topbanner_forum
  *

avatar image

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
  • Wednesday November 12, 2025, 5:19 pm
  • Proudly celebrating 15+ years online.
  • Donate now to become a lifetime supporting member of the site and get a non-expiring license key for all of our programs.
  • donate

Recent Posts

Pages: prev1 ... 67 68 69 70 71 [72] 73 74 75 76 77 ... 264next
1776
Damn, today OneNote's capability to copy text from pictures saved me hours of typing. Really neat function.
totally agree.  i had no idea it was that good.
_____________________
Now try out its search capability for spoken word in the audio of audio files and video files.
Finally, everything is starting to become useful and searchable data.
1777
Damn, today OneNote's capability to copy text from pictures saved me hours of typing. Really neat function.
totally agree.  i had no idea it was that good.
_________________________
Yes, when I started to realise its potential, it blew me away. And it's been improved. And now there's Office Lens on Win10 smartphones (I've been using a Nokia Lumia 830). Select document, or photo, or whiteboard, and then apply it to your image, and watch what happens. Seriously smart and useful technology. I'm in lurve.    :-*
1778
General Software Discussion / Re: Picasa to be 'phased out'
« Last post by IainB on March 09, 2016, 09:24 AM »
People who flee from Picasa because the centralized storage is about to be taken down are looking for a new centralized storage.
Wise, wise men.
_____________________________
Yo no comprendo: "because the centralized storage is about to be taken down".
I didn't know it was being "taken down". I thought it was being "frozen", and users were being encouraged to migrate to Google Photos/G+ or something.
Have I missed something?
1779
General Software Discussion / Re: Picasa to be 'phased out'
« Last post by IainB on March 08, 2016, 06:37 AM »
Though I haven't yet evaluated Google Photos, it seems that one area of Picas functionality - face recognition - is absent in most/all of the alternatives.
Seeking alternatives to Google Picasa? Look no further!

I find the face recognition tremendously useful in automating name-tagging.
1780
T-Clock / Re: T-Clock 2010 (download)
« Last post by IainB on March 07, 2016, 11:04 AM »
I terminated T-Clock today and restarted Windows Explorer, as I wanted to run the standard Windows clock with 3 clocks displayed - showing the time in different timezones.
So I guess I need to make a request for T-Clock to be able to display 3 or more clocks...    ;)

Coincidentally, my Windows Defender virus checker just told me that the file: C:\...Clocks\T-Clock\misc\Options.exe has been quarantined as it is a seriously bad Trojan called Trojan:Win32/Varpes.L!plock

Shouldn't somebody check that? I know it is probably a false positive, but then again...

UPDATE: I uploaded the latest version file T-Clock v2.4.0 beta3.zip to VirusTotal just now, and it came back with a clean bill of health. Looks like I'll probably have to wait a few days before reinstalling the quarantined file...
1781
I keep a check/backup of my many Firefox add-ons using FEBE, Firefox Sync, and Extension List Dumper (the latter slightly modified to get it to work). However, NirSoft seems to have come up with something very useful for all/most browsers: New utility that displays the details of all Web browser addons/plugins installed in your system
1782
General Software Discussion / Re: Slysoft shutdown (by government action?)
« Last post by IainB on March 07, 2016, 02:31 AM »
@mwb1100: Thanks for this notice.
Included in the list of proggies is the freeware Virtual CloneDrive 5.5.0.0: 2016 01 13.
I already have Virtual CloneDrive 5.4.5.0: 2011 3 6  installed on my laptop, so I upgraded to the latest version, which has undergone quite a lot of change, according to the changelog.

