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    The description :revk ® 's rants 2018-06-05 insulin - an idea as i said, insulin transported at wrong temperature can go bad. the insulin i take is really clever stuff , releasing over time from one injection. but if...

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revk ® 's rants 2018-06-05 insulin - an idea as i said, insulin transported at wrong temperature can go bad. the insulin i take is really clever stuff , releasing over time from one injection. but if it gets too hot or cold it is buggered. so what we need is a clever means to include in the insulin something that changes colour dramatically if outside these temperature, but is also safe to inject. that way, badly stored insulin could turn red or some such. surely this is possible? p.s. as people have pointed out, far safer to have something external on the pen that shows out of temperature at some point, and no need to make it actually safe to inject. p.p.s. surprised manufacturers don't do this, as they would sell more where it was badly transported :-) posted by revk at 18:41:00 5 comments: labels: diabetic , insulin did gdpr kill my blog? no comments since 23rd? i almost had not noticed, i was sort of beginning to think i was boring all of a sudden. i have also been a tad busy. then i checked the "awaiting moderation" and loads of comments! i have approved all that look non spammy as always, sorry for the delay. yay! i am not boring, well, that much, yet... so i checked settings and the moderation email is marked "the email address added in this field will be invited by email, and will have 14 days to accept the invitation in order to receive notifications." so i am wondering if i missed an email pre-gdpr and so stopped getting the moderation emails. makes some sense... though, having changed the moderation email, i have not had any "invitation", so maybe it is just broken at blogger? sorry for the delay, and thanks for posting comments. and thanks to geekypenguin for asking on irc. how could i think i was just boring :-) posted by revk at 18:07:00 1 comment: labels: blogger , gdpr 2018-06-04 multihoming ipv6 i am lucky, i have an ipv6 pi block and announcements via multiple transit providers, but most people don't have that and rely on somewhat more flaky dsl lines and the like. if you have two providers for ipv6 you end up with two separate pa public ipv6 blocks, which is exactly what one of our customers ended up with. a /60 from us and a /60 from someone else. well, technically, from a&a he had a /48, but was only using /60. he wanted some higher availability networking, so went for "prefix mapping" rfc6296. now, this does seem a lot like ipv6 nat, i agree, but not really and almost none of the usual nat issues. basically he maps the low bits of the /60 from each provider incoming (68 bits of host) on to a local fd01::/60 block for machines on his lan. he can have dns for each device/ip on the lan pointing to both the external ip blocks. no change of source ip, nor ports, just mapping the ipv6 space. for outgoing he can map to a preferred link, or even randomly or randomly with a bias, mapping the host part of the fd01::/60 to each of the external public ipv6 blocks, and can even make that mapping apply depending on whether the ppp link in question is up or down! so for outgoing, one link down, just works. for incoming, one link down means things trying both ips from dns, which is quite common these days in many protocols. how has he done that? well, he asked on irc if firebrick do it, and the answer was no! we had something similar for ipv4 only on the older fb105 model but not on current firebricks. i ended up making him wait a whole 48 hours before i did an new alpha release that does this. the reason was i was waiting to issue a stable release with all the recent acme code first. no last minute changes for a new feature like this - a stable release needs to be, err, stable. outstanding support from @firebrickltd , after what if conversions with @therealrevk of @aaisp on irc re: nptv6 fast forward 48 hours (over a weekend...) and an alpha firmware has been shipped with the feature. such wonderful devices, and such wonderful support #firebrick4life — russell clare (@virtubean) 4 june 2018 — russell clare (@virtubean) 4 june 2018 but, it was a good idea, a good feature, restored some of the old fb105 features for block mapped addresses, and so i have issued it as an alpha now. my only thought now is if i should have some way to do random ip mapping one day... hmmm... obvious the solution is more complex than the ipv4 only old fb105 firebricks, as we not only allow ipv6 prefix mapping of any size, but also ipv4 prefix and range mapping, and ipv4 to ipv6 as well as ipv6 to ipv4 mapping. you can use this to make a nat64 mapping engine putting all of ipv4 space in an ipv6 /96 if you want. very flexible. have fun if you try the latest alpha, and obviously in a few weeks it will be in a general release. posted by revk at 17:39:00 6 comments: labels: firebrick , ipv6 , rfc6296 2018-06-03 insulin i am diabetic, and it is inherited from my mum. so i am on insulin, for a few years now. it was to be expected. i am lucky, as currently i only need one shot a day of a time release insulin (over 24+ hours) and some pills when i have a meal... but my dosage is mostly pretty consistent, and i try to stick to routine. i know i have had issues with insulin in transit before. i went to greece for a week and