Computing desk | ||
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< August 25 | << Jul | August | Sep >> | August 27 > |
Welcome to the Wikipedia Computing Reference Desk Archives |
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Hello folks, I am trying to put words into an array of strings as pointer arrays inside a loop. However, when I tried to display one of the string, turns out that every word in the array is the last word in the file. I did malloc but it didn't help. I'm lost in confusion now. Thanks. 60.240.161.162 ( talk) 00:05, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
void loadData()
{
char line200];
char *word;
char *stoppedWords500];
FILE *bookPointer;
FILE *stoppedPointer;
int test = 0;
bookPointer = fopen(BOOK_FILE, "r");
stoppedPointer = fopen(STOPPED_FILE, "r");
fgets(line, 100, stoppedPointer);
while(test < 477)
{
word = strtok(line, "\n");
fgets(line, 100, stoppedPointer);
stoppedWordstest = malloc(sizeof(word));
if(stoppedWordstest == NULL)
{
printf("There is a fatal error. Exiting.\n");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
else
stoppedWordstest = word;
test++;
}
printf("\n\n");
printf("%s\n\n", stoppedWords0]);
fclose(bookPointer);
fclose(stoppedPointer);
}
NULL
instead of line
as the first parameter after you first access that line, and keep doing so until you pull up the next line. strtok will remember which string you're dealing with; once it's cleared out the string, it'll return NULL, which is your end-of-line condition. --
Consumed Crustacean (
talk) 01:25, 26 August 2008 (UTC)I just tried to configure my Mac Mail to receive Gmail, but I seem to have made a mistake in the settings. Is it possible to modify the settings or even delete the account so I can start again?-- ChokinBako ( talk) 00:14, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
Ok, I tried to extract a file on my computer, and it gives me an error that says AMS Runtime Error: Extract Error 9. What does that mean? What can I do about it to make the file work? And I'm positive that the file itself is fine and not corrupt or anything. Please help!
-- Screwball23 talk 00:24, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
I recently got an e-mail message consisting only of the words:
limpkin turbidity superlunary? dragon, cervantes ponder. sealant superlunary visionary visionary superlunary deaf, tradesman schlesinger compositor lecher calculable rightward.
caine hove dragon
appellate galway schottky? hove, insoluble collimate. blowback schlesinger denture examination attributive schlesinger, limpkin compositor photolysis backbone lecher ponder.
dragon assume selectmen
examination activation galway? paprika, pagoda limpkin.
scripture activation.
It's obviously some sort of spam, but I have no idea how it sells anything? Anyone have any guesses? Bart133 t c @ How's my driving? 01:07, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
For sure it's a spammer. The idea is that the software that detects what is spam and what is email that you actually want to read uses statistical measurements of word usage in the mail and it "learns" the patterns that you, personally, like to read and the patterns you reject. (This is the "bayesian" thing). By sending lots of gibberish - or long sections of non-advertising (like long quotations from books and such) they hope to drown out the statistical analysis of spam and non-spam and thereby make bayesian spam detection work less well. If you spam filter has learned that any email containing the words "guaranteed", "v*agra" and "buy" is 85% likely to be spam - then now it also has to knows that some spam contains "limpkin turbidity superlunary" and that mail that DOESN'T contain those words is therefore LESS likely to be spam. This generally reduces the filter certainty when it sees: "buy guaranteed v*gra!". So sending you occasional chunks of gibberish makes it easier for subsequent spam to make it past your detectors. SteveBaker ( talk) 17:41, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
We constantly encounter issues with page freezing when accessing Wikipedia (English) using Windows 2000 workstations and IE6. Please let me know if this has been escalated before? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 192.193.1.6 ( talk) 01:18, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
I've moved the question over to Wikipedia:Village_pump_(technical)#Constant_freezing_when_accessing_wikipedia_using_Windows_2000_IE_6, hopefully get some more eyes on it. Probably best to move discussion over there just to centralize it. -- Consumed Crustacean ( talk) 02:56, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
Running Apache on Windows, how can I set up a scheduled check that the service is running, and if it isn't, start it? The service has a tendency to crash, thanks probably to modperl and a perl script I'm running (this is a personal server). I'm envisioning a scheduled batch file that checks the output of "httpd -k start", but I've never done batch-file "scripting" (was always under the impression that it is pretty limited in capability). Thanks. Whiskeydog ( talk) 02:54, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
#!/usr/bin/perl -w for (;;) { system("httpd -k start"); # assuming this is harmless if it's already started sleep 60; }
Hi - I've received a microsoft XP service pack, and it's asking me to back up the system - forgive my naivete, but I know how to back up files, but not the system. Can anyone tell me how, please?
