Hi Clem,
Where is JOL60.zip?

Thanks and regards,
David

On 2025-05-07 08:54, Clement Clarke wrote:
Subject: Re: New version of JOL - a JCL replacement language
I couldn't resist Paul....

A photo at Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/clemclarke

I have uploaded the Jol Documentation as a Zip file.  I suggest it be
downloaded and unzipped into a directory called \JOLIBM, although any
directory can be used.  The Windows version of Jol will be loaded into the
same directory. You can then start or double click on the  AA_index.html
file.

Here's the link:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1685iH2B7-KJ8yHNhHag_7vymrNLhpj4o/view?usp=drive_link

If you open the DOCS folder, and click on or start  AA_index.html, your
browser will open and you can look at all the documents.

Clem

On Mon, May 5, 2025 at 5:45 PM Paul Gilmartin <
[email protected]> wrote:

On Sun, 4 May 2025 23:10:45 -0700, Tom Brennan wrote:

Clem posted the original link, so we can assume he has control over the
DNS name and the server contents.  Do you trust Clem?  I do.

I've never met Clem.  I don't know what he looks like,  Why should I
trust someone who claims to be Clem.  That's what certificates  are for.

Looks like Clem fixed the cert problem today, as Thomas mentioned.  So
that should hopefully eliminate most of your concerns such as redirect
and malware, along with the .org guess.  Ready to click yet? :)

Expired certificate?

It could be Clem set it up with a self-signed cert and put that cert in
the trusted store in his browser.  That way when he tests himself, it
looks good.  I've done that myself for local testing or for a small set
of users.  These days I use ZeroSSL certs, even for testing.  No more
hassles, no more evil red marks on the browser URL line.

I don't grok "self-signed".


On Sun, 4 May 2025 23:23:06 -0700, Tom Brennan wrote:

Since it's still May 4th here in California, here's one that tells you
to go away even after you got there :)  (server under my desk)
https://www.mildredbrennan.com/

"still May 4th here"‽  What brand server are you using that doesn't
know it's no longer May 4 inHerstmonceux?  Probably Microsoft.
Long after it was generally recognized as a Bad Idea they kept
system clocks and file timestamps in local time (as does ISPF.)


On 5/4/2025 10:54 PM, David Cole wrote:
Agreed (with Gil). There's a lot more dangers in bad websites than just
credentials theft.

If my browser says "don't go there", I won't.

Three.  Firefox, Safari, and curl.  The one I tried is better now.

--
gil

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