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Some nice pictures at the link ... 'World's oldest dog' Maggie the kelpie dies at the age of 30 leaving her owner devastated Australian dog Maggie the Kelpie has died at the age of 30, her owner said The beloved pet was thought to be the oldest dog in the world She was the best friend of Victorian dairy farmer Brian McLaren Mr McLaren said he was very 'sad' at the death of the Australian sheep dog By Jenny Awford For Daily Mail Australia Updated: 05:55 EST, 19 April 2016 http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3547370/Maggie-kelpie-dies-age-30.html Maggie the Kelpie, an Australian dog that was thought to be the oldest in the world, has died at the age of 30 leaving her owner devastated. She was the best friend of Victorian dairy farmer Brian McLaren who confirmed the news, saying that Maggie passed away peacefully on Sunday night. The beloved dog was still wandering around the dairy in Woolsthorpe, west of Melbourne, and growling at cats in the weeks before her death. But Mr McLaren said that the Kelpie, who was more than 200 in dog years, went downhill in her last two days. 'She was 30 years old, she was still going along nicely last week, she was walking from the dairy to the office and growling at the cats and all that sort of thing,' Mr McLaren told the Weekly Times. 'She just went downhill in two days and I said yesterday morning when I went home for lunch ... 'She hasn't got long now'. 'I'm sad, but I'm pleased she went the way she went.' Maggie has already been buried beside the McLaren's other dog in a marked grave under a pine tree. 'We were great mates, it is a bit sad,' he said. Maggie was a contender for the oldest dog in the world, but Mr McLaren lost the original paperwork for the dog, meaning that her age could not be independently verified. The Western District owner previously spoke about the fact that his youngest son, Liam, was four years old when they bought Kelpie Maggie as a young pup. Liam is now 34. Officially, the title of the oldest dog in the world still belongs to Bluey, an Australian cattle-dog from Rochester in Victoria, which reached 29 years and five months. According to the Guinness Book of Records his owner bought him as a puppy in 1910 and he grew up to work among the sheep and cattle until he was put down in November 1939. ...
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Story highlights from the article ... Ten cases of Elizabethkingia infection identified in Illinois The Illinois cluster is a different strain than an outbreak of the same infection in Wisconsin (March) Source of infections is still unknown http://www.cnn.com/2016/04/20/health/elizabethkingia-illinois-cluster/index.html New Elizabethkingia cluster found in Illinois By Debra Goldschmidt, CNN Wed April 20, 2016 A new cluster of Elizabethkingia infection, previously rarely seen in humans, has been found in Illinois, health officials said Wednesday. Testing by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed the Elizabethkingia anophelis infection in 10 Illinois residents, according to the Illinois Department of Public Health. Six of those individuals have died. Most of the infected patients had underlying health conditions, and it's unknown if they died from the infection or pre-existing conditions. The Illinois cluster of cases is a different strain of infection from the one identified in an ongoing Elizabethkingia outbreak in Wisconsin, first reported in March. Fifty-nine cases have been confirmed in that state since November. Eighteen have died. Officials there have said all of those infected had "at least one serious underlying illness" and most are older than 65. The cases began in 2014. Dr. Chris Braden, deputy director at the CDC's National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, said this cluster of cases in Illinois is not surprising but it is concerning. Federal and state health officials asked health care providers and health departments to be on the lookout for cases of Elizabethkingia last month. These bacteria are not mandated or voluntarily reported so clusters may have previously gone unnoticed. "We are identifying this because Illinois really looked for it," Braden said. Last week the Illinois Department of Public Health said it found one case of the same strain of Elizabethkingia identified in the Wisconsin outbreak. That person died earlier this year. Last month health officials in Michigan also found a case of the infection that matched the strain of the Wisconsin outbreak. "Although this strain of Elizabethkingia is different than the one seen in the Wisconsin outbreak, our investigatory methods remain the same and we continue to work with the CDC and our local health departments to investigate this cluster of cases and develop ways to prevent additional infections," said Dr. Nirav Shah, director of the Illinois Department of Public Health. The bacteria are commonly found in soil, river water and reservoirs but do not commonly cause illness in humans. People with compromised immune systems or serious underlying health conditions are more at risk of infection. Previous outbreaks have been associated with health care settings. Most of the infections have been in the bloodstream, although some have been in the respiratory system or joints. Symptoms of Elizabethkingia infection include fever, shortness of breath, chills and a bacterial skin infection called cellulitis. The infection is often antibiotic resistant and difficult to treat. Health officials have not yet found the source of the Wisconsin outbreak. Braden said the Illinois investigation is starting by gathering information about each individual case, including where the person lived, what health care they were receiving and what facilities they had been to. It will also consider what type of infection the person had -- for example, was it in the bloodstream or on the skin? Because the strains are different officials are operating under the assumption the Illinois and Wisconsin cases are unrelated. However, there is a possibility that the investigation could find they are related -- for example, exposure to the same product. "Previously, health providers were not required to report individual cases of Elizabethkingia, so it is difficult to determine the degree and kind of exposure that results in illness. For the same reason, it is difficult to estimate how many cases of illness actually occur each year," a statement from the Illinois health department said. Braden said, "We haven't really been looking for clusters with this particular organism; it's possible we could see others as states request laboratories look for these and request them." With the source still under investigation, health officials said the best way to prevent this and other infections is to follow "good health practices," including frequently washing hands and requesting health care providers do the same. ...