quickly realised my insulin must have got cooked in taxi from airport to hotel as it was not working - high blood sugar, asleep all the time, and zits and boils (one on my nose ended up with antibiotics once i was back home). really not nice. so i wonder how well the insulin is managed before i get it from pharmacist. recently after some change of medication i upped my daily dose from 40 units to 70+ units a day. medications for blood pressure have caused such changes before, but this seemed a tad extreme. i have taken to using a cooler pack specially for the insulin now even for short trips, and will do so this week for trip to a ship for a cruise. but this week (yesterday) i started a new batch, and today, well, wtf? this morning i went for breakfast as usual at costa, but by the time i got there i could hardly stand, was shaking, and really wondered if i would pass out! i had breakfast, coffee, and also 500ml of lucozade as well, and when i got home was only a 7 on the blood sugar (which is high side of perfectly normal), but all day i have been hitting hypos and eating and drinking more and more sugary drinks! this is silly! that said, i got a shit load of work done! wtf? i am wondering if i had a bad batch before, or something. i need to work on maybe lowering my dose over the next few days. a holiday is bad enough for this, and time zone changes, but this on top of it is not funny. more test strips and reserve chocolate for this trip i think! posted by revk at 19:40:00 5 comments: labels: diabetes , insulin 2018-05-29 winding down i am in this odd phase of a holiday all booked which is in only 9 days, 18 hours, 0 minutes, and 26 seconds away. oh, do i have a countdown app on my phone? maybe... i'm sort of putting off work i should do until after the holiday now. got a message from one of my cohorts today... "cagney's" is one of the restaurants on the ship. it seems i am not the only one "winding down". i am packed as much as i can be, which is also unusual for me. ok yes, maybe the packing is getting a bit ocd here. being weeks away i have labeled every cable and attached velcro cable ties to each, and put in labelled plastic boxes, and well, it is almost like i am bored or something! if i was a normal employee, this would be a couple of weeks of very low productivity for my employer. the irony is that i will get work done whilst on holiday too. i also have a list of things still to pack, and keep adding to it - latest being my hat, which will be needed assuming it is sunny. i even listed passport, just in case i am so tied up being careful to pack what is on the list and i forget some of the basics. yes insulin and needles are on the list too! is there a word for "fear of forgetting something". i bet there is. even so, i expect to do the new firebrick release before i go. the latest alpha has been tested a lot and very stable, and the last bits are just about ready. lots of work on the true random number generator in the fb2900, and the entropy from other sources for key generation. it has taken a bit longer than expected but it is important to get it all right. the acme stuff is very cool and easy to use now. posted by revk at 18:11:00 8 comments: labels: holiday 2018-05-25 analogue phones, 1876 to 2025, rip analogue phones have been around a long time, but bt plc have finally announced that in the uk the analogue phone will be gone by 2025. i have been saying this for a while, traditional landlines are on the way out. people use mobiles for calls, if they call at all as people tend to "message" and "text" and "facetime" a lot more these days, or so it seems to me. but the end is in sight - bt plc t/a openreach will stop selling analogue phone service, and even isdn phone services, in only 5 years time (2023) and stop actual services 2 years later in 2025. for actual phone calls the alternatives are mobile and voip. for businesses, services like webrtc to call from your browser. i have been using voip for a long time now, in fact i am not sure how long, but over a decade at least. this will be a challenge to some industries where analogue lines are still used for alarm monitoring systems, lifts, and just as a backup. it will also be interesting to see how ofcom cope as voice telephony becomes simply an "over to top" service just like web pages, email, or things like facetime, which are out of their remit. it will also be interesting if this move is followed by the death of the "phone number" as a thing. a&a have been selling broadband using the analogue copper pair simply as a carrier for the broadband for a long time. we don't do "landline" phone service. so for us, for these existing services, we simply migrate them to the data only variants rather than a "phone service with no calls" as we have now. the bigger challenge is the existing broadband customers that have a phone line from someone else and broadband with us. they will need to realise that they have to change at some point in the next 7 years. thankfully we already offer a means to migrate to a broadband only service and (where a bt number) port the number to voip which we can even point to a mobile sim if needed. even with our small customer base that represents an average of several lines per day that need moving in order to be finished in only 7 years! but for now, no change. we need to wait for bt to have these new sotap and sogea services rolled out, which is likely later this year. we live in interesting times... posted by revk at 05:59:00 21 comments: