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Internet

Synchronicity

I was reading in the feed reader about the new Thunderbird update for the first time, and which window wants attention right at that moment?

TB 2.0.0.14

Of course the update notification window. Just coincidence? ;)

Depends… Of course there are no “mysterious vibes” or anything like that, but just the fact that the update was new and it wasn’t long after I had switched on the PC and started the daily routine of reading mail and feeds – so rather even a certain causal relation and nothing that’d be useful for my mystic/pseudoscience satire. :P

» Wikipedia: Synchronicity

Browser statistics and more (2)

Exactly 6 months ago, I posted a few statistics about my visitors – time for an update…

Numbers are again based on the data from blogcounter.de from late August 2007 until now (which of course contains the data I posted in October, but that was less than 8 percent); my own visits were not counted.

Browsers:

The Internet Explorer is still dominating, there was only a slight decrease from combined 57.5% to 55.5%; IE 7 can’t recompense for IE 6’s decrease (from 28.7% to 23.2% total or 22.8% from Nov to Apr):

Browsers up to 2008/04

Operating systems:

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Drawing a _blank

GreenSmilie This is a post for a German blog carnival about whether to have external links open in a new tab/window – by giving them the attribute target="_blank" – or not.

Actually, I’m quite surprised how many like this attribute – I, on the other hand, don’t like to be patronized that way at all. If I want to open a link in a new window or tab, I can do that as desired with Shift+left-click and middle click (or Ctrl+left-click), respectively, or via the right-click context menu – these options seem to be way too little known. We should start a Middle Click Awareness Week…

On notebooks (with touchpad) you then need either the right click, spread your fingers or use the other hand.

If the website/blog owner, on the other hand, is using the target="_blank" attribute, I don’t have an easy way to open the link in the same window/tab, which I actually do want to do sometimes (yes, not with each and avery click you desperately want to stay on the original page, for at some point, you actually have seen enough for this visit ;) ) – so I got an unneeded tab open that I have to close manually.

On notebooks (with touchpad) you then have to cumbersomely move to the close button of the tab or window (or use a key combination).

NO BLANKS! By the way, especially for smaller mobile surfing devices (which have lower resources) this may become more of a convenience and performance problem; this certainly applied to the “Nokia 770 Internet Tablet” I had been using for some time.

So the only argument in favor of _blank seems to me the lack of knowledge of some web surfers regarding the ways to operate their browsers. And some particular arguments of _blank supporters – some of which seem to want it for all links – I can’t follow at all (no offence meant): Lia, for instance, writes in this comment (in German; my translation:):

I’m always annoyed when I have to click an image to enlarge it and then have to click the Back button!

:confused: To what extent is it easier and more comfortable to close a window or tab than to click the Back button? By the way, many mice with more than 3 buttons have the Back funtion by default on the 4th button!

And Prinzzess seems to prefer to type a former URL again and fret about that over using the Back button, which offers a longer history on all reasonably useful browsers without mass click orgies. Or over taking control by herself with middle click & co. in the first place…


Regarding the standards conformity which is against this attribute, well, this isn’t that important to me, the visitor comes first (and this target attribute doesn’t cause display problems, anyway).


So my “campaign slogan”:

:arrow: Against patronizing, against target="_blank"! :mrgreen:

 


Photo © absolut – Fotolia.com

Super high-quality spam distribution

“Because” of that, they send Russian spam distribution offers to German mail addresses:

здравствуй Предоставляем супер качественные Эл. Почтовую рассылку

Without punctuation marks (except for the abbreviation); Altavista and Google translate that to (not literally) something like “How do you do we offer super (high-) quality e-mail distribution”.

Bad thing is, there is still “enough” spam floating around, regardless of any such errors in form and content.
:motz:

Why can’t all spam coming from Russia be as pretty as Anghela, Nadezhda & co??

Links of the Week (2008/16)

Kurz und bündig:

And a comic by xkcd:

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