The Wiert Corner – irregular stream of stuff

Jeroen W. Pluimers on .NET, C#, Delphi, databases, and personal interests

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Having cancer is not a fight or a battle, it is about having luck or misfortune

Posted by jpluimers on 2021/12/10

It has been a while after my last post about me having cancer. No, I am not giving up. But I am having the regular fear of the upcoming checks: did the metastases return, or do I have the luck to outlive some 30% of my peer group.

The last metastases surgery has been slightly more than a year ago. A year from now, that percentage hopefully will be 50% and slowly increase over time until about 90% in some 9 years from now.

At year’s end, I will know for sure.

Below are some links on, mostly Dutch but with English abstract, articles about the mental side of having cancer, or having survived it for now.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in About, Cancer, LifeHacker, Personal, Power User, Rectum cancer | Leave a Comment »

Solved: CPU Xeon E5-1620 v.4 does not allow Windows 11 upgrade – HP Support Community – 8645349

Posted by jpluimers on 2026/03/06

I might need this: [Wayback/Archive] Solved: CPU Xeon E5-1620 v.4 does not allow Windows 11 upgrade – HP Support Community – 8645349

You don’t download the ISO file to a USB stick.

You download it to your PC and use the free Rufus utility that I zipped up and attached in that discussion link I posted to transfer the ISO file to a DVD so that it is bootable.

You have to use the version I attached 3.18 because the newer Rufus versions removed the W11 hardware check bypass hack.

Try it again in the morning when you are ‘bright eyed and bushy tailed’ as we say in the USA.:

Related:

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Posted in Power User, Windows, Windows 10, Windows 11 | Leave a Comment »

HelgaDulfer on Twitter: “@zorgenzo Probeer form op te slaan en dan met Adobe Fill&Sign in vullen en ondertekenen; vervolgens kun je ingevulde exempl. mailen of weer opslaan” / Twitter

Posted by jpluimers on 2026/03/06

[Wayback/Archive] HelgaDulfer on Twitter: “@zorgenzo Probeer form op te slaan en dan met Adobe Fill&Sign in vullen en ondertekenen; vervolgens kun je ingevulde exempl. mailen of weer opslaan”

I took a quick look, but the mobile Fill & Sign apps on Android and iOS are even harder to use for filling out forms than using Acrobat Reader on PC or MacOS Preview.

–jeroen

Posted in Adobe, Adobe Acrobat, Adobe Reader, Android Devices, iOS, PDF, Power User | Leave a Comment »

Delphicon 2023 – Day 2 – YouTube

Posted by jpluimers on 2026/03/05

Forgot to schedule this post: [Wayback/Archive] Delphicon 2023 – Day 2 – YouTube

–jeroen

Posted in Delphi, Development, Software Development | Leave a Comment »

UTF-8, Explained Simply – YouTube

Posted by jpluimers on 2026/03/04

Cool interesting video: [Wayback/Archive] UTF-8, Explained Simply – YouTube

It covers both history from the late 1800s Baudot Code (also known as ITA1) via 1930s ITA2 and 1950’s EBCDIC / FIELDATA ages through 7-bit ASCII in the 1970s  and incompatible UCS-2 (now UTF-16) of the 1990s to the current day and age of UTF-8 (which actually started out on a placemat in 1992).

Though mentioning 8-bit encoding, it skips details of extended ASCII encodings like ISO/IEC 8859 and Windows-1252.

It goes to quite some length on decoding UTF-8 and showing how forgiving the UTF-8 standard is. Yes, it is a self-synchronising code thanks to the venerable Ken Thompson.

Definitely worth watching as it also covers the Zero-width joiner which is not just important for combining Emoji, as it is used by many people nowadays, but got in fact implemented to support various scripts like Arabic script or any Indic script.

Oh, the placemat story: Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in ASCII, Development, EBCDIC, Encoding, ISO-8859, Software Development, UCS-2, Unicode, UTF-16, UTF-8, Windows-1252 | Leave a Comment »

Odido-router verzamelt analytics van je huishouden en stuurt het door naar AI toko lifemote

Posted by jpluimers on 2026/03/04

Dit is net zo nalatig als de Odildo hack waar alle klantgegevens mee op straat kwamen te liggen: [Wayback/Archive] Odido-router verzamelt analytics van je huishouden

Bevindingen in het kort

  • De Odido-router haalt bij een nieuwe WAN-verbinding een bash-script op over een onversleutelde HTTP-verbinding.
  • Je kan dit script manipuleren om een root shell op je router te krijgen.
  • Als je TLS-verkeer mitm’t zie je analytics-data over de lijn gaan; de scripters hebben TLS-validatie uitgezet (`curl -k`) dus je kan dit ‘versleutelde’ analytics-verkeer inzien.
  • Je router stuurt namen en MAC-adressen van devices in je huis door naar Lifemote. Verder deelt het ding de SSID’s en MAC-adressen van WiFi-netwerken in de buurt. En wat analytics-stats over je dataverbruik. Lifemote adverteert met “AI-Powered Home Wi-Fi Solutions for ISPs”. Het voelt wat vies dat zij AI’s gaan trainen met data uit mijn huishouden. Daar vind ik wat van.