I have the excellent shellcity.net in my feed-reader, and always check that site whenever they make a post. I think I would probably have downloaded Virtual CloneDrive from the link they give at: http://www.shellcity.net/alpha/V
It says there:
VIRTUAL CLONE DRIVE
Comments | Report Entry
Virtual CloneDrive works and behaves just like a physical CD/DVD drive, however it exists only virtually. Image files generated with CloneDVD or CloneCD can be mounted onto a virtual drive from your hard-disk or from a network drive and used in the same manner as inserting them into a normal CD/DVD drive. Probably the best virtual drive software, Virtual CloneDrive allows you to enjoy the freedom of a virtual drive and is completely free .....(free).....
GO THERE

The "Go There" link is to the now defunct slysoft URL, giving a 404.
I have left a comment about this at shellcity.net re this software.
1783
General Software Discussion / Re: gateway ta6 laptop
« Last post by IainB on March 06, 2016, 09:11 PM »
@holt: Just reading through this thread to refresh my memory, I wondered about several things mentioned:
USB: The laptop has a USB port. You have connected this to a hard disk drive in an enclosure which supports USB 3.0.
The spec at http://gatewaycomput...ikia.com/wiki/CX2720 doesn't mention USB at all, but it does mention Fastwire. It might be helpful if you posted the actual spec of your particular model of this laptop to a separate page on that wikia.com site, so we could all see it, and other people may be able to benefit from it too.

In any event, connecting a USB 3.0 device to a USB 2.0 port will result in data transfer rates that are considerably lower than USB 3.0 rates, and certainly not above the max rate enabled by USB 2.0. That is, though USB 3.0 is backwards compatible with USB 2.0, it cannot accelerate data transfer rates beyond the constraints/limits of USB 2.0.

AntiVirus: You appear to have opted for a $paid AV program. I would strongly recommend that you remove it and install Microsoft Security Essentials (discussed/reviewed elsewhere on DC Forum) - which is $free to personal users  and which has a very good engine that makes it the de facto choice for IT network engineers supporting high security commercial network installations - e.g., in banks. Furthermore, MSE continues to be rigorously supported and updated by Microsoft, to contend with any newly-discovered attacks. So, though Microsoft don't support XP any longer, they still support MSE (which post-dates XP anyway).
1784
Not from my experience, but this article could be useful: 7 Little-Known OneNote Features You Will Love

I have not used OneNote's Version History (!), so found the reference to that as the 7th feature rather interesting. It looks like it could be a potentially incredibly useful feature.   :-[

The article also includes a link to: in-depth comparison of OneNote vs. Evernote, which might help to answer some of the questions posed by others in this discussion thread.
1785
Living Room / Re: feline ear mites - derris dust or rotenone.
« Last post by IainB on March 06, 2016, 04:55 AM »
@holt: Ah, sorry, I should have added that:
  • Derris dust was now better known as "Rotenone", and was originally synthesised from plants by Japanese scientists.
  • Rotenone is produced by extraction from the roots and stems of several tropical and subtropical plant species, especially those belonging to the genera Lonchocarpus and Derris.
  • It passes environmental standards - being bio-degradable, and when used as an insecticide on food plants does not get into the food chain.
  • It has been widely researched (e.g., see search, below) and found to be relatively harmless - Rotenone is classified by the World Health Organization as moderately hazardous. So don't eat/ingest it.
  • Some of the more recent research into rotenone has looked at, for example, potential health effects on agricultural workers (who would presumably have been exposed to rotenone when they used it as a crop insecticide). I would recommend that you remain skeptical, as I suspect that if you looked for the named sponsors of this research, the majority of it will have been funded as a scare tactic by large pharmaceuticals and ag-chemical giants - e.g., Monsanto. There's no money to be made in rotenone, but rotenone sure as heck could be stopping you making money selling some patented and inferior or more toxic product to rotenone.

Put this search into your URL bar: https://duckduckgo.c...nimal+fur&t=ffab
("derris dust for de-lousing animal fur").
Amongst the links will be:

Since cats wash themselves, they will tend to ingest anything you apply to their fur. Fortunately, they'd have to ingest a helluva lot of rotenone for it to become toxic, but you could avoid even that by virtue of fitting a protective cowl.
1786
Living Room / Re: feline ear mites - try derris dust.
« Last post by IainB on March 05, 2016, 05:53 PM »
Sorry, I only just got around to reading this now, otherwise I would have commented sooner.
For several years, until I went away to college, one of my jobs on the farm as a boy was to muck out (clean up) the dog kennels (we typically might have about 20 dogs at any given time) and the cattery (we typically might have about 15 cats at any given time), I also had to exercise, feed and groom them (where grooming was necessary) and check for transmittable diseases and parasites  e.g., including ear canker, lice, mites, fleas, worms in their stool, etc.) and treat them accordingly.

