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Top Tip: W2K weird popups and blocks!







Top Tip: W2K weird popups and blocks!

Top Tip: W2K weird popups and blocks! 02/17/2004 01:15 PM

I just reinstalled W2K and it all seems to be working just dandy, but I get about 100 of these pop ups per day saying 'WARNING: This message confirms your computer is vulnerable to attacks' and 'see www.MessageHackShield.com to fix this' or some site like that (there are several different ones as well as several different sized popups).




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Top Tip: W2K weird popups and blocks!

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Belle de Jour in a top ten of most
powerful people in UK New Media.
Slightly crack-fueled dreaming for that
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Weird - really really weird - to see
Belle de Jour in a top ten of most
powerful people in UK New Media.
Slightly crack-fueled dreaming for that
particular journo tonight, I fear
07/13/2004 08:23 AM
at least according to the woefully misinformed

media.guardian.co.uk/top100_2004/index/0,14656,1247481,0 0.html
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Top Tip: Attack of the popups!


Top Tip: Attack of the popups! 05/11/2004 12:13 PM
I am trying to get rid of the pop-ups in a computer of a family member. I thought I had successfully eliminated it all, but it re-appeared within a couple days.

Kill the popups


Kill the popups 05/18/2004 07:29 AM
New version cooming soon.

Mozilla Testing Block for New Popups


Mozilla Testing Block for New Popups 04/04/2005 09:28 PM
Mozilla developers have begun testing a patch for Firefox that blocks a new breed of pop-up advertisements that bypass traditional pop-up blockers. Instead of being spawned by JavaScript code, the new pop-ups load from within third-party plug-ins such as Macromedia Flash or Sun's Java.

Mozilla still champ when it comes to
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Mozilla still champ when it comes to
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Well, that's easy to correct: go to toolbar.google.com, and download Google Toolbar, which brings all of the most useful features of Google--plus a couple of ...

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05/19/2004 03:03 PM
"Using our trademarked name as a trigger to which you want to serve your ads causes customer confusion and crosses the line into trademark infringement."

Convert Safari popups to normal windows.


Convert Safari popups to normal windows. 05/24/2004 10:44 AM
I often find myself in pop-ups that have no address bars. Safari has an awkward shortcut to invoke the address bar (command+shift+), but I discovered that the Google shortcut on the edit menu accomplishes the same thing, an...

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Dr Design - Closing Popups and
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Dr. Design - Popups, Domain Names,
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Dr. Design - Popups, Domain Names,
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Be careful when allowing popups in
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Be careful when allowing popups in
Mozilla and Firefox
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Those of you using Mozilla or Firefox need to read this important security notice. The condensed version do not all popups on sites you don't 100% trust! [ZDN et]


Legal Issues Facing Spam, Popups And
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Legal Issues Facing Spam, Popups And
Spyware
01/03/2005 06:04 AM
It appears that politicians are increasingly paying attention to internet "evils" along the lines of spyware, spam and popups. In all cases, these are instances where the openness of the network has been abused, creating certain problems. However, it's not clear that any of these legislative solutions are likely to do any good. We already pointed out how ineffec tive CAN SPAM has been, but a few interesting things happened over the weekend in the areas of popups and spyware. First, a Utah court ruled that pop up ads were not covered by an anti-spam law in that state. The law in question is no longer in effect, so it doesn't really matter -- but it does suggest that the idea of using "unsolicited" email legislation against other forms of "unsolicited" advertising is unlikely to get very far. The news that's getting the most attention, however, is California's decision to pass anti-spyware legislation that would give out fines for spyware purveyors. The text of the actual law is worth reading, as it's clear that a fair amount of thought went into it. However, it's not entirely clear it will do much to stop spyware. First, the sneakiest forms of spyware have been very careful to hide who is really responsible for the products -- meaning, they're likely to successfully remain hidden from any lawsuits. The just slightly more legitimate adware variant of spyware, on the other hand, has always been more about social engineering than any technical trickery. That is, they bury the permissions in a ton of language so that no one is really sure what they're agreeing to. Assuming this continues, these firms will be able to claim that they presented the end user with a choice, and those end users agreed to move ahead with the installation.

That Was Weird...


That Was Weird... 07/17/2004 04:40 PM
I just posted a new item, and suddenly there were 22 comments under it -- all from another posting from more than a week ago. I deleted them, but this is just bizarre.