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Will be released December 31, 2020 ... it's still April, so maybe this is some kind of April Fools Joke. Ambiancé: The world's longest ever film gets a seven hour trailer. Well, seven hours and 20 minutes to be precise. Monday 18 April 2016 http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/news/ambianc-the-worlds-longest-ever-film-gets-a-seven-hour-trailer-a6989561.html We're not entirely sure why you'd need to watch a seven-hour trailer in order to work out whether you fancy seeing a film that lasts for 30 days, but cancel your plans - one has arrived. Swedish director Anders Weberg has released a second full-length trailer for his upcoming experimental film Ambiancé and it runs for a total of 439 minutes. Weberg, who is also an artist, released a 72-minute long teaser trailer last year. He reportedly has an even bigger one due for release in 2018 (mark your calendars now) that will run for 72 hours. The abstract non-linear film features two performance artists on a beach in southern Sweden - and that's about it. There are no cuts. Described as a tale where “space and time is intertwined into a surreal dream-like journey beyond places," this film seems purely to exist for the most dedicated film enthusiasts. Will you sit through the finished product? Ambiancé is released on December 31, 2020. ...
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Here we go again ... Customers Furious As Web hosting Company 123-reg Accidentally Deletes Hundreds of Websites from the Internet 18 Apr 2016 By Jeff Parsons The web hosting service 123-reg has deleted customers' websites after a clean-up error occurred over the weekend. http://www.mirror.co.uk/tech/customers-furious-web-hosting-company-7780626 A popular internet company is facing the wrath of its customers today after mistakenly deleting huge amounts of data over the weekend. It accidentally knocked an unspecified number of VPS (virtual private servers) offline, meaning owners and visitors couldn't access their websites. 123-reg.com provides hosting services for websites and email accounts and has been working since Saturday morning to repair the damage. In the first of seven updates posted on its support page , the company stated: "This morning, our teams were made aware of issues affecting the performance of our VPS product. Our teams are continuing to investigate which has led to some customers experiencing denigrated service levels." By the fourth update, things were getting a bit more serious: "Our teams are continuing to work to restore affected VPS services back to normal throughout the evening and night, using both internal and external experts. If you are currently offline and would like to restore from your own backup to save time we can set you up a new VPS image. Please let our support teams know." As of Monday afternoon, the issue had still not been resolved. We are currently working on restoring your VPS packages using data recovery tools. For more info see our status page https://t.co/37s8eWkhJ7 — 123-reg (@123reg) April 18, 2016 Unsurprisingly, customers who rely on the service to host and maintain their websites and email accounts aren't pleased. @123reg @TomParty they don't want you to know the severity of the situation, I'm hearing everyone's VPS was deleted, so we are taking days — Mark Drummond (@mark_drummond) April 18, 2016 Oh my 123-REG seems to have wiped a couple of friends VMs down the toilet, the internet tells me it was a "script", wow nice blame job #fail — Steve (@JustMeFrom66) April 18, 2016 Do not use @123reg for your hosting. They just accidentally deleted my two VPSs, losing all my customer's data. No apology, no compensation. — Phil Emerson (@philemerson) April 18, 2016 The company informed its customers with an email over the weekend to try and explain what happened. "As part of a clean-up process on the 123-reg VPS platform, a script was run at 7am on 16.04.16. This script is run to show us the number of machines active against the master database. "An error on the script showed 'zero-records' response from the database for some live VPS. For those customers, this created a 'failure' scenario - showing no VM's and effectively deleting what was on the host. As a result of our team's investigations, we can conclude that the issues faced having resulted in some data loss for some customers." @ianhamilton_ @123reg this should hit the news. Just to make others aware . This will wreck my business & plenty of others I am sure — Its a Puzzle Thing (@itsapuzzlething) April 18, 2016 The company says it is working hard to try and reverse the error. "Our teams have been working long into the night to restore as much as we possibly can. We have also invested in external consultants to recover, in the best way possible." 123-reg has about 800,000 customers in the UK and hasn't said how many were affected, although it claims it is a "small proportion". ...
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Man Accidentally 'Deletes His Company' With One Line of Bad Code
Monroe replied to Monroe's topic in Technology News
jaclaz ... thanks for all the new additional information ... and that the whole thing was just a hoax. Not too funny but it explains why the Server Fault page link no longer worked. I was expecting someone older ... after checking the photo out ... well, maybe he'll get a few new customers but the stunt may not be all that funny to many people. ... -
Man Accidentally 'Deletes His Company' With One Line of Bad Code
Monroe replied to Monroe's topic in Technology News
I found some other articles with more information about this ... this is from Popular Mechanics and it may contain some of what was first posted at Server Fault before it disappeared ... the link in this article is dead also. It mentions that the guy has around 1,535 customers. Man Deletes His Whole Company With One Bad Line of Code Thanks to just one mistake, he instructed the computer to delete everything it could find. http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/a20405/man-deletes-company-and-backups-accidentally/ By Eric Limer Apr 14, 2016 The next time you accidentally close a file without saving, just keep in mind that it could be worse. You could be Marco Marsala, a hosting provider who accidentally and irrevocably deleted his entire business with a faulty line of code. As Marsala wrote on Server Fault, a forum where he was asking for help with the bind he'd gotten himself into, "I run a small hosting provider with more or less 1535 customers ...All servers got deleted and the offsite backups too." A dire situation for certain, but one that Marsala was apparently hopeful he could rectify. "How I can recover from a rm -rf / now in a timely manner?" his plea for assistance ends. That "rm -rf/" is the troublesome line that got Marsala into trouble. It is, essentially, a command that will forcibly delete data without asking for confirmation. As The Independent explains: The "rm" tells the computer to remove; the