Ruben’s UNIX Secure Delete Crash Course

Software

To "securely" delete a file on a UNIX or Unix-like system such as GNU/Linux, BSD/Mac OS X, Solaris, Kenny Rogers:

user$ srm FILENAME

From the manpage:

srm removes each specified file by overwriting, renaming, and truncating it before unlinking. This prevents other people from un-deleting or recovering any information about the file from the command line.

And how do you make it dance?

srm, like every program that uses the getopt function to parse its arguments, lets you use the — option to indicate that all following arguments are non-options. To remove a file called ‘-f’ in the current
directory, you could type either “srm — -f” or “srm ./-f”.

* However just to clarify, there is no such thing as secure in computing. All computers have inherent (even if not yet discovered) flaws and data recovery can only be truly rendered useless if the device containing the data you want to delete is ripped out, incinerated, shredded or placed inside a nuclear reactor with evil demonic monkeys. You have been warned.

Development and discussion of srm is carried out at http://source-forge.net/project/?group_id=3297, which is also accessible via http://srm.sourceforge.net.


Rubenerd Show 154: The brilliance of Kevin Kern episode

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10:00 – The art of sleep (Israel Brown's sleep idea), why I don't download music through P2P (and it's NOT because I'm afraid of the RIAA), a music review of The Enchanted Garden by the amazingly talented Kevin Kern (information from Realmusic and Wikipedia article), and why I still can't eat Asian food for breakfast.

Recorded in Adelaide, Australia. Licence for this track: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.5. Attribution: Ruben Schade.


Rubenerd Show 153: The food and beverage spillage episode

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10:00 – Freezing weather in Australia, spilling food for maximum financial loss (my Roger David stain proof jacket, coffee, wine, McDonalds chips), deceptive language from the RIAA, South Australian wine, irritating TV ads, installing Boot Camp successfully on a MacBook (not the MacBook Pro) and flatulent aliens.

Recorded in Adelaide, Australia. Licence for this track: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.5. Attribution: Ruben Schade.


Rubenerd Show 152: The busted iBook episode

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10:00 – Reflections on Show 151, Japanese Best Denki in Singapore, my indestructible iBook G3 ("friend" dropping it, working perfectly), replacement hinges (calling Apple, spitting coffee), being too passive, random quotes (Simpsons on marriage, Australian newspapers on YouTube), and messed up days.

Recorded in Adelaide, Australia. Licence for this track: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.5. Attribution: Ruben Schade.


Rubenerd Show 151: The John Howard university rant episode

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10:00 – Ruben's agitated! "Free" university education, why government should damn well pay (expense versus investment, taxes, medical insurance, retirement), the National Party of Australia is useless, explaining HECS, Centrelink doesn't care, working rather than studying and why Howard would rather bomb Iraq than help Australia's kids.

Recorded in Adelaide, Australia. Licence for this track: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.5. Attribution: Ruben Schade.


Singapore City in June 2006

Media

Someone has put a great new high resolution picture of Singapore City on the Wikipedia article for (you guessed it) Singapore:

Singapore City

The original photo page can be found on Wikipedia and the Wikimedia Commons. I mirrored the image here so I'm not leeching bandwidth.


Old But Useful Software

Software

OldVersion.com

This website has been invaluable to me so many times. Basically it's a repository of outdated software that has been made unavailable by their original creators in an attempt to get you to get the later release.

I wholehearteldy agree with their slogan "Because newer isn't always better". I think to a certain degree newer versions of programs are useful when they provide better support, improved feautres [that people actually care about] and security and stability fixes, but too often in regards to commercial software it seems vendors just roll out new versions just to get their hands on more of our money.

Some examples of "outdated" software I still run:

  • Windows 2000 Professional: the only version of Windows I'll touch)
  • iTunes 5: I can't afford a video iPod, and it seems more stable than v6
  • Office 97: Well, I use OpenOffice.org now, but before then I used it, even after 2000, XP and 2003 since came out. What other "useful" features did they include?

OldVersion.com


Drunk Daddy Lyrics

Media

Big band and swing music is too good!

I thought some of these lyrics from "Drunk Daddy" by the Cherry Poppin' Daddies were pretty smart.

“You arm is too short to box with God”
“Okay dad you can beat me but you’ll never beat me!”


Collagen Most Common Protein

Thoughts

Well how about that!

Folding fact #23

Collagen is the most common protein in the body. By weight, over 50% of our proteins are collagen.

~ Folding @ Home

Oh and that picutre above is a visual model of the myoglobin protein. I know it's not collagen, but its a protein, and it looks pretty :)


Rubenerd Show 150: The 150th Episode… episode

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10:00 – Reaching 150 (progress made), why I can't use Ourmedia anymore, the irritating habit of talking about one's podcast (why I'm a hypocrites), Retro Rubenerd Aha (Episode 50, Sun 23/Oct/2006), NASA World Tour 1999, and celebrating by splurging on a BucketBoss Brand MugBoss ("desk and workbench organiser"). Thank you everyone, you all rock!

Recorded in Adelaide, Australia. Licence for this track: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.5. Attribution: Ruben Schade.