Ta,
Adambrowne666 ( talk) 03:03, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
OK, KISS - keep it simple stupid. Are you using Windows XP? 78.144.131.106 ( talk) 11:54, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
Yes, thanks, we do need to keep it simple; like all autodidacts, I have big holes in my knowledge - it is XP, as you say, Vespine. Adambrowne666 ( talk) 19:18, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
Yes, I am sorry I didn't read your question the first time :-) 78.144.131.106 ( talk) 19:29, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
My MacBook freezes and when I turn it back on I get the flashing question mark. I've tried zapping the PRAM and reinstalling OS X with the disk, but on the "Select a Destination" screen it can't find my hard drive. What do I do? (Oh, and if this helps, the computer makes the infamous clicking sound until I insert the install disk.) -- Lazar Taxon ( talk) 04:13, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
After installing Debian, my computer can't connect to the Internet. "Ping" gives "connect: network is unreachable". This is strange because the system was installed by downloading packages from the Internet while installing. I can, however, access the Internet from the rescue shell that came with the installation CD. Any ideas? I've tried restarting the computer, unplugging the router, and even reinstalling the entire OS. Same result. -- 99.237.101.48 ( talk) 08:50, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
How can I save a web-page in one single file (not html + some folder with the images)? I know there is mhtml, however, the Linux browser that I use doesn't support it. Any other solution? Mr.K. (talk) 10:25, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
jar:
uri scheme, which allows it to access resources from a
JAR file (which, for our purposes, is just a
ZIP file with a .jar extension). Here's a simple example - first to make a JARred website (you'd just copy files, the echo
thing is just to make my illustration easy for me) :echo "<h1>page1</h1><a href=p2.html>p2</href>" > index.html echo "<h1>page2</h1><a href=index.html>p1</a><img src=foo.jpg>"> p2.html zip fin.jar index.html p2.html foo.jpg
/home/fin/Desktop/jar/fin.jar
)jar:file:///home/fin/Desktop/jar/fin.jar!/index.html
and it works like a little self contained website. I'm not aware of any restriction on what (client-side, natch) stuff you can put in there. This scheme (in one form or another) has I think been in firefox since it was Netscape, and is used in some WHATWG standards (whether officially adopted or not I don't know). The only (mild) snafu is that you can't open it with one click, as .JAR is generally associated with the Java language runtime, not with Firefox. --
Finlay McWalter |
Talk 13:08, 26 August 2008 (UTC)we are planning to start an online advertising agency, a niche one I must say. Is there any company out there which provides things like targeting technology, bid matching algorithms and technology, an base software engine which we can buy and use it as our matching engine, etc? Does double click, the company acquires by google provide targeting information and technology? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 59.96.31.2 ( talk) 10:35, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
I have created a document and cannot get it onto a computer other than my own. I need that document for school. I've tried printing it, but my printer doesn't work. I've tried e-mailing it to myself, but the e-mail program freezes when I try to add an attachment. I've tried copy-pasting the source of my document into the source of my e-mail, but it takes a while to respond to the sending and when it does respond, I get a warning message saying "Unknown" and the e-mail does not send. I could copy it to a CD, but it instead copies to the folder called something like "To Be Written to the CD". So now what can I do? February 15, 2009 ( talk) 12:01, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
Webmail? 78.144.131.106 ( talk) 12:24, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
I am using Windows XP and have been sent four .ttf font files from a user of Kubuntu Linux. I am trying to install the fonts but Windows will only install one because it seems to think that they're all the same font. They are in-fact different variations of the same font (e.g. bold or oblique etc). Thus, I can uninstall and install any single one of these fonts but not have them all installed at the same time which is madness. There must be some attribute that needs to be renamed before Windows will accept that they are different fonts (it is not the filename). What can I do to install these into Windows? ---- Seans Potato Business 14:19, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
In windows 3.1 their was a game included in which you built machines to solve problems. Does anybody know what this game is called and where i can find it? Thank you, Canadakid2 ( talk) 14:35, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
