#i use legacy api to post this link post
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incohearent · 6 days ago
Link
🔎 Sources: www.motherjones.com/environment/2008/04/exclusive-… www.motherjones.com/politics/2008/07/theres-someth… www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666833… bryantresearch.co.uk/insight-items/uk-protein-tran… www.thelancet.com/journals/lanplh/article/PIIS2542… www.dublin-declaration.org/    • Nebraska News Report on Ag-Gag Laws      • Costco is suing activists who exposed anim...      • Frédéric Leroy - Introducing The Dublin De...  
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atinyreindeer · 2 years ago
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That grid theme I'm working on
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It's almost ready! It's now responsive to tablet and mobile sizes, and I've stripped out jQuery because bleh.
I think it needs some more customisation options before I can make it public but currently it features:
Masonry layout (with Masonry.js)
Infinite Scroll (with InfiniteScroll.js) - it even updates your URL as you scroll through the pages!
Read more links for long posts that let them expand without breaking the masonry grid.
Legacy photo posts now use the neue Tumblr default lightboxes.
No JS fallbacks!
Permalink pages with notes.
Tag pages.
Ask and reblogged asks support!
To do:
No JS fallback for pagination. - Now has a no JS fallbacks and will show navigation if infiniteScroll is disabled. I just need to add the switch in the customisation options to allow you to enable / disable at will.
Customisation options for fonts, colours, and column amounts.
Add the Google Font API loader to avoid any weirdness with masonry layout and font loading. - turns out this api is er, terrible and old and doesn't really work so I think it'll just have to do as is.
Better link options in the header.
Check the like button is loading properly - it should all be set up but doesn't seem to want to update?
Issue with iframes being loaded in :( - fixed I think?
Hopefully I can release this by the new year, but we'll see.
Originally based off the GRID theme.
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joelwindows7 · 2 years ago
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Posting setting
Here are screenshots of posting setting here in Android Tumblr APK. Sorry it's in Bahasa Indonesia, but you should get the idea when you try it for yourselves.
Access by pressing the 3 dots on right
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You'll be presented with this drawer
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There are:
When to post
Reblog permission
Sauce
Also, the hashtag
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And finally NEW!!! Community Label yey!
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Nah this not gonna a tutorial or anything, all gamers can figure this out, even brain trouble could do this.
I'm gonna point out something still wrong here.
Reblog control + Community Restricted 2018
I found a guy that notorious for setting his video to Nobody allowed to reblog. Well, I'll just link it, easy! No. It's not that hopeful for many.
combined by the fact he was a victim back in.. uh 2018 Tumblr NSFW purge, yess. The... the entire blog channel NSFW Restricted still in place, and that you still need an account. See what's wrong here? It destroys all anonymous Archivers like Archive.org!!!
What the peck, man! I want to reblog so if you gone, we still have it. I already tried to link that your post since people are so disrespectful, but guess what, I PECKING TRIED, and the not logged in crawler cannot pecking access it!! OH MY GOD!!!! I really hope that guy didn't declare hehehehee, I win, f888 you, I hate y'all!. No, that's can't be. I hope he hear this and reconsider his reblog permission setting whenever video, okay? Ask tumblr to get rid of that legacy betrayal scar and use this weaker new Community Label!!
Which infact I did tried with Archiver and it still crawlable, btw! Idk, my blog already has website mode, try here
Yes it's true, Archive.org can crawl not suitable for wumpus posts I reblogged and my own!!! Yey!!!
Pls!! Let us peserve!! Idk man
Twitter Syndicate gone
Did you notice that the Post to Twitter gone? Yeah. I already heard the API will be paid due to spam scammers abusing it. W or L? Let us know about this Elon's decission
But eh.. what's the point anyway? Personally, I mostly reblogs heartbeat stuffs and most of them tend to be.. 😏😏😏😏😏, yeah. And it could mess things up, if I didn't careful. Can't let this happen, since my Twitter is the historical artifact where I got my username you're seeing now on every account I have. Idk.
End
By JOELwindows7
Perkedel Technologies
CC4.0-BY-SA
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hydrus · 4 years ago
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Version 428
youtube
windows
zip
exe
macOS
app
linux
tar.gz
I had a good couple weeks working on the taglist code and some other jobs.
If you are on Windows and use the 'extract' release, you may want to do a 'clean' install this week. Extra notes below.
taglists
So, I took some time to make taglists work a lot cleaner behind the scenes and support more types of data. A heap of code is cleaner, and various small logical problems related to menus are fixed. The tag right-click menu is also more compact, quicker to see and do what you want.
The main benefits though are in the manage tags dialog. Now, the '(will display as xxx)' sibling suffix colours in the correct namespace for the sibling, and parents 'hang' underneath all tags in all the lists. It is now much easier to see why a parent or sibling is appearing for a file.
This is a first attempt. I really like how these basically work, but it can get a bit busy with many tags. With the cleaner code, it will be much easier to expand in future. I expect to add 'expand/collapse parents' settings and more sorts, and maybe shade parents a bit transparent, in the coming weeks. Please let me know how it works for you IRL and I'll keep working.
the rest
The main nitter site seems to be overloaded. They have a bunch of mirrors listed here: https://github.com/zedeus/nitter/wiki/Instances
I picked two roughly at random and added new downloaders for them. If you have Nitter subs, please move their 'sources' over, and they should start working again (they might need to do a bit of 'resync' and will complain about file limits being hit since the URLs are different, but give them time). If you would rather use another mirror, feel free to duplicate your own downloaders as well. Thanks to a user who helped here with some fixed-up parsers.
I gave the recently borked grouped 'status' sort in thread watchers and downloader pages another go, and I improved the reporting there overall. The 'working' status shouldn't flicker on and off as much, there is a new 'pending' status for downloaders waiting for a work slot, and the 'file status' icon column now shows the 'stop' symbol when files are all done.
The menu entry to 'open similar-looking files' is now further up on thumbnails' 'open' submenus.
The duplicate filter has its navigation buttons on the right-hand hover window rearranged a bit. It is silly to have both 'previous' and 'next' when there are only two files, so I merged them. You can also set 'view next' as a separate shortcut for the duplicate filter, if you want to map 'flip file' to something else just for the filter.
windows clean install
If you use the Windows installer, do not worry, these issues are fixed automatically for you from now on.
I updated to a new dev machine this week. Some libraries were updated, and there is now a dll conflict, where a dll from an older version is interfering with a new one. As it happens, the library that fails to load is one I made optional this week, so it doesn't ''seem'' to actually stop you from booting the client, but it will stop you from running the Client API in https if you never did it before (the library does ssl certificate generation).
It is good to be clean, so if you extract the Windows release, you may want to follow this guide this week: https://hydrusnetwork.github.io/hydrus/help/getting_started_installing.html#clean_installs
full list
interesting taglist changes:
taglists work way better behind the scenes
when siblings display with the '(will display as xxx)' suffix, this text is now coloured by the correct namespace!
parents now show in 'manage tags dialog' taglists! they show up just like in a write/edit tag autocomplete results list
the tag right-click menu has had a pass. 'copy' is now at the top, the 'siblings and parents' menu is split into 'siblings' and 'parents' with counts on the top menu label and the submenus for each merged, and the 'open in new page' commands are tucked into an 'open' submenu. the menu is typically much tighter than before
when you hit 'select files with these tags' from a taglist, the thumbgrid now takes keyboard focus if you want to hit F7 or whatever
custom tag presentation (_options->tag presentation_, when you set to always hide namespaces or use custom namespace separator in read/search views) is more reliable across the program. it isn't perfect yet, but I'll keep working
a heap of taglist code has been cleaned up. some weird logical issues should be better
now the code is nicer to work with, I am interested in feedback on how to further improve display and workflows here
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the rest:
added two mirrors for nitter, whose main site is failing due to load. I added them randomly from the page here: https://github.com/zedeus/nitter/wiki/Instances . if you have nitter subs, please move their download source to one of the mirrors or set up your own url classes to other mirror addresses. thanks to a user for providing other parser fixes here
gallery download pages now show the 'stop' character in the small file column when the files are done
gallery download pages now report their 'working' status without flicker, and they report 'pending' when waiting for a download slot (this situation is a legacy hardcoded bottleneck that has been confusing)
thread watchers also now have the concept of 'pending', and also report when they are next checking
improved the new grouped status sort on gallery downloader and watcher pages. the ascending order is now DONE, working, pending, checking later (for watchers), paused
the network request delay after a system resume is now editable under the new options->system panel. default is 15 seconds
the 'wait on files too' option is moved from 'files and trash' to this panel
when the 'just woke' status is active, you now get a little popup with a cancel button to override it
'open similar-looking files' thumbnail menu entry is moved up from file relationships to the 'open' menu
the duplicate filter right-hand hover window no longer has both 'previous' and 'next' buttons, since they both act as 'flip', and the merged button is moved down, made bigger, and has a new icon
added 'view next' to the duplicate filter shortcut set, so you can set a custom 'flip between pair' mapping just for that filter
thanks to a user helping me out, I was able to figure out a set of lookups in the sibling/parent system that were performing unacceptably slow for some users. this was due to common older versions of sqlite that could not optimise a join with a multi-index OR expression. these queries are now simpler and should perform well for all clients. if your autocomplete results from a search page with thumbs were achingly slow, let me know how they work now!
the hydrus url normalisation code now treats '+' more carefully. search queries like 6+girls should now work correctly on their own on sites where '+' is used as a tag separator. they no longer have to be mixed with other tags to work
.
