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My Browser Builds (Part 4)
msfntor replied to roytam1's topic in Browsers working on Older NT-Family OSes
Sorry to hear that, @R! If you have to have surgery, only go to a hospital with the hand specialty! I wish you a speedy and good recovery! -
“Be mindful. Be grateful. Be positive. Be true. Be kind.”
msfntor replied to XPerceniol's topic in Funny Farm
Dogs can smell mental stress in humans with 94 percent accuracy 10/1/2022 A new study shows something amazing: Thanks to their unique olfactory organ, dogs can smell when we feel stressed. It's our breath. Dogs have a unique sense of smell that is vastly superior to ours. That's because they have 125 to 220 million olfactory cells, depending on the breed, while we have just 5 million. But not only that: They can also distinguish between smells much better than we can. An advantage that humans have been using since the domestication of the wolf thousands of years ago. Dogs can smell mental stress in humans with 94 percent accuracy. A well-known example is sniffer dogs. They are trained by the police to be able to smell drugs and sound the alarm, and they are used at customs, for example. On the other hand, it has also been established in medicine that dogs can recognize when their owner is unwell or is seriously ill, for example with cancer. Dogs can smell it when we're emotionally down, study says. However, according to a new study, this is not only limited to physical problems, but also applies to psychological ones. According to this, British researchers from Queen's University Belfast and Newcastle University found out that the four-legged friends can smell when we are emotionally bad. If we feel stressed, it is not uncommon for the furry friends to "feel" it and try to cheer up their owner with cuddles. ... More: https://newsrnd.com/life/2022-10-01-dogs-can-smell-mental-stress-in-humans-with-94-percent-accuracy.BJgdE04SMj.html -
“Be mindful. Be grateful. Be positive. Be true. Be kind.”
msfntor replied to XPerceniol's topic in Funny Farm
Walking this many steps a day can reduce your risk of dementia 9/7/2022 Do you want to reduce the risk of dementia? Start counting your steps and the pace at which you walk. ... "Is 112 the new 10,000?" published this Tuesday in JAMA Neurology. The greatest reduction in dementia risk, 62%, was achieved by people who walked at a very fast pace of 112 steps per minute for 30 minutes a day, according to the study. In previous research, 100 steps per minute was considered a "fast" or moderate level of intensity. The editorial argued that people looking to reduce their risk of dementia should focus on their walking pace over distance walked. ... More: https://newsrnd.com/news/2022-09-07-walking-this-many-steps-a-day-can-reduce-your-risk-of-dementia.SJI7juBxj.html -
“Be mindful. Be grateful. Be positive. Be true. Be kind.”
msfntor replied to XPerceniol's topic in Funny Farm
Walking extends life, even better if you walk fast 9/16/2022 An unprecedented maxi study confirms that walking defends against dementia, cardiovascular disease, cancer and death from these diseases; it also reveals that, if you walk fast, the recommended 10,000 steps a day are not necessary to stay healthy, much less is enough. The work was awarded a double publication in the journals JAMA Internal Medicine and JAMA Neurology. The study was carried out by Matthew Ahmadi, a researcher at the Charles Perkins Center of the University of Sydney. "For less active individuals, our study shows that as little as 3,800 steps a day can reduce the risk of dementia by 25%," the authors state. The study specifically found that every 2,000 daily steps reduces the risk of premature death of 8-11%, up to approximately 10,000 steps per day. Similar associations were observed for cardiovascular disease and cancer. More steps per day was associated with a lower risk of each type of dementia, while 9,800 steps per day was the optimal dose linked to a 50% lower risk of dementia, but the risk was reduced by 25% with a minimum of 3,800 steps per day. 800 steps per day was the optimal dose linked to a 50% lower risk of dementia, but the risk was reduced by 25% with a minimum of 3,800 steps per day. It is not just the total daily steps that matter, they conclude, the intensity of the step or a faster pace have also been shown to reduce the risk of dementia, heart disease, cancer and death associated with these conditions. Here: https://newsrnd.com/life/2022-09-16-walking-extends-life--even-better-if-you-walk-fast.rJ-CKclzWj.html -
