support from their listeners, like many in their format. They are very successful thanks to a clear, broad, mainstream focus for their stations. But this also ...
Feed Source: www.hear2.com

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