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5801
General Software Discussion / Re: Question about extra-large JPG
« Last post by IainB on December 22, 2011, 08:02 PM »
Interviewer: Is there anything you don't like?
Bjarne Stroustrup: Marketing hype as a substitute for technical argument. Thoughtless adherence to dogma. Pride in ignorance.
Wow! That is a totally awesome quote! I'm going to leverage curation using that quote to increase my big picture visibility and give persistence to my whitespace social media presence, going forwards.

(Sorry. Couldn't help myself.)    :-[
5802
General Software Discussion / Re: Question about extra-large JPG
« Last post by IainB on December 22, 2011, 02:52 PM »
Whilst I could not answer your Qs, from what you said I would suggest that you go for inspection/analysis - e.g., open up the images using IrfanView, or PhotoME, which can tell you quite a lot about image compression levels, sizes, aspect ratios, EXIF and IPTC data, camera details, etc.

Though I have not recovered images from CF cards, I have recovered deleted images from old hard drives, and the recovered files tend to be uniformly very large (much larger than their original size would have been), and I think that may be attributable to some of the .JPG compression ratio data being lost, so you would probably need to resample or recompress them to get the file size down - I'm not sure if that would be a lossy process, but I suspect it could be.

Sorry I can't offer anything more than that.
5803
Living Room / A Merry Christmas card
« Last post by IainB on December 22, 2011, 08:50 AM »
I'd like to wish a very Merry Christmas to all DC members.
Let's not forget that Christmas is all about celebrating the birth of baby Jesus, over 2,000 years ago. It is a time of goodwill to all.

So, though I gather that US Congressmen may be no longer allowed to use the phrase "Merry Christmas" in any written communication on government business, I feel sure we might all be able to find our way to sending this Christmas Eurocard out to all - it's in support of an endangered species:
Christmas Eurocard.jpg
5804
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: O&O DriveLED4 Pro Christmas giveaway
« Last post by IainB on December 22, 2011, 05:35 AM »
Something rather odd about that website...
5805
Living Room / Re: UK Police Test 'Temporarily Blinding' LASER
« Last post by IainB on December 21, 2011, 09:40 PM »
Yes, but if you use any of those on a cop, it's always a felony attempted homicide charge. Funny how the law isn't consistent.
I looked at the cartoon and thought it was a bit "over the top", until I happened to read this (and listened to the attached sound clip: A Canada Border Crossing Mini-Drama

It's apparently an "assault" on a law enforcement officer" if you pull away from him when he grabs you. One wonders what sort of crime would it be if you hugged him.
I guess this is "your America today" all right.
Depressing.
5806
Living Room / Re: You like science fiction, don't you? Of course you do!
« Last post by IainB on December 21, 2011, 09:19 PM »
I also want the Beeb's HHGTTG now...(sigh). (Though I do have it on cassette tape.)

http://www.sadena.co.../BBC-Radio/H2G2_old/
@MaxEvilTwin: I thought I'd already said "thankyou" for this, but I can't see it in the thread.
Thanks again anyway!
I downloaded all those HHGTTG .mp3 files.
5807
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: A-Pdf 90% off: $199
« Last post by IainB on December 21, 2011, 08:06 AM »
I think the ancient Greeks had a word for this kind of thing: RipΩff.
5808
Yes, I think that's what they call "Taking the Mickey", isn't it?
The rest of his blog makes for interesting reading too.
He doesn't mince his words.
5809
Living Room / Re: SOPA - new cartoons/social comment
« Last post by IainB on December 21, 2011, 02:39 AM »
Yes. I think that is quite a good example of satire.
Probably wasted on the SOPA advocates though.
5811
Living Room / Re: You like science fiction, don't you? Of course you do!
« Last post by IainB on December 20, 2011, 05:42 PM »
Ahh, bliss!
Been listening to the Foundation and HHGTTG audios... (thanks again!).

Though I dislike "talking books" in general (they usually feel "too slow" for impatient me), I have sometimes enjoyed listening to books being read out loud by people/actors with good vocal projection and clear English speaking voices (I find some accents annoying/distracting).
And I have often enjoyed listening to a lot of Beeb radio plays since age 7 or so, and the above two Beeb audios are definitely examples of well-produced radio plays.

And yes, I do like SF. "Like" is probably a gross understatement in my case. I used to be addicted to SF (and I probably still am). I have enjoyed reading science fiction since first reading HG Wells' "The Time Machine" at age 8 or so.
The time and your life's context when you read these things can be quite significant in your life.
I can't recall exactly, but I think I was about 10 when I first read Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm. They were an introduction to the new ideas/possibilities of what life might be like under tyranny - whether, communist, Fascist, or state control - and they made me very thoughtful on the subject. They also helped me to make more sense of the shortwave broadcasts that I would regularly listen to on our HMV valve radio - especially:
  • the world news broadcast by the Voice of America;
  • the world news broadcast by the Chinese, in English;
  • the world news broadcast by the BBC World Service;
  • the world news broadcast by the USSR, in English.

