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LULA - Lightweight User-Level ACL







LULA - Lightweight User-Level ACL

LULA - Lightweight User-Level ACL 05/15/2004 09:45 PM

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LULA - Lightweight User-Level ACL

Grok Headline matches for LULA - Lightweight User-Level ACL

Intrusion response dips down to end-user
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Intrusion response dips down to end-user
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A company's ability to respond in real time to network attacks is becoming crucial as traditional firewall and antivirus defenses are increasingly being breached by new worms and viruses.

Linux Programming: User-Level Memory
Management


Linux Programming: User-Level Memory
Management
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An excerpt from Linux Programming by Example: The Fundamentals explaining memory management and the Linux/Unix address space.

[waraxe-2004-SA#017 - User-level
authentication bypass in phpnuke
6.x-7.2]


[waraxe-2004-SA#017 - User-level
authentication bypass in phpnuke
6.x-7.2]
04/12/2004 04:55 PM
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Lula to woo Beijing on trade ties


Lula to woo Beijing on trade ties 05/23/2004 09:23 AM
Brazil's president starts a six-day visit to China to win trade and strengthen developing nations within the WTO.

Lula embarks on new Africa tour


Lula embarks on new Africa tour 04/10/2005 11:50 PM
Brazilian President Luis Inacio Lula da Silva is on a five-nation tour of Africa - the fourth since coming to power.

Stellus Systems™ Sets New Standard
for Consumer-level GPS Receivers for
Smartphones and Handheld
DevicesHigh-Performance GPS Receiver
Transforms Mobile Devices Into
User-Friendly Navigational Tools


Stellus Systems™ Sets New Standard
for Consumer-level GPS Receivers for
Smartphones and Handheld
DevicesHigh-Performance GPS Receiver
Transforms Mobile Devices Into
User-Friendly Navigational Tools
01/05/2005 03:27 AM
Stellus System, Inc., a leading system integrator of wireless communication products, announced today the SSI-SDIO-1000, the first high-performance, rugged GPS (Global Positioning System) receiver with a SDIO (Secure Digital Input/Output) interface designed for power conscience consumer-level applications. Stellus’ unique design enables mobile devices, such as Smartphones and connected PDAs, to receive GPS signals and, together with off-the-shelf GPS mapping software, transforms them into navigational receivers. [PRWEB Jan 5, 2005]

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Lula, Brazilians, to Fight Flab Together
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Lightweight C++ 1.3 05/05/2004 09:15 PM
A language similar to C++ which is translated to C.

Lightweight C++ 1.3.2


Lightweight C++ 1.3.2 05/19/2004 07:41 AM
A language similar to C++ which is translated to C.

Lightweight C++ 0.5


Lightweight C++ 0.5 03/20/2003 02:06 PM
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ultra lightweight xml-rpc lib for C++


ultra lightweight xml-rpc lib for C++ 12/20/2003 06:24 AM
ulxmlrpcpp 1.2.4-final available

Heavyweight vs. lightweight


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Winner who's no Lightweight 11/07/2003 08:51 AM
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RSS: Lightweight Web Syndication


RSS: Lightweight Web Syndication 05/23/2002 10:39 PM

Lightweight Neural Network ++ 0.995


Lightweight Neural Network ++ 0.995 05/09/2004 07:57 PM
A feed forward neural network C++ library.

Lightweight XML Search Servers


Lightweight XML Search Servers 01/22/2004 03:18 AM
Jon Udell creates a lightweight XML search server using Python and the libxml/libxslt libraries.

Lightweight Languages 2 Conference


Lightweight Languages 2 Conference 03/13/2003 10:16 AM
This Saturday, I attended the LL2 conference at MIT. LL2 is dedicated to "lightweight" programming languages, a delibrately loose category including (1) any pleasant, easy-to-use scripting language and (2) any academic language which makes it easier to prototype and write software quickly. LL2 is a small, informal workshop with audience participation. The attendees are a diverse bunch, and enjoy goring each other's sacred cows. You have been warned.

