Ubuntu on the server, the shop box and the wife's laptop. Gentoo on my office machine (only slightly less painful than the self-flagellation of the pre-internet days) :D:mad:
Printable View
Everlast management - please "do the right thing" and remove these extremely annoying pop-ups from your web site, at least on your forum pages, rather than forcing everyone to have to reconfigure their web browsers to block them.
Though I also dislike the bar and have blocked it, I understand why it is there. Social Media is huge in this current time for business growth. I personally do not hardly touch a social media site but the impact these have now days has gone un-real in my mind. At work, we have recently developed into our software ways which we may block access to specific features of big social media sites network wide. Social Media has become a huge marketing tool.
What I am saying is that by recommending NoScript, you may have unwittingly broken other websites for the folks that use it. Javascript is everywhere. I can't send an email or book a flight with out it. Not everyone that installs this is going to understand that NoScript is "helping" them by preventing them from paying bills or keeping the calendar widget from popping up. Some sites I could only fix by globally disabling NoScript, which completely defeats the purpose.
I second jakeru here. Do the right thing, and turn it off.
NoScript is a great tool to monitor what scripts run from sites in your browser. Not a bad thing to know. Simple to enable sites you frequent.
Some reading is required to use it like everything. I do not bank over the internet myself. I order things and deal with the problems that causes, took years before I would even do that.
Agreed, I've seen some sites that try to run scripts from 15-20 different domains, it's getting ridiculous.
Usually when something doesn't work (like embedded videos or scribd type stuff) you can guess which ones to grant temporary permissions to for it to work.
On a side note, does anybody know what the 'cdn' I keep seeing in domain names stands for? (i.e. googlecdn.com, facebookcdn.com etc.)
"Content distribution network" or "content delivery network". (I had to look it up.) Some info, here:
http://webmuch.com/how-why-you-should-use-google-cdn/
It appears to be a strategy for bandwidth-intensive content providers to speed delivery, by sending data from the server nearest to the user, for instance.
That banner is gone, but now pictures don't come up when I hover on them. Anybody else have this problem?
It was removed a bit ago.
Thanks for doing the right thing. Everlast is one of the only companies that listen to their costomers.