--jeroen

Posted in *nix, *nix-tools, bash, bash, Development, ISP, Odido (ex Dutch T-Mobile), Power User, Python, Scripting, Software Development | Leave a Comment »

dasm – macro assembler for 8-bit machines

Posted by jpluimers on 2026/03/04

Finding a reference to DASM while researching yesterday’s post @jpluimers on Twitter: “@b0rk @jilles_com Acids vs bases.”, it felt even more like a trip like memory lane as I had used it in the 1980s on Apple ][ and Apple //e after mainly using EDASM. Lisa and Merlin.

I am glad that it is still alive and kicking with home page at [Wayback/Archive] dasm – macro assembler for 8-bit machines and repository at [Wayback/Archive] dasm-assembler/dasm: Macro assembler with support for several 8-bit microprocessors.

Especially this history section on the home page rang a bell:

  • Matthew Dillon started dasm in 1987-1988.
  • Olaf “Rhialto” Seibert extended dasm in 1995.
  • Andrew “Dr.Boo” Davie maintained dasm in 2003-2008.
  • Peter Fröhlich maintained dasm in 2008-2015.
  • In 2019, the dasm source code and releases were moved to GitHub.

More links from this trip down memory lane:

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in //e, 6502 Assembly, Apple, Apple ][, Assembly Language, Development, History, Power User, Software Development | Leave a Comment »

Decoding HTML encoded source to XML text

Posted by jpluimers on 2026/03/03

For Some links on getting the most recent defragmentation time of a Windows volume I needed to copy back and forth some XML code back and forth between my ARM MacBook Pro to a remote Windows machine accessing via the Microsoft Windows App (the app formerly known as Microsoft Remote Desktop for Mac).

The problem with that is the copying would lose line breaks, which for XML meaning is no problem, but for human understandability while editing the XML in the Event View query dialog was.

So I decided to go to the “Code” view in my Classic WordPress editor (did I ever tell you much I dislike – especially the accessibility of – the not so new but still haughty named Gutenberg editor?), copied the HTML encoded form and wanted to convert it to unencoded XML text.

Well, here I got to naming confusion land, on which I will talk further below, but first two of the potential solutions:

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Posted in Cyberchef, Development, Encoding, HTML, Software Development, URL Encoding, Web Development | Leave a Comment »

Why octal is important (via @jpluimers on Twitter: “@b0rk @jilles_com Acids vs bases.”)

Posted by jpluimers on 2026/03/03

A few years back I tweeted [Wayback/Archive] Jeroen Wiert Pluimers @wiert@mastodon.social on Twitter: “@b0rk @jilles_com Acids vs bases.”

Ph scale of acids vs bases.

It was a kind of tongue-in-cheek reaction (with a way better picture below) to a very valuable post by b0rk (Julia Evans) on both Twitter and Mastodon [Wayback/Archive] Julia Evans on Twitter: “bases” / [Wayback/Archive] Julia Evans: “bases title: bases # we usually…” – Mastodon for two reasons:

  1. There are various interpretations of bases
  2. Octal is very important to educate as errors introduced by its support are hard to spot even if you do know about octal.

Back to Julia’s post:

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Posted in *nix, *nix-tools, 68k, 8086, Assembly Language, bash, bash, C, C++, Chemistry, Conference Topics, Conferences, Development, EPS/PostScript, Event, Haskell, History, Java, Java Platform, JavaScript/ECMAScript, Jon Skeet, LifeHacker, Mathematics, PDP-11, Perl, PHP, Power User, Python, science, Scripting, Software Development, x86 | Leave a Comment »

Why does every book come from the same country? – YouTube

Posted by jpluimers on 2026/03/02

On the history of ISBN and their representation in EAN codes: [Wayback/Archive] Why does every book come from the same country? – YouTube.

TL;DR: EAN unique country codes (now GS1 country codes) 978 and 979 are Bookland.

--jeroen

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Posted in History, LifeHacker, Power User | Leave a Comment »

Changing default page view in Adobe Acrobat

Posted by jpluimers on 2026/03/02

Being so used to open PDF files using MacOS Preview – which remembers the last view settings and re-applies that when opening a new document, it took me a while to figure out that in both Adobe Acrobat and Adobe Reader (formerly Acrobat Reader) you have to set it in the preferences using Ctrl-K as explained in [Wayback/Archive] Changing default page view in Adobe Acrobat

When you open a PDF in Adobe Acrobat Reader, the default page view may not be to your liking. For example, it may show a full page when you really need to see part of a page in full width.

To change these settings follow the steps below.

  1. Edit, Preferences (or Control-K).
  2. Choose Page Display in the Categories section.
  3. In the Default Layout and Zoom section (top of page), change the Page Layout and Zoom selections to your preference. “100%” and “Fit Page” are most commonly used in the Zoom selection.
  4. Click OK to save your settings.

Contrary to the above, the defaults for both my Acrobat Reader both the “Paye Layout” and “Zoom” settings were “Automatic”. I just changed the “Page Layout” to “Two-Up” and am much happier now (:

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Adobe, Adobe Acrobat, Adobe Reader, Power User | Leave a Comment »