Categories
Software and Programming

Nuke All Ads

Does it just seem that way, or did the appearance of Mozilla’s image blocking feature coincide with a decision by Internet advertisers to make every single gooddamn king-sized annoying ad with Flash?

Perhaps it was just the zeitgeist, or the appearence of Flash 6, but I wouldn’t rule that out. Web advertising loves the cutting edge – it needs it to dodge banner-blocking technology.

Some people just deleted Flash. Phil Ringnalda linked to a CSS2 solution you can use with Mozilla: add style rules to your userStyle.css file that hide embed tags of a certain size common for ads.

The user style sheet trick didn’t work for me on the first couple of sites I tried, though, probably because all their ads aren’t really Flash, but IFRAMEs with external source files (on advertising servers).

Killing off all the IFRAMEs on a page is trivial with a bookmarklet, and cleans up ads wonderfully. The problem is it’s not automatic – you need to click the bookmarklet, which means the ads have to annoy you enough for you to bother clicking the bookmarklet.

You could probably do this in a user stylesheet too – apply the style rules to IFRAME tags rather then EMBED tags.

Categories
Blather

The Thundering of Festivals

Just in time for Halloween, Jakob Nielsen does an Alertbox column on Celebrating Holidays and Special Occasions on Websites (Alertbox Oct. 2002). Interestingly, he cites a study his consultancy did surveying 56 websites from the U.S., U.K., and Israel on each of seven holidays: Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year’s, Valentine’s Day, Presidents’ Day, Purim, and St. Patrick’s Day.

And indeed, at least one weblog I frequent had a holiday theme set up for Halloween. I bet Google trotted out a pumpkin logo for the occassion.

So I thought, "jolly good idea, I should do that". Of course, I don’t celebrate Halloween. What do I celebrate? Hanukah? (actually, a relatively cool holiday, as far as Israeli Holidays go) Ramadan? (I hear it’s around the corner, or already started. I think it would be cool to mark Ramadan once – lots of Israelis fast on Yom Kippur, not out of religious observance, but just to see if they can endure the one day fast. Think how much harder it would be to not eat for a whole month during daylight hours, all the while carrying on with work as usual. Although it gets dark early now…)

No. The closest special date to commemorate was yesterday, November 4th, the anniversary of the assassination of the Israeli Prime Minister, Yitzhak Rabin.

Yossi Gurvitz, who is a real essayist and not a wimpy blogger like myself, wrote eloquently about the murder and the way Israeli society chose to commemorate it while repressing thought about its real implications.

As an aside, Yossi recalls singing a Monthy Python drinking song when he heard of Rabin’s assassination. I heard about it in even less decorous state. On the night of the peace demonstration when Rabin was shot, I was sitting at the offices of a multimedia start-up, working on the script for an interactive erotic network game. The manager of the company had been to the demonstration and was watching the news on TV when we heard about the shooting.

But back to Yossi’s essay. I agree with his sentiment, which echoes how I felt very well. Rabin’s murder basically woke us up to the fact that a member of our family is a homocidal maniac. And rather then dealing with the situation with the "show of force" Yossi fantasizes about, we chose to keep quiet and live with the problem, hoping things will "work out".

The current political situation, which just imploded, just underlines the steady feeling left-wing Israelis have, that our lot is not dissimilar to that of a beaten wife.

God, what an aimless rant.

Categories
Resources

Inessential Works of Reference

Ka-BOOM! A Dictionary of Comic Book Words (Kevin J. Taylor, ed.) collects Many Hundreds of New Words which Modern Literature, Science & Philosophy have Neglected to Acknowledge as True, Proper & Useful Terms & Which Have Never Before Been Published in Any Lexicon. It contains such useful terms as HWOKSH [Batman #502, 1993] The sound of a head being kicked and MMMBUH-WHAMMM [The Adventures of Bayou Billy #2, 1989] The complex sound of a monster truck crashing through a wall, it goes far beyond the eponymous KaBoom.

Kronos: A Chronological History of the Martial Arts and Combative Sports is a far more substantial work, and it appears to attempt to list any historical evidence or anecdote pretaining (however peripherally) to its subject. It’s organized as a long list of snippets of information, arranged chronologically and broken up into sections by time periods. It’s absolutely fascinating and well worth dipping into time and again.

I originally found both of these web publications archived at the National Library of Canada Electronic Collection.

Categories
Science Fiction and Fantasy

Charles Sheffield

Charles Sheffield Dies at 67; Physicist, Sci-Fi Author (washingtonpost.com)

Charles Sheffield‘s site is worth visiting, and contains a good bibliography and some nice bits of autobiography:

…I hated what I was finding; and after a while I had the dangerous thought, “You know, I could probably write something as bad as this myself.”

I tried. And soon I learned that I could not only produce something as bad as what I was reading, I could write something a good deal worse.

Categories
Software and Programming

Windows and ICS

Yesterday my girlfriend got us two network cards and a cable, so I could hook up our computers and let her share my ADSL internet connection, instead of the painfully slow modem.

So I spent pretty much the whole night setting it up. Part of my problems were jumping the gun and installing opaque proxy software (Wingate, especially) before getting networking to work properly between the two machines. However, near dawn, I found an exhaustive site telling me how to easily and simply set up Internet Connection Sharing, using nothing but Windows itself, and there was much joy.

This was cut short in the morning, when my girlfriend discovered that she couldn’t use her Hotmail account. Or connect to her Bank’s online service. Apparently, ICS doesn’t work properly with HTTPS connections.

So I spent some time looking for solutions. They are fairly sparse online, although some people have noticed the problem, and one guy has a solution which only requires a small proxy server application to be installed…

However, if I’ve learned anything last night, it’s not to rush off and install new software before exhausting the full capabilities of my OS. A lot of Windows software, I feel, was written to solve problems that troubled old versions of the OS, and which magically disappeared in newer versions.

One site pointed me at this
laconic snippet of Windows 2000 Documentation, which describes how Windows 2k itself can work as a proxy. There’s more on that in this Windows 2000 tips page.

I’m eager to try this out tonight, but first – a gaming session. With Jake, who I owe an article already…