MakeUseOf.com: “Cool Websites and Tools [January 5th]” plus 8 more |
- Cool Websites and Tools [January 5th]
- Collabtive – A Free Open Source Project Management Software
- The Top 5 Google Alternatives and Why You Should Use Them
- 4 Ways To Make Use Of The Wordpress RSS Feed Footer Plugin
- Technology Explained : What Is The Definition Of A Firewall?
- Three Very Different Ways To Find Inspiring Quotations
- Size & Zoom Your Windows Better With SizeWell [Mac]
- The 3 Best Free Classical Music Download Sites
- Fennec – The Firefox Solution for Windows Mobile
Cool Websites and Tools [January 5th] Posted: 05 Jan 2010 07:31 PM PST Check out some of the latest MakeUseOf discoveries. All listed websites are FREE (or come with a decent free account option). No trials or buy-to-use craplets. For more cool websites and web app reviews subscribe to MakeUseOf Directory.
These are just half of the websites that we discovered in the last couple of days. If you want us to send you daily round-ups of all cool websites we come across, leave your email here. Or follow us via RSS feed. Did you like the post? Please do share your thoughts in the comments section! Related posts | |||||||||||||||||||||
Collabtive – A Free Open Source Project Management Software Posted: 05 Jan 2010 05:31 PM PST Managing projects can be tricky, time-consuming and confusing. It’s easy to lose one’s way when faced by a myriad of tasks, each with its own deadline. Project management requires a manager to be alert at all times. It is, in essence, the art and science of managing everything that is related to a project (be it tasks, team members, deadlines, etc.). When all aspects of a project mesh together without causing any disruptions, we have what we call a successful project. Managing projects is not an easy task. In fact, the need to use project management software is increasing by the day. The need to structure and organise various projects/processes is become more and more dire. Offline and standalone solutions are just not good enough anymore. However, not everyone (or for that matter, every company) has the budget required to go for Microsoft Project or similar management solutions. And this is where Collabtive steps in. Collabtive is open source project management software. It is a PHP based (which means it can be run on almost any computer, which has a browser capable of understanding PHP) project management system. Collabtive allows you to manage projects by setting up different tasks and assigning them to different users. The progress of these tasks can then be tracked using the easy interface of the application. The administrator can add multiple users to the application and each user can access the interface through his/her browser. There’s practically no limit to the number of users that can work simultaneously on Collabtive. Although it doesn’t provide advanced features such as Gantt charts, it does provide for a very simple and efficient mechanism to keep track of your projects.
Once you login with your credentials, you are greeted by what the Collabtive team call your Desktop. The Desktop shows you a list of all current projects, a tasklist, as well as a calendar showing your tasks and milestones. Clicking on a project name takes you to the project page. This page is also called the Project Dashboard. The Project Dashboard consists of a calendar specific to a particular project. It also consists of a Timetracker, using which you can track the amount of time that you have spent working on the project. There is also an Activity Log, which contains a step-by-step listing of all the activities pertaining to the project. This page also contains a number of icons at the top, which allow you to visit your Milestones page, review your Tasklists, access the Messaging system, as well as access the file repository for a particular project. There is also a User tab, which shows a list of all the users currently using the Collabtive system for a project. The tasklist allows you to create tasks, which may be critical to the project. Each task can have an associated due-date and can be assigned to one or multiple users. These tasks, once completed, can simply be “finished” by clicking on the tick-mark next to them. The Milestones can be looked upon as distinct phases in the project timeline. Each milestone may have a number of tasks associated with it. As and when tasks are finished, a status bar for the project under consideration keeps increasing on your Desktop. The right hand side pane across all pages provides a search bar, a simple text-based calendar, and a list of users who are currently online. The search bar searches across tasks, milestones, as well as entire projects. Also, each user can fill out his/her profile page so that different team members have ways and means to contact one another. All in all, Collabtive provides for a very elegant project management system. It may not be as power-packed as its commercial counterparts, but it provides more than a decent feature set to keep track of all the tasks and milestones associated to your project. Collabtive can be used in a number of scenarios. It can be used to track curriculum progress in schools. It may also be used by manufacturers to track the status of various orders. For students, it can be an ultimate collaboration platform, where they would be able to share notes, homework, even entire assignments and research. And last, it can be used as a simple calendaring application. If you are a a project manager (and hate the commercial Silicon Valley giants, just like yours truly), making the switch to Collabtive should top your list of things to do. Related posts | |||||||||||||||||||||
