My pet project needs geeky help.

So, I’ve developed a bit of a pet peeve over the years against glo-sticks, and their myriad variations of use once and throw away bright and shinies. I’ve set up a website that I want to be a great place to find and discuss glo-stick alternatives. I’ve done some digging, and put up a few items. If you have any favorite light toys, could you go take a look at Death to Playa Glo Worms and post your suggestion(s)? If there isn’t a category for you favorite toy(s) let me know and I’ll create it.

Thanks!

-Chris

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SecureCRT on OS X!!!!!!

I have been using SecureCRT on Win32 systems for around a decade. It is by far the best SSH/Terminal application I have ever used. Sadly, there is nothing on OS X quite like it.

Sure, Leopard gave us tabbed browsing under OS X; but the ability to manage groups of tabs is, to say the least, crippled. JellyfiSSH gives us a nice menu for managing connections, but it in itself is limited. It won’t open new connections as a tab on an existing window.

I wrote an article a while back about getting SecureCRT working on CrossOver Mac, but that has its limitations as well. The majority of what I regularly need to do works, but there is a fair chunk of activities that just crash out.

Apparently I missed something in the last VanDyke News You Can Use newsletter. I missed a survey for OS X users. I missed the chance to raise my voice and say “I will buy it!”

Never fear though, for it appears that VanDyke is indeed embarking on this noble project!

——————————————
2. Survey Results – SecureCRT for Mac OS X
——————————————

Last month we surveyed you to learn more about how you use the Mac,
and what features you would like to see in SecureCRT for the Mac
platform.

Those of you who responded were not just home and educational
users: a significant number of corporate IT users were among the
participants, with a sizable portion in larger organizations. Job
titles tended to be technical, from IT managers to developers, with
some executives for good measure.

Not surprisingly, well over half of those who responded were
current Mac users. The same proportion say they will not be
running Windows on a desktop a year from now. As for their needs,
over half wanted to see the same session management and tabbed
interface that the Windows version offers.

The most surprising result was that over half of those who
responded said there was a trend in their organization to move
away from Windows within 12 months.

The survey is now closed, but we want to get your input during
initial development. Send your requirements and comments
directly to Maureen Jett, the SecureCRT product director, at
Maureen.Jett@vandyke.com.

This is FANTASTIC news! I can’t wait.

-Chris

ps. Now, if only the folks at Visual SlickEdit would get off their arses and write a Carbon/Cocoa native port of SlickEdit for OS X. Yeah, yeah, yeah… there is an X11 based port for OS X. Sadly, it falls into the same trap that SecureCRT under CrossOver Mac does: Some of it works the way you expect, and some doesn’t; and that is just too annoying to deal with at times.

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Hot Damn, Larry Niven was Right!

In “A World Out of Time“, Larry Niven wrapped quite a few unresolved scientific theories into an interesting bundle of a story. Not all of it has turned out to be true, such as RNA memory transfer. Also, it will be a while before we can actually prove whether circling a starship around a black hole will slow down its local time relative to the rest of the Universe and effectively travel forward in time. (Yes, I know, current research backs this theory; but it is something else to orbit a black hole and return in actuality.) Then there were the two different approaches to longevity that are proposed in “A World Out of Time“. One involved freezing a person’s endocrine system in their pre-pubescent years, which sounds pretty damn boring to me… spending eternity locked in a child’s body. Blech! The other theory, the one that looked like it was going to prove false with all the research regarding the role of telomeres in aging, seems like it just might be panning out: Cellular aging is (at least partially) a result of ‘garbage’ proteins building up in cells and can be reduced, if not eliminated, by cleaning these proteins out of the cell. Of course, this current research project used something a little more mundane that transmat (matter transfer) booths specifically tuned for these proteins; but the result is no less cool!

Follow the link for the article in all its coolness:

Scientists stop the ageing process ABC News in Science
[snip]

"Many of these diseases are due to 'misbehaving' or damaged proteins that accumulate in neurons. By preventing this decline in protein clearance, we may be able to keep these people free of symptoms for a longer time."

If the body's ability to dispose of cell debris within the cell were enhanced across a wider range of tissues, she says, it could extend life as well.

In healthy organisms, a surveillance system inside cells called chaperone-mediated autophagy CMA locates, digests and destroys damaged proteins.

Specialised molecules, the "chaperones", ferry the harmful material to membrane-bound sacs of enzymes within the cells known as lysosomes.

Once the cargo has been "docked", a receptor molecule transfers the protein into the sac, where it is rapidly digested.

With age, these receptors stop working as well, resulting in a dangerous build-up of faulty proteins that has been linked, in the liver, to insulin resistance as well as the inability to metabolise sugar, fats or alcohol.

The same breakdown of the cell's cleaning machinery can also impair the liver's ability to remove the toxic build-up of drugs at a stage in life when medication is often part of daily diet.

In genetically modified mice, Cuervo compensated for the loss of the receptors in the animals by adding extra copies.

"That was enough to maintain a clean liver and to prove that if you keep your cells clean they work better," she says.

[snip]

Sure, it took genetic engineering to make these mice livers stay young; and that isn’t practical for us pre-built human beings. The neat thing is, having isolated that this particular chemical process, perhaps a ‘rejuvenation’ technique can be developed for the receptors. Even if this therapy doesn’t work on all cells and organs, I sure wouldn’t mind a once a week pill I could take that would help me maintain the liver of a twenty year old! he he ha ha ho ho

-Chris

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I use Amazon affiliate links in some of my posts. I think it is fair to say my writing is not influenced by the $0.40 I earned in 2022.