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Posts tagged with "internet"

Google Public DNS

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Google recently announced they have opened a DNS resolver for public testing.

I've switched my DNS settings & have been using it for a while & have definitely noticed an improvement in speed especially for popular sites like the BBC.

Here are Google's instructions for changing your dns settings.

However, if you don't know what you are doing, don't touch.

Google Image Labeler

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Google's Image Labeler is a sneaky way of using the Google userbase as a distributed network of volunteers to identify the content of images by disguising the process as a game. You are paired up with someone else & you are both shown an image & you have to type in as many relevant labels as possible until you & your partner come up with a match, each match is assigned a score depending on how obscure the matching term is. With each match you get a new image to tag & at the end of 2 minutes you get a total score. It is surprisingly addictive. Although I think it would be nice to be able to send a message to your anonymous partner at the end of the round. For example I'd like to know why my partner didn't tag a picture of Richard Dean Anderson with Macguyver or Stargate?!?!

My best score so far is 1090.

IAA: Internet Addicts Anonymous

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Hi. My name is Jon & I am an internet addict.

I spend waaaay too much time online & now I have decided to really cut down.

Yesterday, I limited myself to half an hour online. I checked my email (my ISP deleted 31 copies of mydoom, woo to them), updated a couple of pages to my website, read a few blogs, then went up the pub.

Yay me.

It is a bad sign when going up the pub is considered a healthier lifestyle choice...

Maybe I could sue Opera Software for damages? My condition is blatantly all their fault...

How I first came to Opera

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In 1999 I learnt html & built a website for the Tunbridge Wells Juggling Club <http://www.twjc.co.uk/> which I still maintain today. At the time it wasn't much, a dozen or so pages, some pretty (awful) pictures & that was about it.

By 2001 I was using a mixture of tables & CSS for layout & some javascript for effects. I thought I knew all I needed to know.

It was in this year that I was invited along to a business meeting for the British Juggling Convention 2002 which was to be held in Whitstable. The BJC is the second largest juggling event in the world behind the European Juggling Convention & is organised & run entirely by volunteers. At the meeting I volunteered to build a website. I was told that someone else had already mentioned that they would knock something up. I emailed the person in question to offer them my help & he replied saying that he was no longer available & he set me up with ftp access to the server.

I immediately launched into the task & built a small & simple website containing every scrap of information I had & uploaded it to the server. I sent an email to the event's main organiser to give it a once over. She emailed me back saying what a fantastic job I had done & was really pleased with how quickly I had got all the information tapped in :angel:

I posted to usenet & all the major juggling mailing lists & forums then sat back.

The next day I received a message from the guy who had originally planned to do the website:

"You haven't seen it in Netscape or Opera have you?"

In what?

That night I downloaded, Netscape 4.7 (kill, destroy, hate, vermin, putrid, die Netscape 4 die!!!!), Lynx (what a neat little browser) & Opera 5. When I went to download Opera I remember reading the words "The Fastest browser on earth!" Rubbish I thought, all browsers must be the same. They can only be as fast as your internet connection. I loaded up Opera & went to a couple of sites to get the feel of the thing. Then I loaded up Internet explorer resized both apps so they were sitting side by side next to each other. I typed in the same web address into each. I clicked go in IE & then in Opera. Opera rendered the site first by a clear second (try it yourself). Wow.

I took a look at my creation in my new toys.

What an eye opener.

All the images were broken in Netscape & Opera, although that was a pretty simple fix. I had to tweak the margins & a few other css declerations to make the layout work in Opera. It took me an age to get the site to work in Netscape 4, people kept emailing me saying that the images were obliterating the text but I couldn't workout the problem & no one I knew could tell me what was wrong either. In the end I managed to fix the problem by deleting all the line-height rules from the stylesheet. After that the site displayed as intended in IE, NN & Opera & was fully accessible in Lynx too.

This was my first major site, hundreds of people were visiting a day. & it was broken in about 20% of the browsers people were using. I was so embarassed.

After that I read up on the W3C standards & really managed to clean up my coding habits. It took me a few days to clean up the TWJC website & make that accessible too. I found that if I wrote to standards everything looked ok in IE & Opera but NN was still a major pain & really limited what I was trying to do.

I found myself using Lynx more & more, I just loved the way that I could browse the internet using 3 fingers on the arrow keys. Very fast too.

I stopped using lynx though as most of the sites of the day relied too much on images. What a shame. So I started giving Opera a serious test run. Within a couple of days I was hooked. What did it for me was the MDI. Nothing else at the time had this feature, I was so impressed by the innovation. I would often load up HTML/CSS how to pages in one window & my own experiments in another. It was so easy to read one page, write a bit of code then see what happened in the other. I also fell in love with alt + f3 - the first shortcut I ever learnt!

It was quite a while before I discovered the power of mouse gestures. This was around the same time Opera 6 was released & I registered it there & then. Now with Opera 7 I am still discovering features that make me think 'this is fantastic'. Yesterday I learnt that you can use fast forward to cycle through a directory of images without going back to the directory listing (thanks to <http://tntluoma.com/opera/lover/7/>. How cool is that!

Many people don't understand why which browser you use is so important. The internet is a very important part of my life. I use it everyday. Opera makes it easier & faster & I have so much more control over what happens than with any other browser. I am genuinely happier when using Opera than the other browsers.

Blogs are bad, mmkay

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It has just dawned on me that I spend between 3 & 4 hours a day reading blogs. :yikes:

My addiction to blogs started mid 2003 & has been getting worse & worse. I have a relatively small set of regular reads, but I tend to follow almost every link they present to me. I also read at least 20 Opera journal posts a day too.

My obsession with blogs has been to the detriment of my juggling & in turn my own website.

That's it as of today I am cutting off the supply. Nurse! Cut the intravenous drip of daily data! I'm going to try to cope on my own.

(still going to post here though of course)
December 2009
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