The Top 5 Google Alternatives and Why You Should Use Them Posted: 05 Jan 2010 03:30 PM PST Google has been the leading search engine for as long as I can remember. Launched as a small beta start up in 1996 at the domain google.stanford.edu using inexpensive hardware, you wouldn’t think then that it would ever become the success it is today with so few useful Google alternatives available. In fact, in 1998 when it first went live on the official Google.com domain, the beta was publically labeled by its creators as a “might-work-some-of-the-time-prototype”. While the mechanics of it have improved dramatically since then, it still relies on the number of backlinks to theorise how important a webpage is. A lot of us have grown sick of what could be called an outdated way to display results and maybe even resent their market dominance. If you want to shed that mentality of instantly “Googling it” then you’ve got to take the leap, here are five excellent Google alternatives – each one has their own specific goals and a different way of doing things; and no, they’re not Bing, Yahoo! or Wolfram Alpha. FactBitesNormally, when you search for something on Google, or any of the big search engines for that matter you’re returned results based on the popularity of the page. That’s because search engines link relevance with popularity. FactBites however draws on the web’s vast amount of encyclopedias and information websites such as Wikipedia and more specialised ones to provide you with factual information. This search engine is great for things such as school work and research for articles or other such works. To put it bluntly, it cuts off all the excess fat that you don’t need and gives you the best of the best. For example, in the search results above I have searched for ‘American Civil War’ and the results returned are purely factual including many educational websites, Wikipedia and historical sources. The same search on Google returned some educational websites though poorly organised amongst various online stores and enthusiast websites which would not be very useful for those in search of facts. QuinturaThis search engine I liked a lot because it redefines how search results should be displayed. Instead of just showing you a list descending in order of relevance, they have this accompanied by a tag cloud to the left of the screen. This allows you to quickly display alternative results by just hovering your mouse over them. This tag cloud can also be shared or embedded using the appropriate buttons. Quinturq uses the same method to display results for web, images and videos. Clusty SearchEver been doing research for a topic or just searching for stuff in general and get pretty annoyed at how disorganised the results can be? A more organized Google alternative is in order. Often, when I’m looking for sources for an article I have to perform multiple refined searches to get the kind of results Clusty Search could get in one – and organize them into their respective categories too. Say you’re looking for articles and material relating to Nintendo. Instead of doing five or six different searches, just search for Nintendo and Clusty will gather them into their respective groups while still displaying traditional style results as you can see in the screenshot above. Results can be clustered into different ways depending on what you’re searching for. Examples include sources, type of material (blogs, reviews, news etc..) and size, quality and so on for images and videos. Dog PileSurprisingly, over 85% of everyday searches return different results when you use different search engines such as Google, Yahoo, Bing and Ask. DogPile performs multiple searches for your term and then aggregates those results into one quality set of results. Their mission is to have a simple yet effective search engine to give universal results instead of what one engine thinks may be best suited for you. They have all the standard search functions too for filtering your results and search categories such as Image, video, Web etc, as well as the Yellow and White Pages! CuilThe homepage of Cuil is minimalistic, mostly black with your run-of-the-mill search box in the middle. You can also select what language you want your results in. They index websites in English, French, Turkish, Italian, Polish and much more. The way they display search results is most intriguing. Firstly, you have your traditional results as per usual. In the right sidebar, depending on what you have searched you could have a map, historical timeline, streaming results, category tags and other specific features relating to your search. For example, I searched for NASA and in the right sidebar there was tag clouds for ‘Space Agencies’, ‘Space Centres’, ‘NASA Problems’ as well as a timeline and resources. They also have tabs along the top which refine where your results come from. Examples seen in the screenshot are NASA TV and NASA Ames. Thumbnails and favicons are also displayed beside the search results for better presentation and to help you decide if it’s the one for you. So there you go. Five great Google alternative search engines enabling you to break free from Google and other traditional search engines in style. Do you have any suggestions for other alternative search engines? What do you think of the ones profiled? Did you like the post? Please do share your thoughts in the comments section! 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4 Ways To Make Use Of The Wordpress RSS Feed Footer Plugin Posted: 05 Jan 2010 01:31 PM PST As a blogger, and an avid user of the Wordpress blogging platform, I enjoy trying out new plugins. In fact, that is one of the advantages of hosting your own blog using Wordpress: the extensibility! There are so many plugins out there that help to extend the usability of Wordpress that it has actually dipped its toe into the CMS (content management system) category meaning there are many “websites” actually being run by the Wordpress software. In this article I would like to introduce you to a specific wordpress content rss feed plugin that does NOT make it usable as a CMS but it aids greatly in the creation and promotion of a blog, what Wordpress was originally designed to do. Anyone familiar with the parts of a website OR a blog are familiar with the term “footer.” The footer is the part at the bottom of every page on a site or blog. The footer is a part of almost every blog.
