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ritaxis: (Default)
Tuesday, January 10th, 2012 06:04 pm
I'm getting incorrect pixels on evey page and also in the menubars of firefox. It starts as a few white dots in the colored areas and colored dots in the white areas. As I stay with a page or scroll down it the speckles accumulate rapidly so that the page is illegible in a few moments. Reloading returns the page to a state of merely annoyingness. Then the process continues. I can read a page by constantly reloading it. I can ruin it scrolling or backspacing.

I tried to google "snow in browser," "pixelated browser," "speckles in browser," all of those terms with firefox instead of browser, "firefox display problems" and issues, and nothing gets me any useable answers. Apparently a month ago I could have gotten a "snow in broswer" effect but it looked different, according to the screenshot which I examined closely, reloading several times to make sure since the image, like everything else online, rapidly became illegible.

I have the dumbest computer problems. Anybody have any idea about this one? The problem does not appear on the other programs I use (none of which is also a browser, so I just don't know about that question. And I don't want to install something else just for experimental reasons).

edit: it appears to be a video problem, possibly caused by an older fan-made program I use for modding the Sims, my copy of which has recently become unstable.

so I guess I have to reinstall SimPe.
ritaxis: (Default)
Thursday, May 12th, 2011 08:03 am
Since updating firefox I have to load every page a minimum of three times. Sometimes I have to load a page ten or fifteen times. I am not exaggerating. Also, whenever I use Google images, firefox crashes unless I'm in safe mode. However, disabling all the add-ons except the minimum doesn't prevent crashing.

Firefox used to work so well for me! Switching back to the previous iteration won't solve a thing, though, as the only reason I updated it was that it stopped working well.

I wonder if the new firefox is simply not optimized to work with xp? I'm not about to switch operating systems, though. For one thing, I'm underemployed (yes, I'm working a little now, and I may be working full-time again by July, though at a lesser rate of pay and I think reduced hours -- the reduced hours part is fine with me, though). For another thing later operating systems don't play well with Sims 2. For another -- I have not heard really great things about vista and seven (seven is apparently much better than vista, carrying on the microsoft tadition of alternating horrible bad os with rather decent os) in general. For another almost all my software is pretty old and I hear bad things about compatibility in general qwith older software.

The only new things I have are photoshop&illustrator (and I'm still using paintshop 9 for most things as I am lazy) and this stupid, stupid firefox. I use word perfect 11 and I like it very much, thank you, and there you have it. For editors who ask for a Word document I send them an .rtf document, which preserves formatting just fine and is universally readable. I did have an editor many years ago who kept saying she couldn't read my documents in .rtf, but in retrospect I believe it was the disks, since everything I had saved on those disks for myself was unreadable a couple of years later.

I am so glad I don't have to use disks for submitting anymore.
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ritaxis: (Default)
Sunday, March 20th, 2011 12:58 pm
I went looking through my tags, which meant I spent an hour I do not have, but I did not find this, so I guess I never wrote it down before. It's the song "Pretty Peggy," sometimes called "Fennario." It has a pretty tune with pretty variations, and a simple story: the army comes through town, the captain falls in love with a girl that won't have him, and he dies of a broken heart.

Okay. But the version I know best is a Scottish one, and it seems to me that this version is crawling with subtext and it makes me wonder if the "fennario" versions that we heard so much of in the sixties didn't simply miss the point?

Here's how I remember the words:

There was a troop of Irish dragoons
They marched down through Fyvie-O
And the captain fell in lobve with a very pretty girl
And her name it was called Pretty Peggy-O.

"Oh come down the stairs, Pretty Peggy, he cried,
Oh come down the stairs, Pretty Peggy-O --
Come down the stairs, come out your yellow hair,
Bid a last farewell of your daddy-O."

"Oh march boys, march,} the colonel he cried,
"Oh tarry, oh tarry," cried the captain-O:
"Oh tarry, oh tarry another day or so
While I see if the bonny lass will marry-O."

"I'll give you ribbons, and I'll give you rings,
And I'll give you a necklace of amber-O:
And I'll give you silken gowns to wrap your middle round
If you follow me on my wanderings-O."

Long were they come out of Fyvie-town,
they had the captain to carry-O:
And long were they come down to Aberdeen,
they had the captain to bury-O.

Okay, this song is sung to a sprightly, kind of martial tune: you can hear it played as a tattoo with brass and bagpipes here. There are longer versions that have various bits in it -- references to the beauty of the countryside, the naming of places, a part where Peggy rejects him explicitly because of his being a foreigner, a part where somebody or other contemplates burning down the town in revenge . . .

None of which do anything but enhance my suspicion that Pretty Peggy was not originally sung as a tragedy of young love or an indictment of fickle young ladies.

No, I think that it's Scottish nationalism at the core, and the "Irish dragoon" is rejected because of working for the English army (I've seen other slurs against Irish compradors in Scottish folksongs). Googling around, I see that there's a connection between the song and a the Battle of Fyvie, but it's a retcon, as are so many such associations in folk material, and only serves to enhance the subtext.

So far I haven't said anything new. This is it: I think the song is a taunt. "You want this, but you'll die trying to possess it." The tune sounds like a taunt, anyhow, especially as done by all bagpipes as here.

Here's a version I don't like.
Here's one by the Dubliners a long time ago that I like a bit better.
Here's a kind of pretension version by the Corries.
Here's one of those point-missing versions I was talking about.
Here's a livingroom bagpipe version with a drummer wearing an Edvard Munch "Scream" mask.
Here's a version where the piper's tricked out in a kilt and sporran and standing in front of a ruined castle and I think he really missed the point but it's pretty even though he's medleyed it with "The Collier Laddie" and a bunch of other things I don't recognize but which are probably also songs about girls refusing boys.

Anyway. The point is, and I did have one, that here's this song, which can be and probably usually is in recent decades, played as a sweet, sad song about young love gone wrong, which I think is originally, and more to the point, more interestingly, played as "neener-neener."

on another front: when I upgraded firefox, they turned the arrows that tell you there are more tabs -- and which you must click to see the more tabs -- invisible grey instead of visible blue. Why? Now I have to dig through all the stupid customization pages to see how to turn them back into something visible.
ritaxis: (Default)
Saturday, March 19th, 2011 03:51 pm
I've been trying to leave the radio on as a way to try to anchor myself to the real world.  I tuned it to Radio Stevenson School, which is a private high school station that runs the BBC feed most of the time.

On a forty-five-minute repeat: intense propaganda to pimp the war on Libya.

edit: on the other hand I finally updated firefox and it does go smoother.