Weird


Weird 11/02/2003 04:18 PM

Reading about it being 71 degrees for the NYC Marathon, I was about to go running today (I did the LA marathon in 1997 and was hoping to do one next year) but was surprised to find the rain just turned to snow and is piling up on the roof and streets. New York? 70 and partly sunny. Oregon? snowing.


Weird Presents Anyone?


Weird Presents Anyone? 12/25/2003 04:20 PM

Weird Swing Bug


Weird Swing Bug 06/22/2004 11:54 PM
We ran into a weird issue with Swing today at work. The small class below reproduces this. 1 import javax.swing.*; 2 import javax.swing.event.TreeModelEvent; 3 import javax.swing.event.TreeModelListener; 4 import javax.swing.tree.DefaultMutableTreeNode; 5 import javax.swing.tree.DefaultTreeModel; 6 7 public class Blah extends JFrame implements TreeModelListener { 8 9 private JTree tree; 10 11 public Blah() { 12 setSize(150, 150); 13 setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE); 14 DefaultMutableTreeNode root... (294 words)

The Weird Als of Finland


The Weird Als of Finland 06/30/2004 06:07 PM

Everybody Humppa!

Finland has a dance called the humppa, but it's spoken of with the same disdain that disco gets in the US these days. It's for the geezers. I have been told it is something like the German polka only without the lederhosen, which is good since I'm half German and, after a few Straßenfests where people jump around in lederhosen with buckets of beer in their hands barely able to stand up, much less dance, the costumes just don't really add much to the overall aesthetic. I had a biology professor, a Bavarian who was really into opera singing, show up for a lecture in lederhosen and dance a polka for us while we sat there speechless. Everyone thought he was nuts, but I just thought he was hopelessly homesick and I couldn't imagine him doing that dance without the full costume in his usually disheveled professor uniform. I have been spared, so far, the spectacle of drunk Finns hopping around much like drunk Germans to goofy music. So far.

While we were off at the lake for Juhannus, my ear picked up something that sounded a lot like Viva Las Vegas but....not. I was informed that it was a group called Eläkeläiset [the pensioners] who are the humppa song gods in Finland and, well, everywhere else people like to humppa. I fried a few neurons just thinking about an Elvis tune done in humpaa/polka time. I can't describe their music except to say that they are the Weird Al Yankovics of Finland. Sample the Peljätty Humppa [2.2mb] and try to guess the song they are covering and be very, very afraid. It's like Ethyl Merman singing a disco version of No Business like Show Business [yes, she really did...], as it's so bad that it transcends the badness and is irresistibly brilliant. I must have more of their music. The guys actually have a regular band, Kumikameli, but I can't really tell the difference between the samples on that web site and the humppa music so it may be just a nuance only a Finn can hear. :) The lyrics are very clever and, unsurprisingly, the music is popular with the polka loving Germans. There even seems to be an OpenBSD-Humppa connection which does help explain a few things about OpenBSD. Weird Al has done a polka album so perhaps it is time he teamed up with Eläkeläiset and did a humppa album. Disturbing thought. *zot* There went another neuron.


Weird science


Weird science 12/31/2004 04:43 PM
It didn't take long for politicized debate to get roiling over the nature of the tsunami disaster -- some of it rather murky. Steven Milloy of the Cato Institute and Junk Science.com is now blasting environmentalists for "shameless exploitation" as they "surf the tsunami tragedy" in order to bring attention to the problem of global warming. Milloy wants to give the impression that he's navigating through truer waters, but clearly he's looking to ride the wave in a direction of his own:

News of the Weird... NOT!


News of the Weird... NOT! 01/02/2005 09:23 PM
Though not the web institution of Jim Romenesko's Obscure Store or as overexposed as Dave Barry's Blog, Chuck Shepherd's NEWS of the WEIRD is a fairly good source for news stories that are... well... WEIRD. And Chuck's the only one who has collected a list of stories that "now occur with such frequency" that they are NO LONGER WEIRD. Quite a resource for judging how our society has changed in the last umpteen years.

In semi-related news, Barry is semi-retiring his weekly column, but we still have AutoDave, the automated Dave Barry column generator. Still, I suspect he did it just to upstage Dan Gillmor's farewell column, as he gives up the old-media columnar life in favor of "Grassroots Journalism".
To Dave Berry, 'Grassroots Journalism' is writing about the brown patch in your lawn directly over the septic tank.

weird referer


weird referer 01/07/2004 04:31 PM

Recently (but I just noticed it today) I started getting HTTP referers that are a variation of the following: "XXXX:+++++++++++++++++++++++" (the number of plus signs varies). A google search with appropriate terms quickly turned up discussions like this one that suggest that the referer is someone using an anonymizer or internet security product of some kind. Without that information it smells like an attempt at an exploit of some kind... but of what kind (and if so, I've never heard of it)?