If you have a modern machine you might want to check out Crazy Machines 2, which is a fairly decent TIM clone with 3d graphics and physics and such. 88.211.96.3 ( talk) 09:05, 27 August 2008 (UTC)
I'm running Firefox 3.0.1 on an Pentium 4, w/ 500 MB RAM, running XP MCE version SP2. Every so often, when I try to go to another site or save a Wikipedia edit, it times out on me. Then, when I retry, there's no problem. I run Ad-Aware and have Norton. Any ideas? Clarityfiend ( talk) 16:17, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
I am giving a presentation and I need a simplified computer structure to demonstrate the extremity of the difference between accessing memory and disk data. I cannot find a list of average computer data access times. How long does it take an average computer to access memory? How long does it take to swap a page of memory? How long does it take for a drive to write data to DMA? How long does it average seek time take? Is there a list somewhere of average computer times? -- kainaw ™ 17:26, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
I'm doing web development for a fellow who does historical linguistics. He requires me to occasionally have letters on the page well outside the standard character set, like the schwa (ə) or the funny T-comma (ț). I've set the Content-Type of my page to "charset=utf-8", and the page itself is saved as UTF-8. Now the schwa, for example, shows up fine in Safari 3 and Firefox 3 on OS X. But I tried it on IE6 on XP and, well, I got the dreaded empty box character.
What's the best approach here? He's got some complicated stuff. So far I had thought about either just doing it with the HTML entities and damned to people who use old browsers, but if there's a better way to go about it than that, I'd be appreciative. Obviously I could just render the really weird ones as graphics and have them dropped into the text either as IMG tags or with CSS but each of those have their ups and downs too.
Any suggestions? I've never done any web development before that involved such exotic characters. -- 140.247.133.59 ( talk) 17:57, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
If it's any help I see this T Comma - ț as a little box and I'm on internet explorer 6 as well so it's a problem with IE6 and not your particular PC I think. God knows why they haven't upgraded to 7 here. Does it not work with Windows 2000 or something? 88.211.96.3 ( talk) 09:03, 27 August 2008 (UTC)
My mistake, "Latin Small Letter T With Comma Below" ( U+021B, ț) is not in Arial (or Times New Roman). What is in Arial is "Latin Small Letter T With Cedilla" ( U+0163, ţ), which looks like a t-with-comma. This comment tells the sordid story. I can believe that IE7 and Firefox 3 make this substitution and IE6 doesn't. You may as well use characters in Arial where you can, so switch to ţ. But "Latin Small Letter Schwa" ( U+0259, ə) is most definitely in Arial and Times New Roman, and I still can't see a reason in the world why it wouldn't render in IE6. Are you sure you haven't made a mistake somewhere? I'm grasping at straws here, but your Content-Type is "text/html; charset=utf-8", not "charset=utf-8", right? Have you tried using numeric character references to see whether the problem is with the UTF-8 or the Unicode rendering? Could you post the malfunctioning HTML file somewhere so we can take a look? -- BenRG ( talk) 09:56, 27 August 2008 (UTC)
Hi! I'm using the TweakUI tool to get xmouse behavior on my XP system and it works fine except for firefox 3.0.1 which always pops to the top when it get focus (hover, not click). This is a new behavior. Is there a way to turn this off? Thanks. Saintrain ( talk) 22:24, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
Is it possible to enable the Remote Desktop exception in Windows Firewall remotely? I'm working with Vista, but it might be the same on older versions. I would like to be able to do this in the registry. There is a nice trick to remotely enable RD by using regedit's Connect Network Registry feature, but I'm pretty sure that RD is not a default exception in Windows Firewall. Thank you Louis Waweru Talk 23:05, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
Hi. Is subnotebook really the most widely used and accepted term? Cause quite frankly, it sucks. (Or hopefully the article is not aptly named?) -- Kreachure ( talk) 23:12, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
Computing desk | ||
---|---|---|
< August 25 | << Jul | August | Sep >> | August 27 > |
Welcome to the Wikipedia Computing Reference Desk Archives |
---|
The page you are currently viewing is an archive page. While you can leave answers for any questions shown below, please ask new questions on one of the current reference desk pages. |
Hello folks, I am trying to put words into an array of strings as pointer arrays inside a loop. However, when I tried to display one of the string, turns out that every word in the array is the last word in the file. I did malloc but it didn't help. I'm lost in confusion now. Thanks. 60.240.161.162 ( talk) 00:05, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