labels: 1876 , isdn , landline , phone , wlr 2018-05-23 pick a card, any card... @monzo a winner i have blogged a few times on issues with banks, and indeed, only yesterday, had the fun with barclays wanting me to text a short code after they authorised a card payment. so i thought it time to give a bit of a review of a couple of cards for personal use, monzo and starling, and how my views have changed slightly. for my non techie friends and relatives - download the monzo app on your smart phone and follow the instructions to get one now... just do it! summary i prefer monzo now , they are a proper bank now, and less hassle. i am recommending monzo to my friends. both monzo and starling accounts have a number of key features:- instant set up using a smart phone - you need photo of id and short video clip and your details, and sorted. both have "account switch" systems to move dds and payments from another bank, but you don't need to close your existing bank account - nothing stops you having more than one bank! the account does all the usual things like direct debits, faster payments, and so on. you can have you salary paid in to them. they are proper bank accounts. both offer overdrafts. both do apple pay. both do live updates of spending on the phone app. both allow third parties to send money using a debit card! i.e. charge someone's debit card to put money in to your account. that is cool, you can send someone a link to pay you money! both allow api integration with your own systems so you can see transaction details live on your own computer system if you are geeky enough to want that. it is cool for geeks, honest. both allow you to disable and re-enable the card as you wish. both allow separate spending pots / savings pots to partition off your money. there is not a lot to decide between them, but i have listed some of the key differences i have noted below and why i prefer monzo now. i feel they are especially good for anyone living on a budget and wanting to carefully manage their money. monzo i got a monzo card when it was in beta (my son got one in alpha), and was a pre-payment mastercard with quite a nice phone app. back then there was a waiting list even. i used in uk and us and worked well. it has moved on massively since then. it is a proper bank, and they have neat features like warning you of a direct debit the day before, and you have to love the "ka-ching" sound when using the card. they now have apple pay as well. some key advantages to monzo:- the app clearly shows the limits on usage, e.g. daily card usage amounts and so on. they have a warning of dd payments the day before. they show declined card transactions and the reason why declined, very useful if there is some fraud, or you simply mistyped the expiry date! the api (and app) has way more detail including sender bank sort code and account number and showing the proper reference on payments and direct debits. the "ka-ching" sound effect when you spend money really simple means to send payments between monzo card holders you know, or near you, and the reference allows lots of text and even emojis, and reaction emojis as well making easy to acknowledge a payment with a smiley face. that really bright orange! starling i got a starling card later than monzo, and one of the key things that impressed me was the instant set up. at the time monzo had a waiting list which i am assuming they do not now. also, not only did i have a working bank account in minutes, with sort code and account number, it was on apple pay instantly even before i has the card. next day it popped up offering an overdraft (though i don't use one). the day after the card arrived and it was in very cool packaging! whilst apple pay is a bit gimmicky, i do like it, and use it, so i started using starling for my day to day spending instead of monzo. i also asked them about spending limits on the card as the app does not show it and they said there was no limit. with that i decide starling was the card for me and pretty much stopped using monzo at all. indeed, a card that would just work for any amount i had on it, that was going to be my main bank account now. finally a card that would do what i wonder, or so i thought. i ran in to a few snags and basically they were not interested in fixing at all. one was that there were no details of sender sort code and account on payments, and another is the direct debits do not show the actual payment reference so you cannot relate to a specific dd notice for an individual invoice. whilst both are minor issues, my concern was their reluctance to do anything or consider either an issue. then, recently, i found that they misled me over the spending limit on the card and actually it is £10,000. they also said that fast payments were £10,000 in 24 hours too, so having moved money to starling to pay something more than £10,000 (only option was a single transaction for full amount as was on a web site) i could not move all the money back to a different account. it then turns out that this was also mis-information and that the £10,000 fast payment limit is per transaction! to this day i don't know if the £10,000 card limit is per transaction or per day... to my surprise, even days after alerting them to these issues and misinformation a friend contacted me to ask about starling limits as they too had multiple contradictory statements from starling about limits, and they wanted to buy a £16,000 car but did not want embarrassment by having the card