The tools you might use for grooming don't need to be sterilised in an autoclave (as used for sterilising surgical instruments) - that is, boiling water or steam. That really would seem to be "going over the top".
My childhood research on entomology (the branch of zoology concerned with the study of insects, in which I have always been interested) indicated that very hot tap water - about 60°C - will do the trick, as insects and their eggs (including insects that are arthropods - i.e., having an articulated exoskeleton) cannot sustain life after being exposed for about a minute at that temp. You can scientifically prove this simply by immersing insects in the very hot water for a timed period and observing what happens - and this is repeatable.

By grooming your cat's ears, you will be collecting the mites (and anything else) from the cat's fur, onto the grooming instrument. So it is the mites that are in the ears that are the root cause, and this should be treated at the same time as you immerse the grooming instrument in very hot water to clean it. The primary vector (the thing that transmits) for the mites is another cat, not the grooming instrument - the latter being something that effectively just compounds the infestation already on the cat. Your cat will have contracted mites from another cat, and so will be likely to be re-exposed to mites/fleas etc. in its normal social activity with other cats, or off its bedding, etc.

The best approach is thus to treat the cat's fur, ears and bedding with an insecticide that kills fleas/mites - and one that comes to mind that I successfully used on dogs and cats as kennel-boy was derris powder - also freely available for use as an insecticide on food and other plants. It was very effective and relatively harmless - e.g., not as toxic as some of the insecticides animals are treated with today, and which can really knock their livers for six, leading to a premature death (liver failure or liver cancer).

The thing is that derris dust tend to be not promoted/marketed for this purpose today, because it is dirt cheap and the pharmaceutical companies don't have a patent on it for which they can charge a high price. The other stuff they do have a patent on is the only stuff they will offer. Vets seem to be in on this game as well, and only sell the expensive stuff. I have even heard some claim absurdly that derris dust is "highly toxic" to put customers off the idea and buy the expensive stuff which is highly toxic.
So, love your pets and don't treat them with stuff that potentially shortens their life expectancy.
1787
Living Room / Re: Interesting "stuff" - understanding the DRAM market.
« Last post by IainB on March 05, 2016, 04:49 PM »
I learned quite a lot about the supply and demand and pricing of DRAM by reading this very informative article at anandtech.com. Thought it was very interesting - especially about the predicted shift towards DDR4 technology as the likely de facto standard - so am passing it on for those who might be similarly interested: Price Check: Price Gap Between DDR3 and DDR4 Memory Almost Gone
1788
Living Room / Re: Peer Review and the Scientific Process
« Last post by IainB on March 04, 2016, 05:25 AM »
Well this was a surprise! (NOT)
(There are some quite amusing bits in here.)
Psychologists Call Out the Study That Called Out the Field of Psychology
By Rachel E. Gross
458637324-amy-cuddy-speaks-onstage-during-cosmopolitan-magazines
Independent researchers have had trouble replicating the famous findings of Harvard psychologist Amy Cuddy (pictured).

Craig Barritt/Getty Images for Cosmopolitan magazine and WME Live

Remember that study that found that most psychology studies were wrong? Yeah, that study was wrong. That’s the conclusion of four researchers who recently interrogated the methods of that study, which itself interrogated the methods of 100 psychology studies to find that very few could be replicated. (Whoa.) Their damning commentary will be published Friday in the journal Science. (The scientific body that publishes the journal sent Slate an early copy.)
Rachel E. Gross Rachel E. Gross

Rachel E. Gross is a Slate editorial assistant.

In case you missed the hullabaloo: A key feature of the scientific method is that scientific results should be reproducible—that is, if you run an experiment again, you should get the same results. If you don’t, you’ve got a problem. And a problem is exactly what 270 scientists found last August, when they decided to try to reproduce 100 peer-reviewed journal studies in the field of social psychology. Only around 39 percent of the reproduced studies, they found, came up with similar results to the originals.

That meta-analysis, published in Science by a group called the Open Science Collaboration, led to mass hand-wringing over the “replicability crisis” in psychology. (It wasn’t the first time that the field has faced such criticism, as Michelle N. Meyer and Christopher Chabris have reported in Slate, but this particular study was a doozy.)

