I suspect that I am batshit about my shipping tendencies. I suspect that, to all rational observers, I am completely, utterly, irredeemably, wall-to-wall batshit. I suspect this, and quite frankly I am more than willing to accept it. But I would like to take a little bit of time aside and use it to dissect some forms of batshit far more pernicious than mine. I speak, of course, of the sort of batshit that leads one to denigrate characters who are made of total win.but I'm torn between thinking, "wow, that was actually really insightful" and being embarrassed that I understood all the terminology therein.
07 May, 2011
So, I am a bit of a Dr. Who fan
And I won't tell you how I ran across this today:
27 April, 2011
sync
underwhelmed by monday's appointment at the doctor. but it's better than nothing.
kind of finding powerpoint useful and terrible at the same time.
worried about the school work i'm taking on this semester, but excited to be getting back to it.
wanting to get back on the motorcycle again. felt almost physical pain this morning watching a gsxr 1k on 66 while i was commuting. really wanted to be the guy on the bike and not in a cage.
discouraged by having to "go dark" in a number of ways regarding my public internets presence. i suppose there's a payoff down the road.
kind of finding powerpoint useful and terrible at the same time.
worried about the school work i'm taking on this semester, but excited to be getting back to it.
wanting to get back on the motorcycle again. felt almost physical pain this morning watching a gsxr 1k on 66 while i was commuting. really wanted to be the guy on the bike and not in a cage.
discouraged by having to "go dark" in a number of ways regarding my public internets presence. i suppose there's a payoff down the road.
23 April, 2011
21 April, 2011
They're putting in a drive through...
The agency has 68,269 pounds of opium and morphine stored at Fort Knox and West Point, an amount taht could satisfy the nation's legal needs for about a year, according to the latest figures by the United Nations International Narcotics Control Board.
(via)
11 April, 2011
Outlook 2011, boneheaded but useful.
Quite a few people I know have made Apple's Mail.app work well enough with user-generated certificates, but I don't know anyone who's actively using it with a CAC (that I know of). I prefer to use Outlook 2011 because I like the calendaring in Outlook a little better. For anyone interested, I'm using Apple's part number H2312LL/A, which is of course also available from Amazon. Of the various instructions out there, none of them really seem to work, although Microsoft's blurb thing sort of does.
The main idea is thus: you connect the SC reader, then go to security under the advanced tab in the "Accounts" page and simply pull down the sign/encrypt certs you wish to use.
Of course, Outlook doesn't quite pull it off without appearing to be completely boneheaded. For messages that I've actually decrypted (or encrypted), I don't have to use the card again to read them. And, here's a quirk: if you have encrypted messages in your Inbox, you can't just double-click on them to read them. But, if you reply or forward them, the "preview" pane will obligingly decrypt them for you. So I suspect what's going on (the boneheaded part) is Outlook attempts to decrypt things when it receives them (as evidenced by the fact I get nagged for my PIN when I receive the email, rather than when I attempt to open it), and then caches the decrypted message on disk. Apparently the preview pane does the decryption juju as well, but not the doubley-clicky thing. Which is stupid for two reasons. First, why does the preview pane search out my certificate and decrypt but not the double-click? Second, why on Earth are they storing the decrypted messages on disk? I can pull out the CAC and the files are still decrypted. This makes me worry for the data on the computer (it's supposed to be encrypted in my server-based mail spool for a reason, guys).
Outlook on the PC doesn't do this, of course.
(part of the reason for poasting this is so that The Google will have this as reference for Mac users looking to set up the same sort of thing. I found it was kind of a pain to do.)
(also: thanks, Shawn)
The main idea is thus: you connect the SC reader, then go to security under the advanced tab in the "Accounts" page and simply pull down the sign/encrypt certs you wish to use.
Of course, Outlook doesn't quite pull it off without appearing to be completely boneheaded. For messages that I've actually decrypted (or encrypted), I don't have to use the card again to read them. And, here's a quirk: if you have encrypted messages in your Inbox, you can't just double-click on them to read them. But, if you reply or forward them, the "preview" pane will obligingly decrypt them for you. So I suspect what's going on (the boneheaded part) is Outlook attempts to decrypt things when it receives them (as evidenced by the fact I get nagged for my PIN when I receive the email, rather than when I attempt to open it), and then caches the decrypted message on disk. Apparently the preview pane does the decryption juju as well, but not the doubley-clicky thing. Which is stupid for two reasons. First, why does the preview pane search out my certificate and decrypt but not the double-click? Second, why on Earth are they storing the decrypted messages on disk? I can pull out the CAC and the files are still decrypted. This makes me worry for the data on the computer (it's supposed to be encrypted in my server-based mail spool for a reason, guys).
Outlook on the PC doesn't do this, of course.
(part of the reason for poasting this is so that The Google will have this as reference for Mac users looking to set up the same sort of thing. I found it was kind of a pain to do.)
(also: thanks, Shawn)