My router appeared to die last night, after I tried to setup a new WiFi network. The admin interface for the router was completely borked, and the browser console kept showing javascript errors.
Turns out, because my network name contained an apostrophe, the javascript code behind the admin interface became completely unusable.
Friday, August 07, 2015
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Popular Posts
-
These are the robots I've been working on for the last 12 months. They each weigh about 11 tonnes and have a 17 meter reach. The control...
-
So, you've created a car prefab using WheelCollider components, and now you can apply a motorTorque to make the whole thing move along. ...
-
Often, when building a game, you need to test if objects are colliding. The objects could be spaceships, rocks, mouse pointers, laser beams....
-
Summary: NodeJS wins. Test Program ab -n 10000 -c 5 http://localhost/ Gevent Code from gevent import wsgi class WebServer(object): def a...
-
Why would I ask that question? Python 3 has been available for some time now, yet uptake is slow. There aren't a whole lot of packages i...
-
MiddleMan: A Pub/Sub and Request/Response server in Go. This is my first Go project. It is a rewrite of an existing Python server, based o...
-
I've just finished refactoring an awful C# class. I had been delaying the job for a while because I didn't want to do it. Then, whil...
-
Dear Lazyweb. Imagine a nice RESTful interface for working with Tags. The URL: /tags/ will return a list of all the tags. The URL: /tags/fo...
-
It is about 8 degrees C this morning. So cold, especially when last week we had high twenties. To help solve the problem, a friend suggeste...
-
We're almost done with our Giant Robot Project. Realising we had only a few hours before the robots would be deconstructed and sent awa...