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All Comments

I have a pdf of my catalog on my homepage. How do I make it flip pages like Macys catalog on there website?
I want it to flip pages on the website itself instead of my pdf that you have to open. If there was a way to do this for a amateur website designer, any help would be nice. Especially if it still has to be in a pdf format.
Flash is the best way to do what you are talking about.

You could also try:
blogs.adobe.com/pdfdevjunkie/2007…
How much privacy are Americans willing to give up?
Print E-mail story Most e-mailed Change text size

Is Google's data grinder dangerous?
It wants to know more about us than we know ourselves.
By Andrew Keen, ANDREW KEEN is the author of "The Cult of the Amateur." ak@aftertv.com.
July 12, 2007


WHAT DOES Google want? Having successfully become our personal librarian, Google now wants to be our personal oracle. It wants to learn all about us, know us better than we know ourselves, to transform itself from a search engine into a psychoanalyst's couch or a priest's confessional.

Google's search engine is the best place to learn what Google wants. Type "Eric Schmidt London May 22" into Google, and you can read about a May interview the Google chief executive gave to journalists in London.

Here is how he described what he hoped the search engine would look like in five years: "The goal is to enable Google users to be able to ask the question such as 'What shall I do tomorrow?' And 'What job shall I take?' "

Schmidt's goal is not inconsiderable: By 2012, he wants Google to be able to tell all of us what we want. This technology, what Google co-founder Larry Page calls the "perfect search engine," might not only replace our shrinks but also all those marketing professionals whose livelihoods are based on predicting — or guessing — consumer desires.

Schmidt acknowledges that Google is still far from this goal. As he told the London journalists: "We cannot even answer the most basic questions because we don't know enough about you. That is the most important aspect of Google's expansion."

So where is Google expanding? How is it planning to know more about us? Many — if not most — users don't read the user agreement and thus aren't aware that Google already stores every query we type in.

The next stage is a personalized Web service called iGoogle. Schmidt, who perhaps not coincidentally sits on the board of Apple, regards its success as the key to knowing us better than we know ourselves.

iGoogle is growing into a tightly-knit suite of services — personalized homepage, search engine, blog, e-mail system, mini-program gadgets, Web-browsing history, etc. — that together will create the world's most intimate information database. On iGoogle, we all get to aggregate our lives, consciously or not, so artificially intelligent software can sort out our desires. It will piece together our recent blog posts, where we've been online, our e-commerce history and cultural interests. It will amass so much information about each of us that eventually it will be able to logically determine what we want to do tomorrow and what job we want.

The real question, of course, is whether what Google wants is what we want too. Do we really want Google digesting so much intimate data about us? Could iGoogle actually be a remix of "1984's" Room 101 — that Orwellian dystopia in which our most secret desires and most repressed fears are revealed?

Any comparison with 20th century, top-down totalitarianism is, perhaps, a little fanciful. After all, nobody can force us to use iGoogle. And — in contrast to Yahoo and Microsoft (which have no limits on how long they hang on to our personal data) — Google has committed to retaining data for only 18 months.

Still, if iGoogle turns out to be half as wise about each of us as Schmidt predicts, then this artificial intelligence will challenge traditional privacy rights as well as provide us with an excuse to deny responsibility for our own actions. What happens, for example, when the government demands access to our iGoogle records? And will we be able to sue iGoogle if it advises us to make an unwise career decision?

Schmidt, I suspect, would like us to imagine Google as a public service, thereby affirming the company's "do no evil" credo. But Google is not our friend. Schmidt's iGoogle vision of the future is not altruistic, and his company is not a nonprofit group dedicated to the realization of human self-understanding.

Worth more than $150 billion on the public market, Google is by far the dominant Internet advertising outlet — according to Nielsen ratings, it reaches about 70% of the global Internet audience. Just in the first quarter of 2007, Google's revenue from its online properties was up 76% from the previous year. Personal data are Google's most valuable currency, its crown jewels. The more Google knows our desires, the more targeted advertising it can serve up to us and the more revenue it can extract from these advertisers.

What does Google really want? Google wants to dominate. Its proposed $3.1-billion acquisition of DoubleClick threatens to make the company utterly dominant in the online advertising business. The $1.65-billion acquisition of YouTube last year made it by far the dominant player in the online video market. And, with a personalized service like iGoogle, the company is seeking to become the algorithmic monopolist of our online behavior.