void loadData()
{
char line200];
char *word;
char *stoppedWords500];
FILE *bookPointer;
FILE *stoppedPointer;
int test = 0;
bookPointer = fopen(BOOK_FILE, "r");
stoppedPointer = fopen(STOPPED_FILE, "r");
fgets(line, 100, stoppedPointer);
while(test < 477)
{
word = strtok(line, "\n");
fgets(line, 100, stoppedPointer);
stoppedWordstest = malloc(sizeof(word));
if(stoppedWordstest == NULL)
{
printf("There is a fatal error. Exiting.\n");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
else
stoppedWordstest = word;
test++;
}
printf("\n\n");
printf("%s\n\n", stoppedWords0]);
fclose(bookPointer);
fclose(stoppedPointer);
}
NULL
instead of line
as the first parameter after you first access that line, and keep doing so until you pull up the next line. strtok will remember which string you're dealing with; once it's cleared out the string, it'll return NULL, which is your end-of-line condition. --
Consumed Crustacean (
talk) 01:25, 26 August 2008 (UTC)I just tried to configure my Mac Mail to receive Gmail, but I seem to have made a mistake in the settings. Is it possible to modify the settings or even delete the account so I can start again?-- ChokinBako ( talk) 00:14, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
Ok, I tried to extract a file on my computer, and it gives me an error that says AMS Runtime Error: Extract Error 9. What does that mean? What can I do about it to make the file work? And I'm positive that the file itself is fine and not corrupt or anything. Please help!
-- Screwball23 talk 00:24, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
I recently got an e-mail message consisting only of the words:
limpkin turbidity superlunary? dragon, cervantes ponder. sealant superlunary visionary visionary superlunary deaf, tradesman schlesinger compositor lecher calculable rightward.
caine hove dragon
appellate galway schottky? hove, insoluble collimate. blowback schlesinger denture examination attributive schlesinger, limpkin compositor photolysis backbone lecher ponder.
dragon assume selectmen
examination activation galway? paprika, pagoda limpkin.
scripture activation.
It's obviously some sort of spam, but I have no idea how it sells anything? Anyone have any guesses? Bart133 t c @ How's my driving? 01:07, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
For sure it's a spammer. The idea is that the software that detects what is spam and what is email that you actually want to read uses statistical measurements of word usage in the mail and it "learns" the patterns that you, personally, like to read and the patterns you reject. (This is the "bayesian" thing). By sending lots of gibberish - or long sections of non-advertising (like long quotations from books and such) they hope to drown out the statistical analysis of spam and non-spam and thereby make bayesian spam detection work less well. If you spam filter has learned that any email containing the words "guaranteed", "v*agra" and "buy" is 85% likely to be spam - then now it also has to knows that some spam contains "limpkin turbidity superlunary" and that mail that DOESN'T contain those words is therefore LESS likely to be spam. This generally reduces the filter certainty when it sees: "buy guaranteed v*gra!". So sending you occasional chunks of gibberish makes it easier for subsequent spam to make it past your detectors. SteveBaker ( talk) 17:41, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
We constantly encounter issues with page freezing when accessing Wikipedia (English) using Windows 2000 workstations and IE6. Please let me know if this has been escalated before? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 192.193.1.6 ( talk) 01:18, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
I've moved the question over to Wikipedia:Village_pump_(technical)#Constant_freezing_when_accessing_wikipedia_using_Windows_2000_IE_6, hopefully get some more eyes on it. Probably best to move discussion over there just to centralize it. -- Consumed Crustacean ( talk) 02:56, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
Running Apache on Windows, how can I set up a scheduled check that the service is running, and if it isn't, start it? The service has a tendency to crash, thanks probably to modperl and a perl script I'm running (this is a personal server). I'm envisioning a scheduled batch file that checks the output of "httpd -k start", but I've never done batch-file "scripting" (was always under the impression that it is pretty limited in capability). Thanks. Whiskeydog ( talk) 02:54, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
#!/usr/bin/perl -w for (;;) { system("httpd -k start"); # assuming this is harmless if it's already started sleep 60; }
Hi - I've received a microsoft XP service pack, and it's asking me to back up the system - forgive my naivete, but I know how to back up files, but not the system. Can anyone tell me how, please?
