Hack-a-Day.com is dead. Long live Hack-a-Day.com!

Yes folks Hack-a-Day is back online and it looks like most of the issues have been ironed out.  I’m sure Eliot and Co. are glad to have it up and running once again.

If you need your fix, please go to http://hackaday.com versus http://www.hackaday.com.  Every DNS server I have checked at the time of this posting does not have a standard ‘www’ record for hackaday.com.  If you cannot get to http://hackaday.com, odds are your DNS records are stale.  You can clear your local DNS cache with an ipconfig /flushdns at the command line.  If that does not work, your DNS provider might not have updated records.  In that case, use 4.2.2.2 as your DNS host.

Either way, everyone can calm down now since you can get your Hack-a-Day fix once again!

Hack-a-Day is Down (For Now)

As you have probably noticed (and who hasn’t?), the Hack-a-Day web site is currently down and has been for a few days.  It seems that initially, DNS issues plagued the site and then they were DDoS’d when the propagation completed.  Now a pending Wordpress conversion is underway, which should be completed soon.  Forum moderator snorkle256 got the scoop from Eliot last night:

09/09/2008 21:52:46 ‹eliot› so, we’re moving to Wordpress.com VIP hosting (take that Anderson Cooper)
09/09/2008 21:53:03 ‹eliot› and we’re waiting for them to completel the transition
09/09/2008 21:53:38 ‹eliot› The fist downtime was moving from Blogsmith on AOL’s servers to Wordpress in our colo
09/09/2008 21:54:19 ‹eliot› once we came back up we were getting DDoS’d from the first day
09/09/2008 21:54:57 ‹eliot› that essentially saturated the 1G connection Sunday night
09/09/2008 21:55:17 ‹eliot› the devs took us down and decided to investigate other options
09/09/2008 21:56:13 ‹eliot› Wordpress is not easy to use at our level
09/09/2008 21:58:27 ‹eliot› we decided to go with Wordpress.com since this is there software and scaling will be there problem not ours
09/09/2008 21:59:06 ‹eliot› right now we’re just waiting to hear that it’s finalized
09/09/2008 21:59:26 ‹eliot› it should be within the next day; we were expecting today
09/09/2008 22:00:10 ‹eliot› k, I’m back to watching Spider Man cry

In the meantime, why not check out our Forum or Chat Room to satisfy your Hack-a-Day cravings?

Check back here for any subsequent updates.

MyVu Personal Video Viewer Hacked to Allow Input From Any Video Device

For those of you unfamiliar with the MyVu Personal Video Device, it resembles a set of sunglasses with video screens and a pair of headphones built in.  It’s a great little product, but forum member RetroPlayer did not like the fact that his MyVu was tethered only to his iPod.  He decided he wanted to liberate the mini-theater to allow it the ability to connect to any video player with a standard CINCH/AV output, aka an “RCA Output”.

He poked around for a bit, then finally ended up calling MyVu in order to try talking to an engineer.  Surprisingly, he was put through to one, and the engineer was quite accommodating.  He gave RetroPlayer a ton of information, which helped him overcome some issues he was having.

The hack works well, but isn’t quite complete yet.  RetroPlayer has posted schematics and all the details of his project, but has stated that he will continue working on it, taking it from the breadboard to an actual adapter.

4th of July Special - Set off Fireworks Using an Arduino!

In an attempt to ensure that all of his digits survive the 4th of July, forum member morehpperliter has devised a simple but elegant replacement to the time-honored tradition of “light the fuse and run like hell!”  Using an Arduino and a bit of code know-how, you too can keep yourself out of the emergency room this 4th of July.  Or you can continue shooting Roman Candles at your friends and hoping for the best…whichever works for you.

Always on USB Charging Port for Your PC

Forum member Cerberus posted a tutorial on how to rig up an always-on USB charging port for your PC using a spare USB port, a resistor, and a few pieces of wire.

It requires a small bit of soldering know-how, but anyone who has used an iron at least one time can pull this off.  It is a great option for someone looking to reduce clutter while saving energy, since it enables and USB device to charge while your PC is turned off without the need for yet another wall wart.

Newsbin + NZBs + Gmail = MailBin

I am happy to announce the first public release of my MailBin application, which works in conjunction with Gmail and Newsbin to enable individuals to remotely queue up Usenet downloads by emailing themselves .nzb files.

