
dezzo and his Olympus C2020Z
I happen to find this picture of dezzo in my picture archives. I remember him mentioning about it on his site.
Family guy with 3 Daughters, Digital Guy, Wine Community Leader, Runner in Singapore.

I happen to find this picture of dezzo in my picture archives. I remember him mentioning about it on his site.

My Uncle Paul is passionate about his stuff, although he is not Francisco “Django” Bustamante, Efren “The Magician” Reyes or Fong-Pang Chao, he is definately one that has the theory and experience not only of playing the game, but also in behind the scene stuff like customising cues, assembling tables, etc… I think billards, snooker and pool is his life. oh ya… and there is also his harley…
dezzo recently showed me how he did XSSI includes and PHP Includes and passing parameters to create pages by collaborating templates and content on-the-fly. I am now so psyched to create sites using templates with these inculdes, maybe i will even redo my entire blog.
Imagine reading 80+ pages of articles for research after a tedious search, cut and paste and reading it off your monitor in Arial 8pt. Errm… why am i not already wearing glasses?
Is being paranoid the opposite of being ignorant, if so i rather be paranoid. The following is an excerpt from CERT®, our lighthouse on the net.
“How easy is it to break into my computer?
Unfortunately, intruders are always discovering new vulnerabilities (informally called “holes”) to exploit in computer software. The complexity of software makes it increasingly difficult to thoroughly test the security of computer systems.
When holes are discovered, computer vendors will usually develop patches to address the problem(s). However, it is up to you, the user, to obtain and install the patches, or correctly configure the software to operate more securely. Most of the incident reports of computer break-ins received at the CERT/CC could have been prevented if system administrators and users kept their computers up-to-date with patches and security fixes.
Also, some software applications have default settings that allow other users to access your computer unless you change the settings to be more secure. Examples include chat programs that let outsiders execute commands on your computer or web browsers that could allow someone to place harmful programs on your computer that run when you click on them.”
~ Taken from here