So when Eric Schmidt says Google wants to know us better than we know ourselves, he is talking to his shareholders rather than us. As a Silicon Valley old-timer, trust me on this one. I know Google better than it knows itself.
People's personal data should be copy righted and user of that data (either personalized or categorically) should pay a fee negotiated between the data generator and the user.

For example, integrating a credit card spending event to a database may require the user to credit a penny to the credit card user, and integrating a larger spending such as a car may require the user to credit, let say, $20 to the car buyer's account.
Anastasia Romanov News Story?
Recently there was an article published on the Yahoo! homepage about a possible discovery of her body. The article stated that her remains were found by an "amateur."

I want to reread the article, but I can't find it anywhere. Can anyone point me in the right direction? A link would be great. Thanks!
The story was interesting so i saved the link for myself..but here it is

cosmos.bcst.yahoo.com/ver/250.1/p…
Surely 71 year old Frank Corti is the story of the week!?
www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/new…

I boxed as an amateur teen for about 4 years and was always told that the last thing you lose is your punching power, 71 year old Frank Corti has proved that theory right! Hopefully the little sh*t will think twice about robbing oaps again. What a hero!
Your thoughts?
Well you know violence is never the answer..!!













But it did the trick this time..heh!
Best amateur-turning-pro video camera?
I'm a teacher looking to take videos of my test prep classes to stream online, and perhaps convert to DVD later on.

I would like to purchase a video camera with broadcast quality (or near) image and sound, but in an affordable price range (ideally around $1000, but I'd go up to $2000). My questions:

1. Because I'm shooting only indoors, with very little camera movement, can I get away with a less expensive model that still has great picture quality? Any recommendations for a good amateur-turning-pro model?

2. Is HD what gives a video camera that TV-like quality? Or can I get the same quality pic with a non-HD camera? I've tried some nice Canon HD cams, and was a bit surprised at how much they brought out the freckles on my skin -- I want TV quality, but would like to avoid clearer-than-life views of any blemishes I may have.

3. As I will be uploading these to my homepage, will HD vids have extremely large file sizes that I should avoid in favor of a non-HD camera? Again, I want high quality picture, but I want to be able to affordable upload my videos without paying an arm and a leg for hosting.

Thanks!
For a camera you need to decide what format you want to use.
1 Obviously if you are using a tripod then there will be little/no movement, lighting is very important, removing reflective surfaces, and the like.

2 if you want quality then you are going to have to pay for it, its that simple, there is a world of difference between standard def and hd, basically there is twice as much information in a hd frame then std def, just watch a hd television and compare it with a normal one.
as for your freckles and blemishes, they are going to show as you are using a higher quality camera, that's why film and tv companies use make up.

3 All video has a large file size, but you have to balance the two, file size and quality. you are obviously not going to upload a 1 gb video mpg, avi file, to your website instead you will convert it to another format, maybe flash, as its probably one of the most compatible formats. by reducing the frame rate and resolution, you can reduce the file sizes to something more reasonable, with out reducing the quality too much, but all that depends on the subject. lots of movement in the video will increase the file size as there is more information to process, but little movement will reduce the file size less information to process. if you are not using flash but another format the the system is the same. there are sites around the allow free hosting of video, maybe not alot but using a few of them you can got quite a bit of video onto the net.

as for cameras you need to have a look around and find something that suits the needs you have. at that budget you are unlikely to get a new pro camera but a high end consumer one. there is a difference. maybe a second hand XL1 or XL2 may fit the bill, still a high quality camera. used by many pros and semi pros, for all sorts of locations. its a lot of camera for a good price, but again we are going back to formats and you dont say what type you want. MIni-dv, HDD or media card, last two need a high end computer to edit the video, as the data is highly compressed.

