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mod_speling Breaks Flash Forms in ColdFusion

February 12th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in ColdFusion, Linux, Technology, Work

We were setting up a new server for our ecommerce site, and we knew that the code was primarily used in Windows environments. Having wrestled with apps built by developers who think “case sensitve” means not buying animal skin luggage, we decided to be preemptive and configure mod_speling to make Apache case-insensitive on Linux.

The ColdFusion 8 installer creates an alias on Linux systems from cfide to CFIDE so that either will work. Flash forms need to call the scripts folder in CFIDE in order to load their various components. On this server, Flash 10 on Safari would show the “Initializing” message and fill the loading bar, then stop. No error, nothing. Firefox on OS X would show the loading window, then throw an error “RSL Load Failed” and stop at 40%. Googling this problem led us to believe that it couldn’t find the .swf or even the scripts folder.

I suspected mod_speling fairly early on, and disabled it. No luck. Reinstall CF, build a completely new server, lots of time wasted. I never could get the debug version of Flash Player 10 on OS X to work and dump a trace, and there aren’t any instructions for this specific version that I found. None of the log files were any help, no error messages, nothing. The best we could do was look at the network activity on the client and see what the page was trying to load. It looked like it was finding all of the files.

Finally, I checked the SSL config that was included in the Apache config on the server. Spellcheck was turned on there as well, and we had missed it. Turned it off, and suddently Flash forms work again. We still don’t know exactly why they failed, but it obviously has something to do with redirects and aliases for the CFIDE and/or scripts folder.

ADDENDUM: Turns out the CheckSpelling directive works in .htaccess files. So we have case sensitivity and flash forms coexisting, for now. This fellow found a rather unique solution too, but I haven’t tested it.

 

Obligatory Application List

February 5th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Technology, Work

I was reconfiguring yet another portable for work and meetings and thought it might be useful to me and interesting to others to post a standard “applications I use” list. These are the ones that I use most often and I try to put on any system I’ll be taking to meetings. Some things like Photoshop are missing because I don’t use them enough to install on every system I use.

There are many more applications that I use in specific circumstances, but they aren’t on my essentials list.

 

Worship in Spirit and Truth

January 27th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Faith, Opinion

I had an interesting discussion on Sunday with my wife and a friend. They had been to a worship service at the church we currently belong to that was very moving. It involved testimony on signs and audience participation. Evidently it was very moving.

My wife said that she kept thinking about how unimpressed I would be. She even mentioned something about wearing a Pharisee hat.

I’m not opposed to emotion in worship. I just don’t believe that it should be about emotional reaction, that it should be crafted specifically to elicit emotion as if that were some measure of “spirit and truth”. I think the Pharisee remark was based on my assertion that there is a right way and a wrong way to worship God. I’m just becoming more and more cynical about the whole concept of “personal” religion and the American “roll your own” mentality. I object to the idea that it’s your intent that matters, not your actions or words or forms. Where’s that scriptural precedent? Intent does matter, but so does what we do. Christ did not abolish the law and prophets, nor did he say that any of the ancient forms were wrong. He said that the forms and actions are not enough.

I think it does matter what we do when we say we’re “worshipping”. For what it’s worth, the Pharisees weren’t necessarily wrong, their doctrine was simply insufficient. You can get to Heaven by following every rule and law, but no human being other than Christ was able to do it.

Worship is about pleasing God, not us. Sermons aren’t worship. Fellowship isn’t worship. I don’t think we get to tell God what worship should be. I’ll need to read more on this issue, too.

 

I Just Want a Phone

January 14th, 2009 | 1 Comment | Posted in Opinion, Technology, Work

My Razr is finally dying, and I’m casting about for a new cell phone. I have an iPod Touch, and really like it, but I don’t always need a portable computer. It’s also not small, and I can’t really see carrying a phone that large. So I just want a phone.

I don’t want a camera, PDA, “web enabled device”, portable music player, video conferencing device nor even a full address book. I carry a phone to make and receive phone calls, occasionally a text message. I can handle phone keys for entering text, and I really don’t like downloading pictures and video on my phone. I don’t watch much TV, so zero need for that on a device.

I want the smallest, lightest, thinnest phone I can get, with excellent reception and call quality. I tried the Sony Ericsson W580i for a while, and it’s not bad. I couldn’t figure out how to turn off the face buttons, and I don’t need the music stuff. What really aggravated me was the proprietary charger. The Razr uses mini-USB, just like my kid’s Nintendos and my PlayStation controllers and my portable hard drives. I have those cables everywhere. I really hate having yet another cable to carry around or keep in multiple locations. Also, mini-USB can charge from the computer.

So, small, thin, light; excellent reception and call quality, no extraneous features, USB charging. I wonder if such a beast exists. All of the “simple” phones I’ve seen so far have been, frankly, ugly as hell. They’re not thin or light or small. I bet if they took most of the crap out of the new Razr it would be half the size and just what I want. Not likely though. I guess I’ll keep looking.

 

Heaven’s Blog

December 12th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Faith, Orthodoxy, Spirituality

In my continuing exploration of Orthodox Christianity, I have browsed various web sites related to Orthodoxy in America. Starting from the OCA site I found the site for the American Carpatho-Russian Orthodox Church which is under the Church of Constantinople. Apparently.

From there, I found a page for the church I attended for a time many years ago. I’m not Russian, it’s a story for another time, but I attended and sang in the choir. The new priest there has a blog, and I’m certain that if I still lived in Pittsburgh I would seek him out as a spiritual guide. His blog is brilliant. As I’ve read I’ve found myself agreeing over and over with him and learning new and fascinating things.

I’m very wary of following people. However, if I could find a person like this to talk to it would go a long way to restoring some sanity for me.