r deletes everything within a given directory; and the f stands for "force", telling the computer to ignore the usual warnings that come when deleting files. ... [Because] of an error in the way it was written, the code didn't actually specify anywhere – and so removed everything on the computer. Why was Marsala running this command at all? It was actually part of his backup procedure, presumably intended to delete old backups. But due to the lack of specificity, it just deleted everything it could get its hands on—including customer websites. Because Marsala didn't have a backup somewhere that was completely isolated from what this particular command could touch, it all went away. It's probably gone forever, according to the experts on Server Fault. The lessons to be learned here? A few: Always double check instructions to delete anything. Make sure you back up your important data offline. And last but not least, a computer will always do exactly what you tell it to do. If it doesn't do what you wanted, you are the one who messed up. Source: Server Fault via The Independant Also this link ... This is from developers.slashdot.org and has more information that could also have been in the original Server Fault post ... between the two links ... a person can have a general idea maybe what was originally posted. It also mentions he posted at the Centos help forum. https://developers.slashdot.org/story/16/04/14/1542246/man-deletes-his-entire-company-with-one-line-of-bad-code Reader JustAnotherOldGuy writes: Marco Marsala appears to have deleted his entire company with one mistaken piece of code. By accidentally telling his computer to delete everything in his servers, the hosting provider has seemingly removed all trace of his company and the websites that he looks after for his customers. Marsala wrote on a Centos help forum, "I run a small hosting provider with more or less 1535 customers and I use Ansible to automate some operations to be run on all servers. Last night I accidentally ran, on all servers, a Bash script with a rm -rf {foo}/{bar} with those variables undefined due to a bug in the code above this line. All servers got deleted and the offsite backups too because the remote storage was mounted just before by the same script (that is a backup maintenance script)." The terse "rm -rf" is so famously destructive that it has become a joke within some computing circles, but not to this guy. Can this example finally serve as a textbook example of why you need to make offsite backups that are physically removed from the systems you're archiving?"Rm -rf" would mark the block as empty, and if the programmer hasn't written anything new, he should be able to recover nearly all of the data. Something about the story feels weird. ... -
Email Fraudsters Scam US Company Out of Nearly $100 Million
Monroe posted a topic in Technology News
Email Fraudsters Scam US Company Out of Nearly $100 Million April 15, 2016 http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2016/04/15/email-fraudsters-scam-us-company-out-nearly-100-million.html?intcmp=latestnews U.S. officials said Thursday that an unidentified company was defrauded out of nearly $100 million by individuals who used a fake email to pose as one of its vendors. Reuters reported the U.S. government has filed a civil forfeiture lawsuit in federal court in New York seeking to recover nearly $25 million derived from the fraud which is being held in approximately 20 bank accounts around the world. Authorities said about $74 million has been returned to the company, according to Reuters. Tom Brown, the managing director of Berkeley Research Group’s cyber security practice, told Reuters the lawsuit “appears to be the largest email scam that I’ve seen." The email scheme is believed to have taken place between August and September after a Cyprus-based bank identified some suspicious transfers, authorities said. The fraudsters carried out the scheme by creating a fake email address posing as one of the company’s legitimate vendors in Asia. The individuals posed as a vendor while communicating with a separate company that was hired to handle the logistics of vendor payments to the American company, the complaint said. The American company sent $98.9 million meant for the vendor to a bank account in Cyprus, according to the suit. Authorities said at least $25 million was laundered through separate accounts in Cyprus, Latvia, Hungary, Estonia, Lithuania, Slovakia and Hong Kong. The Cyprus bank was able to restrain nearly $74 million. Authorities believe that this case is the latest example of fraudsters targeting businesses with foreign suppliers or that regularly complete wire transfers. The FBI issued an alert to companies last week that businesses have lost $2.3 billion globally from wire fraud from October 2013 to February of this year. ...-
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Man Accidentally 'Deletes His Company' With One Line of Bad Code
Monroe replied to Monroe's topic in Technology News
I almost didn't post this story ... my thinking was that the story can't be true ... who doesn't have some sort of backup to rely on. So I guess maybe this guy didn't ... I have no servers to fool with ... just a simple XP computer setup but I would hate to face a complete reinstall of the OS with all my settings and software added through the years. I do have that backup ready to go. However, the story had some information in it that might be useful to someone working with servers ... the code that he used and that forum for "server experts" called Server Fault. Maybe that forum was already known by people here ... maybe not. Still hard to believe there was no backup. ... -
Man Accidentally 'Deletes His Entire Company' With One Line of Bad Code ‘I feel sorry to say that your company is now essentially dead,’ one person on a coding forum advised Marco Marsala. Thursday 14 April 2016 http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/news/man-accidentally-deletes-his-entire-company-with-one-line-of-bad-code-a6984256.html A man appears to have deleted his entire company with one mistaken piece of code. By accidentally telling his computer to delete everything in his servers, hosting provider Marco Marsala has seemingly removed all trace of his company and the websites that he looks after for his customers. Mr Marsala wrote on a forum for server experts called Server Fault that he was now stuck after having accidentally run destructive code on his own computers. But far from advising them how to fix it, most experts informed him that he had just accidentally deleted the data of his company and its clients, and in so doing had probably destroyed his entire company with just one line of code. The problem command was "rm -rf": a basic piece of code that will delete everything it is told to. The “rm” tells the computer to remove; the r deletes everything within a given directory; and the f stands for “force”, telling the computer to ignore the usual warnings that come when deleting files. ...