I had asked my mother why the news slant and the words and terms used to describe the same world events were often so different in each case, and she told me that the word I needed for this was "indoctrination", and explained that each of the broadcasters wanted the listener to see the world events through their particular belief system.

Today, I was hurtled back to those times quite by coincidence when I came across a link to this recent blog post (2011-12-21): The Connection Between George Orwell and Friedrich Hayek
I found it a very interesting article, and it helped to put George Orwell's life into a fuller context that made a lot of sense - to me at any rate. I had previously just regarded him as an author, without wondering too much what his beliefs/ideologies were or where he had got his ideas from.
5812
General Software Discussion / Re: AdBlock Plus To Not Block All Ads
« Last post by IainB on December 20, 2011, 06:14 AM »
How could I make the CSS script:
@-moz-document domain("google.com") OR @-moz-document domain("google.co.nz")
- or am I stuck with one domain only?
You will have to create a set for each domain name by pasting the code into the file twice..

Use @-moz-document domain("google.com") for one of them and @-moz-document domain("google.co.nz") for the other. No promises that the ID names will match the ones used in the page of the localized version. Test it and let me know if it works, and if it doesn't, I'll take a look at the google.co.nz page and see what is going on.

Done it. It now seems to work OK. Thanks.
The red border appears on adverts in both domains.
To be able to see the adverts in the first place, it looks as though I need to disable these FF add-ons: (requires FF restart)
  • AdBlock Plus
  • ABP Element Hiding Helper
  • NoScript
Thanks for all the tips folks!
5813
General Software Discussion / Re: AdBlock Plus To Not Block All Ads
« Last post by IainB on December 19, 2011, 09:15 AM »
@app103: Of course. It was right under my nose.
I am in New Zealand, and every time I send a search to Google, it gets transformed into google.co.nz.
It's very annoying. I can't see how to defeat it entirely in the awesome bar, but I read in a help forum that you could force the .com if you use:
http://www.google.com/ncr
- that returns you to google.com

How could I make the CSS script:
@-moz-document domain("google.com") OR @-moz-document domain("google.co.nz")
- or am I stuck with one domain only?

Could I fix this in the about:config instead? (Can't see how.)

Sorry to bother you.
5814
General Software Discussion / Re: AdBlock Plus To Not Block All Ads
« Last post by IainB on December 19, 2011, 04:39 AM »
A-hah! Some sort of success!? Found this quite by chance.
Why the red border works here and not on a Google search is a mystery.
19_641x456_AA37C29C.png
5815
Find And Run Robot / Re: Hanging behavior -- FARR Problem?
« Last post by IainB on December 19, 2011, 04:12 AM »
Just reporting another couple of these odd FARR hangs - one about a week ago, and one yesterday.
Same symptoms. Same workaround. Except the OS (well, Windows Explorer) seemed unstable yesterday, even after I had restarted WE.
So I rebooted and the problem went away.

I don't see why this would necessarily be a FARR-caused problem. On the other hand, I don't see what could be causing it either. There's no apparent pattern that I can see, and I cannot deliberately make the problem repeat.
5816
Interesting blog post here from one Luboš Motl, a scientist (physicist) in the Czech Republic:
Why the God particle is an accurate term

5817
General Software Discussion / Re: AdBlock Plus To Not Block All Ads
« Last post by IainB on December 18, 2011, 08:20 PM »
@app103: Thanks again.
Well, I triple-checked, and I had (as I said) done it "by the book" - which was also exactly as you had directed, I think.
The file path is: C:\Users\username\AppData\Roaming\Mozilla\Firefox\Profiles\2vuv8r8c.default\chrome\userContent.css
That was where the example file was also, which I copied, renamed and edited to include the script you provided.
Couldn't be simpler - right?     :(

Content of that userContent.css file:
Spoiler
/*
 * Edit this file and copy it as userContent.css into your
 * profile-directory/chrome/
 */

/*
 * This file can be used to apply a style to all web pages you view
 * Rules without !important are overruled by author rules if the
 * author sets any.  Rules with !important overrule author rules.
 */

/*
 * example: turn off "blink" element blinking
 *
 * blink { text-decoration: none ! important; }
 *
 */

/*
 * example: give all tables a 2px border
 *
 * table { border: 2px solid; }
 */

/*
 * example: turn off "marquee" element
 *
 * marquee { -moz-binding: none; }
 *
 */
 