The first thing to do with this website, if you use uBlock O. like me, and not Proxomitron, is to allow (put in green) www.popularmechanics.com and hearstapps.com. If we don't talk about the home page this time, but on the articles, the site is almost OK here. In the articles, the images are of good dimensions, the text is OK. Then, sometimes we have the links to other articles on the first article link. This website works good with articles in: DCBrowser, and Extreme 360Chrome 13.5, 13, 12 versions. TikTok Claims ‘Brown Noise’ Can Cure Your Anxiety and Help You Sleep. Here’s What the Science Says Brown noise is a low-frequency sound. Can it really help with focus, sleep, and controlling anxiety? BY ASHLEY STIMPSON - PUBLISHED: AUG 2, 2022 Just like there are different colors of light, there are different colors of sound. Both naming systems are based on the frequency of the medium. Brown noise is a low-frequency sound that some people find helpful for focusing and controlling anxiety. Scientists are unsure if sound exposure can aid sleep or enhance focus, but caution there could actually be some health drawbacks. Since time immemorial, white noise has been the secret weapon of light sleepers, sufferers of tinnitus, and parents of newborns everywhere. In fact, renowned sculptor and architect Gian Lorenzo Bernini invented the first white-noise machine all the way back in the 17th century. But lately it seems Brown noise is the new white noise—at least on TikTok, anyway. In February, a user named ADHD Assist posted a video, alleging Brown noise is “an ADHDer’s and neurodivergent’s best friend.” A teacher on TikTok says she plays it at a low volume to encourage focus in her classroom. A therapist even calls it a “game changer.” Across the platform, users say Brown noise prevents racing thoughts, quells anxiety, and helps them sleep. What is Brown noise, exactly, and can it really do all that? The Three Colors of Sound Just like we can assign different colors to different frequencies of light, we can do the same with frequencies of sound. There are many different colors of noise, but most conversations about using them for sleep or relaxation center around three main hues: white, pink, and Brown. White noise is a very specific sound, despite the fact that it has come to be synonymous with any kind of droning or background noise. Just like white light contains all the colors of light visible to the eye, white noise contains all frequencies of audible sound in equal measure. Most people describe white noise as the sound of an untuned radio or television static. Pink noise is similar to white noise, but has fewer higher frequencies, making it sound softer, or more refined, to the human ear. Sometimes pink noise is compared to rain or waves on the beach. Brown noise has even fewer high frequencies than pink noise, making it the deepest and most base-heavy of the three. Think: a raging waterfall or the low roar of thunder. Unlike the others, Brown noise was not named after a color, but a scientist. In 1827, Robert Brown was the first to observe the way particles dart around randomly when suspended in a fluid. A century later, Albert Einstein described this behavior—what scientists had come to call Brownian motion—with a mathematical formula. When the formula is applied to electronic sound, the result is a bass-heavy noise. ... ... Basner is less concerned about using white, pink, or Brown noise to encourage focus, so long as the sound levels are kept at a healthy volume. However, he reiterates that what makes sound exposure effective isn’t some magical property of the sound, but instead its ability to conceal other noise and, over time, the Pavlovian response we develop to it. “For instance, turning on the white noise machine is a sign that it’s time to go to bed. You’re training the body.” While it’s not always possible, the most ideal color of sound for sleep or focus is black noise—the absence of sound. In other words, precious silence. - by ASHLEY STIMPSON More Here: https://www.popularmechanics.com/science/health/a40783321/brown-noise/
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@Dell-AA-Mayweather, have you seen the discussion about your link: https://www.deviantart.com/timzuneeverse on the page 102 here: https://msfn.org/board/topic/182876-360-extreme-explorer-modified-version/page/102/ I wrote: "Why I've "We don't support your current browser version. Please upgrade your browser, it includes important security updates." nag screen/window at the top of this link: https://www.deviantart.com/timzuneeverse - but only in DCBrowser AND Extreme 360Chrome v13.5, please??? Extreme 360Chrome v13 AND v12 doesn't have this window..." ...then another quote: "- BUT Today, don't have more this nag window on https://www.deviantart.com/timzuneeverse - in DCBrowser nor 360Chrome v13.5, if st.deviantart.net is not allowed by me (so is natively forbidden partially).. in the new tab. - and have this nag window, if st.deviantart.net is allowed by me expressly.. in the new tab. This same comportment in 360Chrome v13 and v12." - so all is good.