Microsoft still a collaboration
lightweight


Microsoft still a collaboration
lightweight
06/21/2004 05:59 AM
Silicon.com Jun 21 2004 9:56AM GMT

Lightweight Neural Network++


Lightweight Neural Network++ 01/22/2004 11:42 AM
First version is out

SQLite: A Lightweight Alternative


SQLite: A Lightweight Alternative 03/06/2004 02:03 AM
In this tutorial, Timothy shows you how to get started using SQLite.

Lightweight Business Models


Lightweight Business Models 09/22/2004 11:17 PM

The workshop that Jason Fried and myself will be giving at Web 2.0 is entitled "Lightweight Business Models". I'm liking that title more and more as we approach the event.

What will be interesting to see - will be all the Web 1.0 folks meeting all the Web 2.0 folks. Lots of announcements, schmoozing, networking and (hopefully) kai-seki.

I have these vivid memories of the Nikko - doing kai-seki for hours with various Japanese emissaries in the late 80's - when money was no object.

I don't necessarily see the Web 2.0 as a platform with JUST eBay, Amazon or Google - but it's nice to have them there. But it's also nice to have Technorati, Sxip and Flickr.

:-)

The idea of workshop is that there are all these 'little' programs out there that when connected together (via open standards) can create a decentralized mesh of functionality united around new kinds of micro-content.

Here's John Battelle's post....

web2Over at O'Reilly, Tim's posted his thoughts on why Web 2.0 is a meme with legs, and he's inviting feedback from his readers on what they'd like to see asked of all the speakers we have coming to converse. I'd like to do the same - you guys have always kept me honest, and the conference is really shaping up to be something else again. As Tim puts it:

I'm talking about the emergence of what I've started to call Web 2.0, the internet as platform. We heard about that idea back in the late 90s, at the height of the browser wars, but that turned out to be a false alarm. But I believe we're now starting the third age of the internet -- the first being the telnet-era command line internet, the second the web -- and the third, well, that tale grows in the telling. It's about the way that open source and the open standards of the web are commoditizing many categories of infrastructure software, driving value instead to the data and business processes layered on top of (or within) that software; it's about the way that web sites like eBay, Amazon, and Google are becoming platforms with rich add-on developer communities; it's about the way that network effects and data, rather than software APIs, are the new tools of customer lock-in; it's about the way that to be successful, software today needs to work above the level of a single device; it's about the way that the Microsofts and Intels of tomorrow are once again going to blindside established players because all the rules of business are changing.

Time and again as I report in this space, I'm struck by how different this time round is from the late 1990s. For example, today I spoke with Jeff Weber, who runs USAToday's digital publishing efforts, and we had a robust conversation about publishing models, new and old. I was part of the first wave of "new media" in the 90s, and we were convinced that the world was changing, but wrong in the timing and execution. Now, a whole host of "lightweight publishers" have sprung up, and they are challenging and undermining the entire cost structure and business model of old line publishers. This time, it's real. Weber pointed out to me that Yahoo News, which is twice as big as USAToday.com, and has just 11 employees. Then there's craigslist, with more traffic than nearly anyone, and only 20 or so employees. How do they do that? They've got a very Web 2.0, lightweight business model, that's how (and Yahoo aggregates content, then creates interfaces, of course). Over and over, in so many aspects of industry, we see this happening - travel, finance, media, entertainment, retail. It's exciting, and it's fun.

At Web 2.0, we're going to talk about all this, and (this will be the last time, I promise) I'd really like to see you all there. I still have a limited number of discount codes to dole out, first come, first served (jbat at battellemedia dot com). The event is October 5-7, in San Francisco at the Hotel Nikko.

Even if you can't make it, check out the program and let me know what you'd like to see asked of the speakers. I hope to see you there!