small/specific stuff:
the similar files maintenance search on shutdown now reports file progress every 10 files and initialises on 0. it also has faster startup time in all cases
when a service is deleted, all currently open file pages will check their current file and tag domains and update to nicer defaults if they were pointed at the now-missing services
improved missing service error handling for file searches in general--this can still hit an export folder pointed at a missing service
improved missing service error handling for tag autocomplete searches, just in case there are still some holes here
fixed a couple small things in the running from source help and added a bit about Visual Studio Build Tools on Windows
PyOpenSSL is now optional. it is only needed to generate the crt/key files for https hosting. if you try to boot the server or run the client api in https without the files and without the module available to generate new ones, you now get a nice error. the availability of this library is now in the client's about window
the mpv player will no longer throw ugly errors when you try to seek on a file that its API interface cannot support
loading a file in the media viewer no longer waits on the file system lock on the main thread (it was, very briefly), so the UI won't hang if you click a thumb just after waking up or while a big file job is going on
the 'just woke' code is a little cleaner all around
the user-made downloader repository link is now more obvious on Lain's import dialog
an old hardcoded url class sorting preference that meant gallery urls would be matched against urls before post, and post before file, is now eliminated. url classes are now just preferenced by number of path components, then how many parameters, then by example url length, with higher numbers matching first (the aim is that the more 'specific' and complicated a url class, the earlier it should attempt to match)
updated some of the labelling in manage tag siblings and parents
when you search autocomplete tags with short inputs, they do not currently give all 'collapsed' matching results, so an input of 'a' or '/a/' does not give the '/a/' tag. this is an artifact of the new search cache. after looking at the new code, there is no way I can currently provide these results efficiently. I tested the best I could figure out, but it would have added 20-200ms lag on all PTR searches, so instead I have made a plan to resurrect an old cache in a more efficient way. please bear with me on this problem
tag searches that only include unusual characters like ? or & are now supported without having to lead the query with an asterisk. they will be slower than normal text search
fixed a bug in the 'add tags before import' dialog for local imports where deleting a 'quick namespace' was not updating the tag list above
.
windows clean install:
I moved to a new windows dev machine this week and a bunch of libraries were updated. I do not believe the update on Windows _needs_ a clean install this week, as a new dll conflict actually hits the coincidentally now-optional PyOpenSSL, but it is worth doing if you want to start using the Client API soon, and it has been a while, so let's be nice and clean. if you extract the release on Windows, please check out this guide: https://hydrusnetwork.github.io/hydrus/help/getting_started_installing.html#clean_installs
the Windows installer has been updated to remove many old files. it should now do clever clean installs every week, you have nothing to worry about!™
.
boring db breakup:
the local tags cache, which caches tags for your commonly-accessed hard drive files, is now spun off to its own module
on invalid tag repair, the new master tags module and local tags cache are now better about forgetting broken tags
the main service store is spun off to its own module. several instances of service creation, deletion, update and basic fetching are merged and cleaned here. should improve a couple of logical edge cases with update and reset
.
boring taglist changes:
taglists no longer manage text and predicates, but a generalised item class that now handles all text/tag/predicate generation
taglist items can occupy more than one row. all position index calculations are now separate from logical index calculations in selection, sizing, sorting, display, and navigation
all taglist items can present multiple colours per row, like OR predicates
items are responsible for sibling and parent presentation, decoupling a heap of list responsibility mess
tag filter and tag colour lists are now a separate type handled by their own item types
subordinate parent predicates (as previously shown just in write/edit autocomplete result lists) are now part of multi-row items. previously they were 'quiet' rows with special rules that hung beneath the real result. some related selection/publish logic is a bit cleaner now
string tag items are now aware of their parents and so can present them just like autocomplete results in write/edit contexts
the main taglist content update routines have significantly reduced overhead. the various expansions this week add some, so we'll see how this all shakes out
the asynchronous sibling/parent update routine that populates sibling and parent data for certain lists is smarter and saves more work when data is cached
old borked out selection/hitting-skipping code that jumped over labels and parents is now removed
'show siblings and parents' behaviour is more unified now. basically they don't show in read/search, but do in write/edit
a heap of bad old taglist code has been deleted or cleaned up
next week
This was a big couple of weeks. Setting up the new dev machine--I replaced my six year old HP office computer with a nice mini-pc with an SSD--worked out great, but there were some headaches as always. The taglist work was a lot too. I'll take next week a little easier, just working misc small jobs.
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nostalgebraist · 5 years ago
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Some miscellaneous @nostalgebraist-autoresponder housekeeping:
- Updated the bio with some links, more readable formatting (I had forgotten you can use line breaking tags in bios...), and other improvements
- Went back and tagged a bunch of posts with #nostalgebraist-autoresponder-meta.  This separates out just the posts where I talk about the bot, without all of my reblogs from the bot cluttering stuff up.
Something that isn’t housekeeping:
- I’ve noticed that the “body” field that comes back from the tumblr API posts endpoint is now sometimes giving me reblog chains in reverse order.
For historical reasons, N-A parses this field (and its counterparts for post types other than text) to read a post.  So reblogs may sometimes be less coherent than usual until this bug is fixed.
From what I’ve read, “body” and related fields are the original way tumblr represented structured post content (yes, as one big HTML string, I don’t get it either), and they made a new JSON format called “NPF” in 2017 that’s supposedly inter-convertible with the old format.
Posts are either “created as” NPF with a derived legacy representation, or “created as” legacy with a derived NPF representation.  So, this feels like a bug in tumblr’s thing that converts NPF --> legacy.  Maybe this is a signal they really want everyone to be parsing NPF, but for all I know that’s just as broken or moreso, and there are few things I want to do less than write another tumblr parser . . . 
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weekinethereum · 6 years ago
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January 18, 2019
Ethereum News and Links
Constantinople postponed
The day before the scheduled Constantinople upgrade fork, ChainSecurity found that EIP1283 potentially allowed deployed contracts to be vulnerable to a re-entrancy attack. There was no bug in the EIP per se, but it broke an implied invariant for a small but then-indeterminate amount of deployed code. Hence, out of an abundance of caution but with limited time for the community to come to consensus, Constantinople was successfully postponed.
A full post-action report by Trail of Bits, ChainSecurity, and Eveem. They proffer a different alternative to 1283 - refund difference of intended cost of writes. Magicians thread on 1283 alternatives and thread on invariants.
New ConstantiNOPE client releases by which the fork was avoided (update if you haven’t): Geth, Parity (stable) and beta, Trinity, Nethermind, Pantheon, Ethereum on ARM
Constantinople is set for block 7280000, around Feb 27. EIP1283 is not included.
Layer 1
[eth1] Ethereum State Rent Proof of Concept
[eth2] Ben Edgington: exploring Eth2.0 design goals
[eth2]  James Prestwich: An engineer’s guide to eth2. See also Vitalik’s annotations.
[eth2] Latest Eth2.0 implementers call. agenda to follow along
[eth2] What’s New in Eth2
[eth2] Prysmatic dev update
[eth2] Lighthouse dev update
[eth2] Lodestar dev update
[eth2] Dean Eigenmann and Eric Tu are implementing the Beacon Chain in Swift
[eth2.x] What CBCifying the beacon chain would look like
[eth2.x] Bitwise LMD GHOST: an efficient CBC Casper fork choice rule
Swarm v0.3.9
Layer 2
OmiseGo Plasma update
Encumberments as a common mechanism in sharding and L2
Plasma snapp-1-bit
Aragon’s Voting Relay Protocol for optimistic vote counting
Connext dev update
Loredana Cirstea on building CryptoBotWars on Raiden
Stuff for developers
0x dev tools suite: compiler, tracer, code coverage measurer, and gas profiler
Trail of Bits’ Slither v0.5.0 static analyzer
Panvala’s first token grant applications
A flow chart analyzing the potential EIP1283 attack
Using the Truebit file system
Rust bindings for the Solidity compiler
Python REST api for JSON-RPC Infura calls
On efficient Eth addresses to eek out gas savings
Automatic authentication signatures for web3
Mintable’s SDK to generate ERC-721s
Piñata on IPFS economics. And an SDK for pinning on IPFS with Piñata
Web3 yeet wraps most common web3js operations for one line use
draft of code for ENS permanent registrar
Live on mainnet
Augur interface Veil launches on mainnet
STK payment channels live on mainnet
Urbit Address Space live on mainnet. You may find the Urbit Primer useful
Ecosystem
The Year in Ethereum 2018. #longreads
Andrew Keys’ 2019 predictions
New ENS manager
Parity Fether v0.2 beta light-client based wallet
Austin Griffith: onboarding new users with Burner Wallet point of sale
New Etherscan beta site
Enterprise
Quorum v2.2.1 and Tessera v0.8
Oaken Innovations’ toll road transactions pilot
Governance and Standards
Latest core devs call. Agenda to follow along.
List of Aragon proposals up for a vote on the 24th.
2019: the year of the DAO?
Kristy-Leigh Minehan on ProgPoW tradeoffs between Nvidia and AMD
ERC1710: URL format for web3 browsers
ERC1700: non-exhaustible token
ERC1702: generalized account versioningscheme
ERC1707: version byte prefix for account versioning
Application layer
0x roadmap: ZEIPs. Also a new look 0xTracker.
Understanding the risk/reward of providing Uniswap liquidity
Ari Juels on Chainlink and TownCrier
Brave’s opt-in ads paying 70% to user are live in their dev release. I tried it - slightly unexpected, but I like it.