Now this new commentary, from Harvard’s Gary King and Daniel Gilbert and the University of Virginia’s Timothy Wilson, finds that the OSC study was bogus—for a dazzling array of reasons. I know you’re busy, so let’s examine just two.

The first—which is what tipped researchers off to the study being not-quite-right in the first place—was statistical. The whole scandal, after all, was over the fact that such a low number of the original 100 studies turned out to be reproducible. But when King, a social scientist and statistician, saw the study, he didn’t think the number looked that low. Yeah, I know, 39 percent sounds really low—but it’s about what social scientists should expect, given the fact that errors could occur either in the original studies or the replicas, says King.

His colleagues agreed, telling him, according to King, “This study is completely unfair—and even irresponsible.”

Upon investigating the study further, the researchers identified a second and more crucial problem. Basically, the OSC researchers did a terrible job replicating those 100 studies in the first place. As King put it: “You’d think that a test about replications would actually reproduce the original studies.” But no! Some of the methods used for the reproduced studies were utterly confounding—for instance, OSC researchers tried to reproduce an American study that dealt with Stanford University students’ attitudes toward affirmative action policies by using Dutch students at the University of Amsterdam. Others simply didn’t use enough subjects to be reliable.

The new analysis “completely repudiates” the idea that the OSC study provides evidence for a crisis in psychology, says King. Of course, that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t be concerned with reproducibility in science. “We should be obsessed with these questions,” says King. “They are incredibly important. But it isn’t true that all social psychologists are making stuff up.”

After all, King points out, the OSC researchers used admirable, transparent methods to come to their own—ultimately wrong—conclusions. Specifically, those authors made all their data easily accessible and clearly explained their methods—making it all the easier for King and his co-authors to tear it apart. The OSC researchers also read early drafts of the new commentary, helpfully adding notes and clarifications where needed. “Without that, we wouldn’t have been able to write our article,” says King. Now that’s collaboration!

“We look forward to the next article that tries to conclude that we’re wrong,” he adds.
1789
Living Room / Re: Interesting "stuff" - effects of large IT projects gone wrong.
« Last post by IainB on March 04, 2016, 05:15 AM »
I was reading this article about Reports Coming in of Big IBM Layoffs Underway in the U.S. - IEEE Spectrum, and saw down the RHS of the page several interesting articles about the effects of large IT projects gone wrong.
1790
Well that was quick and painful.
  • WFC v4.6.2.2 downloaded and installed without any apparent problem. I verified the file checksum as well, JIC.
  • I registerd with a $10.00 PayPal "donation".
  • Program activated fine.
  • Then it crashed and screwed up some of my Firewall settings.
  • Thinking this might have something to do with a recent Win10 update, I gave it the benefit of the doubt. Kill WFC process(es). Reboot.
  • I uninstalled WFC via the Control Panel (in the manner prescribed in the FAQ), resetting all Firewall settings to default.
  • Then I reinstalled WFC.
  • WFC was very slow to start up and started sending notifications but they simply hung/hang (do nothing) when clicked to Action.
  • Kill WFC process(es). Repeat step 6.

Dilbert - Higgs-Boson.jpg

I've been had. I'm pissed off about it. I want my $10 back.
1791
...Hmm, I put the button in the Statusbar.  Seemed ok.  Now I bring it up, no button in StatusBar, there is a warning in the AddOns Manager about "could not be verified with FF proceed with caution."  I put the button back in the StatusBar.  Voila.  Now I have 2 buttons.
_______________________
We can all call you "Two-button Miles" from now on then.    ;)
1792
General Software Discussion / Re: Configure Host file!
« Last post by IainB on March 03, 2016, 02:27 AM »
Oh dear. After reading and contributing a little in this discussion thread, and then in light of that reviewing the thread Windows Firewall Control - Mini Review (which I also contributed to), I am considering caving-in to my obsessive-compulsive trialling habit, and revisiting Windows Firewall Control as a registered user.
1793
Living Room / Re: Consider installing 2 x 8Gb RAM cards in your 64-bit laptop.
« Last post by IainB on March 03, 2016, 01:34 AM »
In the last week or so Kingston RAM has been on sale on Amazon - I picked up 16GB 1866MHz DDR3 for ~AU$25 less than local suppliers.
_______________________
That's in Australia - "The Lucky Country".
In NZ, it's a bit different. On Amazon.com, a general rule seems to be:

Rule: that most of the suppliers of stuff that I might want to buy seem to be unable to ship to NZ at all, or, if they do ship there, then the shipping is likely to be prohibitively expensive (e.g., sometimes costing nearly as much or more than the product you wanted to buy).

