avram: (Default)

With LiveJournal’s new owners announcing that LJ will no longer allow the creation of new Basic accounts, lots of people are upset over the prospect of having to look at ads. For those of you lagging behind the leading edge of web browser technology, here’s a solution:

Step 1: Firefox if a free open-source web browser available for Windows, MacOS X, and Linux. (If you use Linux, you already know all about it, so just skip right on to some other post.) Download and install it. It’s free. Costs no money. Since it’s open-source, it’s highly customizable with lots of themes and add-ons, which brings us to…

Step 2: AdBlock is a free add-on for Firefox that allows you to block ads from showing up when you browse the web.

Special for Mac users: If you don’t want to leave Safari, you can still block ads! SafariBlock is a Safari add-on based on AdBlock. Or try Ad Subtract, which uses CSS to hide ads.

Another reason to use browser extensions: Y’know how when a LiveJournal post gets a lot of comments, LJ starts hiding some of them, and you need to keep clicking to unfold the hidden comments? Doesn’t that annoy the crap out of you? Here’s what you do:

Now those long comment pages will get an “Unfold All” link at the top of the comments. Click that, and it all unfolds. (In my experience, this doesn’t work perfectly — a few comments stay folded — but it works pretty well.)

avram: (Default)
Y’know what’s kinda annoying? The item on the left is a Canon printer, a model I own, the Canon S330. The item on the right is a digital camera I don’t own, the Canon S330.

Canon products

Because there just aren’t enough possible combinations of letters and numbers for Canon to come up with different naming schemes for their different product lines.

Also what’s annoying is that I use the printer very rarely, yet it seems as if it’s running out of ink after two or three pages. Probably the print head’s getting gummed up with crusty ink. There are cleaner heads you can buy, but Canon doesn’t (as far as I can tell) make one, and I can’t find them listed on Amazon. In fact, all the listings I see are from companies low enough on the food chain that my rip-off sense is tingling.

Which has me thinking about buying a new printer. Something that can print on 3x5 index cards would be nice. But the printer market has turned really weird compared to what it was like when my sense of what printers ought to do was being formed, back in the ’80s and early ’90s. Back then, printers were mostly aimed at printing business documents (or zines, or RPG character sheets) on paper. Now they seem mostly aimed at printing photos for the home market. And it’s hard to find one that doesn’t have a copier and scanner bundled in.

And speaking of scanners, hot damn, 4800 dpi! I may need to get one of these babies.

April 2017

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