just some thoughts for you


Good luck

RR
Can someone please explain me stylesheet in html?
i had been making me site like imdb .....its completely amateur using basics of html images,hyperlink,table,colors and all so i had a homepage and had lots of sites linking to it i mean those sites can be accessed by this homepage.so i found out about this stylesheet ....i mean i read it helps in changing many sites with one go.but i cant understand how to use it....i mean if i wanted to change the colors and title heading of all the pages i have made at one go how do i do it....i guess i am talking about External style sheets.pleaSE HELP ME OUT
thanks
A stylesheet contains CSS rules that alter behaviors of elements defined within the HTML documents. Let's say I had 400 pages in my website and all of them had a header with a div id called "foobar".
Now, let''s say I wanted to change this header color to green so I create a stylesheet and attach this stylesheet (using the <link/> tag) to the top of all the 400 pages. Now all of the headers on the 400 pages are green. But let's say I don't want green. I want blue. Now instead of going through 400 pages to change the color, all I have to do is change the stylesheet and it will affect all 400 pages.
Apache virtuAL host / HTTP REFERER?
I'm an amateur into the world of PHP, Apache, and mySQL.
I've installed WAMP Server on my PC. I was browsing a particular site shoppersclub<dot>com and accidentaly would have pressed a key...

Now when i try to open shoppersclub<dot>com, I see localhost (i.e. WAMP Server default homepage)

phpinfo() says: (notice shoppersclub)

Variable Value
HTTP_HOST shoppersclub.com
HTTP_USER_AGENT Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.0; en-US; rv:1.9.1.3) Gecko/20090824 Firefox/3.5.3
HTTP_ACCEPT text/html,application/xhtml+xml,applica…
HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE en-us,en;q=0.5
HTTP_ACCEPT_ENCODING gzip,deflate
HTTP_ACCEPT_CHARSET ISO-8859-1,utf-8;q=0.7,*;q=0.7
HTTP_KEEP_ALIVE 300
HTTP_CONNECTION keep-alive
HTTP_REFERER shoppersclub.com/
PATH C:\Windows\system32;C:\Windows;C:\Windo… Files\Microsoft SQL Server\90\Tools\binn\
SystemRoot C:\Windows
COMSPEC C:\Windows\system32\cmd.exe
PATHEXT .COM;.EXE;.BAT;.CMD;.VBS;.VBE;.JS;.JSE;…
WINDIR C:\Windows
SERVER_SIGNATURE no value
SERVER_SOFTWARE Apache/2.2.11 (Win32) PHP/5.2.9-1
SERVER_NAME shoppersclub.com
SERVER_ADDR 127.0.0.1
SERVER_PORT 80
REMOTE_ADDR 127.0.0.1
DOCUMENT_ROOT D:/wamp/www/
SERVER_ADMIN admin@localhost
SCRIPT_FILENAME D:/wamp/www/index.php
REMOTE_PORT 57471
GATEWAY_INTERFACE CGI/1.1
SERVER_PROTOCOL HTTP/1.1
REQUEST_METHOD GET
QUERY_STRING phpinfo=1
REQUEST_URI /?phpinfo=1
SCRIPT_NAME /index.php

How do i remove this setting that on navigating to shoppersclub<dot>com, I see localhost... I wanna see actual homepage of shoppersclub...

Please help...

Thanks :)
Check your hosts file in C:\WINDOWS\system32\drivers\etc

open the hosts file in notepad and look for the website you are being redirected to and delet the line along with 127.0.0.1

Before
127.0.0.1 localhost
127.0.0.1 shoppersclub<dot>com


After
127.0.0.1 localhost

Failing that.
go into your apache conf file (Do Not know where it is in wamp, you will have to look) and change the

SERVER_NAME shoppersclub.com
to
SERVER_NAME localhost

also if it is in there check the HTTP_REFERER and change that to localhost too.
Who's your daddy? Answer's at the drugstore (What Do you Think?? About That. )?
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Who's your daddy? Answer's at the drugstore
Pharmacy chain markets DNA paternity tests in 30 states nationwide

Pierre-philippe Marcou / AFP - Getty Images file
New at-home DNA paternity tests require samples of cells swabbed from the cheeks of the guy, the alleged father and, ideally, the mother.
View related photos

Video

Who's your daddy? DIY paternity test debuts
March 27: A new type of at-home medical test can reveal a guy’s paternity. But is it a good idea? NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports.
Today show


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By JoNel Aleccia
Health writer
MSNBC
updated 8:36 a.m. ET, Thurs., March. 27, 2008


JoNel Aleccia
Health writer

--------…

• E-mail


After two decades, Sean Reid of Surrey, British Columbia, discovered that he had a son. Fred Turley of Des Plaines, Ill., learned he didn’t have a daughter. And Wendy Lieb of Lewis Center, Ohio, made certain she wasn’t going to be a grandmother quite yet.