[John Battelle's Searchblog]


Greasemonkey as a lightweight
intermediary


Greasemonkey as a lightweight
intermediary
03/30/2005 03:05 PM

In The architecture of intermediation, Jon Udell discusses the need for a mechanism for a high-level tool for adding custom features to web applications. In Jon's case, he wants to add a private bookmarks feature to del.icio.us. Jon thought about using a web proxy to intercept and modify del.icio.us pages, but ruled it out as too low-level.

Jon, you need Greasemonkey.

The latest release of the swiss army knife of Firefox extensions adds support for cross-domain XMLHttpRequest calls from greasemonkey scripts. What that means is that you can create a user script (a short JavaScript that will be executed whenever your browser loads specific pages) that can then pull extra data in from another server. This new ability is described in the greasemonkey documentation.

I'm using this for my final year project, a decentralised web annotation system that lets you annotate pages, storing your annotations locally and then sharing your public annotations as a feed (similar to the way RSS aggregators work). The trick there is to run a local web server on some port, then have the Greasemonkey user script (eventually a full extension) communicate with that local server to store and retrieve data. I'm using Ruby on Rails' built in WEBrick server to prototype the service, and it's working a treat.

This architecture could be easily adapted to add private bookmarks to del.icio.us - or to add any number of cool features to any number of other sites. Here's another example: Google's Desktop Search integrates results from your local drive with the search results page on Google. Using greasemonkey and a local web server tied in to OS X Tiger's Spotlight indexer, you could add this functionality to any search site you wanted to. Just be sure to lock down the web server to only serve requests from localhost, to avoid sharing search results for your data with anyone on the network who can see your machine.

When people asked me what I was excited about at SxSW, one of my answers was Greasemonkey. This kind of stuff is the reason why.


hoarder - lightweight java cms


hoarder - lightweight java cms 04/17/2004 11:23 AM
hoarder-0.1.1 released!

MParser a very lightweight xml parser


MParser a very lightweight xml parser 06/17/2004 03:01 PM
MParser first public release!

Revenge of the User: Lessons from
Creator/User Battles ETCON talk notes


Revenge of the User: Lessons from
Creator/User Battles ETCON talk notes
02/11/2004 04:31 PM
Here're my running notes from danah boyd's Re venge of the User: Lessons from Creator/User Battles at the O'Reilly Emerging Technology Conference in San Diego.
The response is an attempt to "configure the users" -- constrain behavior to acceptable behavior with messaaging, kicking people off, etc.

This won't work: you can't tell a hacker not to hack. These kids are social hackers. You can stop some bad behavior, but you chase off your best users, too.

Dating doesn't happen because you're in a dating context. Dating arises out of real contexts.

Taking away fakesters didn't make Frienster more real. Friendster is unreal because people never remove their friends, even if they never see them (the exception is when you break up, ironic, because ex-lovers are strong ties!).

Link

HotFix Watch: Programs that are
advertised to a user run when another
user logs on to an SMS 2.0 client
computer


HotFix Watch: Programs that are
advertised to a user run when another
user logs on to an SMS 2.0 client
computer
08/30/2004 05:24 PM

How to deal with packages where user
specific data configuration has to be
user portable


How to deal with packages where user
specific data configuration has to be
user portable
09/11/2004 11:26 PM

fbpanel - lightweight X11 desktop panel


fbpanel - lightweight X11 desktop panel 04/10/2004 03:23 PM
fbpanel 3.4 released

Lightweight XML Search Servers, Part 2


Lightweight XML Search Servers, Part 2 02/18/2004 08:10 PM
Jon Udell enhances his lightweight XML search server by adding database backed storage, using the Berkeley DB XML database, and retrieving and indexing all of the weblogs he reads.

Know more about world's tiniest
lightweight fish!


Know more about world's tiniest
lightweight fish!
07/23/2004 12:58 PM
123Bharath.com Jul 23 2004 5:12PM GMT

In Search of a Lightweight WYSIWYG
Client


In Search of a Lightweight WYSIWYG
Client
02/01/2005 09:08 PM

I'm interested in finding a nice, lightweight, WYSIWYG HTML editor for use by non-developers. In this scenario, as I'm sure you know, is not havig too little functionality, but having too much. I haven't found one yet that I'm comfortable unleashing on non-developer content editors.