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This new update from two days ago sounds important after reading about it ... but then all Adobe Flash Updates always seem to be important. Adobe patches actively exploited Flash Player vulnerability in 24 flaw fix The new Flash Player update squashes a bug that hackers have been using to infect computers with ransomware April 8, 2016 http://www.pcworld.com/article/3053090/security/adobe-fixes-24-vulnerabilities-in-flash-player-including-an-actively-exploited-one.html Adobe Systems released a security update for Flash Player to fix 24 critical vulnerabilities, including one that hackers have been exploiting to infect computers with ransomware over the past week. The company advised users Thursday to upgrade to the newly released Flash Player 21.0.0.213 on Windows and Mac and Flash Player 11.2.202.616 on Linux. The Flash Player Extended Support Release was also updated to version 18.0.0.343. As usual, the Flash Player build bundled with Google Chrome on all platforms, Microsoft Edge and Internet Explorer for Windows 10 and IE for Windows 8.1 will be upgraded automatically through the update mechanisms of those browsers. Twenty-two of the newly patched vulnerabilities can result in remote code execution on users’ computers, one can lead to a security feature bypass and one can be used to bypass the memory layout randomization mitigation that’s supposed to make exploitation harder in general. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Warning: There’s a major security flaw in Flash and you need to update immediately By Zach Epstein on Apr 8, 2016 http://bgr.com/2016/04/08/adobe-flash-security-flaw-update/ Stop us if you’ve heard this one before… dozens of times. A very serious security flaw has been discovered in Adobe Flash and millions of users are impacted. The zero-day vulnerability allows hackers to exploit the flaw and crash a user’s system, or even take control of the system and steal private data. It’s one of the most serious types of flaws out there and in this case the vulnerability is being actively exploited by hackers. In other words, this isn’t some tiny bug discovered by researchers and handled privately with Adobe behind closed doors. Hackers are using the security hole to attack users as you read this — and now Adobe has released an update to patch the flaw. Here’s what you need to know: All desktop versions of Adobe Flash player are affected, including builds for Windows, OS X and Linux. So basically, if you have a computer you need to install the update. ...
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Adobe's Default Flash Cookie - settings.sol
Monroe posted a topic in Malware Prevention and Security
I installed a little free flash cookie cleaner over two years ago ... I was always getting one flash cookie in particular and sometimes several flash cookies would show up in this little program. Finally today ... like two years late ... I took the time to find out exactly what "settings.sol" was and where it came from. I will add that sometimes there are a crazy amount of "flash cookies" to delete but most of the time maybe just two or three. I found this interesting blog article from Oct 2010 ... Part 2 ... haven't found Part 1 but it looks like Part 2 is the one to read. Adobe Flash, The Spy in Your Computer – Part 2 By ESET Research posted 6 Oct 2010 http://www.welivesecurity.com/2010/10/06/adobe-flash-the-spy-in-your-computer-part-2/ This small part is from the article: "There is one spy aspect of Flash that this configuration did not stop. Adobe has a default cookie that records each Flash enabled site you visit. Using the web-based Flash Settings Manager, if you go to the website privacy settings or storage setting panels and delete all websites it will delete this history from the default cookie, but what if you don’t want the sites written at all? I decided to see if I would prevent this from happening. The default cookie is called settings.sol and its location depends upon your operating system and version. I first use the web-based panels to configure flash how I wanted and then marked settings.sol as read only. Next I went to sites that use flash and went back to check the settings.sol file. I think it is appropriate to mention here that “SOL” in English is an acronym for Sh*t Out of Luck. I do not think this is a coincidence. When I went to look at the sol file I discovered that Flash had written a file called settings.sxx that contained the website I had visited. After marking both the sol and sxx files as read only, Flash finally stopped tracking the websites I visit." There is a nice little free program called Flash Cookies Cleaner v1.2 ... the home website doesn't seem to offer the program anymore ... at least I could not find it but it is at this site as a free download ... all the information below is from SOFTPEDIA. SOFTPEDIA - Flash Cookies Cleaner v1.2 http://www.softpedia.com/get/Security/Secure-cleaning/Flash-Cookies-Cleaner.shtml Save precious disk space and keep your virtual identity safe by deleting Flash cookies with the help of this lightweight application. Flash Cookies Cleaner is a compact application designed to scan your computer for the cookies saved by the Adobe Flash Player application in order to remove them. These cookies, also known as Local Shared Objects, are responsible for remembering the volume level on Flash video players and other settings for each website. Helping you save some disk space If you are not comfortable with having these settings saved on your computer you might want to delete them. The problem is that these cookies are not removed in the same way you clean the cookies saved by your browser. Actually, completely cleaning the browser has no effect on these items. Since every Flash cookie can save up to 100 kilobytes of information, the space used for an intensive Internet user can be quite significant. It is recommended to remove them if you want to clean your hard drive and to avoid the privacy issues. Quickly identify and remove cookies The application has an easy to use interface that allows you to detect and to delete all the cookies with a couple of clicks. You can also review the detected items before deciding to delete them. Unfortunately, you cannot select the items that you want to remove since the app deletes all the detected cookies. It has a small footprint and barely uses the CPU even when scanning or deleting cookies. The response time is above average since in our tests it detected and removed over eight hundred entries almost instantly. Straightforward with little features This app detected more items than the Adobe Website Storage Settings panel and removed them with no problems. However, it lacks the ability to change the maximum disk space for each cookie and to disable the local storage. In conclusion To sum it up, Flash Cookies Cleaner is a useful application for the users that want to completely remove the browsing traces from their computer with minimum effort. After intense use of the computer for entertainment purposes you might want to give this little utility a try. ... -
Very interesting ... I don't have a smart phone but I'm thinking the lawsuit could at least make the phone company tell the actual memory size still available after everything has been placed on the phone and the box has been sealed and ready to be sold. At least a person would have some idea of what they actually have in total available memory when they buy the phone. What happens to the memory total from future updates and whatever else after a person buys the phone ... that's something else but at the time of purchase a person would have some general knowledge of how much actual memory they have at that time. Sort of like buying a hard drive listed at 100 GB on the box but in reality the actual GB size is around 80 GB (+ or -). Has that ever been challenged in a lawsuit after all these years. The common person who doesn't understand MB and GB size is probably easily fooled ... of course there is always some fine print somewhere on the box with that warning explaining all this ... but they advertise 100 GB. ...
