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They aren't appearing in IE9 either.
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They are appearing fine in Chrome for me.
One of these days I'm going to think of a really clever signature.
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Firefox 14 works. For now.
I think computer viruses should count as life. I think it says something about human nature that the only form of life we have created so far is purely destructive. We've created life in our own image.
Stephen Hawking
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Anything wrong when pasting "stuff" in the message of a new message ?
(both on firefox and chrome)
When asking a question in the "quick answers" section.
I trying to paste some code in the message area, and everything in the current browser page stop working.
I cannot type, I cannot click on the "Post Message" or "Cancel" button, I have to close the whole page (close button button on the tab area of the browser).
I cannot even select text, so I loose all that I have written.
In the C++ forum it is working as expected.
Max.
Watched code never compiles.
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Should be good now. I've just done a site update. It's always a little weird for a few minutes.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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May or may not be related.... in the QA solutions, a great deal of whitespace is being generated for no apparent reason. Unfortunately, I am stuck in IE7 land for now if that makes any difference.
Why is common sense not common?
Never argue with an idiot. They will drag you down to their level where they are an expert.
Sometimes it takes a lot of work to be lazy
Please stand in front of my pistol, smile and wait for the flash - JSOP 2012
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Unrelated, but I have a fix. Give me a couple of hours and I'll deploy.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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... important edit ...
The proof of the pudding that you have unblocked a site, when you remove its IP from the Hosts file, is to re-boot, and try to launch the same link again: page loads: you know you have unblocked it.
Unfortunately, it appears that a successful load of a LakeQuincy.com page depends on a successful call by that site to ads.doubleclick.net, a notorious source of "tracking" adds.
As you may know, Google owns doubleclick.net, and I think it's quite "polite" that they, in Chrome, respect a Hosts file block of doubleclick: assuming, that is, they could over-ride it.
Here'e Wikipedia on DoubleClick:
"DoubleClick is often linked with the controversy over spyware because browser HTTP cookies are set to track users as they travel from website to website and record which commercial advertisements they view and select while browsing.[7]
DoubleClick has also been criticized for misleading users by offering an opt-out option that is insufficiently effective. According to a San Francisco IT consulting group, although the opt-out option affects cookies, DoubleClick does not allow users to opt out of IP address-based tracking.[8]
DoubleClick with MSN were shown serving malware via drive-by download exploits by a group of attackers for some time in December 2010.[9]"[^].
Since I will never unblock ads.doubleclick.net, that effectively means the solution I've just spelled out here will not work for me.
I'll leave the original post here for reference.
~
... edit 2 ...
If you want to get really spooked: consider that Win 8 is going to over-ride your Hosts file settings for (gasp) both FaceBook, and ads.doubleclick.net[^]. Evidently the answer here, for now, is to turn off Windows Defender.
~
original post:
note: I wanted to post this as Tip/Trick, but it's site-specific, and there's no Tip/Trick category such as: "Using CP Effectively"
CP's highly valued e-mail newsletters have sponsored sections with links to products, or services, etc. These are all routed through "lakequincy.com:" if "lakequincy.com" is blocked in your Hosts file: clicking these links will lead you to web-pages with obscure error messsages that sound ominous: like, in Win7, Chrome:
"Server Error in '/' Application. A potentially dangerous Request.Path value was detected from the client ... )."
I, like many others, use the MVPs' Hosts file[^] to block a lot of well known sources of ads, spam, etc. The August 18 version blocks somewhere around 16k IP addresses.
127.0.0.1 a.lakequincy.com
is blocked in that file's May 23rd. version, and in the new August 18 version.
So, if you are tired of seeing messages like the one above instead of web pages: and you want to see the ads: check to see if you need to remove that entry from your 'Hosts' file.
Whether CP, or LakeQuincy, wish to contact the authors of the MVPs Hosts file, and ask for removal of that block: up to them. Why that block is there is unknown to me.
If CP thinks what's described here is valuable information for a FAQ ... is there a FAQ section on e-mail newsletters from CP ? ... great; if not, great
Meanwhile, there are sponsored content ads in the CP newsletters that I want to read, and I'd like to support CP, by clicking-through on their links, so CP gets revenue.
I would be happy to pay CP US $20 per year to subscribe to CP's e-mailed newsletters.
best, Bill
"One of the few good things about modern times: If you die horribly on television, you will not have died in vain. You will have entertained us." Kurt Vonnegut
modified 20-Aug-12 8:47am.
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Thanks Bill. I appreciate the sentiment.
You could certainly post a tip in the FAQ section[^]
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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Unfortunately, doubleclick.net is blocked at my (and I suspect other users') workplace, causing LQ content to not be served up.
