This is a good week for variety; I managed to get historical links, game links, music links, hardware… checking all the boxes except roguelikes, darnit.
- The Design of the Roland Juno oscillators. Nicely explained. (via)
- 50 Years of Text Games, a new year each week, and here’s the post schedule, and of course, 1971: The Oregon Trail. (via)
- Tunguska: Ternary Computer Emulator. (via)
- How Graphviz thinks the USA is laid out.
- 7-screen laptop, from a year ago. (via)
- Christmas Cards The Unix Way – with pic and troff. (video)
- Systems design explains the world: volume 1.
- Our alerts are quiet most of the time (as they should be). I wish this was more common.
- The 100 Best Albums of 2020. You will find something unexpected in there. (via)
- Repairing and bootstrapping an IBM PC/AT 5170, Part 3.
- Embedding an SQL injection into a company name. (via)
- The Immortal Soul of an Old Machine, 40th anniversary review of The Soul of a New Machine. (via)
- Now here’s a geek watch.
- ASCII Weather Station.
- ECC RAM and why it’s useful.
- Intellivision returns. (via)
- Plaintext HTTP in a Modern World.
Your post finally convinced me to read Plaintext HTTP in a Modern World. Yep… that’s part of the reason why I never set up my websites to force HTTPS.
For other company names see
https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/10542519
https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/12956509
The latter used to be called “><SCRIPT SRC=HTTPS:
as per https://www.companysearchesmadesimple.com/company/uk/12956509/script-src-https-mjt-xss-ht-script-ltd/
Oops, sorry, It was called “> LTD
Here’s much better background
https://boingboing.net/2020/11/09/uk-company-script-srchttps-mjt-xss-ht-ltd-told-to-change-its-name.html