Example of 'brilliant' apps?

Bill Hacker wbh at conducive.org
Sat Mar 19 12:40:00 PST 2005


Erik Wikström wrote:
"Bill Hacker" <wbh at xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:423c6f62$0$716$415eb37d at xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

Downside is that if you don't teach it not to talk to stangers, you'll
walk into
Starbucks for a coffee, pop open the lid, auto-connect to T-Mobile
and find some unsuspecting customer across the room has a Bluetooth
phone or PDA that's trying to sneak out for a little fun - and has noticed
your PowerBook advertising free love and internet connectivity - drive
sharing and chat, too if you haven't spanked it soundly.
They really oughta teach these bot's more cautious ways before they
give 'em batteries.  Just 'coz you don't do x86 doesn't mean you can't get
...taken advantage of ;-D
Bill


Well, I was hoping for something that would be able to run some scripts or
such so that you configure your services etc. according to the network you
are connected to, would be neat to dynamically change the firewall-rules so
that when home for example you are more open and when in an "unknown" net
you'd be as closed as could be.
--
Erik Wikström

Such settings are already in the Mac - should be adaptable to other *BSD's.

Ex: You start with 'Automatic', as described.  You can add multiple specific
'sets' of settings, and - lo and behold -they can have some/all of the
features of  'Automatic'.  Several of mine are identical execpt for 
selecting
specific (often off-continent) DNS for testng.

To do something similar in a *BSD, one could have 'set's of rc.conf, hosts,
and resolv.conf files and/or conditionals, and/or shell scripts that set new
over-rides and HUP stuff.
Not at all hard to implement.  Not even hard to do the probing.
IS hard to decide what to do, about it, when and where.
But that's where coding starts...  th 'what to od' more than the 'how'.

Bill



Bill





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