So, more often than not, I tend to end up not buying.    :(

For that spec of RAM cards, I did some comparative pricing  on Amazon.com first, and observed that the above rule seemed to be operating, before deciding to buy that spec from a local NZ supplier, and it helped that they were in the same city, about 20 minutes drive away, and that I had done business with them in the past and found them good to deal with.

The exception to the above rule seems to be where Amazon themselves are selling something via their Amazon International Sales arm.
For example, in 2012 I had been looking around for a Kindle as a birthday present for my daughter, and the Kindle 4 was available locally in NZ at a reasonable discount (on the usual NZ price) from a retail store chain called Dick Smiths, but it was even cheaper on Amazon.com at US$109 via Amazon International Sales, and they only charged about US$12 for slow shipping to NZ, bringing the net total to US$121. This made it cheaper than the locally-available product by about US$13 (NZ$20) - so I bought it from Amazon on that basis. This sort of thing would be the exception, as I say.
1794
Living Room / Re: Consider installing 2 x 8Gb RAM cards in your 64-bit laptop.
« Last post by IainB on March 02, 2016, 12:13 PM »
@Shades: All the caveats you give are wise - and those are covered by the Crucial System Scanner, so that avoids the risks you outlined.
It tells you how much max RAM your laptop can support and then gives you the spec and part number of the Crucial brand RAM that is guaranteed to work for that laptop, IF you buy the Crucial RAM online from Crucial at that point, using the part number specified.
So I just took that spec and part number to a local supplier who sold Crucial RAM at good prices, but he didn't have any Crucial RAM of that spec in stock, but he did have some Kingston RAM which had the same spec and was a bit cheaper.   $ :) $
I did this for a Toshiba laptop, and a Samsung laptop. The Crucial spec for the RAM was the same (identical) in both cases, but with a slightly different part number.
After playing around and re-running the scanner, I figured out that the parts were identical (per the spec), and that the part number generated by the Crucial System Scanner was unique (had to be) each time because it was used to identify that specific order placed at that point as being bona fide for warranty verification purposes - they guarantee that it will work for that laptop, remember?

A pretty smart online ordering system. However, I didn't want to order it from that source as the shipping costs to New Zealand would have been astronomical.
1795
General Software Discussion / Re: Configure Host file!
« Last post by IainB on March 02, 2016, 10:59 AM »
The firewall that comes with Windows 7 (and up) is actually good in blocking incoming/outgoing network traffic. And there are (freeware) tools available that make working with this firewall easier, if you find it's default interface intimidating/fugly.
___________________________
Yes, that's what I had found, and for a while when I was using Win7-64 I preferred to use Windows 7 Firewall Control (purchased in Nov. 2012 for US$30). It was excellent, but under Win10-64 PRO I don't really feel that I need such software any more.
1796
General Software Discussion / Re: Configure Host file!
« Last post by IainB on March 01, 2016, 11:24 PM »
I might be missing something here, but what's wrong with using Windows Firewall to control this?
I've used that for years to disable certain proggies from "phoning home" every time they are started up.
1797
Living Room / Consider installing 2 x 8Gb RAM cards in your 64-bit laptop.
« Last post by IainB on March 01, 2016, 10:22 PM »
In case anyone reading this doesn't realise it, if you have a 64-bit laptop, it will typically have 2 x RAM card slots. Most 64-bit laptops come with 1 x 4Gb or 2 x 4 Gb RAM cards installed, which is pathetically inadequate compared to what a 64-bit laptop is capable of addressing.