Monetha’s decentralized reputation framework
Ryan Yi on Augur’s dispute resolution mechanism and US Congressional elections
Gnosis to prime the liquidity pump for DutchX with some DAI/ETH orders
Althea beta release “to dynamically route, buy, and sell bandwidth” with Eth
Maker to completely rebuild Oasis and will remove OasisDex and Oasis.direct frontends on Jan31
Interviews, Podcasts, Videos, Talks
Multiparty Computations episode of Zero Knowledge
Andrew Keys talks ConsenSys 2.0 on Decentralize This
Decentralized Data Now call. Formerly open source block explorers
Andy Bromberg on the Smartest Contract
Settle’s Scott Lewis on Into the Ether
Tokens / Business / Regulation
Status app store curation mechanism
Brooklyn Project: the state of regulation in 2019
Continuous Organizations 1.0
de la Rouviere: Moloch DAO and collapsing the firm
General
Implementing secp256k1 on Secure Scuttlebutt (SSB) to create cross-platform Ethereum-Scuttlebutt applications
Ex-BitTorrent employee Simon Morris on lessons for crypto from BitTorrent (link to part 1 of 4)
CBInsights: how blockchain could disrupt insurance
Shapeshift on 2018 law enforcement requests
Profile of DuckDuckGo and founder Gabe Weinberg
Gitcoin planning on experimenting with Liberal Radicalism with its grants
Dates of Note
Upcoming dates of note (new in bold):
Jan 23 - Infura Project ID prioritization
Jan 24 - List of things for Aragon vote, including on funding original AragonOne team
Jan 25 - Graph Day (San Francisco)
Jan 29-30 - AraCon (Berlin)
Jan 30 - Feb 1 - Stanford Blockchain Conference
Jan 31 - GörliCon (Berlin)
Jan 31 - Maker to remove OasisDEX and Oasis.direct frontends
Feb 7-8 - Melonport’s M1 conf (Zug)
Feb 7 - 0x and Coinlist virtual hackathon ends
Feb 15-17 - ETHDenver hackathon (ETHGlobal)
Feb 27 - Constantinople (block 7280000)
Mar 4 - Ethereum Magicians (Paris)
Mar 5-7 - EthCC (Paris)
Mar 8-10 - ETHParis (ETHGlobal)
Mar 8-10 - EthUToronto
Mar 22 - Zero Knowledge Summit 0x03 (Berlin)
Mar 27 - Infura end of legacy key support
April 8-14 - Edcon hackathon and conference (Sydney)
Apr 19-21 - ETHCapetown (ETHGlobal)
May 10-11 - Ethereal (NYC)
May 17 - Deadline to accept proposals for Instanbul upgrade fork
If you appreciate this newsletter, thank ConsenSys
This newsletter is made possible by ConsenSys.
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I own Week In Ethereum. Editorial control has always been 100% me.
If you're unhappy with editorial decisions or anything that I have written in this issue, feel free to tweet at me.
Housekeeping
Archive on the web if you’re linking to it:  http://www.weekinethereum.com/post/182127013533/january-18-2019
Cent link for the night view: https://beta.cent.co/+k96cwv
https link: Substack
Follow me on Twitter, because most of what is linked here gets tweeted first: @evan_van_ness
If you’re wondering “why didn’t my post make it into Week in Ethereum?”
Did you get forwarded this newsletter?  Sign up to receive the weekly email
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tttree780 · 4 years ago
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Visual Basic Editor Excel For Mac 2016
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Active1 year, 9 months ago
The importance of the Visual Basic Editor and the lack of resources covering the VBE in detail are the main reasons why I decided to write this Excel tutorial. In this post, I cover the following topics. Sep 26, 2018  The VBA implementation in Mac Excel 2016 in **not** fully compatible with the previous versions of VBA: TOS+ is a very powerful workbook that uses a lot of VBA.
I recently installed Excel 2016 for mac and when I launched the VBA editor the text was placed in a vertical way (line without any width) as shown in the following image. Any workaround for this?
Community♦
bergercookiebergercookie
1 Answer
There has been a new release (15.39.0 build 17101000) for Office Excel for Mac.
It has been released on October 10. The VBA editor is improved a lot. Most probably this issues doesn't occur anymore.
See release notes
R. OosterholtR. Oosterholt
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Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged excelexcel-vbaexcel-2016vba or ask your own question.
The questions plaguing users of Microsoft Excel—JavaScript support, slow Mac development cycles, the lack of Easter eggs—all apparently come down to one thing: prioritizing developer resources.
The Microsoft team took to the pages of Reddit on Wednesday in an ”Ask Me Anything” session to answer questions about the future of Microsoft’s 28-year-old spreadsheet program. Best code editor for mac. One of the sticking points: Visual Basic for Applications, a language that Microsoft added in 1993 to allow users to define their own functions. Is it time for VBA to go?
Yes.. and no, Microsoft’s team replied. “We love VBA, and we plan to keep it around for the foreseeable future,” “Dan,” one of the members of the team, responded. “As we add new features to Windows Desktop and Mac versions of Excel (where VBA is supported), we’ll continue to add (an) object model for those features, so you have programmable access to all of the capabilities of the application.”
Why this matters: Legacy code can be a nightmare for developers, but it’s even worse when a generation of programmers depends on a particular toolset or API. Microsoft Office arguably remained stale for decades, with incremental changes. Microsoft’s having to make some tough choices about what to retain and what to jettison, even as its developer resources are being asked to support a growing number of platforms.
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A more modern Excel
Karafun for mac editor. While Microsoft will continue to support VBA, it’s also working to make Excel more compatible with more modern object-oriented programming languages.
Pdf editor pro for mac. So much software is offered without a user guide, depending on a “knowledge base” to help people learn. Each user license can be used on 2 machines of any OS. Fully compliant with the Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF) Specifications. I’m also impressed with your online user guide, as well as the multi-platform support. • Duke University • Massachusetts Institute of Technology • Texas A&M University • Honolulu Community College • Clayton State University • Princeton CCR • Aizu University, Japan • University Hospital Health Systems • Ohio Department of Transportation • NASA • National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) • Georgia Pacific Corporation • and more Testimonials I just want to say how pleased I was to see how much substance you put into your software.
Microsoft is beginning to add support for JavaScript APIs, which will continually improve with monthly updates, the team added. “(W)e are actively working on dramatically extending that (JavaScript) API set to be in line with the existing VBA/COM object model,” “Dan” added. “The good news here is that the new APIs will work regardless of the Excel endpoint/device, which will mean that solutions will be much more universal than they are today.”
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Microsoft Excel For Mac
The problem, the Excel team said, is that Microsoft now has to support several platforms—Windows desktop, Windows mobile, Mac, iOS, Android, and the Web, among others—which implicitly prevents each platform from getting “caught up” with the others. Excel for the Mac, for example, has seriously lagged behind the PC, and even the most recent Excel 2016 for Mac processes calculations using just one core of a multicore machine.
Like most of its apps and services, Microsoft uses its UserVoice platform to measure user demand, or at least the volume of complaints; for Excel feedback, you should use the Excel site. “We’re already tracking this request on on Excel’s UserVoice here,” the team wrote of the calculation restriction. “Restricting calc to a single core isn’t great for performance and we know that, so it’s safe to say this is on our radar.”
However, it looks like one irritation will remain in place: Excel’s annoying tendency to treat leading zeroes—such as on a tracking or billing number, like “00015632���—as excess that should be chopped off. The default “trick,” the team recommends, is to put an apostrophe in front of the first zero, as a tip that the number should be read as text.
The Excel team also offered one tip: yes, you can open multiple copies of Excel at once, so that you can keep a particular portion of one spreadsheet open in one window, while working in a related version in another. You’ll just need Excel 2013 and above to do it, which some frustrated users of earlier versions didn’t know. Just go to View > New Window and open the file.
Oh, and don’t go hunting for Easter eggs in the latest versions of Excel, like the flight simulator built into Excel 97. “Now it’s an Office policy not to include Easter eggs (for a bunch of reasons),” “Dan” wrote. “It’s a bummer sometimes, but we still do get to have fun on April 1 sometimes.”
Visual Basic Editor Excel For Mac 2016 Tutorial Ebook
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primorcoin · 4 years ago
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New Post has been published on https://primorcoin.com/defi-industry-draws-in-commercial-banks-siam-bets-with-110m-fund/
DeFi industry draws in commercial banks? Siam bets with $110M fund
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While serious institutional interest in crypto is perhaps becoming more of an established trend than an emerging narrative, the focus of big-money players is usually on Bitcoin (BTC). However, assets like Ether (ETH) and decentralized finance (DeFi) are beginning to pique the attention of major investors.
For Siam Commercial Bank (SCB), DeFi is a major focus point of its current digital asset drive, as Thailand’s oldest bank prepares itself for the expected financial technological disruption of decentralized finance. While other banks are still undecided or only making temporary forays into interacting with digital assets, SCB says it is keen on committing funds to explore the blockchain and DeFi space.
SCB’s DeFi focus is also coming at a time when regulators in Thailand are targeting the decentralized finance space for more stringent regulations. Indeed, regulatory attention is increasingly coming the way of the niche market space with national and intergovernmental agencies looking to craft legal policies for the DeFi market.
DeFi initially held the promise of decentralization; the disintermediation of the established gatekeepers of global finance. However, with banks and financial institutions investing in decentralized technology, the narrative appears to be shifting towards a hybrid form of DeFi known as regulated DeFi, which combines the extant norms and efficiency of traditional finance, instant settlements and cost reduction benefits associated with decentralized protocols.
DeFi ambitions
Siam Commercial Bank’s $110 million blockchain war chest started as a $50 million seed fund initiated back in February by SCB 10X, the bank’s venture arm. As reported by Cointelegraph at the time, the fund further strengthened the bank’s forward-thinking approach to the emerging developments in digital finance.
In a conversation with Cointelegraph, Mukaya ‘Tai’ Panich, chief venture and investment officer at SCB 10X, said that DeFi was a sort of revelation for the bank during its assessment of the emerging digital finance landscape.
“We were doing work on the blockchain industry and started looking into DeFi. And we were amazed by it,” Panich told Cointelegraph. According to the SCB 10X executive, the bank was quick to spot the paradigm shift of potential DeFi technology and the possible disintermediation of the traditional financial institutions.