declined. they too were considering new banks like starling because of the hassle of traditional banks and their over zealous and often misdirected "fraud protection" systems, and the appalling way you are treated once they are triggered. so it seems starling have not learned. this is a real shame. mistakes are one thing, not learning is another. now monzo have apple pay, i have basically stopped using starling. monzo have limits but they say what they are in the app, no ambiguity! their only possible saving grace is that starling do business accounts now (in limited cases), and if that has a sane api (with sender sort code and account as well as full reference) that may be useful. to be fair, some other features... pay interest on credit balances, which is nice. do some stuff with € it seems. it seems foreign cash withdrawals may be better. amex clearly neither monzo nor starling will help with any larger transactions. monzo is great for day to day spending, but if and when i want to spend more, i cannot trust them to work because of usage limits. also, i am wary of barclays or lloyds or other banks because of the hassle and attitude the second you trip their fraud systems. to be honest the attitude is perhaps the worst part. so, it seems, the best way forward is an amex card. they have a reputation for not dicking people about. i hope it is well founded. early days (1st month) but we will see. so far only hassle is pizza hut don't seem to take amex. otherwise no problems at all. i'll blog more on this if/when i really put them to the test but that may be some time. it is almost sad that i am deliberately putting everything i do through amex to make sure they build up my credit rather than using monzo. the good news is they do have an app and it has real time alerts. it is a bit odd, in fact, as the alerts flag up in the apple wallet in real time, and the amex app lags behind by minutes. but the end result is i can see spending in real time just the same monzo or starling, which is nice. it also means any fraud can be sorted really quickly. i hope that has been useful - i appreciate an amex card is not for everyone - i have a wide range of readers and friends and i know some have used amex platinum for years (and have more money than sense, some of them), but some have almost no income and struggle, so it is a tad hard making a blog post that works for that range of people - maybe i have succeeded this time. i know that, thinking back to when i was really broke, a monzo card would have been perfect. posted by revk at 17:52:00 25 comments: labels: amex , monzo , starling new toy (mag card reader/writer) much like barcodes are a bit of a hobby, magnetic cards have been for a long time. i made my first mag card reader using a sony walkman cassette head mounted on a block of wood, over 30 years ago... back then magnetic stripes were the main way bank cards worked, even for cash machines, long before we had chips in cards. oddly, they are still quite common in the us but i understand chip and pin is catching on. they are also used for some door entry systems. well, on a whim, i got one of these :- of course, really, most people have no need for a card reader, and even less use for a card writer. now, in my case, we sort of do. we have a nice card printing machine, which will also encode mag stripes on cards. the driver code is written by me (as had no linux drivers). we sell printed cards, including encoding mag stripes on cards for customers. we used to have a card reader and it seems to be missing, hence my buying a new one. it is useful for checking things if needed. but i thought i'd order one that writes, why not? i got an msr pro usb reader/writer. seems easy to use, and very flexible. to be honest, unless you have a mag card based control system of some sort, a door entry system, or maybe handling mag cards is part of the business (like us), you probably have no "legitimate" use for a reader or writer. of course there are probably fun uses for this, and also not so legal uses, especially if there are places that only use the mag stripe in some way for bank cards. these are few and far between, but i noted when in the us they not only used the mag stripe but also print the "name" from it on the receipt. i am not sure i have the nerve to do it, but i could, for example, recode a card so that instead of track 1 containing ^kennard/adrian^ it could contain ^service/included^ so that in the us it prints that on the receipt just to confuse them. would that be "legal"? i have no idea (and even less so for us law ). the card remains the issuers property but this is not "damaging" or even defacing their property, and it can be undone by re-writing the original coding. it is not done in order to defraud anyone (even in us, tips are supposedly optional). so might even be legal. of course there may be specific laws covering this (there is a law on changing esn in mobile phones, would you believe!). that said, i am not sure i'd want to get caught doing it... the more dodgy thing to do, is to recode the other details, copy someone's card mag stripe to another card. now, these days, with chips being used rather than mag stripes, it is not going to work. if done to defraud someone it would be very illegal. so whilst this is a fun toy, it is really only any use for things like checking we have correctly coded cards, and debugging the code that drives the card printing machine. so i would not suggest you rush out and buy one... p.s. first thing