The concept is simple, utilizing the ability to send oneself a message at Gmail.com with characters appended to your usual email address.  The MailBin application, along with Newsbin takes care of the rest.  Read more about the program here, and join the forum discussion here.

It is Alpha software in that it has not been broadly tested, but I am pretty sure of its capabilities.  Please pass along any bug reports, suggestions, etc you might have.

Thanks to Morehpperliter for the initial idea.

Securing Windows Remote Desktop with CopSSH

I like having the ability to remotely access my PC at home while I am away in case I want to grab an important file I have left there, or if I need to finish something I didn’t quite get around to.  For ages I simply set port forwarding on my router allowing port 3389 to be directed to my desktop PC, which let me connect to my computer using Microsoft Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP).  While this was not the most secure method of doing so, it worked, and I did not want to change how I did things.That’s not to say that RDP is not secure – it does use 128 bit RC4 according to Microsoft.  However, with man-in-the-middle attacks being relatively easy to carry out, I thought there had to be a better (and more secure) way of connecting to my oh so precious home network.

In the end, I decided that I could route my RDP sessions through an SSH tunnel and sleep a little easier at night.  If you follow the directions below, you can too…

Installing CopSSH

1)    Download CopSSH, Putty and Puttygen.

2)    Execute the CopSSH installer, click Next to proceed, then click I agree to accept the license agreement.

CopSSH Screen 1

Continue reading ‘Securing Windows Remote Desktop with CopSSH’

A Quick Hello to Our New Visitors

I can see that we are getting a little influx of traffic from my Lifehacker comments and such, so I wanted to give visitors an idea of what Team Hack-a-Day is about, and encourage them to stop by our forum and chat room as well.

Our main focus is participating in Stanford University’s Folding@Home Project, which is a distributed computing application which allows Stanford researchers to utilize unused computer cycles to further their research into diseases such as cancer, Alzheimer’s,  Huntington’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, etc.  This is done by downloading the Folding@Home software package and installing it on your computer.  It is an incredibly easy process, and I encourage any visitors that are not currently participating in the project to do so.  A (somewhat dated) installation and configuration walk through can be found here.

For those of you wondering why or how we became organized around this project, you can read the full details here - for those of you who want the quick and dirty version, here goes.  Several readers of the Hack-a-Day blog decided to start participating in Stanford’s Folding@Home project, and one skilled gentleman that goes by the name BillytheImpaler put together a great how-to guide to help others get folding.  Many people joined in, and once the community began to outgrow the Hack-a-Day comments section, a user by the name of PocketLnt started an online forum for the group.  With an unofficial blessing from Eliot Phillips, the founder of Hack-a-Day, Team Hack-a-Day and our web site were born.

As time went on, the group grew in magnitude as did our Folding@Home contributions.  Team Hack-a-Day is now ranked number #29 in the world for its contributions to Stanford’s Folding@Home project with a total of over 80,000,000 points.

Our forum is full of people from various backgrounds with two things in common: our love for technology, and our drive to help rid the world of these protein-related diseases any way we can.  Take a look around, I guarantee you will find something of interest.

Safely Shutting Down and Restarting explorer.exe in Windows XP

I saw a recent article on Lifehacker about cleanly shutting down and restarting explorer.exe in Windows Vista. I gave it a try in XP just for the sake of it, and not surprisingly, it did not work.

I did however find a way to do it in Windows XP that I wanted to share with others.

You can see the full process after the jump.
Continue reading ‘Safely Shutting Down and Restarting explorer.exe in Windows XP’

A Tale of Two RAID Controllers

It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of a working Promise RAID controller, it was the age of a failed Promise RAID controller…

My motherboard has two on board Sata RAID controllers - one Promise FastTrack 378 controller and one Intel ICH5 controller. They are far from enterprise-grade, but they get the job done…most of the time. I began having problems with the ICH5 controller awhile back, where the controller would suddenly “lose” one or both of the drives in my RAID0 array. Obviously this is a problem, but I stuck with that controller until I couldn’t take it any more.

I finally decided to give up on the Intel controller, so I started shopping around for a new SATA II controller card, capable of RAID0. I narrowed down my options and settled on a Promise FastTrack TX2300 card, figuring that since my current Promise controller had a good track record, adding another Promise card would be great.

That assumption couldn’t have been further from the truth. Let’s just say the card didn’t live up to its “Promise”…
Continue reading ‘A Tale of Two RAID Controllers’