“DeFi projects can be completely automated,” he said, noting that human involvement would be restricted to smart contract code upgrades. Panich also touched on the revolutionary nature of smart contracts and how lines of code can enable direct transactions between entities like lenders and borrowers without the need for a central counterparty.
Given the possibility of DeFi upending the legacy finance status quo, Panich says banks would do well to prepare for the imminent disruption:
“The reason we want to invest in DeFi and be part of the DeFi protocol’s ecosystem is because we want to understand and capitalize on DeFi, given its potential to meaningfully impact the financial industry.”
At $110 million, the blockchain and DeFi fund is almost half of the SCB 10X’s $220 million venture capital fund. Commenting on the size of the allocation to digital assets, Panich said that it was a reflection of the bank’s commitment to the DeFi space, adding:
“SCB 10X has invested and developed multiple collaborative relationships with the blockchain community in Asia and across the world including Ripple, BlockFi, Sygnum, Alpha Finance Lab, Anchorage, Anchor Protocol (part of Terra chain), Axelar and Ape Board, among others.”
Related: Thai bank’s venture arm invests in institutional crypto custodian Anchorage
Upending global finance
Back in April, John Whelan, head of Banco Santander’s blockchain lab in Madrid, put forward an argument for regulated DeFi. According to Whelan, private layer-two settlement networks for asset classes running on top of public blockchains will likely emerge in the future.
According to Whelan, blockchain adoption for reducing transaction settlement throughput is a major focus point for legacy finance stakeholders. Whelan’s comments highlighted the emerging narrative that rather than disintermediation, financial institutions will find means to adopt DeFi tech to their own backend processes.
Panich also echoed similar sentiments, telling Cointelegraph: “I want to point out that I really see a future where traditional financial companies will work together with DeFi companies. My view is that in the future, there will be an integration of traditional finance with DeFi.”
According to the SCB 10X chief investment officer, banks and financial institutions have the necessary “customer-facing” experience to better offer innovative fintech services to consumers. “In the future, I can see a world where DeFi can power the back-end of traditional finance companies,” Panich added.
For Rachid Ajaja, CEO and co-founder of decentralized capital market outfit AllianceBlock, the promised upending of legacy finance by DeFi is something that will happen in the long term. However, Ajaja said the short-term trend will consist of more financial institutions leveraging aspects of decentralized finance.
The AllianceBlock CEO drew parallels with the digital transformation era that saw the emergence of fintech companies providing services via APIs that interface with the banking system. “With the bridging of DeFi and financial institutions, we will see exactly the same thing, and bit by bit, legacy systems will change,” Ajaja told Cointelegraph, adding:
“Long term, I am absolutely confident that DeFi will upend the global financial system completely because everything that is done in traditional finance can be replicated in DeFi with lower cost, less need for a middleman, new opportunities and increased new revenue streams. It’s only a matter of time.”
Craig Russo, director of innovation at the nonfungible token vault and marketplace protocol PolyientX, also provided further insight as to the possible future path for DeFi adoption in global finance. Russo told Cointelegraph that financial institutions will most likely adopt open-access protocols via initiatives like Compound Treasury while also utilizing DeFi technology within their internal systems.
“A big goal of the DeFi movement is to revamp the current economic system to better align incentive structures, which may ultimately come at odds with the interests of some institutions while opening the door to a new wave of fintech innovation,” Russo added.
Related: Thailand to target DeFi in latest regulatory clampdown
Dealing with regulatory pressure
As the SCB continues with its exploration of blockchain investment opportunities, authorities in Thailand are shining the regulatory spotlight on DeFi. Back in June, Thailand’s Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced plans to consider a licensing regime for the decentralized finance protocols, especially projects that issue tokens.
Commenting on how the bank will handle the increased scrutiny of the DeFi space, Panich stated, “SCB 10X’s aim is to absolutely work within the regulations laid out by the government and regulators such as the Thai SEC and the Bank of Thailand.”
“Blockchain and DeFi are very young, emerging and fast-changing industries. As a TradFi player active in DeFi, it is incumbent upon us to work closely with the government and regulators to help put forward the DeFi industry’s perspective, finding optimal ways to move the industry rapidly forward.”
The Thai SEC’s plan to consider DeFi regulations is indicative of the current attention being paid to DeFi by regulators across the globe. Also in June, the World Economic Forum released a policy toolkit for fair and efficient DeFi regulations.
The emphasis on fair and efficient regulations is likely based on fears that blockchain startups may be at a disadvantage from a compliance standpoint if more stringent measures are applied to DeFi. Regulated entities like banks and financial institutions may find it easier to negotiate these policy constraints.
Indeed, AllianceBlock’s Ajaja made this same point to Cointelegraph, stating, “DeFi primitives are definitely at a disadvantage in this regard against their counterparts in mainstream finance.” As such, Ajaja stated that compliance gateways for protocols like Know Your Customer and Anti-Money Laundering are necessary for greater compatibility with mainstream finance and the move towards interfacing with real-world assets for DeFi primitives.
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michaelandy101-blog · 4 years ago
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Remembering Our Pal, Russ Jones
New Post has been published on https://tiptopreview.com/remembering-our-friend-russ-jones/
Remembering Our Pal, Russ Jones
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We love you, Russ.
There are such a lot of methods to recollect you, infinite aspects to who you have been and your influence on website positioning. The place do I even start?
You have been the funniest man within the room. You’d gear up for a joke with that wry smile and sparkle in your eye, and we all the time knew what was coming. Your humorousness was eager and intelligent and ever-present.
I keep in mind being sick and jetlagged on the way in which to placed on a mini-MozCon for a valued, strategic shopper — you made the two.5-hour winter automotive trip cross by in a breeze together with your entertaining and hilarious tales. You may make charming dialog about something and with anybody. Listening and laughing with delight to your tales about rising up as an an identical twin, present occasions, reminiscences from previous MozCons, and concepts about what we may construct at Moz subsequent, you reworked my drained and cranky temper into pleased and inventive power. Your spirit and laughter was infectious.
You have been good. Our longtime pal, hyperlinks API energy consumer, and collaborator on the weblog, it was solely a matter of time earlier than you turned a full-fledged Mozzer. Once we formally welcomed you to Moz in 2015, it was like coming residence. From the beginning, you confirmed up keen and able to innovate. Over time you have been relentless in your quest for higher knowledge, holding tech giants and the website positioning business accountable. You have left an indelible mark on Moz: our hyperlink index and key phrase corpus bear witness to your ardour for dependable, high quality knowledge and significant metrics. Key phrase Explorer would not be right here with out you. Your work on the brand new Area Authority rating was transformative. And your dedication to the website positioning group, to relaying complicated concepts clearly and with conviction, have been second to none. You have been all the time there after we wanted you.
You have been daring and brave. You caught up in your beliefs and staunchly defended them, be they skilled or political. You have been a loyal and steadfast advocate, all the time prepared to wade into the fray in your buddies and colleagues, the most effective sort of pal to have. I realized quite a bit from watching you debate and clarify with aptitude, class, and compassion in all of the website positioning corners of the web. Conversations that I didn’t have the abdomen for, you’ll enter into with a smile, guided by the flame of your convictions.
I beloved your devotion to your loved ones and the way you treasured time with them above all else. You’d suppose deeply about whether or not you have been being the most effective dad, husband, brother you can be. The identical curiosity and drive for greatness that you simply utilized to work, you additionally utilized to your private relationships. You needed to be good at loving your loved ones since you believed they deserved that from you. I felt it once you introduced them to MozCon and also you talked about watching your daughters develop and be taught. You have been all the time asking your self, “How could I be a better dad in this moment?” Your ardour for service and making the world higher was pushed, partially, since you needed a greater world in your ladies.
There’s a lot we nonetheless want let’s imagine to you. There are phrases left unsaid, tasks unfinished, concepts unrealized. However past all else, I simply wish to say thanks, Russ, for the unbelievable influence you have had: on Moz and Mozzers, on the website positioning group, on the whole lot and everybody you touched. On me.
To the website positioning group, I invite you to revisit the huge legacy Russ gifted us together with his weblog posts, Whiteboard Fridays, and MozCon displays, linked under. Bear in mind him for all he gave us. We’re fortunate to have these reminiscences of an excellent soul gone too quickly.
Whiteboard Fridays:
MozCon displays:
Weblog posts:
A memorial website has been arrange in his honor at rememberingrussjones.com. There you may learn extra about Russ and his nice loves in life, share a reminiscence, and make a donation to a fund for his household.
Our grief is deep. Our love is deeper. At present, I will be elevating a glass (Scotch, neat) and I ask you to hitch me on this toast: To Russ, who pushed for excellence, who all the time strove to make life a bit of simpler for others, and who all the time had a sparkle in his eyes and a joke on the prepared. Goodbye, my pal.
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nutrifami · 4 years ago
Text
Remembering Our Friend, Russ Jones
We love you, Russ.
There are so many ways to remember you, endless facets to who you were and your impact on SEO. Where do I even begin?
You were the funniest guy in the room. You would gear up for a joke with that wry smile and sparkle in your eye, and we always knew what was coming. Your sense of humor was keen and clever and ever-present.
I remember being ill and jetlagged on the way to put on a mini-MozCon for a valued, strategic client — you made the 2.5-hour winter car ride pass by in a breeze with your entertaining and hilarious stories. You could make charming conversation about anything and with anyone. Listening and laughing with delight to your stories about growing up as an identical twin, current events, memories from past MozCons, and ideas about what we could build at Moz next, you transformed my tired and cranky mood into happy and creative energy. Your spirit and laughter was infectious.