/*
 * For more examples see http://www.mozilla.o...nix/customizing.html
 */

  /* BEGIN Google ad tweaks */
 @-moz-document domain("google.com"){
 
     #tads{
         border:5px solid red !important;
     }
     .std{
         border:5px solid red !important;
     }
     #tadsb{
         border:5px solid red !important;
     }
 
 }
  /* END Google ad tweaks */

5818
General Software Discussion / Re: AdBlock Plus To Not Block All Ads
« Last post by IainB on December 18, 2011, 12:17 AM »
@app103: Thanks. I did all those steps. No go.
So, if it's not a mistake, then maybe that CSS script has a conflict with something else in my add-ons and it just gets nullified.
I don't know anything much about CSS script (though it seems pretty straightforward).
I know nothing about relevant priorities or potential conflicts of these scripts and add-ons.
5819
General Software Discussion / Re: AdBlock Plus To Not Block All Ads
« Last post by IainB on December 18, 2011, 12:12 AM »
@mahesh2k: That's curious. I don't get any such adverts - none at all, in fact.
Maybe it is the ABP lists that I subscribe to - or NoScript? (I already mentioned above that NoScript  is complementary to ABP + ABP EHH).
5820
General Software Discussion / Re: AdBlock Plus To Not Block All Ads
« Last post by IainB on December 17, 2011, 11:12 PM »
Actually, it is a good step into the right direction. The more users only allow static ads, the more ads will be static and less obtrusive and blinking and sounding and requiring Flash and crashing the browser, and one fine day no-one needs ad blockers anymore.
I think your statement has a chance of being supported by events. It certainly seems like it could potentially be a good step in the right direction, at least - that is, assuming that a "step in the right direction" means:
"...towards advertisers changing their advertisement implementation and on-screen presentation practices and in a manner that does not detract from the user's ability to gather useful and meaningful content for his browsing purposes."

Always hoping for improvement in such things, I have already re-enabled updating for ABP, and the new version 2.0.1 has installed.
After reading the FAQ Allowing acceptable ads in Adblock Plus, I have disabled (set false in about.config) the special treatment for the "acceptable" ads switch, so that it appears as just another filter in the ABP Options, and which I can enable/disable at will. I dislike black box features on principle, and prefer to be able to see what's going on inside, so the ability to view the filters for this is an advantage in that regard.

Given my preceding and long experience of some/most advertisers' moronic communication methods, I am somewhat sceptical of the potential rate of take-up of this ABP feature by advertisers - i.e. will they be able to change and become collaborative/willing? - hmm. Time will tell. It's a new idea, a change to the way things are usually done, and apparently an improvement of potential benefit to all/most parties, with no apparent disadvantages that I can think of.
And it can (so far) be switched off it we don't like it or if advertisers continue to abuse their communications access to users.
It seems reasonable to give it a chance.

@app103 That CSS mod - I can't get it to work. I think did it all by the book, but no go. I've not fiddled with CSS directly before, so I could have made a mistuk somewhere.    :(
5821
General Software Discussion / Re: AdBlock Plus To Not Block All Ads
« Last post by IainB on December 17, 2011, 08:41 PM »
Google's answer to Adblockplus, sneaking static ads in between search results. lol I guess soon they'll mix the colors and it'll be hard to see if it's ad or not. I'm sure that advertisers are going to get ripped off if they get false clicks or bounced clicks, google is making damn money with this.
http://img600.imageshack.us/img600/384/88googleads.jpg

How so is this "Google's answer to Adblockplus"? I don't understand. It doesn't seem to affect ABP - ABP blocks that too (I just checked - if I disable ABP then I will see these ads, but when ABP is enabled, I don't).
What am I missing here?

@app103 That CSS mod is rather nifty, thankyou. I shall use that for when I disable ABP and want to have the ads displayed but avoid them seeming to be part of my search results.
The CSS (script) shouldn't create much overhead.
5822
Of course, non-believers' belief (that god-believers' beliefs are metaphors only and not based in a factual God) is simply itself an opinion, because science and philosophy can neither prove nor disprove the existence of a God.

Spot on.
There seems to be no proof that God exists.
There seems to be no proof that God does not exist - though Thomas Paine's biting criticism of the Bible and religion in "The Age of Reason" (Published in 1794 and 1796) arguably came pretty close.

My 10-year old daughter understands that to believe in God or anything else that you do not know for sure to be true (e.g., ghosts, invisible friends, fairies at the bottom of the garden, the emperor's new clothes) necessitates credulity and the suspension of reason. Despite that, she understands when I tell her that that some people do not believe in the god(s) of religion or myth, but yet have apparently had a direct experience that enabled them to know that there is something (e.g., typically: it felt like pure, unconditional love, and maybe it's "God", and that it has always loved us, is loving us now, and always will, for every moment of our existence).