This will show up at the bottom of every email message OR post in the feed reader if a reader has subscribed to your blog’s feed. It’s really easy to install and use and there are many ways you can put it to use. Let me share with you four such uses. 1. AdvertisementsMany bloggers would LOVE the opportunity to monetize their blog. If you love to blog, and you spend a lot of time doing it, why not try to make a few bucks off of it? If you have found a good either pay per click or affiliate program, the footer of your RSS feed could be the PERFECT place to put it! 2. Help Running A Blog ContestI like to run the occasional contest on my blog. A blog contest can be a great way to not only encourage more people to read and subscribe to your blog, but you can also use them to get to know your current readers a bit better. I haven’t done them too often in the past (maybe twice a year but I’m thinking about doing them a bit more often) but when I do I need a way to have people enter. I like to make it so that only subscribers can enter and to do so I need a way to see who is actually a subscriber. With this plugin, I can either advertise on my blog that I run contests only for subscribers and only mention the contests in the RSS footer, OR I can post the contest to the public and tip them off that there is a contest code entered in the footer of the posts sent via RSS (if you choose to do the latter, you need a way to let them enter the code into a comment without the whole world seeing it – check out this article showing a trick how to do this remembering that this plugin will save one of these steps). 3. Quick Reminders For SubscribersA quick note in the footer of the RSS feed is an easy way to remind subscribers of something. Say you want to let them know about a live video broadcast coming up, the footer of your RSS feed could be one of many other places to place a reminder. 4. Linking To Subscriber-Only ContentAs a blogger trying to gain as many subscribers as you possibly can, making some content only available to subscribers is one way to encourage it. For instance, you can create some sort of a giveaway like an exclusive ebook to give to only subscribers. Then set up a page on your site that does not show up in the blog’s navigation menu (using the Hide Pages Plugin to hide the page). Lastly, all you have to do is link to the page in your RSS footer. There you have it! What do YOU use your RSS footer for? Did you like the post? Please do share your thoughts in the comments section! New on Twitter ? Now you can follow MakeUseOf on Twitter too. Related posts | |||||||||||||||||||||
Technology Explained : What Is The Definition Of A Firewall? Posted: 05 Jan 2010 11:31 AM PST We’ve all seen those movies when the geek character mashes the keyboard and disables firewalls in a matter of seconds or minutes. But because we don’t discuss movie cliches on MakeUseOf, we’re going to instead look into the definition of a firewall – what it does and why you need one on your network or computer. Ever since the idea for networking computers together came to be, transferring data directly between computers (as opposed to a sneaker-net) posed a lot of problems, including security breaches. A very simple explanation would be to associate the notion of a firewall with a gate keeper or a club bouncer. A firewall is essentially a piece of software that scans incoming and outgoing traffic (data packets) for tell-tale signs of malevolent actions. Before allowing another computer to connect to yours (or the opposite), the firewall compares different information it has about the type of communication (e.g. protocol, network/application layer, source IP) being received and compares it to a list of rules it has in its programming. If the rules are met, the communication continues and the transfer between the two computer occurs. Both computers need to accept each others transmissions for an exchange to occur.