You were brilliant. Our longtime friend, links API power user, and collaborator on the blog, it was only a matter of time before you became a full-fledged Mozzer. When we officially welcomed you to Moz in 2015, it was like coming home. From the start, you showed up eager and ready to innovate. Over the years you were relentless in your quest for better data, holding tech giants and the SEO industry accountable. You've left an indelible mark on Moz: our link index and keyword corpus bear witness to your passion for reliable, quality data and meaningful metrics. Keyword Explorer wouldn't be here without you. Your work on the new Domain Authority score was transformative. And your commitment to the SEO community, to relaying complex ideas clearly and with conviction, were second to none. You were always there when we needed you.
You were bold and courageous. You stuck up for your beliefs and staunchly defended them, be they professional or political. You were a loyal and steadfast advocate, always willing to wade into the fray for your friends and colleagues, the best kind of friend to have. I learned a lot from watching you debate and explain with flair, class, and compassion in all the SEO corners of the internet. Conversations that I didn’t have the stomach for, you would enter into with a smile, guided by the flame of your convictions.
I loved your devotion to your family and how you treasured time with them above all else. You would think deeply about whether you were being the best dad, husband, brother you could be. The same curiosity and drive for greatness that you applied to work, you also applied to your personal relationships. You wanted to be good at loving your family because you believed they deserved that from you. I felt it when you brought them to MozCon and you talked about watching your daughters grow and learn. You were always asking yourself, “How could I be a better dad in this moment?” Your passion for service and making the world better was driven, in part, because you wanted a better world for your girls.
There's so much we still wish we could say to you. There are words left unsaid, projects unfinished, ideas unrealized. But beyond all else, I just want to say thank you, Russ, for the incredible impact you've had: on Moz and Mozzers, on the SEO community, on everything and everyone you touched. On me.
To the SEO community, I invite you to revisit the vast legacy Russ gifted us with his blog posts, Whiteboard Fridays, and MozCon presentations, linked below. Remember him for all he gave us. We're lucky to have these memories of a brilliant soul gone too soon.
Whiteboard Fridays:
Defense Against the Dark Arts: Why Negative SEO Matters
Content Expansion: From Prompt to Paragraph to Published Page
Getting Smarter with SERPs
Generating Local Content at Scale
Matter: How SEOs Can Help Now
Content Authority: Potential Measures of Authoritative Content
Risk-Averse Link Building
Let's Make Money: 4 Tactics for Agencies Looking to Succeed
The Theory Behind Ranking Factors
MozCon presentations:
Esse Quam Vidieri: When Faking It Is Harder Than Making It
Lies, Damned Lies and Analytics
Blog posts:
Million Dollar Content - An Analysis of the Web's Most Valuable Organic Content
Google Keyword Planner's Dirty Secrets
Sweating the Details - Rethinking Google Keyword Tool Volume
Google Keyword Unplanner – Clickstream Data to the Rescue
Google's War on Data and the Clickstream Revolution
Google Search Console Reliability: Webmaster Tools on Trial
Not Your Dad's Keyword Tool: Advanced Keyword Research Use Cases
Tackling Tag Sprawl: Crawl Budget, Duplicate Content, and User-Generated Content
Paint by Numbers: Using Data to Produce Great Content
The Unspoken Reality of Net Neutrality
The Maker SERP Squeeze: Why Should SEOs Care?
The Link Building Webslog
Page Authority 2.0: An Update on Testing and Timing
Page Authority 2.0 Is Coming This Month: What’s Changing and Why
A Comprehensive Analysis of the New Domain Authority
Detecting Link Manipulation and Spam with Domain Authority
A New Domain Authority Is Coming Soon: What’s Changing, When, & Why
Using a New Correlation Model to Predict Future Rankings with Page Authority
A Quarter-Million Reasons to Use Moz's Link Intersect Tool
Backlink Blindspots: The State of Robots.txt
How to Find and Monitor Bad Backlinks
Big, Fast, and Strong: Setting the Standard for Backlink Index Comparisons
How Mobile-First Indexing Disrupts the Link Graph
A memorial site has been set up in his honor at rememberingrussjones.com. There you can read more about Russ and his great loves in life, share a memory, and make a donation to a fund for his family.
Our grief is deep. Our love is deeper. Today, I'll be raising a glass (Scotch, neat) and I ask you to join me in this toast: To Russ, who pushed for excellence, who always strove to make life a little easier for others, and who always had a sparkle in his eyes and a joke at the ready. Goodbye, my friend.
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hydrus · 7 years ago
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Version 320
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I had a great week. The downloader overhaul is in its last act, and I've fixed and added some other neat stuff. There's also a neat hydrus-related project for advanced users to try out.
Late breaking edit: Looks like I have broken e621 queries that include the '/' character this week, like 'male/female'! Hold off on updating if you have these, or pause them and wait a week for me to fix it!
misc
I fixed an issue introduced in last week's new pipeline with new subs sometimes not parsing the first page of results properly. If you missed files you wanted in the first sync, please reset the affected subs' caches.
Due to an oversight, a mappings cache that I now take advantage of to speed up tag searches was missing an index that would speed it up even further. I've now added these indices--and your clients will spend a minute generating them on update--and most tag searches are now superfast! My IRL client was taking 1.6s to do the first step of finding 5000-file tag results, and now it does it in under 5ms! Indices!
The hyperlinks on the media viewer now use any custom browser launch path in options->files and trash.
downloader overhaul (easy)
I have now added gallery parsers for all the default sites hydrus supports out the box. Any regular download now entirely parses in the new system. With luck, you won't notice any difference, but let me know if you get any searches that terminate early or any other problems.
I have also written the new Gallery URL Generator (GUG) objects for everything, but I have not yet plugged these in. I am now on the precipice of switching this final legacy step over to the new system. This will be a big shift that will finally allow us to have new gallery 'seachers' for all kinds of new sites. I expect to do this next week.
When I do the GUG switch, anything that is supported by default in the client should switch over silently and automatically, but if you have added any new custom boorus, a small amount of additional work will be required on your end to get them working again. I will work with the other parser-creators in the community to make this as painless as possible, and there will be instructions in next week's release post. In any case, I expect to roll out nicer downloaders for the popular desired boorus (derpibooru, FA, etc...) as part of the normal upcoming update process, along with some other new additions like artstation and hopefully twitter username lookup.
In any case, watch this space! It's almost happening!
downloader overhaul (advanced)
So, all the GUGs are in place, and the dialog now saves. If you are interested in making some of your own, check what I've done. I'm going to swap out the legacy 'gallery identifier' object with GUGs this coming week, and fingers-crossed, it will mostly all just swap out no prob. I can update existing gallery identifiers to my new GUGs, which will automatically inherit the url classes and parsers I've already got in place, but custom boorus are too complicated for me to update completely automatically. I will try to auto-generate gallery and post url parsers, but users will need GUGs and url classes to get working again. I think the best solution is if we direct medium-level users to the parser github and have them link things together manually, and then follow-up with whatever 'easy import' object I come up with to bundle downloader-capability into a single object. And as I say above, I'll also fold in the more popular downloaders into some regular updates. I am open to discuss this more if you have ideas!
Furthermore, I've extended url classes this week to allow 'default' values for path components and query parameters. If that component or parameter is missing from a given URL, it will still be recognised as the URL class, but it will gain the default value during import normalisation. e.g. The kind of URL safebooru gives your browser when you type in a query:
https://safebooru.org/index.php?page=post&s=list&tags=contrapposto
Will be automatically populated with an initialising pid=0 parameter:
https://safebooru.org/index.php?page=post&pid=0&s=list&tags=contrapposto
This helps us with several "the site gives a blank page/index value for the first page, which I can't match to a paged URL that will then increment via the url class"-kind of problems. It will particularly help when I add drag-and-drop search--we want it so a user can type in a query in their browser, check it is good, and then DnD the URL the site gave them straight into hydrus and the page stuff will all get sorted behind the scenes without them having to think about it.
I've updated a bunch of the gallery url classes this week with these new defaults, so again, if you are interested, please check them out. The Hentai Foundry ones are interesting.
I've also improved some of the logic behind download sites' 'source url' pre-import file status checking. Now, if URL X at Site A provides a Source URL Y to Site B, and the file Y is mapped to also has a URL Z that fits the same url class as X, Y is now distrusted as a source (wew). This stops false positive source url recognition when the booru gives the same 'original' source url for multiple files (including alternate/edited files). e621 has particularly had several of these issues, and I am sure several others do as well. I've been tracking this issue with several people, so if you have been hit by this, please let me if and know this change fixes anything, particularly for new files going forward, which have yet to be 'tainted' by multiple incorrect known url mappings. I'll also be adding some 'just download the damned file' checkboxes to file import options as I have previously discussed.