/ravi
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This has caused me great trouble with my first ever article on codeproject (Simple and Easy-to-Use Pie Chart Controls in WPF[^]). I did not realize there was a size limit on uploaded images to be included in the article. I uploaded an image to be included in my article. After the article was approved, I realized the image showed in my browser from which I had submitted, but would not show in other browser. I uploaded a new image with correct size. But now in preview I could not see another image (legal size), which was earlier showing. The story did not end here. I kept having problems and still I am not sure how would it look when it is again approved!
Another interesting fact, while my revised version with legal size images is under approval process, the old illegal size image has started to show up in the already online version! This bug seems very interesting as well as dangerous to me!
I do not want to make this post any bigger; but I should add I must have met tons of very frustrating bugs in the online submission wizard. I am willing to provide the complete list if that interests the codeproject development team.
My suggestion for now is that codeproject force the image size at the the time of upload to stop this kind of problems from occurring.
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The Lounge Lizard email included a link to this message ("Watch New Movies Online Free"). Based on the title, I'd say it was voted into oblivion pretty fast. I see two issues with this:
- I'm guessing the message was deleted before the email was sent. Probably shouldn't include deleted messages in the email.
- I'm guessing the message got only down votes, yet it was listed under "Popular Threads". I guess that depends on your definition of "popular", but I'd say that, while this thread got a lot of attention, it wasn't very popular.
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Fixed. Thanks for that.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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Doesn't look fixed. The latest Lounge Lizard had another message as the most popular, but it was one that got voted into oblivion.
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Consider these two sequential C# forum posts, by the same poster, computerPublic, on the topic of Tuples: [^]; and: [^].
On those two topics I count #8 first-level responses, and #4 comments-on-comments (second-level responses).
Now we switch to the Lounge, to a thread initiated by Roger Wright, titled "A Blatant "Programming Question:" [^] which the OP clearly indicates is based on the discussion of Tuples, in the messages from computerpublic, on the C# forum:
"There's a discussion going on in the C# forum about Tuples, and I'm curious what one would use them for."
Responses, and responses-to-responses, on the Lounge post: I count as a total of #21 as of right now.
Clearly the most interesting technical, and in-depth, responses to the issue "computerpublic" is trying to understand with the general problem of returning multiple types of values from a function, occur in the Lounge !
In my opinion, this switching to the Lounge to continue a disscussion of an OP on a specific technical forum really dilutes the technical forum, and is not what the Lounge is for.
On the other hand, I'd see a Lounge post that brings attention to an OP on a technical forum, gives a link to it, and then suggests that the topic is interesting, and deserves more discussion on the technical forum, as being pro-active in promoting the technical fora, and helping the OP.
In my opinion, there has been an increasing, and disturbing, trend to asking more programming questions on the Lounge in the last year.
I don't know if anyone, with any rep-level, has the power to re-locate a post, or a whole thread, from the Lounge to a technical forum, but I think someone needs to intervene in cases like this.
best, Bill
"One of the few good things about modern times: If you die horribly on television, you will not have died in vain. You will have entertained us." Kurt Vonnegut
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Technical discussions are welcome in the Lounge so long as the OP is not looking for a specific technical solution (e.g., to get some work or homework done). Basically, if you have a problem and are looking for a solution, the Lounge is not the right place to ask. However, if you just want to chat about some interesting technical topic, that's OK.
I personally enjoyed reading through the thread to get the various perspectives of why one would want to use such a construct, as well as reasons it is not useful from other perspectives.
We're all technical people here. We enjoy a good technical discussion (especially one where we can provide opinions rather than simple knowledge).
As far as the discrepancy of post counts between the forums, that's pretty obvious I'd think. The Lounge is a very popular forum. On top of that, if somebody answers a specific technical forum question with a specific answer, only one answer should be necessary. In the discussion environment expected in the Lounge, there are no such limitations. You can add your $0.02 even if your answer is similar to somebody else's (again, this is especially because these are opinions, and having a second or 20th opinion can be welcome).
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Hi AspDotNetDev,
I have two responses to your comments:
~
1. you ignore the fact that in this case a discussion was started on the Lounge in response to, and with specific mention of, a discussion already going on in the C# forum: when Roger Wright says, on the Lounge:
"There's a discussion going on in the C# forum about Tuples, and I'm curious what one would use them for."
He didn't even provide a link to the thread on the C# forum.
It means he made a conscious choice to start a second discussion: titling his thread: "A Blatant Technical Question," which "mocks" the CP rules against posting technical questions on the Lounge, which he himself intensifies by making the first sentence of his Lounge post:
"Not really... "
The OP on the C# forum also clearly indicates he is curious what you would use them for, and that he's confused about them in his second post where the word "Tuples" appears in the title of the question:
"Basically I am experimenting with Tuple for the first time and I am completely out of my element. I have no idea of how to correct the errors I am getting. Can someone please help."
~
2. You write:
"We're all technical people here. We enjoy a good technical discussion (especially one where we can provide opinions rather than simple knowledge)."