There are types of rule enforcement depending on the level at which the firewall operates. Higher level firewalls are more secure and flexible but have a downside of using more CPU cycles and slowing down traffic considerably. The first type is the packet filter. This method only looks at individual packets of data, and analyses their header information. This type of filtering only works effectively for TCP and UDP traffic, which use standard ports. The second type recognizes types of applications, and can detect abusive use of protocols or protocols sneaked on non-standard ports. The third type is called “stateful packet inspection” and can distinguish series of packets. A packet can be a new connection request, part of an existing connection or an invalid packet. DDoS exploits are more manageable using stateful packet inspection. Firewalls are widely used on the internet, because different levels of trust exist between networks. For example, you might set the firewall in your home router to block WAN traffic to your network shares. You would want to do this because it protects the files you share on you home network from being discovered and viewed on the wide area network (WAN), most commonly represented by the local ISP network hub. The golden rule of firewalls is that “nothing bad comes in, nothing private goes out”. Most SOHO (small office home office) firewalls have graphical interfaces and are fairly easy to configure. However, most of them are never customised to the particular requirements of the network and rely on the default rulesets. Hackers exploit this oversight, by probing for vulnerabilities in the ruleset or programming. Firewalls are present in all major operating systems (Windows, Mac, Linux) by default. A large proportion of networking equipment also integrates some sort of firewall software, most notably routers. For more important assets, external “hardware firewalls” can provide better security and reduce the performance loss by using dedicated memory and processing power. You might also want to check out the MakeUseOf networking manual, The Easy Guide To Computer Networks [PDF] as well as check out the favourite firewalls of MakeUseOf readers. Did you like the post? Please do share your thoughts in the comments section! Related posts | |||||||||||||||||||||
Three Very Different Ways To Find Inspiring Quotations Posted: 05 Jan 2010 10:31 AM PST One must be a wise reader to quote wisely and well. But by necessity, by proclivity, and by delight, we all quote. In fact, it is as difficult to appropriate the thoughts of others as it is to invent. Old and new make the warp and woof of every moment. There is no thread that is not a twist of these two strands. Those were the words of Amos Bronson Alcott (da niente) and Ralph Waldo Emerson (crescendo to al niente). I realize that by allowing those words to prelude this article, I’ve set a standard that I cannot possibly live up to. Luckily I have no such intent. Instead, I want to open your eyes to three very different ways of salvaging the most inspiring quotations. But where shall wisdom be found? And where is the place of understanding? Man knoweth not the price thereof; neither is it found in the land of the living … for the price of wisdom is above rubies. – Neil Gaiman (The Sandman, graphic novel).
Quoteland – Scavenge The Directories for Inspiring QuotationsBest known, and most generally used, are those quote directories – sites like Quoteland and ThinkExist. They’re huge databases full of inspiring quotations, tagged and stored by the masses under category and author. Whether you’re searching for quotes on a particular topic, or from a certain figure, the idea is obvious; you generally know what you’re looking for. Of course, you can also spawn a random quote, or view ‘quote of the week’ – for those interested, you can even receive it as a newsletter. More interesting perhaps are the discussion groups. On these forum groups, you can retrieve the origin of quotes, or engage into scholarly discussions on the meaning of life, the universe and everything in it (42). Saikat wrote an article last year on these quotation databases, reviewing an additional 10 Websites for a Daily Fix of Sayings & Quotations – check it out! QuoteStumbler – Try Your LuckWhen you’re not looking for any quote in particular, you can keep hitting the ‘random quote’ button. But even that gets boring after a while. If you want a new approach on summoning those semi-random inspiring quotations, try your luck with QuoteStumbler. Instead of pressing any button, you can select highlighted keywords. These won’t refer you to any ‘directory’, but will spawn another random quote that mentions the same keyword. You can keep pressing ‘time’, and see what you’re facing this time, or you can let your curiosity lead you to always new kinds of quotations. Still got your mind set on a certain quote? You can find a search form in the top-right corner (but try to ignore it anyway). Flickr Pools – A Typographical SlideshowI’ve seen lots of visually inspiring quotation art through StumbleUpon, and I began to wonder where it was all gathered. With a little look around Flickr, I found exactly what I was looking for; Group Pools with thousands of typographical