Doing ourselves out of some cash here....
- Andy Hamilton
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Doing ourselves out of some cash here....
Just found a little plug in for Firefox that blocks any ads on a page. It means that anyone (uhmpt Martin) that is fed up with the google ads at the top of the page can stop them from appearing. Seems to block most ads.
First we sow the seeds, nature grows the seeds then we eat the seeds. Neil Pye
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The Other Andy Hamilton - Drinks & Foraging
My best selling Homebrew book Booze for Free
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The Other Andy Hamilton - Drinks & Foraging
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Martin
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by golly, it works! - have to "teach it" first, but it does achieve it! Thanks! 
http://solarwind.org.uk - a small company in Sussex sourcing, supplying, and fitting alternative energy products.
Amateurs encouraged - very keen prices and friendly helpful service!
Amateurs encouraged - very keen prices and friendly helpful service!
- Muddypause
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Maybe you can tell something about a person by the extensions they have on Firefox. I have to say that Adblock was about the first extension I installed several years ago. When you lot were grumbling about the GoogleAds a while back I was a bit puzzled, because I didn't even know the site carried them.
When you click on an ad, Adblock will suggest blocking that specific one - have a look at the URL which it is showing you and see if it can be reduced to a simple domain, thus blocking everything from that site. For example, if something starts off http://media.adrevolver.com it's a fair certainty that the whole site is dedicated to providing adverts, so foreshorten it to just that and all ads from that site will be blocked regardless of where they are. Sites that you don't want to block completely will often have a fairly obvious advert folder; eg http://www.tiscali.co.uk/banners/ - cut out everything after that bit, and all the banner ads on the Tiscali site will be blocked.
It's also jolly useful for getting rid of all those annoying emoticons that people litter their posts with, and (dare I say it) some of the less becoming avatars <hush, now> (not necessarily on this forum; possibly on this forum).
Nuke Anything is another useful one you might be interested in, for one-time removal of annoyances.
When you click on an ad, Adblock will suggest blocking that specific one - have a look at the URL which it is showing you and see if it can be reduced to a simple domain, thus blocking everything from that site. For example, if something starts off http://media.adrevolver.com it's a fair certainty that the whole site is dedicated to providing adverts, so foreshorten it to just that and all ads from that site will be blocked regardless of where they are. Sites that you don't want to block completely will often have a fairly obvious advert folder; eg http://www.tiscali.co.uk/banners/ - cut out everything after that bit, and all the banner ads on the Tiscali site will be blocked.
It's also jolly useful for getting rid of all those annoying emoticons that people litter their posts with, and (dare I say it) some of the less becoming avatars <hush, now> (not necessarily on this forum; possibly on this forum).
Nuke Anything is another useful one you might be interested in, for one-time removal of annoyances.
Stew
Ignorance is essential
Ignorance is essential
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Martin
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does "nuke anything" work on governments?............... 
http://solarwind.org.uk - a small company in Sussex sourcing, supplying, and fitting alternative energy products.
Amateurs encouraged - very keen prices and friendly helpful service!
Amateurs encouraged - very keen prices and friendly helpful service!
- Millymollymandy
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You wouldn't be talking about Martin would you?Muddypause wrote: It's also jolly useful for getting rid of all those annoying emoticons that people litter their posts with, and (dare I say it) some of the less becoming avatars <hush, now> (not necessarily on this forum; possibly on this forum).
Mind you, if you block out the emoticons you won't know when people are being serious or not!!!
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hamster
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You can probably tell quite a lot about me from the fact that I didn't even know there were extensions on Firefox, let alone how to install them and use them....Muddypause wrote:Maybe you can tell something about a person by the extensions they have on Firefox.
They're not weeds - that's a habitat for wildlife, don't you know?
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http://sproutingbroccoli.wordpress.com
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Martin
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what's wrong with smilies?
On a board like this, they're actually useful, and can emphasise meanings if something could be read "either way" - a little smiley confirms what you mean!

On a board like this, they're actually useful, and can emphasise meanings if something could be read "either way" - a little smiley confirms what you mean!
http://solarwind.org.uk - a small company in Sussex sourcing, supplying, and fitting alternative energy products.
Amateurs encouraged - very keen prices and friendly helpful service!
Amateurs encouraged - very keen prices and friendly helpful service!
- Muddypause
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Are you saying he uses a lot of emoticons? I didn't know that. But I'll try not to think any less of him because of it.M3 wrote:You wouldn't be talking about Martin would you?
Now, you see, I can actually tell that there was a degree of irony in that comment, and I've no idea if you used emoticons to express that. The thing is, language is clever enough to convey that on its own, and I think we should make a stand against the idea that everyone on the internet is too illiterate to be able to understand this.M3 wrote:Mind you, if you block out the emoticons you won't know when people are being serious or not!!!
When you read a book which makes you laugh or cry, do you only know to express these emotions because it has emoticons telling you to? People have been able to communicate the entire gamut of human emotions through the written word without needing to add little graphics that tell us what to feel about it. Language is sophisticated enough to do this, and yet elegant enough for a three year old to use.
I suppose I find emoticons rather patronising. They presume the reader cannot otherwise understand something, and they thus absolve the writer from the responsibility of figuring out a form of words that conveys what they mean. An emoticon conveys someone else's idea of an emotion - you get them from a stock of ready-made feelings. I'd rather find out what you mean by the shape of the words you use.
Stew
Ignorance is essential
Ignorance is essential
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Martin
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I use it as shorthand....... I posted a reply to a post last night in four letters -
"A bit?" - further qualified by the "rolleyes" smiley, which added considerably to it's meaning - otherwise I'd have had to have been considerably more verbose to get my meaning over.....
"A bit?" - further qualified by the "rolleyes" smiley, which added considerably to it's meaning - otherwise I'd have had to have been considerably more verbose to get my meaning over.....
http://solarwind.org.uk - a small company in Sussex sourcing, supplying, and fitting alternative energy products.
Amateurs encouraged - very keen prices and friendly helpful service!
Amateurs encouraged - very keen prices and friendly helpful service!
- Muddypause
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I only saw the four letters and still had a chuckle. Why do you think we couldn't figure out your meaning from that? I'd say it was enhanced by its brevity.
Surely the only thing I missed by not seeing the smilies was what you think of the intellectual capacity of your reader(s).
Surely the only thing I missed by not seeing the smilies was what you think of the intellectual capacity of your reader(s).
Stew
Ignorance is essential
Ignorance is essential
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Martin
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A novel view.......I regard it more as a way to talk on an internet board very much as one does in "real life" - the expression on the speaker's face is very important to qualify what has been said (rolling one's eyes for instance) - and to save excess verbosity (of which I have at times been very guilty)
(I put in a smiley smiley there!)
(and another!) 
(I put in a smiley smiley there!)
http://solarwind.org.uk - a small company in Sussex sourcing, supplying, and fitting alternative energy products.
Amateurs encouraged - very keen prices and friendly helpful service!
Amateurs encouraged - very keen prices and friendly helpful service!
- Stonehead
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A kindred spirit! Did you ever think I'd say that?Muddypause wrote:Now, you see, I can actually tell that there was a degree of irony in that comment, and I've no idea if you used emoticons to express that. The thing is, language is clever enough to convey that on its own, and I think we should make a stand against the idea that everyone on the internet is too illiterate to be able to understand this.
Hmm, they were dreamt up by Americans...I suppose I find emoticons rather patronising. They presume the reader cannot otherwise understand something.
Now that is sure to be taken the right way by some!
