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Hi.. there are many apps available which fetches news articles from newspaper websites. for example 360news, news hunt, pulse etc. I want to know are these apps not infringing copyright of newspaper websites? I am also interested in developing a kind of these app, what legal aspect should I consider? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 223.196.80.4 ( talk) 02:37, 1 October 2013 (UTC)
At
http://www.polishpod101.com/polish-word-lists/?page=4, the audio file for "X-ray of a chest" in number 87 says "The boss is blaming the worker". Is that a sign that the website has been hacked? Is the security of visitors at risk?
—
Wavelength (
talk)
02:57, 1 October 2013 (UTC)
Feedback sent to wordlist(at)innovativelanguage.com -- CiaPan ( talk) 08:00, 3 October 2013 (UTC)
Say that I have an Excel spreadsheet that looks something like this below.
Name | Average | Grade |
---|---|---|
John Smith | 67 | D |
Jane Doe | 91 | A |
Mary Jones | 53 | F |
Carl Swanson | 77 | C |
Ed Robinson | 84 | B |
Lisa Adams | 61 | D |
Frank Martin | 98 | A |
Cheryl Graham | 74 | C |
Steven Granger | 52 | F |
Pamela Drake | 88 | B |
Is there any easy function or formula in Excel that would count how many A's, how many B's, how many C's, etc.? Say that I want a chart that looks like the chart below. Is there a function or formula that I can put into the second column below that will total up the grades correctly?
Grade Range | Number of Students |
---|---|
Total Number of A's | |
Total Number of B's | |
Total Number of C's | |
Total Number of D's | |
Total Number of F's |
Note that this would be a dynamic (not a static) spreadsheet, as the grades are constantly changing throughout the semester. So, I cannot simply "sort" the grade column and do a "count" function of the appropriate cell ranges. Nor do I want to constantly have to do a manual count and manually enter the totals.
Thanks! Joseph A. Spadaro ( talk) 14:26, 1 October 2013 (UTC)
Thanks to all. This worked out perfectly for me. And it was exactly what I was looking for. Thanks a lot. Joseph A. Spadaro ( talk) 14:36, 2 October 2013 (UTC)
Hi all, I hardly ever use Twitter, but was recently informed that in the past couple days, my account has been retweeting spammy tweets. I believe it's unlikely that anyone has compromised my account (my long password is still the same, though I just changed it to be sure), but think that it's quite likely that one of the "applications" that has read-write privileges on my account has done this. The word "application" here seems to be a Twitter-jargon use of the word -- I'm referring here to sites such as Slate.com, which, if you choose to log in with your Twitter account, grant themselves read-write privileges, presumably so you can tweet from Slate about how great they are.
I can certainly revoke all privileges from all applications (they are only a handful, and they mostly seem benign, like Slate and Pintrest), but is there any way to know which one sent the tweet? I can't seem to find any metadata associated with the tweets that say this. Surely Twitter must know?
Thanks, — Sam 63.138.152.139 ( talk) 16:01, 1 October 2013 (UTC)
When I google "csrss.exe" I find this page, which says
I also find this page, which says:
and this page and this page, which says:
The first page seems to say csrss.exe is malware; the others say it's essential. Can someone resolve the seeming conflict? Is the first page a fraud? Michael Hardy ( talk) 20:11, 1 October 2013 (UTC)
Computing desk | ||
---|---|---|
< September 30 | << Sep | October | Nov >> | October 2 > |
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. |
Hi.. there are many apps available which fetches news articles from newspaper websites. for example 360news, news hunt, pulse etc. I want to know are these apps not infringing copyright of newspaper websites? I am also interested in developing a kind of these app, what legal aspect should I consider? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 223.196.80.4 ( talk) 02:37, 1 October 2013 (UTC)
At
http://www.polishpod101.com/polish-word-lists/?page=4, the audio file for "X-ray of a chest" in number 87 says "The boss is blaming the worker". Is that a sign that the website has been hacked? Is the security of visitors at risk?
—
Wavelength (
talk)
02:57, 1 October 2013 (UTC)
Feedback sent to wordlist(at)innovativelanguage.com -- CiaPan ( talk) 08:00, 3 October 2013 (UTC)
Say that I have an Excel spreadsheet that looks something like this below.
Name | Average | Grade |
---|---|---|
John Smith | 67 | D |
Jane Doe | 91 | A |
Mary Jones | 53 | F |
Carl Swanson | 77 | C |
Ed Robinson | 84 | B |
Lisa Adams | 61 | D |
Frank Martin | 98 | A |
Cheryl Graham | 74 | C |
Steven Granger | 52 | F |
Pamela Drake | 88 | B |
Is there any easy function or formula in Excel that would count how many A's, how many B's, how many C's, etc.? Say that I want a chart that looks like the chart below. Is there a function or formula that I can put into the second column below that will total up the grades correctly?
Grade Range | Number of Students |
---|---|
Total Number of A's | |
Total Number of B's | |
Total Number of C's | |
Total Number of D's | |
Total Number of F's |
Note that this would be a dynamic (not a static) spreadsheet, as the grades are constantly changing throughout the semester. So, I cannot simply "sort" the grade column and do a "count" function of the appropriate cell ranges. Nor do I want to constantly have to do a manual count and manually enter the totals.
Thanks! Joseph A. Spadaro ( talk) 14:26, 1 October 2013 (UTC)
Thanks to all. This worked out perfectly for me. And it was exactly what I was looking for. Thanks a lot. Joseph A. Spadaro ( talk) 14:36, 2 October 2013 (UTC)
Hi all, I hardly ever use Twitter, but was recently informed that in the past couple days, my account has been retweeting spammy tweets. I believe it's unlikely that anyone has compromised my account (my long password is still the same, though I just changed it to be sure), but think that it's quite likely that one of the "applications" that has read-write privileges on my account has done this. The word "application" here seems to be a Twitter-jargon use of the word -- I'm referring here to sites such as Slate.com, which, if you choose to log in with your Twitter account, grant themselves read-write privileges, presumably so you can tweet from Slate about how great they are.
I can certainly revoke all privileges from all applications (they are only a handful, and they mostly seem benign, like Slate and Pintrest), but is there any way to know which one sent the tweet? I can't seem to find any metadata associated with the tweets that say this. Surely Twitter must know?
Thanks, — Sam 63.138.152.139 ( talk) 16:01, 1 October 2013 (UTC)
When I google "csrss.exe" I find this page, which says
I also find this page, which says:
and this page and this page, which says:
The first page seems to say csrss.exe is malware; the others say it's essential. Can someone resolve the seeming conflict? Is the first page a fraud? Michael Hardy ( talk) 20:11, 1 October 2013 (UTC)