If you do not already have them, you can purchase 2 x 8Gb RAM cards to go into those slots, replacing any smaller RAM cards. This potentially WILL make a difference to the speed/responsiveness of ALL memory-intensive operations - e.g., huge Excel spreadsheets, or when opening up several InfoSelect8 .WD2 databases simultaneously. The laptop will take it all in its stride, instead of pausing/choking on trying to manage and operate on too much data with too little RAM.

Well worth it. The 8Gb RAM cards are relatively affordable too.

Suggest you try the website Crucial.com - DRAM, solid state drive (SSD) memory upgrades for Dell, Mac, Apple, HP, Compaq, Lenovo, Acer, ASUS.
There you can find compatible memory and SSD upgrades with their Crucial Advisor tool and Crucial System Scanner.
I downloaded their Crucial System Scanner - a very handy tool. It confirmed how much and what type of RAM my laptop could support - i.e., 2 x 8Gb DRAM.

Shop around - I ended up buying 2 x 8Gb Kingston DDR3 PC3l-12800 CL11 204-Pin SODIMM
 - from a local retailer, at a discounted price, after comparing their prices online.
_____________________________
Hope this helps or is of use.
1798
Living Room / Re: What books are you reading?
« Last post by IainB on March 01, 2016, 07:56 PM »
We've been reading "Jane Eyre", by Charlotte Bronte.
In searching for reviews of Jane Eyre, as part of my assisting my daughter with her reading programme, I just now came across something quite interesting that is in the book that either had entirely escaped me before, or which I simply had not read/understood. I certainly do not recall having read it: The book includes a pretty balanced approach to revealing the fallacy of the Christian teaching of "Turning the other cheek".

My attention was drawn to this by reading a post in drhurd.com: Jane Eyre Exposes the Fallacy of Turning the Other Cheek (Charlotte Bronte)
Posted on February 21, 2016
“If people were always kind and obedient to those who are cruel and unjust, the wicked people would have it all their own way: they would never feel afraid, and so they would never alter, but would grow worse and worse. When we are struck at without a reason, we should strike back again very hard; I am sure we should–so hard as to teach the person who struck us never to do it again.” [said Jane Eyre]

“You will change your mind, I hope, when you grow older: as yet you are but a little untaught girl.”

“But I feel this, Helen; I must dislike those who, whatever I do to please them, persist in disliking me; I must resist those who punish me unjustly. It is as natural as that I should love those who show me affection, or submit to punishment when I feel it is deserved.”

“Heathens and savage tribes hold that doctrine, but Christians and civilised nations disown it.”

“How? I don’t understand.”

“It is not violence that best overcomes hate–nor vengeance that most certainly heals injury.”

“What then?”

“Read the New Testament, and observe what Christ says, and how He acts; make His word your rule, and His conduct your example.”

“What does He say?”

“Love your enemies; bless them that curse you; do good to them that hate you and despitefully use you.”

“Then I should love Mrs. Reed [Jane’s abusive aunt and foster parent], which I cannot do; I should bless her [abusive, bullying] son John, which is impossible.”

— from Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte
______________________________
This artificial discussion does not seem to be polemic or propaganda, but merely puts both sides of the issue out in the open using the device of a fictitious discussion between an adult (a Christian) and a child - viz: the Turn the Other Cheek Christian teaching on the one hand, and, on the other hand, why this may not be pragmatic/rational in our everyday life (particularly in the world of reducing peace that we might find ourselves in today).

This, for me, leads to a perfect example of why reading widely and making connections between what one reads is likely to be beneficial for developing an improved understanding of the de facto philosophical challenges that we are likely to face in life, and so I pointed it out to my daughter - because she is studying philosophy at school this year - as a useful teaching point when read together with a news item that I had read recently and with two of the other books that she refers to from time to time (and which I encourage) - which are the Bible and the Koran.