A user on the discord helpfully submitted some code that adds an 'import cookies.txt' button to the review session cookies panels. This could be a real neat way to effect fake logins, where you just copy your browser's cookies, so please play with this and let me know how you get on. I had mixed success getting different styles of cookies.txt to import, so I would be interested in more information, and to know which sites work great at logging in this way, and which are bad, and which cookies.txt browser add-ons are best!
a web interface to the server
I have been talking for a bit with a user who has written a web interface to the hydrus server. He is a clever dude who has done some neat work, and his project is now ready for people to try out. If you are fairly experienced in hydrus and would like to experiment with a nice-looking computer- and phone-compatible web interface to the general file/tag mapping system hydrus uses, please check this out:
https://github.com/mserajnik/hydrusrvue
https://github.com/mserajnik/hydrusrv
https://github.com/mserajnik/hydrusrv-docker
In particular, check out the live demo and screenshots here:
https://github.com/mserajnik/hydrusrvue/#demo
Let him know how you like it! I expect to write proper, easier APIs in the coming years, which will allow projects like this to do all sorts of new and neat things.
full list
clients should now have objects for all default downloaders. everything should be prepped for the big switchover:
wrote gallery url generators for all the default downloaders and a couple more as well
wrote a gallery parser for deviant art--it also comes with an update to the DA url class because the meta 'next page' link on DA gallery pages is invalid wew!
wrote a gallery parser for hentai foundry, inkbunny, rule34hentai, moebooru (konachan, sakugabooru, yande.re), artstation, newgrounds, and pixiv artist galleries (static html)
added a gallery parser for sankaku
the artstation post url parser no longer fetches cover images
url classes can now support 'default' values for path components and query parameters! so, if your url might be missing a page=1 initialsation value due to user drag-and-drop, you can auto-add it in the normalisation step!
if the entered default does not match the rules of the component or parameter, it will be cleared back to none!
all appropriate default gallery url classes (which is most) now have these default values. all default gallery url classes will be overwritten on db update
three test 'search initialisation' url classes that attempted to fix this problem a different way will be deleted on update, if present
updated some other url classes
when checking source urls during the pre-download import status check, the client will now distrust parsed source urls if the files they seem to refer to also have other urls of the same url class as the file import object being actioned (basically, this is some logic that tries to detect bad source url attribution, where multiple files on a booru (typically including alternate edits) are all source-url'd back to a single original)
gallery page parsing now discounts parsed 'next page' urls that are the same as the page that fetched them (some gallery end-points link themselves as the next page, wew)
json parsing formulae that are set to parse all 'list' items will now also parse all dictionary entries if faced with a dict instead!
added new stop-gap 'stop checking' logic in subscription syncing for certain low-gallery-count edge-cases
fixed an issue where (typically new) subscriptions were bugging out trying to figure a default stop_reason on certain page results
fixed an unusual listctrl delete item index-tracking error that would sometimes cause exceptions on the 'try to link url stuff together' button press and maybe some other places
thanks to a submission from user prkc on the discord, we now have 'import cookies.txt' buttons on the review sessions panels! if you are interested in 'manual' logins through browser-cookie-copying, please give this a go and let me know which kinds of cookies.txt do and do not work, and how your different site cookie-copy-login tests work in hydrus.
the mappings cache tables now have some new indices that speed up certain kinds of tag search significantly. db update will spend a minute or two generating these indices for existing users
advanced mode users will discover a fun new entry on the help menu
the hyperlinks on the media viewer hover window and a couple of other places are now a custom control that uses any custom browser launch path in options->files and trash
fixed an issue where certain canvas edge-case media clearing events could be caught incorrectly by the manage tags dialog and its subsidiary panels
think I fixed an issue where a client left with a dialog open could sometimes run into trouble later trying to show an idle time maintenance modal popup and give a 'C++ assertion IsRunning()' exception and end up locking the client's ui
manage parsers dialog will now autosort after an add event
the gug panels now normalise example urls
improved some misc service error handling
rewrote some url parsing to stop forcing '+'->' ' in our urls' query texts
fixed some bad error handling for matplotlib import
misc fixes
next week
The big GUG overhaul is the main thing. The button where you select which site to download from will seem only to get some slightly different labels, but in truth a whole big pipeline behind that button needs to be shifted over to the new system. GUGs are actually pretty simple, so I hope this will only take one week, but we'll see!
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xaydungtruonggia · 4 years ago
Text
Remembering Our Friend, Russ Jones
We love you, Russ.
There are so many ways to remember you, endless facets to who you were and your impact on SEO. Where do I even begin?
You were the funniest guy in the room. You would gear up for a joke with that wry smile and sparkle in your eye, and we always knew what was coming. Your sense of humor was keen and clever and ever-present.
I remember being ill and jetlagged on the way to put on a mini-MozCon for a valued, strategic client — you made the 2.5-hour winter car ride pass by in a breeze with your entertaining and hilarious stories. You could make charming conversation about anything and with anyone. Listening and laughing with delight to your stories about growing up as an identical twin, current events, memories from past MozCons, and ideas about what we could build at Moz next, you transformed my tired and cranky mood into happy and creative energy. Your spirit and laughter was infectious.
You were brilliant. Our longtime friend, links API power user, and collaborator on the blog, it was only a matter of time before you became a full-fledged Mozzer. When we officially welcomed you to Moz in 2015, it was like coming home. From the start, you showed up eager and ready to innovate. Over the years you were relentless in your quest for better data, holding tech giants and the SEO industry accountable. You've left an indelible mark on Moz: our link index and keyword corpus bear witness to your passion for reliable, quality data and meaningful metrics. Keyword Explorer wouldn't be here without you. Your work on the new Domain Authority score was transformative. And your commitment to the SEO community, to relaying complex ideas clearly and with conviction, were second to none. You were always there when we needed you.
You were bold and courageous. You stuck up for your beliefs and staunchly defended them, be they professional or political. You were a loyal and steadfast advocate, always willing to wade into the fray for your friends and colleagues, the best kind of friend to have. I learned a lot from watching you debate and explain with flair, class, and compassion in all the SEO corners of the internet. Conversations that I didn’t have the stomach for, you would enter into with a smile, guided by the flame of your convictions.
I loved your devotion to your family and how you treasured time with them above all else. You would think deeply about whether you were being the best dad, husband, brother you could be. The same curiosity and drive for greatness that you applied to work, you also applied to your personal relationships. You wanted to be good at loving your family because you believed they deserved that from you. I felt it when you brought them to MozCon and you talked about watching your daughters grow and learn. You were always asking yourself, “How could I be a better dad in this moment?” Your passion for service and making the world better was driven, in part, because you wanted a better world for your girls.
There's so much we still wish we could say to you. There are words left unsaid, projects unfinished, ideas unrealized. But beyond all else, I just want to say thank you, Russ, for the incredible impact you've had: on Moz and Mozzers, on the SEO community, on everything and everyone you touched. On me.
To the SEO community, I invite you to revisit the vast legacy Russ gifted us with his blog posts, Whiteboard Fridays, and MozCon presentations, linked below. Remember him for all he gave us. We're lucky to have these memories of a brilliant soul gone too soon.
Whiteboard Fridays:
Defense Against the Dark Arts: Why Negative SEO Matters
Content Expansion: From Prompt to Paragraph to Published Page
Getting Smarter with SERPs
Generating Local Content at Scale
Matter: How SEOs Can Help Now
Content Authority: Potential Measures of Authoritative Content
Risk-Averse Link Building
Let's Make Money: 4 Tactics for Agencies Looking to Succeed
The Theory Behind Ranking Factors
MozCon presentations:
Esse Quam Vidieri: When Faking It Is Harder Than Making It
Lies, Damned Lies and Analytics
Blog posts:
Million Dollar Content - An Analysis of the Web's Most Valuable Organic Content
Google Keyword Planner's Dirty Secrets
Sweating the Details - Rethinking Google Keyword Tool Volume
Google Keyword Unplanner – Clickstream Data to the Rescue
Google's War on Data and the Clickstream Revolution
Google Search Console Reliability: Webmaster Tools on Trial
Not Your Dad's Keyword Tool: Advanced Keyword Research Use Cases
Tackling Tag Sprawl: Crawl Budget, Duplicate Content, and User-Generated Content
Paint by Numbers: Using Data to Produce Great Content
The Unspoken Reality of Net Neutrality
The Maker SERP Squeeze: Why Should SEOs Care?
The Link Building Webslog
Page Authority 2.0: An Update on Testing and Timing
Page Authority 2.0 Is Coming This Month: What’s Changing and Why
A Comprehensive Analysis of the New Domain Authority
Detecting Link Manipulation and Spam with Domain Authority
A New Domain Authority Is Coming Soon: What’s Changing, When, & Why
Using a New Correlation Model to Predict Future Rankings with Page Authority
A Quarter-Million Reasons to Use Moz's Link Intersect Tool
Backlink Blindspots: The State of Robots.txt
How to Find and Monitor Bad Backlinks
Big, Fast, and Strong: Setting the Standard for Backlink Index Comparisons
How Mobile-First Indexing Disrupts the Link Graph
A memorial site has been set up in his honor at rememberingrussjones.com. There you can read more about Russ and his great loves in life, share a memory, and make a donation to a fund for his family.
Our grief is deep. Our love is deeper. Today, I'll be raising a glass (Scotch, neat) and I ask you to join me in this toast: To Russ, who pushed for excellence, who always strove to make life a little easier for others, and who always had a sparkle in his eyes and a joke at the ready. Goodbye, my friend.
0 notes
ductrungnguyen87 · 4 years ago
Text
Remembering Our Friend, Russ Jones
We love you, Russ.
There are so many ways to remember you, endless facets to who you were and your impact on SEO. Where do I even begin?
You were the funniest guy in the room. You would gear up for a joke with that wry smile and sparkle in your eye, and we always knew what was coming. Your sense of humor was keen and clever and ever-present.
I remember being ill and jetlagged on the way to put on a mini-MozCon for a valued, strategic client — you made the 2.5-hour winter car ride pass by in a breeze with your entertaining and hilarious stories. You could make charming conversation about anything and with anyone. Listening and laughing with delight to your stories about growing up as an identical twin, current events, memories from past MozCons, and ideas about what we could build at Moz next, you transformed my tired and cranky mood into happy and creative energy. Your spirit and laughter was infectious.
You were brilliant. Our longtime friend, links API power user, and collaborator on the blog, it was only a matter of time before you became a full-fledged Mozzer. When we officially welcomed you to Moz in 2015, it was like coming home. From the start, you showed up eager and ready to innovate. Over the years you were relentless in your quest for better data, holding tech giants and the SEO industry accountable. You've left an indelible mark on Moz: our link index and keyword corpus bear witness to your passion for reliable, quality data and meaningful metrics. Keyword Explorer wouldn't be here without you. Your work on the new Domain Authority score was transformative. And your commitment to the SEO community, to relaying complex ideas clearly and with conviction, were second to none. You were always there when we needed you.