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I feel sorry for your multiple traumas... I hope the aftermath will heal with time... But you are not stupid, far from it, fortunately! Me: "It's nothing, you're lucky." You: "Oh really !? thanks for letting me know." - yes, cause 12 kHz tinnitus is barely/hardly audible, and will fade with the age, because with the age we lose the hearing for the highest frequencies.
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So which trauma, please?..
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It's nothing, you're lucky.
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- because you wrote this above... you're good - and this is result of TRAUMA. More these trauma to humanity.
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Hahaha jajajaja !!!
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- head traumas? Or to the ears, by loud sounds? Me too I've tinnitus, 8 kHz exactly, in both ears. And I've come to accept this, normally I don't pay much attention to this problem, which is pulsating or permanent (this changes in the day). Recently, after trauma at one ear, in this ear (it's sent by the brain!) have continuous tinnitus of this same frequency, AND sometimes music with choirs, this same non stop, in the day and in the night too. But in reality it is not in the ears, but sent by the brain, so everything is in the brain! Hope for you...
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Hi, evening here (18:57 PM)... and it's dark outside
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360 Extreme Explorer Modified Version
msfntor replied to Humming Owl's topic in Browsers working on Older NT-Family OSes
So clean it now.. you'd be surprised- 2,340 replies
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360 Extreme Explorer Modified Version
msfntor replied to Humming Owl's topic in Browsers working on Older NT-Family OSes
With https://www.whatismybrowser.com/detect/what-is-my-user-agent/ - I've: DCBrowser: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/104.0.5144.141 Safari/537.36 360Chrome v13.5: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 5.1) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/86.0.4240.198 Safari/537.36 360Chrome v13 (M, and your): Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 5.1) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/86.0.4240.198 Safari/537.36 360Chrome v12: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 5.1) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/78.0.3904.108 Safari/537.36 - BUT Today, don't have more this nag window on https://www.deviantart.com/timzuneeverse - in DCBrowser nor 360Chrome v13.5, if st.deviantart.net is not allowed by me (so is natively forbidden partially).. in the new tab. - and have this nag window, if st.deviantart.net is allowed by me expressly.. in the new tab. This same comportment in 360Chrome v13 and v12. Remind me please, how to change native user agent, but not with extension? Thanks!- 2,340 replies
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10 minutes of fascinating deep-sea animals | Into The Deep
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“Be mindful. Be grateful. Be positive. Be true. Be kind.”
msfntor replied to XPerceniol's topic in Funny Farm
Ask your doctor to do a blood test for heavy metals, then to find a solution to ged rid of these. Good water is ozoned, not fluorided or chlorinated... And we too use a water filter for drinking water, by Brite -
“Be mindful. Be grateful. Be positive. Be true. Be kind.”
msfntor replied to XPerceniol's topic in Funny Farm
"to prolong a healthy life, from diet or exercise to anti-aging drugs..." Nicklas Brendborg: "Keeping your mouth clean is one of the few easy things you can do to extend your life" 11/12/2022, 12:09:02 PM The Danish biologist has published a book in which he collects the latest advances to prolong a healthy life, from diet or exercise to anti-aging drugs... Here: https://newsrnd.com/news/2022-11-12-nicklas-brendborg--"keeping-your-mouth-clean-is-one-of-the-few-easy-things-you-can-do-to-extend-your-life".ByMDA0lTBo.html -
This stunningly beautiful jelly was seen during Dive 4 of the 2016 Deepwater Exploration of the Marianas expedition on April 24, 2016, while exploring the informally named "Enigma Seamount" at a depth of ~3,700 meters. Scientists identified this hydromedusa as belonging to the genus Crossota. Note the two sets of tentacles — short and long. At the beginning of the video, you'll see that the long tentacles are even and extended outward and the bell is motionless. This suggests an ambush predation mode. Within the bell, the radial canals in red are connecting points for what looks like the gonads in bright yellow.
