Search & Win
7Jul/09Off

Fixed Some Bugs

There were some bugs and foolish mistakes left unseen by me on the site and I went ahead and fixed them.  Comments should be working properly.  So should the wall ('cept it still brings you to a separate page with weird formatting after posting a comment).  The links page should be fixed.

In my attempts to secure the website further, I accidentally introduced some bugs.  Now, my site should be secure against the typical script-kiddies, noob hackers, and typical bots.  I obviously won't say what I did.

It's funny how many people land on my site looking for the "Andrew Chow" they know.  Or those looking for random song lyrics.

I don't know how serious I want to take this site but if traffic keeps growing, it might just be worthwhile to put some Adsense or what-not to make some money on the side.  Pfft.  :P

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Blue Jays continue to disappoint (see today's game as an example).  J.P. says he's open to taking offers for Halladay though it doesn't mean he'll accept any.  If J.P. wants to keep his job, he'll do his best to keep Halladay or the trade for him better be damn good for the team.  Wells' overvalued contract is already his fault.

But Halladay says he wants to win and play in the World Series (duh) and come 2010, if the Blue Jays don't turn around that season, he'll leave no matter what the Jays organization offers him.  He'll most likely will go to the Yankees or BoSox or whoever can afford his current market value.

MLB needs a salary cap.  Not only because the same teams are reaching the playoffs (though some argue there's been enough variation) but because the richer teams are essentially using the poorer teams as "farms".  The poor teams develop the players to stardom and they leave for bigger paychecks while the poor teams are compensated with lame 1st-round draft picks.

Meh, the players' union will fight tooth and nail to prevent such a cap from happening.  And I guess one could argue that teams are "poor" because of the fans (and lack thereof).  It's hard not to see the contrast between sellout crowds in New York and Boston vs. Toronto.

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