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#1
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aging stats
Just read (and heard on the radio, simultaneously, through an odd
coincidence) about Economist Ray Fair's formulas to calculate effects of age on marathon times. Article is at http://www.nytimes.com/2003/10/28/he...4c576b8ea923c0 and Fair's original piece is linked from his web site - http://fairmodel.econ.yale.edu/rayfair/marath.htm I'm curious about thoughts as to how closely the pattern holds for xc, esp. given role of technique. Another unrelated Q...since posting here for the first time about 4 days ago, I've got about 10 virus-infected e-mails addressed to the posting address (which I use for nothing else)...is this normal? Also, what program do people use to create addresses like ? tyvm Derick |
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#2
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aging stats
DF wrote:
Another unrelated Q...since posting here for the first time about 4 days ago, I've got about 10 virus-infected e-mails addressed to the posting address (which I use for nothing else)...is this normal? Derick I'm fending off 20 or more a day ... all huge file attachments. |
#3
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many virus - spam - file attachments (was aging stats)
Does the virus problem seem to be only from posting to this newsgroup?
Or did you also post to other newsgroups at about the same time? The same thing happened to me in the last month or two. First one of my Email addresses got those 20 Emails a day with huge file attachments. So I got another new Email address, and almost immediately after I started posting to this newsgroup and others, that started having the same problem. After that I got another Email account and finally started mangling the return address -- this seemed to solve the problem -- but it was a shame to see two Email accounts get disabled first. If this problem only occurs with this newsgroup and not others, I've got a definite suspicion about what's causing it. what program do people use to create addresses like I just use my regular Email program. You just have to figure out how to tell it to use an address for newsgroups which is different from your default Email. I have not heard of a PC-based Email program which couldn't change that address setting. Ken |
#4
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aging stats
I think the ideas in that article
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/10/28/health/28RUN.html show promise for feeling good about maintaining the sense of challenge even as measured finish times get slower. Interesting the NYC runners club is now calculating age-adjusted finish times for the NYC marathon. I'm curious about thoughts as to how closely the pattern holds for xc, esp. given role of technique. In addition to technique, I think there's three other factors that make it tricky to use the same ratios for XC ski races: (1) different snow conditions from year to year. (just need to get Professor Fair working on yet another adjustment factor) (2) a key limiter for Running performance is injuries (3) another key factor for XC skiing is specificity and quality of off-season training. Big gains are possible here due to learning from experience, and from the more flexible work-life schedules that some obtain in later years. Runners get less advantage from (3), because it's easier to get a good-quality specific workout in wet weather and darkness, and because the risk of injury puts a limit on the total number of hours that can be used effectively. Ken |
#6
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aging stats
DF wrote:
Just read (and heard on the radio, simultaneously, through an odd coincidence) about Economist Ray Fair's formulas to calculate effects of age on marathon times. Article is at http://www.nytimes.com/2003/10/28/he...4c576b8ea923c0 and Fair's original piece is linked from his web site - http://fairmodel.econ.yale.edu/rayfair/marath.htm I'm curious about thoughts as to how closely the pattern holds for xc, esp. given role of technique. Another unrelated Q...since posting here for the first time about 4 days ago, I've got about 10 virus-infected e-mails addressed to the posting address (which I use for nothing else)...is this normal? Also, what program do people use to create addresses like ? Check out the description of how SWEN/Sobig.F works, there's a good article on the F-Secure home page. Executive summary: On any infected machine which has a configured news server, the virus will download a random set of recent posts in a random set of newsgroups, then parse those postings to come up with email addresses to forward the virus to. Terje PS. I have gotten more than a GB of such emails since august, which makes it totally impossible to get my mail unless I'm on a fast & unmetered connection. :-( -- - "almost all programming can be viewed as an exercise in caching" |
#7
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many virus - spam - file attachments (was aging stats)
On Fri, 31 Oct 2003 05:02:48 GMT, "Ken Roberts"
wrote: Does the virus problem seem to be only from posting to this newsgroup? Or did you also post to other newsgroups at about the same time? The same thing happened to me in the last month or two. First one of my Email addresses got those 20 Emails a day with huge file attachments. So I got another new Email address, and almost immediately after I started posting to this newsgroup and others, that started having the same problem. After that I got another Email account and finally started mangling the return address -- this seemed to solve the problem -- but it was a shame to see two Email accounts get disabled first. If this problem only occurs with this newsgroup and not others, I've got a definite suspicion about what's causing it. what program do people use to create addresses like I just use my regular Email program. You just have to figure out how to tell it to use an address for newsgroups which is different from your default Email. I have not heard of a PC-based Email program which couldn't change that address setting. Ken Whoever is behind the virus loaded MSN Update emails does seem to use Usenet groups to harvest their email addies. On the upside my ISP has obviously figured out how to block them as I went from dozens every day down to zero in the last 3 weeks. g.c. |
#8
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many virus - spam - file attachments (was aging stats)
"George Cleveland" writes:
Whoever is behind the virus loaded MSN Update emails does seem to use Usenet groups to harvest their email addies. On the upside my ISP has obviously figured out how to block them as I went from dozens every day down to zero in the last 3 weeks. And others will want to check with their ISP to set filters to easily block and delete such contaminated files. Check with your ISP's homepage. General SPAM, however, is another issue. And yes, it all preys upon usenet groups among other sources for email addresses. G |
#9
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many virus - spam - file attachments (was aging stats)
On Tue, 4 Nov 2003, taywood wrote: Of more concern to me, I'm getting the same stuff but it doesnt have my email address on it. So how did the mail server know to send it to me and should I be asking the ISP this? Or am I being naive? Mike What you see in the "To:" header is NOT what mail systems use to route and deliver the message. The simple analogy is to think of sending a paper letter via snail mail. First you write your letter on a piece of paper. At the top of the page you put your return address and your addressee's address. (At least you do this for a formal business letter.) When you're done writing you fold it up, put it inside an envelope, and seal it. Then you write the return address and addressee address on the outside of the envelope. The post office only looks at what's on the envelope. What you wrote inside could be completely different but the letter will still go where you addressed it on the envelope. E-mail is the same way. There are "envelope" from and to addresses and there are "From:" and "To:" headers in the contents of the message. What you see in your mail reader are the latter. The envelope addresses are not always even visible to the recipient. Sometimes you can find the "envelope from" address in a header called "Return-path:". Sometimes you can find the "envelope to" address buried in one or more of the "Received:" headers. Probably more than you wanted to know. -Mitch |
#10
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many virus - spam - file attachments (was aging stats)
In article ,
taywood wrote: "Guido" wrote in message ... "George Cleveland" writes: Whoever is behind the virus loaded MSN Update emails does seem to use Usenet groups to harvest their email addies. Not 'whoever', but the worm thing itself. many of the newer things 'watch' what you are doing on the net, and harvest addresses from web pages and other things that you read. Most likely, some innocent victim with an infected machine, reading this newsgroup is sending the virus out to posters. Of more concern to me, I'm getting the same stuff but it doesnt have my email address on it. So how did the mail server know to send it to me and should I be asking the ISP this? Or am I being naive? The To: field in an email is pretty much meangingless. It can have anything in it, and still be sent to you. Similar to paper mail, there is an envelope (which you don't really see), and the paper in the envelope. The paper within may say 'Dear Joe' but the envelope could have that sent to mike. OT: Ground covered with ice/snow this morning, but pretty much gone now. -- -- LITTLE KNOWN FACT: Did you know that 81% of North Americans cannot taste the difference between fried dog and fried cat? |
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