Borepatch
Internet Security, music, and Dad Jokes. And pets - it's a blog, after all.
Tuesday, April 1, 2025
Friday, March 28, 2025
Blogroll addition
I just realized that I don't have a blogroll link to Flares Into Darkness which is really strange since I've been linking to him since forever because he finds all sorts of really interesting (and eclectic) stuff. He has literally been a daily read for me for years and years, and I must have had a massive brain fart in not blogrolling him.
Well, fixed now. Sorry about that, Ambisinistral.
Recommended to everyone. You know what to do.
UPDATE 28 MARCH 2025 15:24: Huh - I see that I did have him on the blogroll.
Tuesday, March 25, 2025
George Foreman and boxing
The passing of George Foreman got me thinking about how boxing has changed from back in the day (1960s/1970s). Back then we used to watch Friday Night Fights pretty regularly - that tailed off in the 1980s as we all lost interest. It just didn't seem as exciting as it had.
There is a great podcast episode on Dan Carlin's Hardcore History about this: Boxing with Ghosts (free download and highly recommended if you ever watch Friday Night Fights). In it Dan interviews longtime sportswriter for Ring magazine Mike Silver about how boxing is really just a shadow of its former self (and why).
But in this episode Dan tells a George Foreman story that illustrates why boxing was so great in those days. The story is from when Foreman was going for his comeback world championship in a bout against a much younger Michael Moorer. Foreman lost each of the first 9 rounds (unanimously). Entering the 10th round it was like a football game with a minute left when he was down 99 to nothing. A friend of Dan's left and went to the bathroom because the "fight was over". Then two quick punches finished Moorer off in a KO and Foreman was champ again.
There is a lot to admire in Foreman's life, but we remember just what a superb fighter he was. Rest in peace.
Thursday, March 20, 2025
Security Cats and Dogs living together
The Surveillance State is bringing people together. In this case Apple (iOS) and Google (Android). You will now be able to send end-to-end encrypted messages from iPhones to Android devices and vice versa. It's kind of like what Signal and Telegram do.
You already have that capability with Apple devices sending to other Apple devices, and Android to Android. This new capability now makes it a big, happy, (more) secure world.
You will need to go into your device settings and enable Rich Communication Services (RCS) protocol. But yay for cross vendor cooperation and interoperability.
Tuesday, March 18, 2025
Monday, March 17, 2025
Update your Firefox browser
If you are at version lower than 128, you need to update Firefox immediately or all sorts of things will break. The crypto certificate it uses to authenticate basically everything is about to expire so pretty much everything will fail authentication.
Bad things will result.
You can find out what version you are running by going into Settings and scrolling down to the Updates section. The current Firefox version looks to be 136, but if you are 128 or higher then you're fine. If your version is lower than this then click on the "Check for Updates" box.
Saturday, March 15, 2025
Come, the Ides of March are
Aye, but not gone.
Today is the Ides of March, the 15th of this month (each month has Ides on various dates). While we look at the Romans as the greatest engineers and organizers until the 18th century, we then jump to the conclusion that they were rational in an Enlightenment kind of way. They weren't. Rather, they were kind of like a combination of Nuclear-Reactor-Brainiac and Management-By-Ouija-Board*.
The Ides themselves are a great example of this second thing. Their months didn't really start at day 1 and count up the same way that our months do. Well, they kind of did, but you need to break out your Ouija Board to really understand things. The Romans didn't count forwards, they counted backwards from three fixed points in the month: the Nones (usually but not always the 5th of the month), the Ides (usually the 13th but was the 15th in March, May, July, and October), and the Kalends (the 1st of the following month).
The Ides were sacred to Jupiter, Greatest and Best, and so this was a solemn day. Thus in Shakespeare we hear Julius Caesar warned to beware the Ides of March. Plutarch wrote that on his last ill-fated journey to the Senate house, Caesar saw the soothsayer who had warned about the day. Caesar joked, "The Ides of March are come;" the soothsayer is said to have replied "Aye, but not gone." Shakespeare cribbed a lot from the ancient authors.
But not everything. The famous quote from Shakespeare's play from the scene where the Senators are stabbing him is when he sees the young Marcus Brutus - of whom Caesar was very fond - among the attackers. Shakespeare has Caesar speak the words Et tu, Brute? Even you, Brutus?
Except that's not what the ancients said about that event. Suetonius says that Caesar spoke in Greek - Kai su, teknon? This was a very common expression among educated Romans, and was often used in various plays but Kai su is generally translated as "You too". That was the formal translation but it was commonly used as "Screw you". "Teknon" is generally translated as "child" but also was understood as "punk".
So Julius Caesar basically was telling Brutus to get bent. At least if you believe Suetonius.
* This is one of the things that make the ancient Romans endlessly fascinating.