I find your logic here very confusing: the topic is clear, and distinctly technical: "Tuples." How can an opinion about Tuples not be a technical statement ? The mind boggles trying to come up with an opinion about Tuples that is not technical: perhaps something like: "Well, Tuples are okay, but not on odd-numbered days of the week served with fish ?"
Why wouldn't those "opinions" be equally valuable to the OP on the C# forum ? And, are not users of the C# forum able to register, by vote, whether they find any post valuable, or off-topic, or respond to them with a comment that the supposed "opinion" is irrelevant to the technical issue being discussed ?
You then write:
"As far as the discrepancy of post counts between the forums, that's pretty obvious I'd think. The Lounge is a very popular forum. On top of that, if somebody answers a specific technical forum question with a specific answer, only one answer should be necessary. In the discussion environment expected in the Lounge, there are no such limitations. You can add your $0.02 even if your answer is similar to somebody else's (again, this is especially because these are opinions, and having a second or 20th opinion can be welcome)."
I seriously question that, for a broad-spectrum query like the OP's request on the C# forum, there's only "one answer." In fact the range of discussions about how Tuples behave, and whether or not to use them, and what they are good for, why they are even "in" C#: suggests they are a facility in C#, about which there is great diversity of views.
In fact, I'd claim that many of the C#, or other technical fora, questions are not just simple questions for which one-and-only-one answer will be found that is "correct:" ...
... and I'd like to make that point even more strongly: the most valuable threads, imho, often involve debate/competition over "best practices," etc. For me, personally, some of the technical fora threads that turned into literally jousting among technical peers have been the most rewarding, provocative, and forced me to re-think what I thought I understood (but really didn't).
I see no reason to believe that one cannot add, to a technical forum, your "two-cents worth," as you can in the Lounge. Within limits of course: one would not expect to see the complete menu of one of Dalek's latest Lucullan feasts posted on a thread on Tuples
Further, this diversion of technical discussion to the Lounge on a "whim," or whatever, is, I believe, strongly, something that dilutes the quality of the technical fora.
Why do I believe that: because the Lounge, gods bless its swampy diversity, its strange burps of methane, its will-o-the-wisps, is, like the over-stuffed-with-people hotel room in the Marx Brothers "A Night at the Opera"[^] ... a phenomenal, exponentially expanding, collage of disconnected topics for which no taxonomy is possible ... within which ... technical content disappears rapidly, covered over, entombed.
In short, I think you have written a vague rationalization, here.
But, I will still respect you in the morning
On a practical level, I think incentives are much more useful than dis-incentives, and promote social cohesion, and communication; so, let me close with a rhetorical question:
"How could Code Project 'reward' people who made sure that interesting technical material appearing on the Lounge which was definitely related to an existing technical forum ... make it into said appropriate forum ?"
Over to you, Chris Maunder, on that one
Now, if we could but ask William of Occam to apply his famous razor to all the grotty stubble in this message: I wonder if he might reply that the answer lies in making sure users know how to use CP's search engine to find content anywhere on CP ?
But, I don't think WC would answer: I think he'd just start humming from Dylan's "Blowing in the Wind."
best, Bill
"One of the few good things about modern times: If you die horribly on television, you will not have died in vain. You will have entertained us." Kurt Vonnegut
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Sorry, Bill, that is too much writing for me to care to read and respond to fully. What I did read did not sway my opinion, but perhaps it will sway Chris.
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Aw shucks, I was hoping to go at least one more round with ya
best, Bill
"One of the few good things about modern times: If you die horribly on television, you will not have died in vain. You will have entertained us." Kurt Vonnegut
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Hello,
I had this article bookmarked for someone. They can't find it now. Any idea what happened?
A Framework for Software Application[^]
You can never try. You either do it or you don't.
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I have written a few articles and it seems to me that codeproject has some kind of versioning system to store older and deleted version of articles as well. I'm not sure but maybe codeproject has a permission system as well so some kind of achievement might be required to see deleted articles (maybe silver membership or something like that...). I'm silver and I can open the link and see the deleted article.
PS: I have also deleted a tip of mine, and don't have the link to it anymore, your own deleted articles aren't shown in your own list.
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Raghu Karupakala wrote: Any idea what happened?
Here's my guess. The article itself, while decently written, was an abysmal implementation, in my humble opinion. I was struck by the number of 5 votes received from what looked like friends of the author, and reputable members, such as Sacha, ended up voting a 1 on the article. Something definitely weird was going on, and I figure the author deleted it.
Marc
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In one of my tips I have 3 downloadable zip files. If I change to the "Browse Code" tab then all the files show up correctly from all zip files but the Directories inside the zip files don't show up at all in the second and third zip files. It might have something to do with the fact that the directory structure inside the zip files is the same: http://www.codeproject.com/script/Articles/ViewDownloads.aspx?aid=441838[^]
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Odd.
I think computer viruses should count as life. I think it says something about human nature that the only form of life we have created so far is purely destructive. We've created life in our own image.
Stephen Hawking
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