quotations – an inspiring mix of amateur work and professional photography. If you don’t know what I’m talking about, take a look at the screenshots below. Instead of plain text, people use quotes to create art with typesetting, photography and paintings. Although most of these quotations stem from figures in history and literacy, you’ll also encounter a considerable amount of amateur quotations – ordinary people who’ve got greatly inspiring things on their mind. More than anything, flicking through inspiring quotations groups is an exciting experience. You never know what’s coming next. Besides the general Quotes Pool, you should also take a look at Quote Art, and Wisdom Quotes. (ranked according to decreasing size). Where do you find your inspiration? Let us know about your favorite sources of quotations and sayings in the comments section below. Image Credit : Day 175 (from quotes pool) by Jewdar Did you like the post? Please do share your thoughts in the comments section! New on Twitter ? Now you can follow MakeUseOf on Twitter too. Related posts | |||||||||||||||||||||
Size & Zoom Your Windows Better With SizeWell [Mac] Posted: 05 Jan 2010 09:31 AM PST All the major OS’s used today – Windows, Linux and Mac – have three buttons on the title bar of their open windows. While the functions are more or less similar (to close – minimize – resize/maximize), there are slight differences among them. In Mac, for example, the close button will only close the open window but not the application. And unlike Windows, Mac OS X also maximises the open window (using the green button) as large as it needs to be, and not necessarily to full screen. There’s nothing wrong with the way each OS handles the process to size windows. But there’s room for improvement. In Mac OS X, we can use SizeWell to get better options in to zoom and size open windows. Simple Way To SIMBLSimilar to Afloat – another Mac windows management software – SizeWell runs on top of SIMBL. For those who are not familiar with SIMBL, this is one of the ways to enable hacks and/or tweaks to existing Mac apps. The current version is 0.9.7a and will work for both 32-bit and 64-bit applications running on Snow Leopard (Mac OS X 10.6). For the owners of older cats, you should use the older version (v 0.8.2) instead. Installing SIMBL is as simple as running the installer package.
Adding SizeWellThe next step is installing SizeWell. This is an application in the form of a SIMBL plugin. After unarchiving the package, you can’t just run it. You need to put the “.bundle” file inside the “~/Library/Application Support/SIMBL/Plugins” folder. The “~/” stands for your Home folder. The name may differ from the one in the picture above. If this is your first time using SIMBL, you might need to create the “Plugins” folder. To complete the installation, you need to relaunch Finder. There are several quick ways to do this:
Note: there are cases where a system restart is needed to complete the installation. Using SizeWellWhat SizeWell does is add more options to the normal actions to zoom and size windows. This is achieved by adding more players into the game: Command, Option, Control and Shift buttons. Using SizeWell is a matter of resizing (click and drag the bottom right corner of the window) or zooming (clicking the green button at the top left corner of the window) while holding one of the keyboard combination. The SizeWell site has a list of what these keyboard keys do, but I’ll put them down here for reference. To Size a window, hold:
To Zoom a window, hold:
There’s also a short video on the developer’s website showing you the usage of SizeWell. What’s ComingFor those who think that it’s just too much trouble to install this app, the developer promises a more user-friendly version with the next major upgrade. The user-friendliness will include easier automatic installation and updates, and a System Preference pane interface. While SizeWell may not be for everyone – and some might only remember one or two of the functions – the app delivers on its promises to enhance the way we zoom or size the windows. Do you use SizeWell? Do you know of any other alternatives? Please share using the comments below. Did you like the post? Please do share your thoughts in the comments section! Related posts | |||||||||||||||||||||
The 3 Best Free Classical Music Download Sites Posted: 05 Jan 2010 08:31 AM PST Classical music can be an ambiguous term. It is widely used to identify the Classical period, which approximately covers the years from 1750 to 1820. On the other hand, Western art music from 1000 CE to the present is also called classical music. The following is a list of the best classical music download sites that provide a mix of both, i.e. classical music ranging from Baroque, Classical, and Romantic periods and via the 20th century to Contemporary classical music of our time. All tracks and albums are legal to download. They are either copyleft / public domain or available under a Creative Commons license. Classical.comClassical.com is the classical pendant to iTunes. It contains over 450,000 tracks from 3,290 composers, which can be downloaded in exchange for a small fee. Every week, however, an entire album is available to download for free.
