Archive for October, 2004

ifiz, not Pixelarmy

Hey! You are not in Pixelarmy website! It’s here. I found this link in my referrers, so I went to check what it was. I didn’t catch the purpose of the page the first 10 seconds I looked at it. OK. Is it a kind of compilation of nice websites? If it’s so, I’m pretty happy to see my site there! So, I repeat it, your not in Pixelarmy, you’re in ifiz! But, still want to thank gabilondo for his Blogomania.

Oh! And on another hand, just check at Modzine.net to make some hits and show pogz that we want Modzine back! Damn, this is so unique :-)

Update: YAY?

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The day I tried Wordpress

After testing out Movable Type and Blogger, I decided to give WordPress a try. I didn’t have a lot of experience in manipulating MySQL databases, but I was decided to learn it, since WP is using SQL databases.

So, after downloading the small 300KB zip file, I installed it in my local PHP server directory. At first, I got some problems in installing the “software” because I had to create a database with PHPMyAdmin, which was a pain to do, for me. And after understanding how SQL is working, with users, tables, etc; I got it.

The user interface is pretty interesting. Better than Blogger’s one I must say. I don’t know if it’s better than MT’s one, because I never reached this step in the process of trying Movable Type ;) Also, a nice function of WP is the Import System. You can import your posts from MovableType, Blogger, GreyMatter, LiveJournal, etc. But the perfect Import option for me was the RSS 2.0 import. WP retreives all your posts written in your RSS feed. Isn’t that wonderful? OK, it can’t import entries’ comments via the feed… but I guess it does when importing from MT or Blogger.

But I found it quite hard when it comes to editing templates. A load of XHTML tags with PHP variables. How can you integrate an already existing CSS layout to this? I guess it’s impossible. You have to design a new layout to match WP items.

In conclusion, WordPress is the best blogging software I ever tested. If the author, Matt Mullenweg, would be able to code a Cutenews import module (which would import categories and comments correctly), I’d switch to it right after.

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Cutenews exploits

I’ve just realized that the fact that Cutenews’ code is public helped hackers to discover some exploits in it. I won’t mention any of the exploits here, that’s not the goal of this entry! Just wanted to tell an advice to Cute users:

Rename your cutenews/ to a personal name which you’ll be the only one to know.

I discovered that the number of potential exploits can be highly reduced if the ‘hacker’ doesn’t know where Cutenews is located.

P.S. - Many exploits in Cute has been fixed in latest versions, but I’m still using 1.3.2 version. So, risks of exploits are lower if you’re using 1.3.5+.

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