This kind of direct experience or revelation has been relatively well-documented. Maybe some of these people were hallucinating and "hearing voices", but it seemed real enough to them. For example, Saul's conversion on the road to Damascus (New Testament, Acts 9), where he - a non-believer full of hatred - had a vision of Jesus Christ.

Who is to say that a person's direct experience - which you cannot share directly as he did - is valid/true or not? To say it were either thing (i.e., valid/true or not) would seem to be irrational in itself. How could you possibly know? We are irrational by nature and so we tend to form an "opinion", to which our ego becomes attached and causes us to stick by that opinion and defend it to the death.

This is why I made this post in a separate thread about the Higgs Boson:
Yes, I found this about the theoretical Higgs boson in Wikipedia:
Spoiler
The Higgs boson is a hypothetical massive elementary particle that is predicted to exist by the Standard Model (SM) of particle physics. Its existence is postulated as a means of resolving inconsistencies in the Standard Model. Experiments attempting to find the particle are currently being performed using the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN, and were performed at Fermilab's Tevatron until Tevatron's closure in late 2011. Recently the BBC reported that the boson will possibly be considered as "discoverable" in December 2011, although more experimental data is still needed to make that final claim.

The Higgs boson is the only elementary particle predicted by the Standard Model that has not been observed in particle physics experiments. It is an integral part of the Higgs mechanism, the part of the SM which explains how most of the known elementary particles obtain their mass. For example, the Higgs mechanism would explain why the W and Z bosons, which mediate weak interactions, are massive whereas the related photon, which mediates electromagnetism, is massless. The Higgs boson is expected to be in a class of particles known as scalar bosons. (Bosons are particles with integer spin, and scalar bosons have spin 0.)

Theories that do not need the Higgs boson are described as Higgsless models. Some theories suggest that any mechanism capable of generating the masses of the elementary particles must be visible at energies below 1.4 TeV;[4] therefore, the LHC is expected to be able to provide experimental evidence of the existence or non-existence of the Higgs boson.

Interestingly, there are apparently two groups of scientists:
(a) Higgs: those scientists who are believers in the SM (Standard Model) predictions and who apparently:
... expect the LHC experiment to be able to provide definitive experimental evidence of the existence of the Higgs boson.

and

(b) Higgsless: those scientists who are non-believers in the SM - and who thus hold instead that the HM (Hiiggsless Model) is the Truth and who apparently:
expect the LHC experiment to be able to provide experimental evidence of the non-existence of the Higgs boson.

Scientists! They're a funny lot aren't they?     :huh:

I don't know how many of either group might be climate scientists.
5823
General Software Discussion / Re: Google Gmail problem - "Nested groups detected".
« Last post by IainB on December 17, 2011, 12:18 AM »
Looks like other users are finding they have the same problem - I just found some posts about it in the Gmail support forum:
Delivery to the following recipient failed permanently: Nested groups detected?

So I added a post there as well.
5824
General Software Discussion / Re: Google Gmail problem - "Nested groups detected".
« Last post by IainB on December 16, 2011, 11:56 PM »
@justice: Thanks. I hadn't seen that particular link, but I did read up about "Nested groups", and they seemed like a useful feature from what Google documentation seemed to be saying about them.
Be that as it may, it doesn't help to explain why I have suddenly only now started getting this block error message in Gmail, when I haven't changed anything to do with it - in Gmail or Groups. It's rather strange.
That's why I say Google must have changed something.

Maybe Google is about to announce the withdrawal of yet another service - who knows?
5825
Posted in case this handy script could be of help/use to someone.
I reckon this script - Google Reader filter from userscripts.org - could well be a "must have" for anyone who uses Google Reader a lot and wants to save time.

This filter works consistently for me in Firefox and Chrome/Chromium, and makes short work of sifting through all the posts in Reader.
The ability to filter duplicates out of a busy discussion thread, leaving all but the most recent post/comment visible, is a serious timesaver IMO.
Must have saved me many hours so far, and probably will into the future.

I have tried other filters, but this one always works perfectly, whereas the others all seem to be deficient in some regard.
Example screenshots below: (from Chromium)
(a) With duplicate posts highlighted. (Posts extend below the bottom of the screen, and you would have to scroll to see them.)
Spoiler
SCreenshot - Google Reader - 0 filtered.png

(b) With duplicate posts removed. (See how because all posts fit within the screen, there's no need to scroll.)
Spoiler
SCreenshot - Google Reader - 1 filtered.png


(By the way, if you are wondering about the screenshot layout and colours, it's because I am experimenting with better ergonomics, rather than having to wear snowgoggles to counteract the glary whiteness of the standard Google Reader display. I got snowblindness once, on an expedition years ago, and I don't want to have to relive any part of that experience. I wondered why I always liked using the old IBM green phosphor display screens.)
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