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Another possible example of the Mediterranean diet with fresh air and walking for a longer life along with something else ... the herb Rosemary. From the article link and a nice photo of Acciaroli ... Could a HERB be the secret to living to 100? Diet rich in rosemary linked to good health and long life expectancy in Italian village. Medical experts will examine pensioners living in Acciaroli near Salerno They have remarkable record for living for longer but also free of disease Population of a few thousand has about 300 people who are aged over 100 By Kate Pickles 30 March 2016 http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-3515735/Could-HERB-secret-living-100-Diet-rich-rosemary-linked-good-health-long-life-expectancy-Italian-village.html Rosemary could be the secret to living to 100 according to researchers investigating 300 centenarians in a remote Italian village. For the herb appears to be commonly used by a group of pensioners who have a most remarkable record of not just living longer but free of heart disease and Alzheimer’s. Teams of medical experts have been given permission for the first time ever to examine the residents of a coastal hamlet called Acciaroli, near the resort of Salerno. Nestled between the sea and the mountains the area has a population of a couple of thousand or so yet among them are at least 300 men and women who are already 100 years old or more. This is a phenomenal ratio compared to, for instance, America where just 0..02 per cent of the population will live that long. It is believed that factors for their long life and low rates of both mental and physical illness include the famously healthy Mediterranean diet that is popular throughout the region. But rosemary is particularly prevalent in their cooking, said researchers from the University of California San Diego School of Medicine and University of Rome, who are carrying out the study. Other influences include, perhaps obviously, the fresh air and walking - the residents regularly walk or hike through mountains to go to the shops or to work for instance as part of their daily routines. San Diego doctor Professor Alan Maisel said: ‘We are the first group of researchers to be given permission to study this population in Acciaroli, Italy.’ The teams will look at diet, lifestyle and take blood samples and distribute questionnaires to the 300 centenarians of Acciaroli. Professor Maisel added: ‘The goal of this long-term study is to find out why this group of 300 is living so long by conducting a full genetic analysis and examining lifestyle behaviours, like diet and exercise. ‘The results from studying the longevity of this group could be applied to our practice at UC San Diego and to patients all over the world.’ ...
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Not exactly sure what you mean ... the Windows XP Startup sound can do that. The Windows XP Initial Startup Music is long playing and probably better to listen to and enjoy. They are two different items ... if someone starts Windows XP for the very first time with a new computer out of the box and they don't have any speakers hooked up until later ... they will never hear that particular Windows XP sound since it only plays that one time and never again. That Windows XP music may be known as Windows XP Welcome Music. I just checked as the music is playing ... it is titled - Microsoft Windows Welcome Music. It is over 5 minutes long ... 5:24 to be exact but it ends at around 5:22. This is from an old 2009 forum dealing with the sound ... "I don't think that's what the OP was referring to. He's talking about the song (and not a "chime," "sound," etc) that plays only when you turn on your PC for the very first time and go through the start-up and registration screens. Beyond that point, the song never plays again unless you restore the computer or track down the file manually." ...
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Adding some additional "facts" ... at least one. I really liked the Windows XP Initial Startup Music ... you only get to hear it that one time when you start XP for the first time. I searched Google and actually found out where it was located and saved it to play every so often. It's a great sound that MS included with XP. *** If you're interested in the location of the XP music ... use a good set of headphones to really enjoy the experience. C:\WINDOWS\system32\oobe\images\title ...
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Came across this list of 20 facts at The Fact Site ... I think this list could be from 2015 but not 100% sure ... so some "facts" may have changed. A few facts I was not aware of ... from the page ... 04 The rolling hills background for XP sold for millions of dollars! Charles O’Rear is a photographer for National Geographic and was the man who captured the beautiful photo seen on all XP operating systems. The photo is taken in California and is said to be the second most valuable photo ever! 10 It’s impossible to create a folder named CON. Odd as this sounds, it’s true. If you’re running XP you cannot name a file CON. This is because there’s already a file in the system named that, but not one you can readily access. 12 The XP stands for Experience. A random but little known fact that the XP is for eXPerience. One of the few Windows OS with a name instead of a number identification. 20 Facts About Windows XP http://www.thefactsite.com/2015/09/microsoft-windows-xp-facts.html Everyone remembers the beloved Windows XP that operated truly as an OS should. It was intuitive, streamlined, and not filled with the horrible kinks and problems seen in Vista or Windows 8. Despite Windows XP officially being made redundant due to the three new operating systems released since, there is still a strong following of individuals who continue to download and use this OS. If you’re one of those hardcore XP supporters, or simply someone curious to learn more about this operating system, then continue reading! We’ve got twenty facts about the Windows XP operating system that may surprise even the most tech savvy readers! All 20 Facts at the link ...
