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<h1>pr0n FAQ</h1>
- <p>Last updated July 21st, 2008</p>
+ <p>Last updated March 23rd, 2009</p>
<h2>So, what is this pr0n thing anyway?</h2>
keyboard shortcuts are in place, so it should be comfortable enough for
most uses.)</p>
+ <h2>Can you remove a picture of me?</h2>
+
+ <p>Yes! By Norwegian law you have the right to deny publication of an image
+ where you are identifiable (with a few exceptions). Just send me an e-mail
+ (see below) with the URL of the images you want removed, and I'll remove them.
+ No questions asked.</p>
+
<h2>I just changed thumbnail resolution, why is everything so slow?</h2>
<p>Probably the requested size was never generated before, so the server
<p>pr0n currently runs on an Intel Q9450 (quad-core 2.66GHz) with 8GB RAM and ordinary
SATA disks. (The server does a lot of other stuff besides running pr0n, of
course.) pr0n itself is a custom-made system by myself, tightly coupled
- into <a href="http://www.apache.org/">Apache</a> 2.2, <a
- href="http://perl.apache.org/">mod_perl</a> 2.0 and <a
- href="http://www.imagemagick.org/">ImageMagick</a> 6.x (as well as various
- other Perl modules), using <a
- href="http://www.postgresql.org/">PostgreSQL</a> 8.3 as the back-end
- database for metadata et al. The base operating system is <a
- href="http://www.debian.org/">Debian</a> lenny (ie. “testing”).</p>
+ into <a href="http://www.apache.org/">Apache</a> 2.2,
+ <a href="http://perl.apache.org/">mod_perl</a> 2.0,
+ <a href="http://www.imagemagick.org/">ImageMagick</a> 6.x
+ (as well as various other Perl modules) and
+ <a href="http://bzr.sesse.net/qscale/">qscale</a>, using
+ <a href="http://www.postgresql.org/">PostgreSQL</a> 8.4 as the back-end
+ database for metadata et al. The base operating system is
+ <a href="http://www.debian.org/">Debian</a> lenny (ie. “testing”).</p>
<p>The Perl modules aren't really that big — we're talking about only
approx. 3300 lines of code (of which ~25% is the WebDAV part; I should
<h2>How much data is there in there, anyway?</h2>
- <p>At the time of writing, approximately 140GB of image data (that is, over
- 72000 different images), plus cache, plus metadata in the SQL database.
+ <p>At the time of writing, approximately 250GB of image data (that is, over
+ 88000 different images), plus cache, plus metadata in the SQL database.
(These numbers are growing rather rapidly, so they could be outdated at
any given time.)</p>