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360 Extreme Explorer Modified Version
msfntor replied to Humming Owl's topic in Browsers working on Older NT-Family OSes
WHY oh why... Why I've "We don't support your current browser version. Please upgrade your browser, it includes important security updates." nag screen/window at the top of this link: https://www.deviantart.com/timzuneeverse - but only in DCBrowser AND Extreme 360Chrome v13.5, please??? Extreme 360Chrome v13 AND v12 doesn't have this window...- 2,340 replies
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“Be mindful. Be grateful. Be positive. Be true. Be kind.”
msfntor replied to XPerceniol's topic in Funny Farm
Thank you very much! But why trying? Why it's hard? - You're positive, so all is OK.! -
“Be mindful. Be grateful. Be positive. Be true. Be kind.”
msfntor replied to XPerceniol's topic in Funny Farm
I prefer METEOBLUE: https://www.meteoblue.com/en/ -
“Be mindful. Be grateful. Be positive. Be true. Be kind.”
msfntor replied to XPerceniol's topic in Funny Farm
@XPerceniol; perhaps you frequently bathe in chlorinated water ??? I've found some thoughts for you on the web: Lesley Maxwell 9 DAYS AGO Symptoms of heavy metal toxicity: Tremors – Involuntary shaking of fingers or muscles. Headaches. Infertility for men or women. Mental “fogginess” feeling confused. Anxiety and depression. Deteriorating eye health. Memory problems. Poor kidney function. Intestinal and digestive problems. Tingling sensations and weakness in the hands, feet, and/or around the mouth. Poor immune function – recurrent infections or having an autoimmune disease." ..and another post: Lesley Maxwell 9 DAYS AGO "There are reports of heavy metal detox helping with various injuries, especially neurological. EDTA cream for example. Hope this will help somebody." Here: https://www.medscape.com/sites/public/covid-19/vaccine-insights/how-concerned-are-you-about-vaccine-related-adverse-events (allow viafoura.net in your uBlock!) Then these links (many more are on the web): 10 Signs You Have Heavy Metal Toxicity (And How to Detox): https://www.powerofpositivity.com/10-warning-signs-of-heavy-metal-toxicity-and-how-to-detox/ Here Are 10 Symptoms of Heavy Metal Toxicity “Heavy metal toxicity is more common than you think. The symptoms of heavy metal exposure range from headaches to constant fatigue. Depending on your level of exposure, you might suffer from serious diseases.” – Dr. Jay Davidson 1. Brain fog, which means having trouble focusing on things you were previously good at or having a poor memory. 2. Digestive problems such as IBS and diarrhea, heartburn and indigestion, as well as stomach acids. 3. Fatigue – both acute and chronic – that contributes to the aforementioned “brain fog.” 4. Chronic mental health problems. Those can include (but are not limited to) depression, anxiety, and bipolar disorder. 5. Migraines or headaches, both acute and chronic. This is normally one of the first symptoms people start to associate with heavy metal poisoning. 6. Nausea and stomach cramps, often ignored because they’re attributed to something else, like food poisoning or a painful menstrual cycle with women. 7. A blurry vision, or an inability to see as well as you had been before, either at a close or at a faraway distance. 8. Numbness, tingling, and paralysis in your arms and legs. Those are known as nervous system disorders. 9. A general feeling of upset and tiredness, an unwillingness to do anything the way you did before. 10. A difficulty breathing normally or choking – this is a serious symptom that needs to be taken care of as soon as possible. All of these sound scary but you can still stay positive by considering what you can do to detox your body from the effects of heavy metals. Scientists suggest making a few key changes to your lifestyle to throw away all offending chemicals: here are a few things you can consider incorporating into your day. ... ... ..and: Can heavy metal toxicity lead to mental health problems like depression or anxiety? By Margaret Jasinska, Naturopath There is quite a bit of research to confirm that heavy metal toxicity can lead to mental health problems like depression or anxiety. This topic was highlighted by an article in the Courier Mail titled “Is there something in the water destroying Australia’s swimmers?” You can read the entire article here. Recent addiction problems among former Australian swimmers has prompted a female former professional swimmer (who wants to remain anonymous) to reveal her long term struggle with depression. She claims her depression was largely caused by copper toxicity, through overexposure to chlorine. ... ... Heavy metal toxicity is a common problem and something you may not have thought could affect your mental health. Here: https://www.cabothealth.com.au/heavy-metal-toxicity-can-lead-mental-health-problems-like-depression-anxiety/ -
Laughs 4 All @Laughs_4_All If you need a smile... Brody loves to spread joy… Buitengebieden @buitengebieden Looking for that blue sock.. We all have that friend when you try to take a picture..