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A touching story ... with all the predators in the ocean ... I hope he can make many more trips. Some nice pictures with the article. Penguin Swims 5,000 Miles Every Year to Visit Brazilian Man Bird swims 5,000 MILES every year to visit Brazilian man who nursed it back to life after he found it covered in oil and dying on a beach. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3482978/Penguin-returns-home-year-Brazilian-man-saved-it.html By Keiligh Baker and Janet Tappin Coelho In Brazil For Mailonline 8 March 2016 | * Pensioner Joao Pereira de Souza, 71, discovered dying penguin on beach * He nursed creature, which was covered in oil, back to health at his home * Mr de Souza named the creature Dindim and released him back into wild * Dindim goes off to breed but always returns to stay at Mr de Souza's home This incredible video shows the touching relationship between a penguin and the Brazilian man who rescued him from certain death. Retired bricklayer and part time fisherman Joao Pereira de Souza, 71, from an island village just outside Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, discovered the tiny penguin languishing on rocks in 2011. The helpless creature was starving and covered in oil but Mr de Souza took him in and nursed him back to health, naming the South American Magellanic penguin Dindim. It took him a week just to clean the sticky black residue from the bird's feathers. When Dindim was well again Mr de Souza released him back into the sea, never expecting to see his new friend again. He was astonished when, just a few months later, the penguin returned to the island where he recognised Mr de Souza and returned home with him. Now, Dindim spends eight months of the year with Mr de Souza and spends the rest of his time breeding off the coast of Argentina and Chile. The flightless bird is believed to swim around 5,000 miles everytime he returns to Mr de Souza. 'I love the penguin like it's my own child and I believe the penguin loves me,' Mr Pereira de Souza told Globo TV. 'No one else is allowed to touch him. He pecks them if they do. He lays on my lap, lets me give him showers, allows me to feed him sardines and to pick him up.' Mr Pereira de Souza said he fed Dindim a daily diet of fish to improve his strength then took him back to the sea to let him go. 'But he wouldn't leave, he stayed with me for 11 months and then just after he changed his coat with new feathers he disappeared,' recalled the retired builder. 'Everyone said he wouldn't return but he has been coming back to visit me for the past four years. 'He arrives in June and leaves to go home in February and every year he becomes more affectionate as he appears even happier to see me.' Biologist Joao Paulo Krajewski, who interviewed Mr Pereira de Souza for Globo TV, said: 'I have never seen anything like this before. I think the penguin believes Joao is part of his family and probably a penguin as well. 'When he sees him he wags his tail like a dog and honks with delight.' Another expert said it appears as though Dindim recognises Mr de Souza as he would another penguin, and acts accordingly. ...
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Interesting fact ... from the article below. "On Wednesday, the moon will blot out the sun, creating a total solar eclipse that will darken the sky over parts of the western Pacific and Southeast Asia. The spectacle will begin on March 9 and finish on March 8. Yes, truly." Total Solar Eclipse Will End the Day Before It Begins http://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/08/science/total-solar-eclipse-will-end-the-day-before-it-begins.html?_r=0 By NICHOLAS ST. FLEUR MARCH 7, 2016 On Wednesday, the moon will blot out the sun, creating a total solar eclipse that will darken the sky over parts of the western Pacific and Southeast Asia. The spectacle will begin on March 9 and finish on March 8. Yes, truly. That’s because the moon’s shadow will first fall over parts of the Pacific on Wednesday morning local time, and then cross the international date line and appear visible on Tuesday afternoon local time. Total solar eclipses occur when the darkest part of the moon’s shadow, the umbra, encases part of the Earth. Anyone standing where the umbra falls will see the moon engulf the sun for about four minutes. This year, people in parts of Indonesia, Borneo and Sulawesi within a narrow strip stretching about 90 miles wide — the line of totality — will experience a blackout at some point from 7 to 11 a.m. local time. (The total eclipse will occur sometime from midnight G.M.T. (7 p.m. Eastern) to 4 a.m. G.M.T. (11 p.m. Eastern). “The cool thing for those who are going to be in the path of totality is that they are going to be able to see the outer atmosphere of the sun called the corona,” said C. Alex Young, a solar astrophysicist from NASA. The corona will look like flames streaming from behind the moon. “This is only visible from the ground during a total solar eclipse,” he said. Those in Australia, South China, and Southeast Asia as well as Hawaii and Alaska will stand in the shade of a partial solar eclipse when the moon’s second shadow, the penumbra, catches them in its shade. From their perspectives, it’ll look as if some galactic giant took a big bite out of the sun. If you’re one of the billions of people who will not see this year’s eclipse, don’t fret; there are consolation prizes. The San Francisco Exploratorium will live stream the total eclipse from Micronesia on its website. And Jupiter will be at opposition Tuesday, allowing stargazers everywhere to see the planet at its brightest in the night sky without needing a telescope. Finally, for those who live in the continental United States, the next total solar eclipse will pass through the middle of the country in August 2017. Total solar eclipses occur about once every one to two years, the last one being in March 2015. It’ll be the first time in nearly 40 years the spectacle will be visible from the continental United States, and it’s expected to bring in a flood of viewers, so consider stocking up on some protective glasses. ...