You were bold and courageous. You stuck up for your beliefs and staunchly defended them, be they professional or political. You were a loyal and steadfast advocate, always willing to wade into the fray for your friends and colleagues, the best kind of friend to have. I learned a lot from watching you debate and explain with flair, class, and compassion in all the SEO corners of the internet. Conversations that I didn’t have the stomach for, you would enter into with a smile, guided by the flame of your convictions.
I loved your devotion to your family and how you treasured time with them above all else. You would think deeply about whether you were being the best dad, husband, brother you could be. The same curiosity and drive for greatness that you applied to work, you also applied to your personal relationships. You wanted to be good at loving your family because you believed they deserved that from you. I felt it when you brought them to MozCon and you talked about watching your daughters grow and learn. You were always asking yourself, “How could I be a better dad in this moment?” Your passion for service and making the world better was driven, in part, because you wanted a better world for your girls.
There's so much we still wish we could say to you. There are words left unsaid, projects unfinished, ideas unrealized. But beyond all else, I just want to say thank you, Russ, for the incredible impact you've had: on Moz and Mozzers, on the SEO community, on everything and everyone you touched. On me.
To the SEO community, I invite you to revisit the vast legacy Russ gifted us with his blog posts, Whiteboard Fridays, and MozCon presentations, linked below. Remember him for all he gave us. We're lucky to have these memories of a brilliant soul gone too soon.
Whiteboard Fridays:
Defense Against the Dark Arts: Why Negative SEO Matters
Content Expansion: From Prompt to Paragraph to Published Page
Getting Smarter with SERPs
Generating Local Content at Scale
Matter: How SEOs Can Help Now
Content Authority: Potential Measures of Authoritative Content
Risk-Averse Link Building
Let's Make Money: 4 Tactics for Agencies Looking to Succeed
The Theory Behind Ranking Factors
MozCon presentations:
Esse Quam Vidieri: When Faking It Is Harder Than Making It
Lies, Damned Lies and Analytics
Blog posts:
Million Dollar Content - An Analysis of the Web's Most Valuable Organic Content
Google Keyword Planner's Dirty Secrets
Sweating the Details - Rethinking Google Keyword Tool Volume
Google Keyword Unplanner – Clickstream Data to the Rescue
Google's War on Data and the Clickstream Revolution
Google Search Console Reliability: Webmaster Tools on Trial
Not Your Dad's Keyword Tool: Advanced Keyword Research Use Cases
Tackling Tag Sprawl: Crawl Budget, Duplicate Content, and User-Generated Content
Paint by Numbers: Using Data to Produce Great Content
The Unspoken Reality of Net Neutrality
The Maker SERP Squeeze: Why Should SEOs Care?
The Link Building Webslog
Page Authority 2.0: An Update on Testing and Timing
Page Authority 2.0 Is Coming This Month: What’s Changing and Why
A Comprehensive Analysis of the New Domain Authority
Detecting Link Manipulation and Spam with Domain Authority
A New Domain Authority Is Coming Soon: What’s Changing, When, & Why
Using a New Correlation Model to Predict Future Rankings with Page Authority
A Quarter-Million Reasons to Use Moz's Link Intersect Tool
Backlink Blindspots: The State of Robots.txt
How to Find and Monitor Bad Backlinks
Big, Fast, and Strong: Setting the Standard for Backlink Index Comparisons
How Mobile-First Indexing Disrupts the Link Graph
A memorial site has been set up in his honor at rememberingrussjones.com. There you can read more about Russ and his great loves in life, share a memory, and make a donation to a fund for his family.
Our grief is deep. Our love is deeper. Today, I'll be raising a glass (Scotch, neat) and I ask you to join me in this toast: To Russ, who pushed for excellence, who always strove to make life a little easier for others, and who always had a sparkle in his eyes and a joke at the ready. Goodbye, my friend.
0 notes
camerasieunhovn · 4 years ago
Text
Remembering Our Friend, Russ Jones
We love you, Russ.
There are so many ways to remember you, endless facets to who you were and your impact on SEO. Where do I even begin?
You were the funniest guy in the room. You would gear up for a joke with that wry smile and sparkle in your eye, and we always knew what was coming. Your sense of humor was keen and clever and ever-present.
I remember being ill and jetlagged on the way to put on a mini-MozCon for a valued, strategic client — you made the 2.5-hour winter car ride pass by in a breeze with your entertaining and hilarious stories. You could make charming conversation about anything and with anyone. Listening and laughing with delight to your stories about growing up as an identical twin, current events, memories from past MozCons, and ideas about what we could build at Moz next, you transformed my tired and cranky mood into happy and creative energy. Your spirit and laughter was infectious.
You were brilliant. Our longtime friend, links API power user, and collaborator on the blog, it was only a matter of time before you became a full-fledged Mozzer. When we officially welcomed you to Moz in 2015, it was like coming home. From the start, you showed up eager and ready to innovate. Over the years you were relentless in your quest for better data, holding tech giants and the SEO industry accountable. You've left an indelible mark on Moz: our link index and keyword corpus bear witness to your passion for reliable, quality data and meaningful metrics. Keyword Explorer wouldn't be here without you. Your work on the new Domain Authority score was transformative. And your commitment to the SEO community, to relaying complex ideas clearly and with conviction, were second to none. You were always there when we needed you.
You were bold and courageous. You stuck up for your beliefs and staunchly defended them, be they professional or political. You were a loyal and steadfast advocate, always willing to wade into the fray for your friends and colleagues, the best kind of friend to have. I learned a lot from watching you debate and explain with flair, class, and compassion in all the SEO corners of the internet. Conversations that I didn’t have the stomach for, you would enter into with a smile, guided by the flame of your convictions.
I loved your devotion to your family and how you treasured time with them above all else. You would think deeply about whether you were being the best dad, husband, brother you could be. The same curiosity and drive for greatness that you applied to work, you also applied to your personal relationships. You wanted to be good at loving your family because you believed they deserved that from you. I felt it when you brought them to MozCon and you talked about watching your daughters grow and learn. You were always asking yourself, “How could I be a better dad in this moment?” Your passion for service and making the world better was driven, in part, because you wanted a better world for your girls.
There's so much we still wish we could say to you. There are words left unsaid, projects unfinished, ideas unrealized. But beyond all else, I just want to say thank you, Russ, for the incredible impact you've had: on Moz and Mozzers, on the SEO community, on everything and everyone you touched. On me.
To the SEO community, I invite you to revisit the vast legacy Russ gifted us with his blog posts, Whiteboard Fridays, and MozCon presentations, linked below. Remember him for all he gave us. We're lucky to have these memories of a brilliant soul gone too soon.
Whiteboard Fridays:
Defense Against the Dark Arts: Why Negative SEO Matters
Content Expansion: From Prompt to Paragraph to Published Page
Getting Smarter with SERPs
Generating Local Content at Scale
Matter: How SEOs Can Help Now
Content Authority: Potential Measures of Authoritative Content
Risk-Averse Link Building
Let's Make Money: 4 Tactics for Agencies Looking to Succeed
The Theory Behind Ranking Factors
MozCon presentations:
Esse Quam Vidieri: When Faking It Is Harder Than Making It
Lies, Damned Lies and Analytics
Blog posts:
Million Dollar Content - An Analysis of the Web's Most Valuable Organic Content
Google Keyword Planner's Dirty Secrets
Sweating the Details - Rethinking Google Keyword Tool Volume
Google Keyword Unplanner – Clickstream Data to the Rescue
Google's War on Data and the Clickstream Revolution
Google Search Console Reliability: Webmaster Tools on Trial
Not Your Dad's Keyword Tool: Advanced Keyword Research Use Cases
Tackling Tag Sprawl: Crawl Budget, Duplicate Content, and User-Generated Content
Paint by Numbers: Using Data to Produce Great Content
The Unspoken Reality of Net Neutrality
The Maker SERP Squeeze: Why Should SEOs Care?
The Link Building Webslog
Page Authority 2.0: An Update on Testing and Timing
Page Authority 2.0 Is Coming This Month: What’s Changing and Why
A Comprehensive Analysis of the New Domain Authority
Detecting Link Manipulation and Spam with Domain Authority
A New Domain Authority Is Coming Soon: What’s Changing, When, & Why
Using a New Correlation Model to Predict Future Rankings with Page Authority
A Quarter-Million Reasons to Use Moz's Link Intersect Tool
Backlink Blindspots: The State of Robots.txt
How to Find and Monitor Bad Backlinks
Big, Fast, and Strong: Setting the Standard for Backlink Index Comparisons
How Mobile-First Indexing Disrupts the Link Graph
A memorial site has been set up in his honor at rememberingrussjones.com. There you can read more about Russ and his great loves in life, share a memory, and make a donation to a fund for his family.
Our grief is deep. Our love is deeper. Today, I'll be raising a glass (Scotch, neat) and I ask you to join me in this toast: To Russ, who pushed for excellence, who always strove to make life a little easier for others, and who always had a sparkle in his eyes and a joke at the ready. Goodbye, my friend.
0 notes
gamebazu · 4 years ago
Text
Remembering Our Friend, Russ Jones
We love you, Russ.
There are so many ways to remember you, endless facets to who you were and your impact on SEO. Where do I even begin?
You were the funniest guy in the room. You would gear up for a joke with that wry smile and sparkle in your eye, and we always knew what was coming. Your sense of humor was keen and clever and ever-present.
I remember being ill and jetlagged on the way to put on a mini-MozCon for a valued, strategic client — you made the 2.5-hour winter car ride pass by in a breeze with your entertaining and hilarious stories. You could make charming conversation about anything and with anyone. Listening and laughing with delight to your stories about growing up as an identical twin, current events, memories from past MozCons, and ideas about what we could build at Moz next, you transformed my tired and cranky mood into happy and creative energy. Your spirit and laughter was infectious.