In all three situations, crucial genetic information altered the lives of the people involved. And in each case, it came not from a doctor or other medical source, but from a $29.99 kit on a drugstore shelf.

Reid, Turley and Lieb are among more than 800 customers who responded to the first wave of marketing for do-it-yourself DNA paternity tests sold as Identigene by Sorenson Genomics of Salt Lake City.

Story continues below ↓
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Sales in three western states — Washington, Oregon and California — were so brisk last fall that Rite Aid Corp. expanded the product this week to some 4,300 stores in 30 states across the country.

“The running joke is that we’re the Maury Povich family,” said Reid, 37, who confirmed years of speculation about a former girlfriend’s son with a kit purchased at a Bellingham, Wash., store. “But why not do it privately? We did this as discreetly, as efficiently and as cost-effectively as possible.”

For users like Reid, the tests provide easier answers to one of life’s crucial questions — Who’s your daddy? — said Douglas Fogg, chief operating officer of Identigene.

“Everyone is purchasing the tests because they’re curious,” said Fogg, who expects to sell at least 52,000 tests this year. “They’re looking to establish questions about their own guy or their own paternity.”

But for genetics experts, drugstore marketing of DNA testing raises questions of accuracy and ethics.

“From our perspective, direct-to-consumer genetic tests raise all the same issues for lax government oversight, potentially misleading or false advertising and the potential for making profound medical decisions on the basis of poorly interpreted or understood results,” said Rick Borchelt, a spokesman for the Genetics and Public Policy Center at Johns Hopkins University.

At the very least, the kits have the potential to complicate the lives of the people who use them, legal experts cautioned.

“We all need to take a step back and realize that this is different than many tests that you take,” said R. Alta Charo, a professor of law and bioethics at the University of Wisconsin at Madison. “This is a life-changing moment.”

DNA tests join other diagnostic tools
The paternity kits have taken their place on store shelves next to other diagnostic tests that don’t rely on DNA, including those for pregnancy, HIV and blood sugar, said Michael S. Watson, executive director of the American College of Medical Genetics.

Unlike genetic tests for health conditions, tests that use DNA to determine paternity are fairly simple to provide and fairly easy to interpret, said Watson. They're subject to limited oversight, however, with no review required by the Food and Drug Administration and no certification required under the federal Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments, or CLIA.

The Identigene kit includes swabs for collecting cell samples from the inside of the cheeks of the guy and the alleged father. Collection of the mother’s cells is optional, but strongly recommended to strengthen the results. The swabs are packaged and mailed to the Sorenson laboratory in Salt Lake City where they’re analyzed.


Cast your vote
Are at-home DNA paternity tests a good idea?


The Sorenson lab is accredited by the AABB, the agency formerly known as the American Association of Blood Banks.

Results are reported online, by phone or by mail in three to five business days. They come back as a probability figure that verifies paternity with 98 percent to 99 percent accuracy, Watson said.

Total cost is about $150, including the price of the kit and a $119 laboratory processing fee. For another $200, users can purchase validated tests that meet legal requirements for determining paternity, Fogg said.

Court use questionable
But Susan Crockin, a lawyer who specializes in reproductive technology, said consumers shouldn’t count on the tests standing up in court.

Video

Who's your daddy? DIY paternity test debuts
March 27: A new type of at-home medical test can reveal a guy’s paternity. But is it a good idea? NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports.
Today show


“The jury’s still very much out on these tests in terms of reliability and establishing a chain of custody,” said Crockin, a consultant for the Johns Hopkins public policy center.

Most of the users who have been buying the kits — which have gone on sale for as low as $17.99 — don’t plan to use the results to resolve legal issues, Fogg acknowledged. Instead, most are looking to answer social questions. And that's where the complexity comes in.

Because the cell samples are taken in private, there’s the potential for fraud and deception, noted Charo, the ethics expert.

“I can imagine rather peculiar circumstances in which somebody has a swab taken without their knowledge,” she said. “It raises questions about informed consent.”

Even when people do consent, the results can be unsettling. Watson estimates that between 5 percent and 10 percent of genetic tests he's conducted show a guy is not related to the presumed father.

“It could break up families,” Watson said. “Some will be broken because that was the goal. Others will be broken up and that wasn't the goal.”

But people who’ve used the at-home tests swear by the ease, the accuracy — and the results.

