Stylish lets you style the web according to your personal taste. I have already posted how you can download any book from Google Books in PDF format.
This is for url= browser users who have url= installed as an add-on. Go to the following web address: Click on the green-ish button with black font labelled ' Install' It's in the upper right-hand corner of the page. You can view the source code and comments before installing. It's a The script also works with the url= browser/url as well as url= Chrome browser/url.
Interested babblers WILL NOT need Greasemonkey add-on for either of those browsers in order for the script to work. I'll post the installation instructions for these latter two browsers later if anyone's interested. I have to go the pharmacy and then the grocery store before I do anything else. First babbler to install and get working wins the big prize. It is very high tech, but I think babblers are ready for this. Enjoy, it's yours, and you owe me $9.95. Just kidding!
If it's a matter of keeping your old bookmarks, I believe you can import those into either Opera or chrome. Not sure about FF though. I added IEPro addon to IE8, and it's a resource hog. Talk about slowing things down. Right now I have three different browsers installed and working with the same userscript installed in three different Windows folders. It works with three different browsers on my PC running on top of Vista.
I admit it wasnt intuitive for me or very easy to get it to run with Opera or Chrome. I can find my way around most Unix file systems, and I must say that Windows Vista must be somewhat confusing for the average Windows user. I've got to stop and think about what in heck I'm trying to do when something doesnt run right. Nobody is interested in snooping around my stuff on my PC running Vista Home, so why all the added file security clap trap? It's ridiculous. Seriously, though. I want to thank Fidel for creating this tool.
I think it's really neat that he saw an issue and actually took time out of his life to create a really neat little app that could help people resolve it and enjoy the site more. In a way, even though I've been jokingly wishing for just this for years, I have mixed feelings about the use of it now that it's here. But I do think that it could be an extremely useful 'cooling off' tool when people just feel they can't get along with another babbler, no matter how hard they try to overcome their annoyance or whatever other emotion gets triggered by the other person. I don't think people will be using this tool extensively (at least I hope not, in that I hope there isn't widespread NEED for it), but I think it can be a really useful little gadget.
![Google Book Er Userscript Di Firefox For Mac Google Book Er Userscript Di Firefox For Mac](http://thatsmith.com/files/2009/10/google-wave-notifier.png)
And I'm really impressed with how well it works. Thanks very much, Fidel, for your contribution and your dedication to the site. I just wanted to make sure that someone is able to run this other than me. I don't think most people will need to use it either. I actually have no one on my lowbies list right now. I began wondering why I was monkeying around with this script when I realized I can't stay miffed at anyone longer than a couple of days anway.
Must be middle age creep, or something. And then I realized that it's not only for my benefit. If anyone was to become really digusted with, say, my posts and my off the wall comments from time to time, they can just turn me off. They can say to themselves, I've had enough of Fidel's atrocious spelling and awful grammar today, I just can't take it anymore. And then click me off. And I don't have to feel bad about, because I won't know.
Pie wrote: Just curious how this works. Say I'm choosing to ignore babbler x. So his posts disappear. What about babbler y who quotes babbler x? Does that part of babbler y's post disappear? No, it's not that sophisticated, but I believe it could be done though with some effort. Not by me though. There is a second hyperlink labelled on/off for e ach author's pane(except moderators) to toggle the comments display of any babbler manually.
That way you can click off individual posts at random in addition to those posters in your 'hidebabbler' list, which is the name of the cookie created and stored in the same folder as your other rabble cookies. Okay, this is for that one babbler who's been installing the script over and over and dinging up the install count. I added a few new lines of script for errer cheking porpoises.
It's supposed to handle crazy usernames with parentheses and those long ones that are truncated in the author's pane but not in the page where quoted. Anyway, it doesn't work sometimes for me with IE8, and I don't know why but it has something to do with how IE8 handles cookies. If it does break, it seems to be that the cookie and tab process become discombobulated for some reason. Try deleting the hidebabbler cookie in your IE8 Windows/Microsoft/AppData/The script changes seem to work a-ok with FF, Chrome and Opera though. In IE8, the approximate path to your cookies looks something like this: C: Users JohnQ babbler AppData Roaming Microsoft Windows Cookies Vista Windows folder and file Explorer won't show me the folders deeper than.
And so I have to type it in to the Explorer window as a text path. Or you can go through IE8 'Options' from the drop down menue, choose General tab, delete button to delete all cookies, OR choose the button beside it, Settings and then 'View Files' to see your hidebabbler cookie.
And just delete that cookie if necessary. Sven wrote: I use a low-tech version: There are one or two babblers whose posts I simply ignore. Generally it works quite nicely!! Me, too, and that's what I meant by using my Internal Spam Filter (TM). Not naming names, of course, but if I don't respond to a particular thread participant in a thread that clearly engages me (say on psychiatry or civil liberties or some such), it doesn't mean I didn't read their, er, 'contribution.'
As my dear father often says 'I don't have time to read every piece of crap that's put in front of me.' And he's a professional! For Goodness' Sake. Al-Qa'bong, I've sent you a PM.
Maybe together we can figure out how to install it. After clicking the green install button, a smaller window should appear with three buttons across the buttom and labelled: Install, Show script source, and cancel. I just tried clicking the green install button on userscripts.org, and I did get the source code page right away.
But it happened while I was using the Opera browser, which is a slightly different installation procedure. The install button should work with Google Chrome or Firefox. Which browser are you using? Well that's no good. Sorry to hear about that.
I get all my security stuff from Shaw cable included with the deal. They over-charge me for packaged services, and I don't have to worry about viruses. I've been getting a number of firewall alerts about attempted tcp connections to my machine from somewhere in New York.
I've sent the ISP down there all the details of the attempted connects, but nothing from those dead-heads so far. I'm thinkin if whoever it is doesn't cut it out, there's going to be trouble.
Make sure your Mac meets the for Firefox. If you use an old version of OS X, see this article for more information:. Installing Firefox on Mac. Visit the in any browser (for example, Apple Safari). It will automatically detect the platform and language on your computer and recommend the best version of Firefox for you. Click the green download button to download Firefox.
Note: If you want to have a choice of the language for your Firefox installation, select the ' Download in another language' link under the download button instead. Once the download has completed, the file (Firefox.dmg) should open by itself and pop open a Finder window containing the Firefox application. Drag the Firefox Icon on top of the Applications folder in order to copy it there. Note: If you do not see this window, click the Firefox.dmg file that you downloaded to open it.
After dragging Firefox to the Applications folder, hold down the control key while clicking in the window and select Eject 'Firefox' from the menu. You can add Firefox to your dock for easy access. Just open your Applications folder and drag Firefox to the dock. Firefox is now ready for use. Just click on its icon in the dock to start it.
Starting Firefox for the first time When you first start up Firefox, you will be warned that you downloaded Firefox from the Internet. Because you download Firefox from the official site, you can click Open.
Also, Firefox will not be your default browser and you'll be told about that. That means that when you open a link in your mail application, an Internet shortcut, or HTML document, it will not open in Firefox. If you want Firefox to do those things, click Use Firefox as my default browser to set it as your default browser. If not or you are just trying out Firefox, click Not now.
![Google Book Er Userscript Di Firefox For Mac Google Book Er Userscript Di Firefox For Mac](http://wowbatangas.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/Mutya-ng-Batangan-2011-Candidates.jpg)
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