Friday, May 29, 2009

Free Website hosting.

One of the favorite tricks of spammers is to use free websites to bounce links off of. In the course of analyzing spam that arrives on my servers Jesse Monroy put together this list of free hosting companies that they were using.

These are domains Where you can get a free websites, or blog.


Last Update 05/22/09 @ 10:23:11
741.com
7p.com
007sites.com
00freehost.com
012webpages.com
0catch.com
100freemb.com
100megsfree8.com
10fast.com
10fast.net
110mb.com
12gbfree.com
150m.com
1afm.com
1stfreehosting.com
2gb.cc
250m.com
25am.com
408ez.com
50webs.com
55fast.com
5nxs.com
8m.net
99galaxy.net
1accesshost.com
1freewebspace.com
1sweethost.com
action-links.net
angelcities.com
angelfire.com
arcadepages.com
awardspace.biz
awardspace.com
b-w-h.com
bidsex.net
bigheadhosting.net
bizhosting.com
blackapplehost.com
bnsites.com
bplaced.net
bravepages.com
brmz.com
by.ru
builtfree.org
c0n.us
cjb.net
createdollz.com
czweb.org
d0m.us
dex1.com
designcarthosting.com
digitalzones.com
dreamstation.com
dynamicweb.hu
easyfreehosting.com
envy.nu
exactpages.com
ez-sites.ws
fcpages.com
fc2.com
fsfn.net
free-site-host.com
freecities.com
freehost.net.au
freehost10.com
freehostguy.com
freehostia.com
freehostingz.com
freeservercity.com
freesite.org
freewebportal.com
freewebpages.org
freewebsitehosting.com
freespaceusa.com
freeweb-hosting.org
freewaywebhost.com
freehostyou.com
freewhost.com
freeweb-hosting.org
freehostyou.com
g3z.com
galaxy99.net
geocities.jp
gigazu.net
greatnow.com
help57.com
hobby-site.com
hostaim.com
hostbot.com
hoster3.com
hostevo.com
hostmo.com
hostparq.com
hostrator.com
hostse.com
hostshield.com
htmlplanet.com
ibnsites.com
icr38.net
iespana.es
igojo.com
k2free.com
kogaryu.com
land.ru
lookseekpages.com
mindnmagick.com
msd4.com
my3gb.com
mysteria.cz
no-ip.org
o-f.com
obxhost.net
orconhosting.net.nz
parknhost.com
prohosting.com
rack111.com
reco.ws
redo2.com
s-enterprize.com
scriptmania.com
servetown.com
stinkdot.org
sts7.com
thport.com
upbee.com
usafreespace.com
uvoweb.net
virtue.nu
w3bzone.com
wakeboardreview.com
wtcsites.com
yazow.com
yourfreehosting.net
yourprivatespace.com
wbs.cz
web2001.cz
webzdarma.cz
ezin.cz
hu.cz
euweb.cz
weebly.com
webz.cz
wz.cz
xf.cz
chytrak.cz
kvalitne.cz
vyrobce.cz
prodejce.cz
nazory.cz
czechian.net


CREATED USING:
awk '{ print "<a href=\"http://www."$1"\">"$1"</a>" }'

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Amazing 3D murals

Source: www.dailymail.co.uk

Wednesday, May 06, 2009

Bisphenol A in plastic may cause obesity, used in coatings on the inside of almost all food and beverage cans!!

I came across this while studying old refining and hydrocracking.

I highlighted the best parts in RED.

Fortunately the bottled water I am drinking at this very moment of made of PETE (polyethylene terephthalate, ID code #1). and is free of Bisphenol A .

I wonder what happens when you microwave in food this? Where heat would release some chemicals. Like in a tupperware bowl?



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bisphenol_A
http://www.cspinet.org/nah/bpa.html


from wiki:

Suspected of being hazardous to humans since the 1930s
, concerns about the use of bisphenol A in consumer products was regularly reported in the news media in 2008 when several governments issued reports questioning its safety, and some retailers removed products made from it off their shelves.

Bisphenol A is used primarily to make plastics, and products containing bisphenol A-based plastics have been in commerce for more than 50 years. It is used in the synthesis of polyesters, polysulfones, and polyether ketones, as an antioxidant in some plasticizers, and as a polymerization inhibitor in PVC. It is a key monomer in production of polycarbonate plastic and epoxy resins.[4] Polycarbonate plastic, which is clear and nearly shatter-proof, is used to make a variety of common products including baby and water bottles, sports equipment, medical and dental devices, dental fillings and sealants, lenses, CDs and DVDs, and household electronics.
Epoxy resins containing bisphenol A are used as coatings on the inside of almost all food and beverage cans.[6]

Health effects

Bisphenol A has low acute toxicity, with an oral LD50 of 3250 mg/kg in rats,[9] but it is an endocrine disruptor.[10][11] Low doses of bisphenol A can mimic the body's own hormones, possibly causing negative health effects.[12] There is thus concern that long term low dose exposure to bisphenol A may induce chronic toxicity in humans.[13][14][15]

Animal studies

The first evidence of the estrogenicity of bisphenol A came from experiments on rats conducted in the 1930s,[16][17] but it was not until 1997 that adverse effects of low-dose exposure on laboratory animals were first reported.[6] Since then, its endocrine disrupting properties have been extensively investigated, and more than 100 studies have been published "rais[ing] health concerns" about the chemical.[18]
Early development appears to be the period of greatest sensitivity to its effects,[19] and studies have demonstrated developmental toxicity, carcinogenic effects, and possible neurotoxicity at low doses in animal models (see table below).[20][21] Recent studies suggest it may also be linked to obesity[22] by triggering fat-cell activity[23] and have confirmed that bisphenol A exposure during development has carcinogenic effects and produce precursors of breast cancer.[24][25]

UPDATE 12/21/2011

http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/b/bisphenol_a/index.html