Month: March 2014
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Ross Moffatt’s “logtail-v3” – logging files by tracking and only outputing the log from last time logtail was run
http://sourceforge.net/projects/logtail-v3/ this logtail can handle large files and log rolls
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Thomas Peuss’s “logtail”, an AJAXified logfile download and tailing application
http://sourceforge.net/projects/logtail/
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John Walker’s “logtail” – a utility to watch multiple log files on multiple machines
http://www.fourmilab.ch/webtools/logtail/ implemented in Perl
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Paul Slootman’s logtail – a utility to print log file lines that have not been read
http://linux.die.net/man/8/logtail implemented in Perl
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after upgrading adium from 1.5.9 to 1.5.10b1 my Mavericks problems with ignored keyboard shortcuts disappeared
https://adium.im/ Within “Mission Control” I was quite able to switch to any of my 4×4 desktops on OS X, but outside “Mission Control” and since I installed Mavericks the keyboard shortcuts got ignore – apart from going to the “left” and the “right” virtual desktop. Now with adium-1.5.10b1 these problems seem to be gone.
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the Ukraine and the Jewish Khazar Kingdom
http://www.haaretz.com/jewish-world/jewish-world-features/.premium-1.580550 Not referring explicitly to Shlomo Sand, but I read about the Khazar Kingdom in one of his books.
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after installing “Jetpack by WordPress.com” and activating “Jetpack Comments” I have zero new SPAM comments on my blogs
I don’t really understand, how “Jetpack Comments” gets this SPAM protection done, but it’s effective. “Jetpack Comments” allows commenters to refer to their Twitter/Google+/Facebook identy, but they don’t enforce that. Still I just have zero new SPAM comments.
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my self-hosted WordPress adminstrative area tells me, that “future security updates will be applied automatically” – and I don’t like, that they don’t ask me
I’m impressed – in a rather negative way. I am not able to disable automatic “security updates” within my own WordPress installation. Of course, I like offers for security updates. But I want to be able to decide myself, whether and when to apply them.
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Perl Maven: Installing a Perl Module from CPAN on Windows, Linux and Mac OS X
http://perlmaven.com/how-to-install-a-perl-module-from-cpan Not covering perlbrew.
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a perl command line as substitute for “cut”
These 2 command lines are equivalent, but the 2nd one is the recommend one (it’s only 2 lines, and they should not be broken): $ perl -ne ‘@F = split(“:”); print “$F[0],\”$F[4]\”\n”‘ /etc/passwd $ perl -naF: -e ‘print “$F[0],\”$F[4]\”\n”‘ /etc/passwd I had used “-a” and “-F” before, but I did not remember (and I wasn’t…