Ta,
Adambrowne666 ( talk) 03:03, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
OK, KISS - keep it simple stupid. Are you using Windows XP? 78.144.131.106 ( talk) 11:54, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
Yes, thanks, we do need to keep it simple; like all autodidacts, I have big holes in my knowledge - it is XP, as you say, Vespine. Adambrowne666 ( talk) 19:18, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
Yes, I am sorry I didn't read your question the first time :-) 78.144.131.106 ( talk) 19:29, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
My MacBook freezes and when I turn it back on I get the flashing question mark. I've tried zapping the PRAM and reinstalling OS X with the disk, but on the "Select a Destination" screen it can't find my hard drive. What do I do? (Oh, and if this helps, the computer makes the infamous clicking sound until I insert the install disk.) -- Lazar Taxon ( talk) 04:13, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
After installing Debian, my computer can't connect to the Internet. "Ping" gives "connect: network is unreachable". This is strange because the system was installed by downloading packages from the Internet while installing. I can, however, access the Internet from the rescue shell that came with the installation CD. Any ideas? I've tried restarting the computer, unplugging the router, and even reinstalling the entire OS. Same result. -- 99.237.101.48 ( talk) 08:50, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
How can I save a web-page in one single file (not html + some folder with the images)? I know there is mhtml, however, the Linux browser that I use doesn't support it. Any other solution? Mr.K. (talk) 10:25, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
jar:
uri scheme, which allows it to access resources from a
JAR file (which, for our purposes, is just a
ZIP file with a .jar extension). Here's a simple example - first to make a JARred website (you'd just copy files, the echo
thing is just to make my illustration easy for me) :echo "<h1>page1</h1><a href=p2.html>p2</href>" > index.html echo "<h1>page2</h1><a href=index.html>p1</a><img src=foo.jpg>"> p2.html zip fin.jar index.html p2.html foo.jpg
/home/fin/Desktop/jar/fin.jar
)jar:file:///home/fin/Desktop/jar/fin.jar!/index.html
and it works like a little self contained website. I'm not aware of any restriction on what (client-side, natch) stuff you can put in there. This scheme (in one form or another) has I think been in firefox since it was Netscape, and is used in some WHATWG standards (whether officially adopted or not I don't know). The only (mild) snafu is that you can't open it with one click, as .JAR is generally associated with the Java language runtime, not with Firefox. --
Finlay McWalter |
Talk 13:08, 26 August 2008 (UTC)we are planning to start an online advertising agency, a niche one I must say. Is there any company out there which provides things like targeting technology, bid matching algorithms and technology, an base software engine which we can buy and use it as our matching engine, etc? Does double click, the company acquires by google provide targeting information and technology? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 59.96.31.2 ( talk) 10:35, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
I have created a document and cannot get it onto a computer other than my own. I need that document for school. I've tried printing it, but my printer doesn't work. I've tried e-mailing it to myself, but the e-mail program freezes when I try to add an attachment. I've tried copy-pasting the source of my document into the source of my e-mail, but it takes a while to respond to the sending and when it does respond, I get a warning message saying "Unknown" and the e-mail does not send. I could copy it to a CD, but it instead copies to the folder called something like "To Be Written to the CD". So now what can I do? February 15, 2009 ( talk) 12:01, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
Webmail? 78.144.131.106 ( talk) 12:24, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
I am using Windows XP and have been sent four .ttf font files from a user of Kubuntu Linux. I am trying to install the fonts but Windows will only install one because it seems to think that they're all the same font. They are in-fact different variations of the same font (e.g. bold or oblique etc). Thus, I can uninstall and install any single one of these fonts but not have them all installed at the same time which is madness. There must be some attribute that needs to be renamed before Windows will accept that they are different fonts (it is not the filename). What can I do to install these into Windows? ---- Seans Potato Business 14:19, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
