By Ryan McElroy
The internet went down today. More precisely, my internet went down today, but thats pretty much the same thing. After my counterstrike game froze, and then web pages started timing out on another computer, and I could no longer contact my router, I knew something was up, so I sauntered on down to look at my WRT54G, a wonderful peice of equipment by Linksys that has served me very well. It looked like a scene from a bad sci-fi movie. The lights on the front were blinking randomly, and a red LED marked “Diag” flashed ominously. Except for beeping sounds, and the camera zooming in on the LED (although my eyes did a fairly good representation of this, if I can say so myself), all the bad sci-fi movie elements were there…
Anyway, after I pulled the plug to restart the router, adjusted the antenae jsut so, and returned to my laptop, things still weren’t working quite right. Its then that I noticed a new wireless network, called “linksys” with good signal quality. Wait a second…
Indeed, the WRT54G bit it hard. This was no soft reset, but hardcore no recovery, all-settings-lost, start-over-from-scratch reset.
In other news, the Sonics won, and Firefox remembers form information, so setting up the same port redirects that I had before was remarkably easy.
Posted on Tuesday 2005.02.01 at 1:12 am in
silverfir
By Ryan McElroy
Apparently, trackbacks don’t go through the same checks as other comments, and spam can sneak through, even containing such words as “party”, “poker” and “online.” I don’t get many real trackbacks, so I think my solution will be to simply turn them off. I don’t feel like figuring out how they are suppsoed to work and how I can get WordPress to filter them, so it seems the best solution.
Update: I just noticed that, while I get emails about these trackbacks, they don’t actually show up as comments. Hm. Anyone know anything about this?
Posted on Tuesday 2005.02.01 at 1:02 am in
silverfir
By Ryan McElroy
An earlier question and Bernie’s response led me to snoop around the WordPress source code, where I found a section that set the non-caching rules and had the page always instantly expire. A comment in the code said that it would be presumptuous to assume that WordPress is the only thing that can change the site… however, I update often enough (at least I used to…) that I don’t feel it is all that presumptive, and at any rate, I am willing to presume to get rid of bad side effects like missing comments, jumping to the top of the page after clicking back, etc. I hope the user experience is greatly improved. Let me know if anything isn’t working.
Posted on Monday 2005.01.31 at 8:27 am
By Ryan McElroy
So… its been a while. And truthfully, I haven’t been all that busy. I’ve just been lazy, and out of the posting habit. A full catch-up will have to wait until a later time, as I have a test in my philosophy of science class that I can’t help but feel somewhat ill-prepared for in about an hour, and I have the intention of sneaking in some last minute studying.
Everyone seems to be getting older these days. First Theo, and now my good friend Kat is 21 today. Now she can go party hardy, although I suspect that she has somewhat more important things on her mind right now.
And now, off to eat.
Posted on Thursday 2005.01.27 at 11:59 pm in
people
By Ryan McElroy
Posted on Saturday 2005.01.22 at 7:30 pm in
life
By Ryan McElroy
Last weekend, I participated in the MIT Mystery Hunt, an annual puzzler extravaganza put on by the most famous of nerd schools. My participation came via Scott, a friend who currently attends said instution. My team-by-proxy was “death-from-above”, and though I directly helped solve only one puzzle out of more than 100, my “team” solved 79, placing solidly above some teams, but solidly below the top-tier teams this year.
Here’s a look at the one I helped with, called “Logomania”:

To solve it, the Washington sub-team figured out the name of the company associated with each logo, then we took the first letter of each compnay and made a sentence out of it, which pointed us to the “company of the sixth logo,” or N-Star, which was the answer to the puzzle.
Sounds complicated? It was. And this was also, I assure you, one of the easiest puzzles in the game. Oh, and if you read Bobby‘s AIM profile, yes, “(03:33:48) Ryan McElroy: I’m a whore barbie ok” really is a quote from me, said at 3:33 am. It was an attempt to solve another puzzle, called “ten times a second.” My guess was way off base, in case you were wondering.
Posted on Thursday 2005.01.20 at 2:27 am in
life
By Ryan McElroy
I’ve gotten myself onto a late schedule recently. Today, I had dinner at 10 pm; this after missing a 9:30 class in the morning. Thus, new year’s resolutions are upcoming; one will be a midnight bed time, mostly, I think. Something like that. Anyway, this 2:30 stuff just doesn’t cut it.