06-26-2017
7 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. What is on Your Mind?
Hi.
I've been very busy this month working on resurrecting my old projects related to "cyberspace situational awareness" (CSA) which began last month by surveying the downstream literature that referenced my papers in this area using Google Scholar and also ResearchGate and posting updates on my... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
5 Replies
2. What is on Your Mind?
Here is an end-of-year update of my CSA research for 2016. A BIG THANK YOU to everyone at unix.com who keeps the forums running so well as I write code for cyberspace situational awareness experiments and do my research.
I am still hopelessly trying to save the world from the unintended... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
6 Replies
3. What is on Your Mind?
Please message me or post in this thread if anyone is interested in contributing some C, C++, or C# code for this project. Right now we have an open source C++ git project (created by someone else a few years ago) that fails when we try to compile on Ubuntu. I need someone to fix the make... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
4 Replies
4. What is on Your Mind?
A Journey Into Cyberspace
A brief visual presentation on the results of research and development into new visualization tools and methods for cyberspace situational awareness via graph processing and multisensor data fusion.
https://www.unix.com/members/1-albums112-picture678.png
... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Neo
1 Replies
5. What is on Your Mind?
What do you think?
Read this: Virtualized Cyberspace, Cyberspace Consciousness and Simulation Theory
and comment below....
Are we in a computer simulation? Yes or No?
Thanks! (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
0 Replies
6. What is on Your Mind?
Our team just published this technical report on ResearchGate:
Virtualized Cyberspace - Visualizing Patterns & Anomalies for Cognitive Cyber Situational Awareness
ABSTRACT
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International Public License This... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
0 Replies
7. What is on Your Mind?
After mulling over self-publishing a cyberspace situational awareness mini-series starting with a short book on human cyber consciousness, I think it is best I delay writing a book and focus on software development. The general idea of human cyber consciousness is indirectly discussed in this... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
urlencode
URLENCODE(1) GridSite Manual URLENCODE(1)
NAME
urlencode - convert strings to or from URL-encoded form
SYNOPSIS
urlencode [-m|-d] string [string ...]
DESCRIPTION
urlencode encodes strings according to RFC 1738.
That is, characters A-Z a-z 0-9 . _ and - are passed through unmodified, but all other characters are represented as %HH, where HH is their
two-digit upper-case hexadecimal ASCII representation. For example, the URL http://www.gridpp.ac.uk/ becomes
http%3A%2F%2Fwww.gridpp.ac.uk%2F
urlencode converts each character in all the strings given on the command line. If multiple strings are given, they are concatenated with
separating spaces before conversion.
OPTIONS
-m Instead of full conversion, do GridSite "mild URL encoding" in which A-Z a-z 0-9 . = - _ @ and / are passed through unmodified. This
results in slightly more human-readable strings but the application must be prepared to create or simulate the directories implied
by any slashes.
-d Do URL-decoding rather than encoding, according to RFC 1738. %HH and %hh strings are converted and other characters are passed
through unmodified, with the exception that + is converted to space.
EXIT CODES
0 is always returned.
AUTHOR
Andrew McNab <Andrew.McNab@manchester.ac.uk>
urlencode is part of GridSite: http://www.gridsite.org/
urlencode November 2003 URLENCODE(1)