The news item was from an interview with an orthodox Christian man living with his family in Syria (the Middle East), and what his response was when ISIS (jihadist soldiers of orthodox Islam) had taken over his home town. He reported that of the thousands of Christians living there, his was one of only about 50 families that had decided to remain. They had been faced with three options:
  • Expulsion: Be expelled (forced to flee - become a refugee) under threat of almost certain death/rape/pillaging by ISIS (because all non-Islamic people are "infidels" and the women and children and their property would become legitimate slaves/spoils of war).
  • Jizya tax: Stay and hope to be allowed to pay the annual jizya tax (ISIS so far has seemed pretty reliable in honestly allowing jizya).
    Jizya or jizyah (Arabic: ????? gizyah IPA: [d?izja]; Ottoman Turkish: cizye) is a religiously required per capita tax on non-Muslims under Islamic law, levied by an Islamic state.[1][2] Jizya tax was not paid by Muslims, who however paid zakat (alms) tax instead.[3]
    Jizya is an example of taxes that depended on the religion of the individual. However, historically, the Jizya tax has been rationalized as a fee for protection provided by the Muslim ruler to non-Muslims, for the permission to privately practice a non-Muslim faith with some communal autonomy in a Muslim state, and as material proof of the non-Muslims' submission to the [supreme] Muslim state and its laws.[3][4]] - Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jizya
  • Convert to Islam: this would be to formally renounce all one's Christian (or other non-Muslim religions) views and beliefs, which are all considered heretical under Islam - and submit to Islam ("Islam" means submit) that is, to the will and the word of Allah as per the Koran. (The Jews are not allowed to convert though.) Islam is a one-way ticket, because, having once become a Muslim, one may not leave, under fear of death by stoning for committing the heresy of apostasy.

The Syrian Christian decided to take the 2nd option - the stigmatising and prejudicial jizya tax, and he and his family were "safe" under the protection of the Caliphate (rather like the Mafia), as long as his annual jizya tax had been paid and was still current - like a licence to practice Christianity.
If that 2nd option had not existed, then it would have been the 1st option - i.e., flee as a refugee, leaving one's property behind (which would be expropriated by the Caliphate) - because the 3rd option (renounce Christianity and submit to Islam) would presumably have been untenable to an Orthodox Christian.

The "Jane Eyre moment f truth" here is the realisation that nowhere in this is the response of "turning the other cheek" likely to be an appropriate or acceptable or even useful response - if one values the lives of one's family and oneself. That is, the foe that one faces and who curses you may have an infinite appetite for your extinction, and thus "turning the other cheek" could be interpreted as a weak response and a sign of weakness, and would thus be at best a useless response and at worst a response inviting death.
1799
Living Room / Re: What books are you reading?
« Last post by IainB on March 01, 2016, 04:21 PM »
@rjbull: re Bram Stoker's book "Dracula".
I had got this book for $FREE on the Kindle, and my now 14½ y/o daughter Lily recently finished reading it during the school holidays. She found it "unputdownable". The narrative, story, character development - everything - was, she said, really good. She also found its description of a sinister, remorseless evil to be quite scary.
I had similarly enjoyed the book when I was 13 y/o, or so. In my view, the many vampire films - from Nosferatu (1922) onwards - have generally failed to meet the standard for gripping, creepy horror set by the book.
I suspect this is probably because the story in the book captivates the imagination and encourages the mind to conjure up mental images and feelings/emotions from the story, in ways that are difficult to replicate in a film medium.
Thus, despite the plethora of vampire movies - the formulaic Hammer Horror ones being typical examples - there tend to be only a few vampire movies that stand out as being exceptionally good.
1800
Living Room / The potential for retrospective irony in using ad hominems in a debate.
« Last post by IainB on February 28, 2016, 05:12 PM »
One sometimes thinks "They might regret making that logical fallacy". Nowhere more satisfying to see than in political debates that have been reduced to slanging matches.

29_468x714_5BE880D9.png

UK Conservative Party poster from 1929 warning of the threat of Ramsay MacDonald's Labour party proclaims "Socialism Would Mean Inspectors All Round", and depicts a beleaguered Englishman in his home surrounded by officials prying into his affairs.
Date:     1929
Source: DailyMail.com
Author:  Conservative Party
Refer: https://upload.wikim...alism_Would_Mean.jpg

Somewhat ironic in view of the current UK Conservative-led government under Cameron pushing legislation to enforce State surveillance for all.
Hat tip to George Orwell.
Pages: prev1 ... 67 68 69 70 71 [72] 73 74 75 76 77 ... 264next