Cthulhu 419 scam

Taken from http://www.geocities.com/steerp1ke/David_Ehi.html I just stripped out the geocities stuff

It’s October! In this spirit of Halloween, for this scam I’m trading my Tom Udo
persona for Randolph Carter. If you’re familiar with the works of H.P.
Lovecraft, a fantasy and horror writer from the 1920s, you’ll appreciate this,
as I include a bunch of references to Lovecraft’s “Cthulhu mythos.” If you’re
not, sit back and enjoy the ride as Randolph gets way more than he
bargained for. In the exchanges below, Randolph’s messages have blue headers,
and the Nigerian Lad’s are in red. To help you read through faster, the
important parts of the Nigerian’s are highlighted in red text.

WTF

The Daily WTF is a fine site pointed to me by Fintan. Some of the entries have me really saying WTF are they thinking of?

Wow, he won

Some people have all the luck. One of the guys in the office won the Spaced Special edition DVD set. Can you guess who it was. Turns out that one of the other co-workers was looking for his web log when he encountered the fact that he’d won. Got to love the sideways web. Then I loaned (yes, I know, technically illegal) my DVDs of spaced to one of the co-workers who had never experienced it so that he could be one with the geek.

Old Boy

Myself and Nicky from the office went to see Oldboy tonight. Oh my god. It was great, disturbing and sick at the same time. It did my head in … it’s Seven meets a love story. Deeply chilling, darkly humourous and definitely a head job.

The Cooler

William H. Macy, Alec Baldwin, Maria Bello. Damn it’s a sweet movie. William H. Macy plays a cooler. His job is to cause people to lose money in the casino. Every time he bets the house wins. The only problem is that he falls in love and it causes him to win.
It’s deeply, deeply cliched – The loser is a total loser, the mobster/casino owner is a complete f**ing asshole. but overall once you get to the end of the movie it gives you a good feeling – in just the same way that Magnolia did.
I’ll give it a thumb up bob!.

Dictator cards

Top trumps … with ‘great’ dictators. Looks like it could be fun, if a bit limited. I want to play Junta with the Bush(shrub) cabinet! Minister for Internal Security, El Presidente for life! Viva el Prez.

Syndrome…

Almost everyone who has worked with programmers or mathematicians knows someone with at least a light form of Asperger’s Syndrome: the well-recognized symptoms include an inability to interpret peoples’ emotions from their facial expressions, incredibly logical thought processes that make math easy but human relations darn near impossible, and fear of physical contact with other people.
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time is quite possibly the best book I’ve read this year. It purports to be a novel written by Christopher Boone, a fifteen year old boy who suffers from Asperger’s, and it hits the mark spot on. Christopher finds a neighbor’s dog dead with a pitchfork stuck in it:

I decided that the dog was probably killed with the fork because I could not see any other wounds in the dog and I do not think you would stick a garden fork into a dog after it had died for some other reason, like cancer for example, or a road accident. But I could not be certain about this.

It’s funny, but it’s also logical, in the irritating way that so many programmers are logical beyond reason. Poor Christopher can barely take a train — the man behind the window asks him if he wants a single ticket or a round trip, which he doesn’t understand.

“And he said, ‘Do you want to go one way, or do you want to go and come back?’
And I said, ‘I want to stay there when I get there.’
And he said, ‘For how long?’
And I said, ‘Until I go to university.’
And he said, ‘Single, then’.”

Christopher numbers the chapters with prime numbers, and can’t resist including a mathematical proof as an appendix, but he doesn’t know when people are angry with him and hates being touched so much his parents can’t hug him. I must warn you not to start reading it before you go to sleep because nobody I know has been able to put it down without reading through to the end.

libXpm buffer overflow problems

Solaris security suffers image problem – Apparently there’s a buffer overflow with the Xpm library. It’s just a shame that I don’t use Xpm files for anything anymore – all the gnome applications use .pngs’s and I don’t think I’ve seen an .xpm file over the web in years – they’re just too big for anything other than icons.

getting linux wireless working

Ok, it all works correctly in the office, as we have a 802.11g wireless hub, but when I’m at home this isn’t the case – it’s only 802.11(a/b).
All I get is a complaint that it can’t set the bit rate.
Grrrr.