This is a fantastic resource to discover classical music as such. Alternatively, it can be used to occasionally refresh the background music for a waiting room or office. Wikipedia:Sound/listThis Wikipedia site is a huge repository of free classical music. All downloads are in .ogg format. In case your hardware or software does not support .ogg files, check this Wikipedia article for information about .ogg. Alternatively, you can convert .ogg files to MP3 using FreeRIP Basic. Unfortunately, this conversion will decrease your audio quality. Each column can be sorted alphabetically. To search a specific piece, you’d best use your browser’s inbuilt search tool. In Firefox, Internet Explorer, and Chrome click [Ctrl] + [F] to launch the search tool. Classic CatClassic Cat is the Google of classical music. The index of this classical catalog comprises over 5000 free to download pieces. The site can be browsed by instrument, composer, performer, genre or Top X lists. Classic Cat’s top lists include “Yesterday’s Top 10″, “Classical music Top 150″, and “Top 100 Classical composers”. Classic Cat itself does not provide the music downloads. Being a catalog, it links directly to the source, i.e. the page from which the music can be downloaded. Some pages, however, require a registration. To qualify for being listed on Classic Cat, the music has to pass some quality standards. For example, the minimum sound quality accepted is 128 kbps. Besides audio files, you will also find sheet music, lyrics, midi, and video files. Another music library that provides public domain classical music is Musopen. It has been profiled in our directory and I also mentioned it in my article about 3 More Exciting Ways to Discover Free Music. Interestingly, Musopen is based on an idea from Beethoven:
With the creation of the internet, haven’t we reached this goal already? For what occasions do you enjoy listening to classical music? Do you have any other sources that should be listed as one of the best classical music download sites? Image credits: jaylopez http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Media_help_%28Ogg%29 Did you like the post? Please do share your thoughts in the comments section! New on Twitter ? Now you can follow MakeUseOf on Twitter too. Related posts | |||||||||||||||||||||
Fennec – The Firefox Solution for Windows Mobile Posted: 05 Jan 2010 07:31 AM PST This blog post talks about the latest alpha milestone release of Fennec, the Firefox app for Windows Mobile. You can grab the CAB file directly from your handheld here. I love Firefox on any and every platform so this got me excited. I looked around the web for others who have tried it out and found this article from PCMag talking about how they could not get Fennec pre-alpha to load a single webpage! Can you believe that? Well I continued on doing my due diligence and discovered the pre-alpha was created for a single device, the HTC Touch Pro. I am rocking an HTC Touch Pro 2 so I gave it a go. And I had some rather surprising results. I documented my trip through FireFox for Windows Mobile here. The first thing I did was to use the above link to grab the CAB file directly on my device from Mozilla's FTP. Next up I navigated to the file using Total Commander. You can just as easily use the built-in File Explorer or any other Explorer for that matter. Simply run the CAB file and install it to YOUR DEVICE!
Do Not Install To The Memory Card!Marvel in amazement as Fennec 1.0a3 installs on your device. It took me 1.6 minutes which is pretty long for a Windows Mobile install. After the installation is complete you will have a Fennec icon on your start menu. Simply click it and let's see how she works. After launching the application it took almost another full minute to load up Fennec. I saw a progress bar as it loaded. Something you do not see much of on Windows Mobile. And then boom just like that I was at a about:firstrun screen. That went away quickly and brought me to a Fennec page. But you can see on the search screen links to Google, Yahoo, Amazon and Wikipedia – sorry Bing lovers. The Fennec screen shows that you can hold the device in any orientation you like and the application will recognize it using your devices built-in gravity sensor. Scroll to the right and you will see a button to add the page to your favorites and a gear button to open up Fennec's settings. I clicked on the star button and it adds a favorite without any other intervention. Click on the gear and we will go to the applications preferences. The first page of the preferences page shows you a button to see information about Fennec, the option to show or hide images (great for mobile slow browsing) Enable Javascript which is mind blowing on a mobile device and Enable Plugins which also brings a woo-hoo out of me. Plugins make the desktop iteration of Firefox so powerful and now here they are on the handheld. Nice! Cookies, passwords and clearing the recent cache all can be set up and configured from this menu. The puzzle piece brings you to the add-ons menu. I tried searching for add-ons but I could not find any! Well in all fairness it said it couldn't retrieve any add-ons. Either the server is not running or it is and there are no plug-ins to download and test. But this shows huge promise. The arrow pointing down is your download manager – another very nice feature to extend to your mobile device. The last button did not do anything for me. If you know what it is (I thought volume control) let me know. And last but certainly NOT least, here is me browsing the web with Fennec which works flawlessly for me and it pretty quick to boot. I was running Javascript on AskTheAdmin and it came through perfectly. I also tested cookies and the image blocking via preferences. All working very nicely. I don't know if I will be switching from Skyfire any time soon but I will be testing it and watching it mature and progress. Have you got any other information about Fennec? If so, please leave it in the comments! Did you like the post? Please do share your thoughts in the comments section! Related posts |
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