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Cache of Century-Old Baseball Cards Found in Paper Bag
Monroe replied to Monroe's topic in General Discussion
Nice link to the PSA article ... lots of additional information there. How close those cards came to be thrown out with other junk. They were at the bottom of the bag ... usually people might be expected to be in a hurry to get everything cleaned up and in order. Very good someone took their time to check the bag out. From the article: "The cards discovered in 2016 were unearthed in a rural town after a southern family was combing through the possessions of their great grandparents. The cards were found inside a torn paper bag on the floor. Initially, the family thought the bag was merely filled with trash and planned to discard it. One of the family members decided to sift through the contents, which included a number of postcards and other paper products. Beneath this small pile of items were the Cobb cards lying face down at the bottom of the bag." ... -
Another reason Windows 7 usage figures might be suspect and that Windows XP usage may be higher and probably is higher ... could be with people using Proxomitron. https://www.netmarketshare.com/operating-system-market-share.aspx?qprid=10&qpcustomd=0 I have been using it since Windows 98SE and since 2012 with XP ... works just great ... may also work with Windows 7 ... I have read it does. I am using the filter set by Sidki which was set up to tell a site that the computer has Windows 7 installed. So everywhere I go ... Windows 7 gets all the "credit" instead of XP, unless I place Proxomitron on Bypass ... which I have to do every so often to get a web page to open properly, but not often. I use K-Meleon v1.8.24 ... when I have Proxomitron working as normal ... this information is seen: What Browser am I using? You appear to be using: Firefox 31.0.9.9 on Windows 7 When I have Proxomitron on Bypass ... this information is seen. What Browser am I using? You appear to be using: Firefox 31.0 on Windows XP http://www.thismachine.info/ So if there are many people using Proxomitron with XP ... then the XP usuage figures could be much higher or somewhat higher anyway. If anyone has never heard of Proxomitron and would be interested in checking it out ... here's some information. Once you get to know this program you may like it ... it's always working when I'm online ... sometimes I have to put it on by-pass. You will learn as you use it. It may be of some help when online. The Proxomitron by Scott R. Lemmon http://www.proxomitron.info/ The Author: Scott R. Lemmon originally developed the Proxomitron for his own use. He then decided to release it to the public and made himself available to users via email and in several Proxomitron user-discussion groups. His support, like his program, was always free. With the release of Naoko 4.5, Scott discontinued all further development and support of his program and pulled the official home of Proxomitron off the Web. We respected his decision to move on and wished him all the best -- which is, after all, what he consistently gave to us. Sadly, one year later, Scott died -- but his brilliance of mind and spirit lives on. Simply put, Proxomitron is a reflection of its creator: To know Scott's program . . . is to know Scott Lemmon. The Un-Official Proxomitron Forum http://www.prxbx.com/forums/ There is a filter set by Sidki that many people use ... it replaces nothing that Scott Lemmon placed into Proxomitron ... it adds to it. sidki-config: Oct 23 2010 http://www.prxbx.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?fid=44 The program may be of some use with various browsers. Just experiment and see how it might work on your computer. Just to add ... he has a Google filter set and Sidki has added to it ... really a big difference in using the Google search site with Proxomitron installed ... that alone makes the program worthwhile. With the Sidki filter set ... ads are gone and the page is a dark blue ... there is also a gray color setting but the blue page is great. I have not mastered all the settings but there is help at the Sidki forum ... if you want or need additional settings. *** Just to add, I always have to put Proxomitron on Bypass when I go to the MS Update site so MS will read that I actually have XP installed ... then I can get any current updates. It's always been this way ... I have IE 8 installed for that. Of course, I'm only getting MS Office 2007 updates these days for Office 2000. ...
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Better than finding a bag of gold coins. From the article: "Card experts in Southern California said Wednesday that they have verified the legitimacy — and seven-figure total value — of seven identical Ty Cobb cards from the printing period of 1909 to 1911." Southern California man finds cache of century-old baseball cards in paper bag March 03, 2016 - Associated Press http://www.foxnews.com/us/2016/03/03/southern-california-man-finds-cache-century-old-baseball-cards-in-paper-bag.html?intcmp=latestnews LOS ANGELES – From a crumpled paper bag in a dilapidated house came a baseball-card find of a lifetime. Seven of them actually. Card experts in Southern California said Wednesday that they have verified the legitimacy — and seven-figure total value — of seven identical Ty Cobb cards from the printing period of 1909 to 1911. Before the recent find, there were only about 15 known to still exist. Joe Orlando, the president of Professional Sports Authenticator in Newport Beach, California, who verified the find, said it is "spectacular" and "miraculous" to have come across such a cache. "I am not sure if any other baseball card find is more remarkable than this new discovery," Orlando said in a statement. The family who discovered the cards in a neglected paper bag at the run-down house of a deceased great-grandfather has asked to remain anonymous. Publicist Donn Pearlman, who helped announce the finding, said only that they are from a southern state and that the cards were first taken to a dealer in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina That dealer, Rick Snyder of MINT State Inc., said his initial reaction after getting a voicemail from the family was "absolute skepticism." "I doubted they were authentic because finding seven of these cards at one place at one time seemed almost impossible," Snyder said. But after examining photos and then finally seeing the cards themselves a week later, he became convinced. Orlando said he was also dubious at first. But after his office and an outside expert examined the cards, he became a believer. The cards with the famed Detroit Tigers slugger come from a lot known as T206, the group most prized by collectors that also includes the Honus Wagner card, arguably the most famous sports card ever. They say on the back "TY COBB — KING OF THE SMOKING TOBACCO WORLD" in green ink. The cards' value is sure to shift now that there are so many more in existence, and an exact figure is difficult to pin down. But Orlando said the total worth of the whole cache should exceed $1 million. It's not yet clear what the family who found them intends to do with them. On a scale of 1-10, 10 being mint condition, the cards range from 3.5 to 4.5, which is high for cards that are more than a century old. "This is one of the greatest discoveries in the history of our hobby," Orlando said. ...
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This article is from May 2013 and deals with smaller billboards as you walk by them. So three years later ... have these smaller billboards become more "enhanced" ... now also picking up phone data with eyes and face ID ? New Billboard Tracks Your Eye Movements by Fox Van Allen May 01, 2013 http://www.techlicious.com/blog/new-billboard-tracks-your-eye-movements/ Welcome to Minority Report: Researchers at Lancaster University in England have created a new type of digital billboard capable of tracking your eye movements. The system, called Sideways, uses a small camera to locate faces, identify eyes, and then track their movement. The content displayed on the screen can change as your eyes move, allowing you to scroll through menus simply by looking at them. Of course, more interesting to retailers is the possibility of using the tracking tech to perfect the art of the advertisement. Say you were in the supermarket checkout aisle, and a candy bar catches your eye. The monitor might display an ad for a different type of candy, or possibly highlight a discount. Shift your gaze to a tabloid, and you might get a few tidbits of hot gossip. And while the advertisement is tracking your eyes, it’s capable of tracking the eyes of 13 other people as well. You can be forgiven for thinking this brings us uncomfortably close to Minority Report, the sci-fi movie where billboards can identify individual passersby using facial recognition. After all, if Facebook can identify you from a picture, so can an advertisement. Technology also exists to track your reaction to ads, so if a pitch isn’t working, the billboard might change its style to better grab your attention. Isn’t technology simultaneously awe-inspiring and terrifying? ...