You were brilliant. Our longtime friend, links API power user, and collaborator on the blog, it was only a matter of time before you became a full-fledged Mozzer. When we officially welcomed you to Moz in 2015, it was like coming home. From the start, you showed up eager and ready to innovate. Over the years you were relentless in your quest for better data, holding tech giants and the SEO industry accountable. You've left an indelible mark on Moz: our link index and keyword corpus bear witness to your passion for reliable, quality data and meaningful metrics. Keyword Explorer wouldn't be here without you. Your work on the new Domain Authority score was transformative. And your commitment to the SEO community, to relaying complex ideas clearly and with conviction, were second to none. You were always there when we needed you.
You were bold and courageous. You stuck up for your beliefs and staunchly defended them, be they professional or political. You were a loyal and steadfast advocate, always willing to wade into the fray for your friends and colleagues, the best kind of friend to have. I learned a lot from watching you debate and explain with flair, class, and compassion in all the SEO corners of the internet. Conversations that I didn’t have the stomach for, you would enter into with a smile, guided by the flame of your convictions.
I loved your devotion to your family and how you treasured time with them above all else. You would think deeply about whether you were being the best dad, husband, brother you could be. The same curiosity and drive for greatness that you applied to work, you also applied to your personal relationships. You wanted to be good at loving your family because you believed they deserved that from you. I felt it when you brought them to MozCon and you talked about watching your daughters grow and learn. You were always asking yourself, “How could I be a better dad in this moment?” Your passion for service and making the world better was driven, in part, because you wanted a better world for your girls.
There's so much we still wish we could say to you. There are words left unsaid, projects unfinished, ideas unrealized. But beyond all else, I just want to say thank you, Russ, for the incredible impact you've had: on Moz and Mozzers, on the SEO community, on everything and everyone you touched. On me.
To the SEO community, I invite you to revisit the vast legacy Russ gifted us with his blog posts, Whiteboard Fridays, and MozCon presentations, linked below. Remember him for all he gave us. We're lucky to have these memories of a brilliant soul gone too soon.
Whiteboard Fridays:
Defense Against the Dark Arts: Why Negative SEO Matters
Content Expansion: From Prompt to Paragraph to Published Page
Getting Smarter with SERPs
Generating Local Content at Scale
Matter: How SEOs Can Help Now
Content Authority: Potential Measures of Authoritative Content
Risk-Averse Link Building
Let's Make Money: 4 Tactics for Agencies Looking to Succeed
The Theory Behind Ranking Factors
MozCon presentations:
Esse Quam Vidieri: When Faking It Is Harder Than Making It
Lies, Damned Lies and Analytics
Blog posts:
Million Dollar Content - An Analysis of the Web's Most Valuable Organic Content
Google Keyword Planner's Dirty Secrets
Sweating the Details - Rethinking Google Keyword Tool Volume
Google Keyword Unplanner – Clickstream Data to the Rescue
Google's War on Data and the Clickstream Revolution
Google Search Console Reliability: Webmaster Tools on Trial
Not Your Dad's Keyword Tool: Advanced Keyword Research Use Cases
Tackling Tag Sprawl: Crawl Budget, Duplicate Content, and User-Generated Content
Paint by Numbers: Using Data to Produce Great Content
The Unspoken Reality of Net Neutrality
The Maker SERP Squeeze: Why Should SEOs Care?
The Link Building Webslog
Page Authority 2.0: An Update on Testing and Timing
Page Authority 2.0 Is Coming This Month: What’s Changing and Why
A Comprehensive Analysis of the New Domain Authority
Detecting Link Manipulation and Spam with Domain Authority
A New Domain Authority Is Coming Soon: What’s Changing, When, & Why
Using a New Correlation Model to Predict Future Rankings with Page Authority
A Quarter-Million Reasons to Use Moz's Link Intersect Tool
Backlink Blindspots: The State of Robots.txt
How to Find and Monitor Bad Backlinks
Big, Fast, and Strong: Setting the Standard for Backlink Index Comparisons
How Mobile-First Indexing Disrupts the Link Graph
A memorial site has been set up in his honor at rememberingrussjones.com. There you can read more about Russ and his great loves in life, share a memory, and make a donation to a fund for his family.
Our grief is deep. Our love is deeper. Today, I'll be raising a glass (Scotch, neat) and I ask you to join me in this toast: To Russ, who pushed for excellence, who always strove to make life a little easier for others, and who always had a sparkle in his eyes and a joke at the ready. Goodbye, my friend.
https://ift.tt/2U7mIMy
0 notes
kjt-lawyers · 4 years ago
Text
Remembering Our Friend, Russ Jones
We love you, Russ.
There are so many ways to remember you, endless facets to who you were and your impact on SEO. Where do I even begin?
You were the funniest guy in the room. You would gear up for a joke with that wry smile and sparkle in your eye, and we always knew what was coming. Your sense of humor was keen and clever and ever-present.
I remember being ill and jetlagged on the way to put on a mini-MozCon for a valued, strategic client — you made the 2.5-hour winter car ride pass by in a breeze with your entertaining and hilarious stories. You could make charming conversation about anything and with anyone. Listening and laughing with delight to your stories about growing up as an identical twin, current events, memories from past MozCons, and ideas about what we could build at Moz next, you transformed my tired and cranky mood into happy and creative energy. Your spirit and laughter was infectious.
You were brilliant. Our longtime friend, links API power user, and collaborator on the blog, it was only a matter of time before you became a full-fledged Mozzer. When we officially welcomed you to Moz in 2015, it was like coming home. From the start, you showed up eager and ready to innovate. Over the years you were relentless in your quest for better data, holding tech giants and the SEO industry accountable. You've left an indelible mark on Moz: our link index and keyword corpus bear witness to your passion for reliable, quality data and meaningful metrics. Keyword Explorer wouldn't be here without you. Your work on the new Domain Authority score was transformative. And your commitment to the SEO community, to relaying complex ideas clearly and with conviction, were second to none. You were always there when we needed you.
You were bold and courageous. You stuck up for your beliefs and staunchly defended them, be they professional or political. You were a loyal and steadfast advocate, always willing to wade into the fray for your friends and colleagues, the best kind of friend to have. I learned a lot from watching you debate and explain with flair, class, and compassion in all the SEO corners of the internet. Conversations that I didn’t have the stomach for, you would enter into with a smile, guided by the flame of your convictions.
I loved your devotion to your family and how you treasured time with them above all else. You would think deeply about whether you were being the best dad, husband, brother you could be. The same curiosity and drive for greatness that you applied to work, you also applied to your personal relationships. You wanted to be good at loving your family because you believed they deserved that from you. I felt it when you brought them to MozCon and you talked about watching your daughters grow and learn. You were always asking yourself, “How could I be a better dad in this moment?” Your passion for service and making the world better was driven, in part, because you wanted a better world for your girls.
There's so much we still wish we could say to you. There are words left unsaid, projects unfinished, ideas unrealized. But beyond all else, I just want to say thank you, Russ, for the incredible impact you've had: on Moz and Mozzers, on the SEO community, on everything and everyone you touched. On me.
To the SEO community, I invite you to revisit the vast legacy Russ gifted us with his blog posts, Whiteboard Fridays, and MozCon presentations, linked below. Remember him for all he gave us. We're lucky to have these memories of a brilliant soul gone too soon.
Whiteboard Fridays:
Defense Against the Dark Arts: Why Negative SEO Matters
Content Expansion: From Prompt to Paragraph to Published Page
Getting Smarter with SERPs
Generating Local Content at Scale
Matter: How SEOs Can Help Now
Content Authority: Potential Measures of Authoritative Content
Risk-Averse Link Building
Let's Make Money: 4 Tactics for Agencies Looking to Succeed
The Theory Behind Ranking Factors
MozCon presentations:
Esse Quam Vidieri: When Faking It Is Harder Than Making It
Lies, Damned Lies and Analytics
Blog posts:
Million Dollar Content - An Analysis of the Web's Most Valuable Organic Content
Google Keyword Planner's Dirty Secrets
Sweating the Details - Rethinking Google Keyword Tool Volume
Google Keyword Unplanner – Clickstream Data to the Rescue
Google's War on Data and the Clickstream Revolution
Google Search Console Reliability: Webmaster Tools on Trial
Not Your Dad's Keyword Tool: Advanced Keyword Research Use Cases
Tackling Tag Sprawl: Crawl Budget, Duplicate Content, and User-Generated Content
Paint by Numbers: Using Data to Produce Great Content
The Unspoken Reality of Net Neutrality
The Maker SERP Squeeze: Why Should SEOs Care?
The Link Building Webslog
Page Authority 2.0: An Update on Testing and Timing
Page Authority 2.0 Is Coming This Month: What’s Changing and Why
A Comprehensive Analysis of the New Domain Authority
Detecting Link Manipulation and Spam with Domain Authority
A New Domain Authority Is Coming Soon: What’s Changing, When, & Why
Using a New Correlation Model to Predict Future Rankings with Page Authority
A Quarter-Million Reasons to Use Moz's Link Intersect Tool
Backlink Blindspots: The State of Robots.txt
How to Find and Monitor Bad Backlinks
Big, Fast, and Strong: Setting the Standard for Backlink Index Comparisons
How Mobile-First Indexing Disrupts the Link Graph
A memorial site has been set up in his honor at rememberingrussjones.com. There you can read more about Russ and his great loves in life, share a memory, and make a donation to a fund for his family.
Our grief is deep. Our love is deeper. Today, I'll be raising a glass (Scotch, neat) and I ask you to join me in this toast: To Russ, who pushed for excellence, who always strove to make life a little easier for others, and who always had a sparkle in his eyes and a joke at the ready. Goodbye, my friend.
0 notes