Anyone knows about this? Has anyone else seen it? I'm curious. :)


Weird Cats


Weird Cats 05/20/2004 01:13 AM
Feline medical curiosities. Polydactyly, conjoined-kitty-fu, "freaks of face," cleft palates, and plain old huge. (Not safe for after lunch).

Weird-o SMS behaviour


Weird-o SMS behaviour 02/05/2005 09:13 PM
Outi sent me yesterday a sweet text message about mice. True to the nature of these beasts, that SMS started multiplying: for some reason, T-Mobile (yes, I'm in Germany) has decided to deliver that message to me eleven times within the past 24 hours. Even though it has been sent only once.

It seems that every SMS sent from Finland is replaced by this same SMS message - so if you've tried to contact me, I have only seen a message about a mouse from Outi. Sorry. You gotta try and resend, if you had anything to say (or just email me).

Weirdosity++.


Weird Science & Bad Photoshopping


Weird Science & Bad Photoshopping 01/16/2004 11:02 AM
Top 10 impossible inventions that allegedly work. Includes such conspiracy-nut favorites as a system for sending power wirelessly, an anti-gravity device, the cloudbuster and an electronic telepathy device. [Snagged from Disinformat ion.]

Weird Financial News


Weird Financial News 01/16/2004 11:05 AM
Did you know West Virginia was auctioned off?

Message from Weird Al Yankovic


Message from Weird Al Yankovic 04/14/2004 03:48 PM
Comedian/musician "Weird Al" Yankovic lost both his mother and father this weekend in an accident involving carbon monoxide poisoning. He's posted a message on his website expressing thanks to fans for their kindness and support in his time of need, and he corrects errors in media coverage on the tragedy. Condolences, and much admiration and respect to Al and his family. Link

Weird color problem


Weird color problem 01/05/2005 10:26 PM
Mark Frauenfelder: Picture 1-2 (Click thumbnail for enlargement.) Anyone know why the body copy shows in gold in IE on OS X? It seems fine on Safari and Firefox. Please email me if you know the answer. (Also, thanks to everyone for your great design suggestions. As you can see, I've incorporated quite a few of them.)

Weird sticker on my DSL modem


Weird sticker on my DSL modem 07/12/2004 07:15 PM
I just got my Yahoo! DSL self-install kit in the mail, and the modem has a red sticker on it that reads:
"ATTENTION To maximize connection speed, leave this modem on for 10 days after DSL installation is complete. Please Note: You can use your DSL service during this time. It is not necessary to leave your computer on, only the modem."
Why do I have to leave the modem on for 10 days? Is something inside it fermenting? Email me if you know.

Weird 'net problem


Weird 'net problem 11/26/2002 07:26 PM
My Internet connection went down for a little while, and when it came back up, all outgoing SMTP and WWW...

Weird Fields winners


Weird Fields winners 04/04/2005 01:18 PM
David Pescovitz: Undergrad Dan Yuan's image here was first runner-up in MIT's annual Weird Fields contest where students generate psychedelic visualizations of vector fields. (Last year's winner here.) The patterns in Yuan's visualization remind me of the background of a Tim Biskup painting.
 Newsoffice 2005 Weird-2-EnlargedTo help students understand electromagnetic force fields, Professor of Physics John Belcher and colleagues at the MIT Center for Educational Computer Initiatives developed a computer applet into which students put the mathematical expressions that describe a given field. "It then pops out a visual representation of what the field looks like," he said.
Link

UPDATE: As the MIT press release and BB reader Tom Zeller point out, the Weird Fields visualizations bear a striking resemblance to sections of Gustav Klimt paintings. Link

six apart people have weird names


six apart people have weird names 08/18/2004 02:47 AM
makes me feel right at home

Found, one weird buoy


Found, one weird buoy 01/05/2005 06:31 AM
David Pescovitz:  !Newsroom Newsgraphics 010405Buoy450This giant buoy washed ashore in Cocoa Beach, Florida and nobody has any clue where it came from or who it belongs to. From Florida Today:
"There's no identifying marks on it, so I don't know where it came from," said Jeff Galliher, petty officer with the U.S. Coast Guard at Port Canaveral. "It's just a buoy base with a tower coming out of it."
Link (via Fark)

Weird and wonderful - the year's top ten


Weird and wonderful - the year's top ten 01/06/2005 09:48 PM
Manchester Online Jan 7 2005 1:48AM GMT

Weird weather 'set to continue'


Weird weather 'set to continue' 08/09/2004 03:25 PM
The unseasonable weather that has wreaked havoc across the UK recently will continue well into the week.