was packet dumps from my machine whilst running the card reader s/w to double check it was not sending every card i scanned to china. posted by revk at 14:50:00 4 comments: labels: mag card , msr pro 2018-05-22 holiday tech i am off on a cruise next month. i am still amazed my mates and i manage to rustle up what it costs, but it makes for a fun holiday each year. but i am taking tech, i do that, and so do my mates. we all have work to do. this year i plan to take the proper desktop mac i use. because i can, and the suite has a nice useful table for it. so i have a flight case for it! but there is more - i expect to do some work - there are "sea days" on this cruise. so firebricks, ethernet, fibre, and all sorts, just to be able to work on this stuff. so i expect to take some "tech" with me... of course i also want to take pictures and videos, so even more tech. that said, i do plan to have some time relaxing, honest. posted by revk at 19:24:00 3 comments: labels: cruise 2018-05-21 if you wanna be the best, if you wanna beat the rest, medication's what you need ok sorry, that slogan was from some old tv show and was "dedication" not "medication", but so easy to change in your head. amlodipine is the latest they have me on for blood pressure. i changed from indapamide to this, and it is, err, interesting. first off, the indapamide made me very "on-edge" but i could get work done, but was out of breath all the time. now on amlodipine it is different. the first thing was going off the indapamide meant i was hypo (low blood sugar) and had to quite drastically lower my insulin. hypo is pretty easy to spot and to fix, if you have snacks. then put on amlodipine i was hyperglycaemic, which is harder to spot. you feel more tired, which is easy to dismiss. but you also find infections, spots, acne, boils, and all sorts within days. not at all nice. high blood sugar can be a real pain, and take a while to recover. though, low blood sugar can be dangerous in very short timescales too. it is harder to die from high blood sugar, generally, but not nice. what is key is any change of any medication, even if unrelated to diabetes, do the blood sugar tests like mad , even if only for a few days! other unrelated medication like these drugs for blood pressure can have a massive impact! amlodipine has massively pushed up blood sugar and i am on almost twice the daily insulin now. that alone is strange. routine is everything - change anything from routine and it all goes to shit. i had this at the weekend, with being late for my usual breakfast. ok breakfast is a costa coffee and sausage roll, but normally at 8:30. my body does not understand weekends. on sunday, my blood sugar went from high 7 to low 4 in 20 minutes and by 9:30 i was shaking. going on holiday, along with a few time zone changes, is going to be, err "fun". i'll cope. there is 24 hour pizza on the ship! as long as i stick to routine now, i think i have it sussed, finally. much higher insulin, but breakfast, some light lunch, a proper dinner (with gliclazide) and a few drinks... the daily routine works and keeps me on balance. it amazes me sleep for 8 hours+ works to be honest as during the day that would not, so clearly my body learns a routine and adapts. it was so much easier when my body regulated this crap entirely by itself! one day we'll have stem cell or artificial replacement pancreas implants, but for now, i inherited this crap from my mum. not her fault, obviously, and she has had a way harder time than i have. but that's life. posted by revk at 20:19:00 10 comments: labels: amlodipine , diabetes , indapamide , insulin , medication , type 1 , type 2 older posts home subscribe to: posts (atom) www.me.uk everything i write here is just my honest opinion and not a statement by my employer, etc, you get the idea. if you find any words or pictures menacing or offensive , or likely to impair your computer , or alarming or distressing , stop reading now and don't come back (and don't forget to block me on social media too). nothing here is legal advice. everything on this blog is without prejudice, just in case. comments are moderated so do not appear instantly. you take responsibility for any comments you post. always bookmark www.me.uk as i may change the url blogger sees. and please, if you don't like what i post, say so - comment - discuss... about me revk i write code. i like to do things right. google+ @therealrevk youtube view my complete profile search this blog labels a&a (77) bt (61) ipv6 (20) politics (105) snooping (74) tech (215) terror (57) blog archive ▼ 2018 (92) ▼ june (4) insulin - an idea did gdpr kill my blog? multihoming ipv6 insulin ► may (20) ► april (10) ► march (16) ► february (23) ► january (19) ► 2017 (276) ► december (32) ► november (32) ► october (24) ► september (17) ► august (20) ► july (27) ► june (22) ► may (30) ► april (18) ► march (22) ► february (17) ► january (15) ► 2016 (205) ► december (17) ► november (13) ► october (8) ► september (11) ► august (22) ► july (14) ► june (14) ► may (17) ► april (23) ► march (20) ► february (27) ► january (19) ► 2015 (283) ► december (28) ► november (33) ► october (16) ► september (28) ► august (24) ► july 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Whois is a protocol that is access to registering information. You can reach when the website was registered, when it will be expire, what is contact details of the site with the following informations. In a nutshell, it includes these informations;

