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Why I Like Glitch

2012 Feb 17, 4:00

Sarah and I have been enjoying Glitch for a while now. Reviews are usually positive although occasionally biting (but mostly accurate).

I enjoy Glitch as a game of exploration: exploring the game's lands with hidden and secret rooms, and exploring the games skills and game mechanics. The issue with my enjoyment coming from exploration is that after I've explored all streets and learned all skills I've got nothing left to do. But I've found that even after that I can have fun writing client side JavaScript against Glitch's web APIs making tools (I work on the Glitch Helperator) for use in Glitch. And on a semi-regular basis they add new features reviving my interest in the game itself.

PermalinkCommentsvideo-game glitch glitch-helperator me project game

URI Percent-Encoding Ignorance Level 1 - Purpose

2012 Feb 15, 4:00

As a professional URI aficionado I deal with various levels of ignorance on URI percent-encoding (aka URI encoding, or URL escaping).

Worse than the lame blog comments hating on percent-encoding is the shipping code which can do actual damage. In one very large project I won't name, I've fixed code that decodes all percent-encoded octets in a URI in order to get rid of pesky percents before calling ShellExecute. An unnamed developer with similar intent but clearly much craftier did the same thing in a loop until the string's length stopped changing. As it turns out percent-encoding serves a purpose and can't just be removed arbitrarily.

Percent-encoding exists so that one can represent data in a URI that would otherwise not be allowed or would be interpretted as a delimiter instead of data. For example, the space character (U+0020) is not allowed in a URI and so must be percent-encoded in order to appear in a URI:

  1. http://example.com/the%20path/
  2. http://example.com/the path/
In the above the first is a valid URI while the second is not valid since a space appears directly in the URI. Depending on the context and the code through which the wannabe URI is run one may get unexpected failure.

For an additional example, the question mark delimits the path from the query. If one wanted the question mark to appear as part of the path rather than delimit the path from the query, it must be percent-encoded:

  1. http://example.com/foo%3Fbar
  2. http://example.com/foo?bar
In the second, the question mark appears plainly and so delimits the path "/foo" from the query "bar". And in the first, the querstion mark is percent-encoded and so the path is "/foo%3Fbar".
PermalinkCommentsencoding uri technical ietf percent-encoding

Blackmail DRM - Stolen Thoughts

2012 Feb 13, 4:00

Most existing DRM attempts to only allow the user to access the DRM'ed content with particular applications or with particular credentials so that if the file is shared it won't be useful to others. A better solution is to encode any of the user's horrible secrets into unique versions of the DRM'ed content so that the user won't want to share it. Entangle the users and the content provider's secrets together in one document and accordingly their interests. I call this Blackmail DRM. For an implementation it is important to point out that the user's horrible secret doesn't need to be verified as accurate, but merely verified as believable.

Apparently I need to get these blog posts written faster because only recently I read about Social DRM which is a light weight version of my idea but with a misleading name. Instead of horrible secrets, they say they'll use personal information like the user's name in the DRM'ed content. More of my thoughts stolen and before I even had a chance to think of it first!

PermalinkCommentsdrm blackmail blackmail-drm technical humor social-drm

This is a great screenshot for IT departments to display at new...

2012 Feb 10, 8:32


This is a great screenshot for IT departments to display at new employee orientation (via FAIL Nation: Probably Bad News: loln00bs)

PermalinkCommentstechnical humor passwords

URI Percent Encoding Ignorance Level 0 - Existence

2012 Feb 10, 4:00

As a professional URI aficionado I deal with various levels of ignorance on URI percent-encoding (aka URI encoding, or URL escaping). The basest ignorance is with respect to the mere existence of percent-encoding. Percents in URIs are special: they always represent the start of a percent-encoded octet. That is to say, a percent is always followed by two hex digits that represents a value between 0 and 255 and doesn't show up in a URI otherwise.

The IPv6 textual syntax for scoped addresses uses the '%' to delimit the zone ID from the rest of the address. When it came time to define how to represent scoped IPv6 addresses in URIs there were two camps: Folks who wanted to use the IPv6 format as is in the URI, and those who wanted to encode or replace the '%' with a different character. The resulting thread was more lively than what shows up on the IETF URI discussion mailing list. Ultimately we went with a percent-encoded '%' which means the percent maintains its special status and singular purpose.

PermalinkCommentsencoding uri technical ietf percent-encoding ipv6

MapReduce Patterns, Algorithms, and Use Cases

2012 Feb 10, 3:42PermalinkCommentstechnical map-reduce programming howto

Vim anti-patterns (geek.nz)

2012 Feb 7, 11:58

Things you do in VIM but faster with more obscure and specific commands.

PermalinkCommentstechnica vi vim reference howto

Coding in Marble - Rico Mariani's Performance Tidbits - Site Home - MSDN Blogs

2012 Feb 6, 8:47

In short: excessive use of promises leads to a ton of short lived objects and resulting poorer pref.

PermalinkCommentsperf technical javascript promise async

Efficient Script Yielding

2012 Feb 3, 12:14

The setImmediate DOM method is like window.setTimeout(callback, 0) but better.

PermalinkCommentstechnical dom setimmediate perf web web-browser

GLYPHICONS - icon library

2012 Feb 1, 9:30

Library of simple and lovely icons available in smaller form for free under CC BY.

PermalinkCommentstechnical icon cc creative-commons

Bootstrap 2 released

2012 Feb 1, 9:28

An HTML and CSS UI framework - common icons and layout necessary for web apps - all free under Creative Commons BY and Apache 2

PermalinkCommentscss html creative-commons cc technical

"If there’s a way for a site to take dependency on a browser quirk, and break if that quirk is..."

2012 Feb 1, 5:10
“If there’s a way for a site to take dependency on a browser quirk, and break if that quirk is removed, it will happen.”

- -Eric Lawrence, Web Browser Legend
PermalinkCommentstechnical eric-lawrence the-eric-lawrence browser web-browser compat

"Forwarded HTTP Extension" - Andreas Petersson, Martin Nilsson

2012 Jan 27, 9:41PermalinkCommentstechnical http http-header proxy ietf standard

"Unified User-Agent String (UUAS)" - Mateusz Karcz

2012 Jan 27, 7:29

IETF draft on the contents of the User Agent HTTP header.

PermalinkCommentstechnical ietf http user-agent http-header

This game was made entirely in css (no javascript) (jsrun.it)

2012 Jan 24, 1:47

Very impressive HTML, CSS, and no javascript game.  See the HN comments for how it is done.

PermalinkCommentstechnical css html game css3 js javascript

Making Love to WebKit

2012 Jan 16, 1:13

A scene-graph implementation in javascript & CSS 3D

PermalinkCommentstechnical css css3d scene-graph javascript

Show request's timestamp in Fiddler? - Stack Overflow

2012 Jan 13, 2:33PermalinkCommentstechnical fiddler http debug tool timestamp

MPAA attacks Ars for "challenging efforts to curb content theft" (arstechnica.com)

2012 Jan 12, 5:12PermalinkCommentstechnical mpaa copyright ars-technica

Lockdown: The coming war on general-purpose computing

2012 Jan 10, 3:25

General Purpose Computing vs The World. Round 1 is copyright. What will be round 2?

PermalinkCommentstechnical legal

CSI: Xbox - how cops perform Xbox Live stakeouts and console searches

2012 Jan 10, 2:33

Fascinating anecdotes on criminal investigations involving game consoles.

PermalinkCommentstechnical crime law video-game xbox
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