After 20 years, a mystery solved
For Reid, the paternity test opened the door to a new extended family. He’d always wondered whether the baby born to a former girlfriend was his, even though she insisted the guy was fathered by another man. When the girlfriend contacted Reid on Facebook last summer, the pictures she sent of her oldest son raised the question anew.

“My wife, said ‘Oh my, that’s you,’” said Reid, a nurse.

Internet research pointed Reid to the Identigene test, which was cheaper and more convenient than other options. With cooperation from his former girlfriend and her son, they all took the tests, with results that altered everyone’s lives.

“Our newest son has a family he never knew he had including grandparents, aunts, and three younger brothers who are all very excited to meet him,” Reid said.

For Fred Turley, 55, the DNA test confirmed what his companion had told him: the 4-year-old girl he helped care for was not his. The news was disappointing, but clear, he said.

“The bottom line is, I don’t have to live with the uncertainty about her being my daughter and wind up in a fight just to find out,” Turley said. “This won’t change how I feel about the girl. It will just remove what had become a major concern.”

For Wendy Lieb, 41, the DNA test restored her 20-year-old son’s future. He’d already quit college, taken a job and assumed the responsibilities of pending parenthood after a girl he had sex with at a party claimed she was pregnant with his guy.


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‘He just didn't look like my son at all.’
Lieb said she was proud of her son’s response, but perplexed after the baby, a boy, was born.

“He just didn’t look like my son at all,” Lieb said. “And we have fairly strong genes.”

A trip to the drugstore and 10 days later, the answer was clear: her son was not the father.

“I thought it would have required thousands of dollars and a trip to the doctor,” she said.

Lieb is relieved for her own guy, of course, but also for everyone involved. As difficult as the situation has been, she said, it will be easier for them to adjust now, rather than years later. The test may raise ethical questions, she said, but it also provides the peace of mind that comes with answers.

“I think it’s a lot more ethical for you to find out the truth,” she said.

www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23814032?GT1=43001
i was just telling my sister about the home D.N.A. she didn't believe they were being sold in stores. i think they are a great idea. now all those lil girls /women can stop making a fool of them selves on Maury because it looks so ignorant and disrespectful. and it's cheaper than going to a lab or the court system.
What do you think of Ron Artest's latest stunt?
Go to the Yahoo homepage and you can see the video of Trevor Ariza blocking Kobe's shot and losing his shoe, but as he goes to grab for it Public Enemy #1 Ron Artest, in a display of class so synonomous with Artest's name, grabs it first and tosses it into the stands. That's the kind of player the Lakers got with the tight lockdown D.

Personally, I can see Ron Artest going down in flames after one too many of his amateur and extremely unprofessional shenanigans. Ron Artest is a straight up clown, and just pulled a move I would have looked down on during recess basketball in the fifth grade. You're making millions a year, you're on a Championship contender, but most of all, this is the guy you were just traded for straight up. Wouldn't you want to get the best of him on the court, not with some schoolyard mickey mouse bullshit?

Artest, grow the hell up. Trevor Ariza is a better ball player than you are, and you just have to come to grips with that.
Artest didn't used to act like that in Houston. He was on his best behavior here, but since he's hanging with the Lakers they've made him back into a hood rat. Everyone knows they play dirty. I used to respect him, but now he can go jump in a ditch. lol.

How 'bout them Rockets, Lakers fans. lol. Lakers ain't doing so hot now.

#1 Rockets Fan
Is Yahoo! being irresponsible putting blogs on the front page?
Yahoo is a major website. I have had my homepage set to Yahoo since I first got the internet. But pseudo-journalism is ubiquitous on the web and I am disappointed that Yahoo chooses to post these blogs on the front page in the highlights section. Reading these headlines, one might assume that these are columns or articles from respected journalists. Now wonder so much ignorance and false information is spread around these days like contagion. I feel Yahoo has a responsibility to its readers to clearly separate and differentiate the Blogs from the valid Journalism sites/entries. You know what a blog is most times, someone "hears" something (or reads something form another blog) and decides to weigh in with their amateur or unresearched opinion. often on significant matters. Millions tune in these websites and digest this gossip, later excreting it at their workplaces and social settings as if it is gospel. Tsk Tsk Tsk on Yahoo! What can be done?
Yahoo has been going down the tubes ever since the whole Jerry Yang/Microsoft debacle.

They are being irresponsible by putting blogs on the front page! It is almost as bad as SFgate!

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