How about FrontPage or Dreamweaver, you say? Dreamweaver is too complicated for the average editor to grasp. Yes, I know it makes perfect to HTML jockeys, but it's not for the faint-of-heart. FrontPage is simpler, but I've found it gives the user too much rope. They end up with more than enough to hang themselves.

Contribute from Macromedia comes close. It's a scaled-down version of Dreamweaver, but it's not problem-free. It requires some voodoo to get it up and running and I didn't find that it was easy to edit file system-based files. Contribute is at its best when used on a site managed by a geek with a copy of Dreamweaver.

Surprisingly, Mozilla Composer — part of the Mozilla Suite — is very good. Not quite perfect, but it's clean and simple. However, you have to have the whole Mozilla shindig to use it. I hope they break it off into its own product.

What I'm looking for is a WYSIWYG editor with which I could let a user edit a pre-created site. Using some strategic rewrite rules, a limited FTP account, and php_append and _prepend files, you could very easily build a nice, maintainable site that handles all the common elements of the page, leaving just the "content valley" to be managed by a content editor with a lightweight WYSIWYG client.

Now if I could just find the right one. Any recommendations?

Update: One last requirement: the client needs to be page-centric. Too many HTML editors drift off into concepts of "the Site" or "the Web." I want one that is concerned pretty much solely with the page that's currently loaded into it, and doesn't try to wrap its arms around the entire Web site at once.


Moving towards lightweight and open
architectures


Moving towards lightweight and open
architectures
04/11/2005 08:28 PM
TechWorld Apr 12 2005 12:37AM GMT

Dell ultraportable is lightweight
contender


Dell ultraportable is lightweight
contender
04/11/2005 01:59 PM
Personal Computer World Apr 11 2005 4:47PM GMT

Lightweight scripting/extension
languages


Lightweight scripting/extension
languages
12/21/2003 09:29 PM
Extension laguages are designed to be embedded in applications to support customization of the application behavior. Common scripting languages, like Perl and Python, are fairly "large" with powerful run-time engines and libraries and are widely available and "script" writters usually assume their stand-alone existences in the deployment environment.

However, if one is looking for a language that's small enough so its source can be embedded in the distribution of and built as part of the application, Python and Perl may be "overweight." For the real lightweight choices there are Lua and Tinyscheme. Are there others? What are people's preferences and opinions regarding lightweight extension languages?

Lightweight Traffic Accounting Suite


Lightweight Traffic Accounting Suite 08/04/2004 01:48 PM
Ltaccts initial release version 0.48

"Lance Arthur slightly loses it over
BitTorrent - which I will confess does
not have the greatest user experience
for a naive user"


"Lance Arthur slightly loses it over
BitTorrent - which I will confess does
not have the greatest user experience
for a naive user"
08/14/2004 09:34 AM

Review - The Elements of User
Experience: User-Centered Design for the
Web


Review - The Elements of User
Experience: User-Centered Design for the
Web
12/08/2002 10:04 PM
WebmasterBase Dec 8 2002 8:41PM ET

Simon Willison: Greasemonkey as a
lightweight intermediary


Simon Willison: Greasemonkey as a
lightweight intermediary
03/31/2005 06:59 AM
Simon Willison: Greasemonkey as a lightweight intermediary .. an agent of intermediation .. explains

simon.incutio.com/archive/2005/03/30/lightweight
track this site | 4 links


Mollensoft Lightweight FTP Server CWD
Buffer Overflow


Mollensoft Lightweight FTP Server CWD
Buffer Overflow
06/01/2004 03:27 PM
Aviram Jenik (Jun 01 2004)
Grok Description matches for LULA - Lightweight User-Level ACL
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LULA - Lightweight User-Level ACL

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