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I dug up some more information on the billboard thing. As for myself, I just find it hard to believe that someone traveling at 50 miles an hour can be "seen" or have their phone ID on record just passing a billboard but I guess it can happen that fast and at a distance. What about many vehicles rapidly going by all at once (rush hour traffic) ... the system can sort all the phones out ? ... what about three or four people in one car, all with phones ... who gets tracked? I suppose if you live in the country and travel old country roads ... with no phone ... but then there are drones hovering around. This is from the article below: "In the United States of America, billboards now see you. Or at least they see certain data from your mobile phone — age, gender, and location — which they can then sell to advertisers." also ... just for walking around with a phone on and certain apps installed, it will be more than billboards tracking a person. They used the term "enhanced billboards". ... also from the article below: "In some cases, Clear Channel will be able to track whether someone who views a billboard ends up accessing the product advertised. If a mobile user has installed the Placed app on their phone, and he or she passes a billboard for a new bar in town, the app will know and be able to report whether the user ever ends up trying the place out. The plan may sound sketchy, but considering the enhanced billboards go on sale Monday in Clear Channel’s 11 major markets, including Los Angeles and New York, it appears to be inevitable. The company plans to open sales to the rest of the country soon as well, meaning the age of billboards that only look one way is effectively over. Now, billboards will always look back at you. Radar also signals the possibility that this strategy may soon be coming to other forms of advertisements including bus stops, signs and city streets. If the data is easily accessible, it would probably pay for the owner of the advertisement to know it." Billboards to Begin Tracking Viewer Locations, Selling Data to Advertisers Radar is the first billboard software that looks back. Adam Toobin February 29, 2016 https://www.inverse.com/article/12141-billboards-to-begin-tracking-viewer-locations-selling-data-to-advertisers In the United States of America, billboards now see you. Or at least they see certain data from your mobile phone — age, gender, and location — which they can then sell to advertisers. Clear Channel Outdoor Americas, an advertising company with thousands of billboards across the United States, will announce its plan, called Radar, to begin tracking information from passing mobile phones on Monday, reports The New York Times. The company is only planning to record demographic data about users in the aggregate, meaning it is disassociated from any unique personal data. So in theory, Radar won’t be able to tell advertisers you’re on a road trip across the country after seeing you jet across the Midwest. There are, however, plenty of ways you make it possible for advertisers to figure that out on their own. “In aggregate, that data can then tell you information about what the average viewer of that billboard looks like,” Andy Stevens, senior vice president for research and insights at Clear Channel Outdoor, told The New York Times. “Obviously that’s very valuable to an advertiser.” Clear Channel is partnering with AT&T Data Patterns, a segment of the company that tracks users, PlaceIQ, an app-based location sensor, and Placed, a program that actually pays users to let it keep tabs on their whereabouts. Radar will have access only to information that has long been accessible to mobile advertisers, according to Clear Channel Outdoor. Tying information like age and gender to a particular location will allow them to sell a more precise profile of the people who see a particular billboard on an average basis. In some cases, Clear Channel will be able to track whether someone who views a billboard ends up accessing the product advertised. If a mobile user has installed the Placed app on their phone, and he or she passes a billboard for a new bar in town, the app will know and be able to report whether the user ever ends up trying the place out. The plan may sound sketchy, but considering the enhanced billboards go on sale Monday in Clear Channel’s 11 major markets, including Los Angeles and New York, it appears to be inevitable. The company plans to open sales to the rest of the country soon as well, meaning the age of billboards that only look one way is effectively over. Now, billboards will always look back at you. Radar also signals the possibility that this strategy may soon be coming to other forms of advertisements including on bus stops, signs and city streets. If the data is easily accessible, it would probably pay for the owner of the advertisement to know it. So it may be an invasion of privacy, but it’s definitely coming to a city near you. ...
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It only gets worse ... maybe time to keep the phone turned off ... but then it's not ready to use for a 911 emergency. See That Billboard? It May See You, Too By SYDNEY EMBER FEB. 28, 2016 http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/29/business/media/see-that-billboard-it-may-see-you-too.html?_r=0 Pass a billboard while driving in the next few months, and there is a good chance the company that owns it will know you were there and what you did afterward. Clear Channel Outdoor Americas, which has tens of thousands of billboards across the United States, will announce on Monday that it has partnered with several companies, including AT&T, to track people’s travel patterns and behaviors through their mobile phones. By aggregating the trove of data from these companies, Clear Channel Outdoor hopes to provide advertisers with detailed information about the people who pass its billboards to help them plan more effective, targeted campaigns. With the data and analytics, Clear Channel Outdoor could determine the average age and gender of the people who are seeing a particular billboard in, say, Boston at a certain time and whether they subsequently visit a store. more at link ...
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Digitally Weary Users Switch to ‘dumb’ Phones !
Monroe replied to Monroe's topic in General Discussion
For myself, the main selling point with the Nophone ... it doesn't need any batteries. So rare in today's world !!! ...