Saturday, September 09, 2006
Migrating Outlook contacts to Mac Address Book
In addition to this macosxhints.com solution, there's a set of links to related articles. A good resource.
macosxhints.com: Disable Spotlight on a FAT32 external drive
macosxhints.com - 10.4: Disable Spotlight on a FAT32 external drive: "putting an empty file named .metadata_never_index file at the top level directory of the volume, it has stopped searching the volume"
Using TextEdit to convert RTF to HTML
A trove of hints and tips about creating HTML from DOC/RTF: macosxhints.com - Convert formatted text to valid HTML using TextEdit
Friday, September 08, 2006
Cool mac things: some of these I didn't know
Some are weird. Not all are useful. But they are all Cool things you can do on Mac. (via TUAW)
Thursday, September 07, 2006
Getting email through: SenderID, DomainKeys and SPF
I've been trying to see how I can stop Google from tagging my email as spam. Only Google, which has the worst spam filtering in the industry, has this problem. I've been looking into what's available in terms of sender authentication. Alas, things are not in great shape. There are 3 options currently:
SenderID has the advantage of Microsoft's support, but the Wikipedia article makes it sound awful on several levels.
That leaves DomainKeys, which has been adopted by Google and Yahoo. Yahoo owns the key patent, but they produced an open source type license.
I have two ISPs: VISI and Lunarpages. VISI doesn't do support any form of email authentication (they promised to put my request on the list), but Lunarpages supports SPF -- unfortunately SPF doesn't seem to amount to much.
I get the sense that first rank ISPs will support DomainKeys, and that corporate pressures may force support of SenderID too -- no matter how ugly it is. In the meantime, I'll just encourage my ISPs to look at DomainKeys more seriously.
- DomainKeys: "cryptographically proves that the mail did in fact originate at the purported domain, and has not been tampered with in transit." Supported by Yahoo, Google, and, I think, Earthlink.
- Sender Policy Framework SPF: Wikipedia - "SPF allows software to identify and reject forged addresses in the SMTP MAIL FROM (Return-Path)". Spammers, however, were early adopters of SPF. SPF has been championed by AOL.
- SenderID: was a combination of SPF and "Caller ID". Unfortunately Microsoft has the relevant patents and they chose to use those patents to attack open source software. The result was the rejection of SenderID. (SenderID also uses SPF, so it's "SPF + Caller ID")
SenderID has the advantage of Microsoft's support, but the Wikipedia article makes it sound awful on several levels.
That leaves DomainKeys, which has been adopted by Google and Yahoo. Yahoo owns the key patent, but they produced an open source type license.
I have two ISPs: VISI and Lunarpages. VISI doesn't do support any form of email authentication (they promised to put my request on the list), but Lunarpages supports SPF -- unfortunately SPF doesn't seem to amount to much.
I get the sense that first rank ISPs will support DomainKeys, and that corporate pressures may force support of SenderID too -- no matter how ugly it is. In the meantime, I'll just encourage my ISPs to look at DomainKeys more seriously.
iusethis.com: some interesting products
iusethis.com has some interesting products I'll check out:
1. Memtest check system memory. Highly recommended for new memory or when buying a used system. Freeware.
2. code collector: manage code fragments
3. Alarm clock II
4. Google maps Plugin
1. Memtest check system memory. Highly recommended for new memory or when buying a used system. Freeware.
2. code collector: manage code fragments
3. Alarm clock II
4. Google maps Plugin
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