Error for "me.uk".

the WHOIS query quota for 2600:3c03:0000:0000:f03c:91ff:feae:779d has been exceeded
and will be replenished in 109 seconds

WHOIS lookup made at 15:05:38 12-Sep-2017

--
This WHOIS information is provided for free by Nominet UK the central registry
for .uk domain names. This information and the .uk WHOIS are:

Copyright Nominet UK 1996 - 2017.

You may not access the .uk WHOIS or use any data from it except as permitted
by the terms of use available in full at http://www.nominet.uk/whoisterms,
which includes restrictions on: (A) use of the data for advertising, or its
repackaging, recompilation, redistribution or reuse (B) obscuring, removing
or hiding any or all of this notice and (C) exceeding query rate or volume
limits. The data is provided on an 'as-is' basis and may lag behind the
register. Access may be withdrawn or restricted at any time.

  REFERRER http://www.nominet.org.uk

  REGISTRAR Nominet UK

SERVERS

  SERVER uk.whois-servers.net

  ARGS me.uk

  PORT 43

  TYPE domain

DISCLAIMER
This WHOIS information is provided for free by Nominet UK the central registry
for .uk domain names. This information and the .uk WHOIS are:
Copyright Nominet UK 1996 - 2017.
You may not access the .uk WHOIS or use any data from it except as permitted
by the terms of use available in full at http://www.nominet.uk/whoisterms,
which includes restrictions on: (A) use of the data for advertising, or its
repackaging, recompilation, redistribution or reuse (B) obscuring, removing
or hiding any or all of this notice and (C) exceeding query rate or volume
limits. The data is provided on an 'as-is' basis and may lag behind the
register. Access may be withdrawn or restricted at any time.

  REGISTERED no

DOMAIN

  NAME me.uk

NSERVER

  NSA.NIC.UK 156.154.100.3

  NSB.NIC.UK 156.154.101.3

  NSC.NIC.UK 156.154.102.3

  NSD.NIC.UK 156.154.103.3

  DNS1.NIC.UK 213.248.216.1

  DNS2.NIC.UK 103.49.80.1

  DNS3.NIC.UK 213.248.220.1

  DNS4.NIC.UK 43.230.48.1

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Mistakes


The following list shows you to spelling mistakes possible of the internet users for the website searched .

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