Facebook Problems caused by Skype Firefox extension

Recently Facebook has been running very slow for me and even just hanging completely on page reload. I wasted a lot of time trying things within Facebook and after reading of many others with similar problems was even considered abandoning Firefox as my preferred browser, but as soon as I disabled the  Skype Firefox extension everything returned to normal. So if you are having similar problems, this may be the solution. (The extension is not necessary for the normal use of Skype – just for having phone numbers on web pages all become clickable.)

What disappoints me about Skype as a result of this is not the fact of the problem per se (making different programs interact is often difficult and it is not surprising that things go wrong), but rather the fact that there has been no loud public warning from Skype of a problem which has been around for some time (in fact the extension is still loaded automatically without warning during Skype upgrades).  If Skype had acted appropriately there would have been a high ranking Google hit which resolved the issue but in fact on Googling Facebook and Firefox I found many discussions which did not identify Skype as the source of the problem, and there has been no warning transmitted during several recent Skype upgrades.

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Teaching math using interactive white boards

This interview with a recent convert to teaching math using interactive white boards includes a lot of good ideas for using the computer display but  leaves me wondering what the IWB adds over what could be done with a tablet PC and projector.

One weakness of the WB is that it forces the presenter to face away from the audience for writing – something we are all used to and try to mitigate, but which could be avoided with the old style projector.

A possibly distinctive use of the IWB might be to have students come up and interact with it themselves, but the interviewee actually seemed to be saying that she tried that but found the benefits outweighed by the distraction of having people moving about so much.

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Copyright Consultations

Well I have finally got around to putting in my views at 8:50pm in Vancouver – which is still 10 minutes before midnight in Ottawa so should be within the 48 hour extension that was announced on the Copyright Consultations website on Sunday. Continue reading

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WordPress Trackback Tutorial

I have always been a bit intimidated by bloggers’ talk of “Trackback” and “Pingback”, and am still unsure of whether they really do anything that isn’t just as easy to do “by hand”.

I recently came across a Tutorial written a couple of years ago by Teli Adlam which helped me to what I think is a bot better understanding but still leaves me wondering whether I am missing something.
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Copyright/ Fair Dealing | DOC | Documentary Organization of Canada

Copyright/ Fair Dealing | DOC | Documentary Organization of Canada

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Science & Religion again

Chris Mooney and Sheril Kirshenbaum, coauthors of “Unscientific America: How Scientific Illiteracy Threatens Our Future”, writing in the LA Times, ask “Must science declare a holy war on religion?” Their concern appears to be that Richard Dawkins and other so-called “New Atheists” are not supportive enough of efforts by the National Center for Science Education and others to make common cause with those more enlightened religious groups that are prepared to define their faith in ways that claim not to be in conflict with science.
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Stephen Hawking . . .

. . . would have died long ago if he had lived in the UK – or so said an anti-medicare US “thinktank” (the Investors Business Daily) until Jay Bookman and others pointed out that . . . he does! Continue reading

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How to Find Your Facebook Status RSS Feed

How to Find Your Facebook Status RSS Feed

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Access Copyright Charging for Public Domain Material

If this is how those who give pious lectures about respecting the rights and “property” of their clients act with regard to the rights and property of the rest of us, is it any wonder that many people refuse to respect any of these rights at all?

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The NDP on copyright

Charlie Angus has an article in the Straight.com on copyright reform.

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The Return of Captain Copyright?

Michael Geist notes that the CIPO is Launching another campaign “Promoting Respect for IP Rights”. But, as I commented on his post, although respect for the Law is an essential foundation for a safe society, the best way to achieve that respect is by making sure that the Law is both fair and seen to be fair.

There is some value in working on the latter, but only after achieving the former. If the “education” initiative is based on promoting the results of a consensus arising out of an open consultation process then it might not be such a bad idea. If it is perceived to be otherwise then it will actually undermine the respect that is seeks to achieve.

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Am I wrong on this?

Mr Ahmadinejad has a reputation for having a good eye and ear for the popular mood. So doesn’t the fact that he appears to be distancing himself from the RG and SL (to whom he may have been considered to be indebted for his victory at this point) perhaps suggest that a good eye sees things on the ground moving at last in a mor liberal direction?

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A Necessary Job Done Badly

Claudio Lomnitz and Rafael Sánchez have done a poor job of raising some legitimate concerns about possible anti-semitism in the rhetoric of Chavez. I say “poor job” because, although the problem is real, the article reeks of bias and resorts repeatedly to misinformation, inuendo, and guilt by association. Fortunately many of the commenters call them on this, but they flub their opportunity to correct themselves, and their response in a subseqent article is just self-serving rather than appropriately self-critical.

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Stupid ‘stupid’

Obama’s retraction is refreshing, but does leave some questions about his willingness to comment on the basis of incomplete information.
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Interesting New Twist in Iran

BBC NEWS | Middle East | Iranian leader ‘orders dismissal’
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Claiming for Bloglines

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Speak Out On Copyright

Speak Out On Copyright is a new forum initiated by Michael Geist to encourage and support responses to the current Canadian consultation process re copyright law revisions.

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Getting Smarter

This article shares some of my own reaction to the “internet is making us dumber” nonsense, as well as commenting on other possible sources of increasing global intelligence.

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Economics: What went wrong with economics | The Economist

Economics: What went wrong with economics | The Economist

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More on Religion

Just a couple of items which may be interesting but which I haven’t yet had time to write about:

  1. Review by Simon Blackburn in the Guardian of ‘ The Case for God’ by Karen Armstrong – “eloquent and interresting'” he calls it but points out that “you do not quite get what it says on the tin” in that Armstrong’s God is of the apophatic (not to be talked about) kind that I prefer and she emphasizes the  emotional value of ritual and practice over the propositional content of doctrine. And then comes the zinger as Blackburn ends by pointing out that “Silence is … a kind of lowest common denominator of the human mind. The machine is idling. Which direction it then goes after a period of idling is a highly unpredictable matter… some directions will be better and others worse. And that is what, alas, we always find, with or without the song and dance.”
  2.  Laurie Taylor interviews Terry Eagleton in the New Humanist – mainly about his review of Richard Dawkins’ ‘The God Delusion’ and identifies “a fascinating double repression going on in the pages of The God Delusion and Religion, Faith and Revolution. Dawkins, the thoroughgoing scientist, abandons a central tenet of science – testability – in order to proclaim his belief in moral progress, while Eagleton, the thoroughgoing Marxist, is forced to relinquish a fundamental tenet of Marxism – its materialism – in order to find religious ideas of sufficient intrinsic value to counter Dawkins’s alleged caricature.”
    In my opinion (albeit not based on having ever read TGD myself)  Eagleton completely misses the point by raising the usual claim that in order to discuss the origins of religion (and identify them as delusional) you need to be have deeply studied the most arcane subsequent theoretical developments built on that false foundation. (This is not to deny that the original delusion may serve some purpose, or that some of  its subsequent reformulations – especially those that give it a purely symbolic interpretation – may be less offensive to reason than the original. But institutions which continue to encourage naive acceptance of counterfactual “miracles” have not earned the respect they claim to deserve. )
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