In windows 3.1 their was a game included in which you built machines to solve problems. Does anybody know what this game is called and where i can find it? Thank you, Canadakid2 ( talk) 14:35, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
If you have a modern machine you might want to check out Crazy Machines 2, which is a fairly decent TIM clone with 3d graphics and physics and such. 88.211.96.3 ( talk) 09:05, 27 August 2008 (UTC)
I'm running Firefox 3.0.1 on an Pentium 4, w/ 500 MB RAM, running XP MCE version SP2. Every so often, when I try to go to another site or save a Wikipedia edit, it times out on me. Then, when I retry, there's no problem. I run Ad-Aware and have Norton. Any ideas? Clarityfiend ( talk) 16:17, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
I am giving a presentation and I need a simplified computer structure to demonstrate the extremity of the difference between accessing memory and disk data. I cannot find a list of average computer data access times. How long does it take an average computer to access memory? How long does it take to swap a page of memory? How long does it take for a drive to write data to DMA? How long does it average seek time take? Is there a list somewhere of average computer times? -- kainaw ™ 17:26, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
I'm doing web development for a fellow who does historical linguistics. He requires me to occasionally have letters on the page well outside the standard character set, like the schwa (ə) or the funny T-comma (ț). I've set the Content-Type of my page to "charset=utf-8", and the page itself is saved as UTF-8. Now the schwa, for example, shows up fine in Safari 3 and Firefox 3 on OS X. But I tried it on IE6 on XP and, well, I got the dreaded empty box character.
What's the best approach here? He's got some complicated stuff. So far I had thought about either just doing it with the HTML entities and damned to people who use old browsers, but if there's a better way to go about it than that, I'd be appreciative. Obviously I could just render the really weird ones as graphics and have them dropped into the text either as IMG tags or with CSS but each of those have their ups and downs too.
Any suggestions? I've never done any web development before that involved such exotic characters. -- 140.247.133.59 ( talk) 17:57, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
If it's any help I see this T Comma - ț as a little box and I'm on internet explorer 6 as well so it's a problem with IE6 and not your particular PC I think. God knows why they haven't upgraded to 7 here. Does it not work with Windows 2000 or something? 88.211.96.3 ( talk) 09:03, 27 August 2008 (UTC)
My mistake, "Latin Small Letter T With Comma Below" ( U+021B, ț) is not in Arial (or Times New Roman). What is in Arial is "Latin Small Letter T With Cedilla" ( U+0163, ţ), which looks like a t-with-comma. This comment tells the sordid story. I can believe that IE7 and Firefox 3 make this substitution and IE6 doesn't. You may as well use characters in Arial where you can, so switch to ţ. But "Latin Small Letter Schwa" ( U+0259, ə) is most definitely in Arial and Times New Roman, and I still can't see a reason in the world why it wouldn't render in IE6. Are you sure you haven't made a mistake somewhere? I'm grasping at straws here, but your Content-Type is "text/html; charset=utf-8", not "charset=utf-8", right? Have you tried using numeric character references to see whether the problem is with the UTF-8 or the Unicode rendering? Could you post the malfunctioning HTML file somewhere so we can take a look? -- BenRG ( talk) 09:56, 27 August 2008 (UTC)
Hi! I'm using the TweakUI tool to get xmouse behavior on my XP system and it works fine except for firefox 3.0.1 which always pops to the top when it get focus (hover, not click). This is a new behavior. Is there a way to turn this off? Thanks. Saintrain ( talk) 22:24, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
Is it possible to enable the Remote Desktop exception in Windows Firewall remotely? I'm working with Vista, but it might be the same on older versions. I would like to be able to do this in the registry. There is a nice trick to remotely enable RD by using regedit's Connect Network Registry feature, but I'm pretty sure that RD is not a default exception in Windows Firewall. Thank you Louis Waweru Talk 23:05, 26 August 2008 (UTC)
Hi. Is subnotebook really the most widely used and accepted term? Cause quite frankly, it sucks. (Or hopefully the article is not aptly named?) -- Kreachure ( talk) 23:12, 26 August 2008 (UTC)