Archive for February, 2007
The Top Level Categories plugin allows you to remove the prefix before the URL to your category page. For example, instead of example.com/category/work, it’ll show, example.com/work for the category address. WordPress doesn’t allow you to have a blank prefix for categories (they insert category/ before the name), this plugin works around that restriction.
more info
import_wordpress allows you to import posts and linked files from a WordPress site to another WordPress site.
HeadSpace2 allows you to add meta-data to your posts, pages, search results, archives, and categories. Meta data is added via a GUI, or can be automatically extracted from post content. Also allows modification to page titles, blog name, and per-post themes.
HeadSpace allows you to configure settings for specific posts, pages, and category pages. In addition to
The video here is someone’s concept of a Zune Phone with a giant receiver and running various different things like Windows Paint, DOS (or at least the command prompt) and Reversi on what looks like WM5. Yikes. While I might agree that the concept of a Zune phone is a little absurd in the first place, I'm not sure I'd go so far as to say it's quite that absurd. Video after the jump.
A retail kiosk video showcasing Windows Vista Ultimate has been made available for download from Microsoft. The Redmond Company has kept things hush-hush about this release and has not explained in any way its reasons for making the video fragment available. It is certainly not for publicity reasons, as Windows Vista advertisements have become ubiquitous.
The
Symantec has bombarded Windows vista with malicious code. Literally! A total of 2,000 instances of malicious code have been executed under the Windows Vista framework and the operating system emerged quasi immaculate, but immaculate nonetheless. While Symantec has a long history of downplaying the security contribution
Microsoft has invested heavily in protecting the core of Windows Vista. Despite this, Vista is far from being a security silver bullet, and the fact of the matter is that the threat landscape is adapting to the security strategy implemented by Microsoft and evolving past it. “Attackers have already moved on,” revealed Symantec. In this context,
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