Weird and Wonderfull in the Shark Tank


Weird and Wonderfull in the Shark Tank 03/13/2003 10:15 AM
If you are bored, like me, check out these weird and wonderful stories from the lives of it professionals in...

Deep night weird-o commenters


Deep night weird-o commenters 02/01/2005 09:48 PM
Odd. Outi seems to have again attracted some weird-o commenters, who seem to be interested mostly in just mocking her. It makes me wonder why there are no weird-o commenters attracted on this blog, even though this is relatively popular for a Finnish blog (something like 800-1000 page views a day, not including RSS aggregators). Four possible reasons come to mind:
  1. I am male (most weird-o commenters seem to haunt young women)
  2. I am boring (technobabble, not too radical opinions, and little personal life; not much to mock me about)
  3. I publish the internet address of every single commenter, so you can't be anonymous to the general public (go to Recen tChanges, then click on the "Main_comments_XXX" entry, then "More Info..." to find this information). Transparency rules.
  4. Writing in English raises the barrier of commenting somewhat

I don't know. Perhaps I should just go more for the social porn aspect of blogging... *grin*

(In order for this blog entry to be not completely void of any actual content, take a look at the Committee to Protect Bloggers, a web site which lists and informs about bloggers that have been jailed or harassed for blogging.)


weird News.com roundup on bl0gs


weird News.com roundup on bl0gs 08/10/2004 03:39 PM
i kind of don't understand what they're doing here

Why Smart People Believe Weird Things


Why Smart People Believe Weird Things 06/21/2004 08:54 AM
On Cognitive Dissonance
"As a behavioral psychologist, I have studied people's reactions to contradiction and inconsistency. We are capable of convincing ourselves of something, and the more evidence that builds up to contradict us the more we believe it.

For more than 40 years, social psychologists have studied the phenomenon of "cognitive dissonance" - what happens when people have pieces of information on the same subject that are inconsistent. The presence of contradictions is psychologically unpleasant, and people do whatever it takes to resolve the inconsistency."

Many in the field posit that tension between contradictory thoughts and feelings are what constitutes consciousness. It doesn't seem to me this qualifies as it appears to be highly dysfunctional and not a natural and normal tension. What say you who are more qualified?

Weird books for tinkerers and mad
scientists


Weird books for tinkerers and mad
scientists
04/20/2004 12:34 PM
I came across an ad for Lindsay's Technical Books in Popular Science. The ad reads like a classified that would have been in the back of the magazine fifty years ago: "Secrets! Melt Metal! Machine Shop! Hydrogen! Old Time Radio! Tesla! Chemistry! Incredible plans, lost secrets, forgotten how-to, and strange books!" It looks like these folks have a lot of fun in their basement labs and backyard foundries. Link

I have a question about weird powerbook
behaviour: ...


I have a question about weird powerbook
behaviour: ...
03/13/2003 10:22 AM


I have a question about weird powerbook behaviour: it's making strange noises. Like, really strange. Every keyboard or mouse event seems to generate a very, very quiet click from inside the machine; moving your finger around the trackpad sounds like a geiger counter.

It's not the audio system -- turning the speaker off doesn't stop it happening. I don't think it's software-related, either (certainly my iBook didn't make these noises, and neither does the desktop G4 in the next room). It doesn't sound like the drive seeking. It might be some kind of electrical interference directly tweaking the speakers, but I don't particularly want to start opening up the laptop and snipping wires to find out. Anyone got any ideas? It's driving me nuts -- I get paranoid when computers do things I can't explain ...

Update: I found other Powerbook owners complaining of the same thing at Powerbook Zone, so it's not just my imagination. Weirdly, the noises stop when the machine is running on battery juice and the CPU is throttled back. So it appears to be something related to the CPU cooling system ...

Discuss


Weird cocoon-car art spotted in Turkey


Weird cocoon-car art spotted in Turkey 04/14/2005 10:49 PM
Xeni Jardin: Spotted by a metroblogger in Istanbul:

"blue beetle wrapped in threads. the sign on the rear pane reads: 'please do not touch or remove the threads. this is an art project by japanese artists visiting our country and will be here for about a week.' spotted in kadikoy with no admirers of art around."
Link (Thanks, Sean Bonner)


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Top Tip: W2K weird popups and blocks!

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