View allAll Photos Tagged javascript.

Om nom nom... My site is complete! Tell me what you think.

  

***iOS users sorry that the site looks like shit on your puny browsers, love Apple***

 

www.patthepcwizard.com/?page=home

 

Coded by yours truly.

i wonder where that beloved piece of paper is..

Exercise in red yellow and blue. Mixed software. 4 line shades, 6 fill colours, 2 background gradients. Edge detection by my own Javascripts.

I wrote a Greasemonkey script called "Flickr Multi Group Sender", that lets you send your flickr photos to multiple groups at once.

 

If you tick the checkbox titled "Save this group selection" the groups you have selected will be saved, and you will be able to quickly reselect them again the next time you use the script, using the secondary select box.

 

*UPDATE* 25-04-2008 Ive updated the script, fixing a few bugs, reinstall the script to get it working again. Also added a function that automatically saves your selection each time, even if you dont check the box. This lets you easily reselect your previous selection, in case you forgot to check the box.

 

*UPDATED* 28/5/2008 The script now works on all international versions of the site. New features include, group counter which displays how many groups you have selected, and groups that the image are already in appear faded out in the select box, and you cannot select them. Script also now works for sending videos to groups.

 

*UPDATED* 7/6/2008 I added a search box at the top, that lets you search your group list, to let you find matching groups quickly.

 

*UPDATED* 14/7/2010 Ive updated the script for the new photo page, remember this script is donationware, if you like it make a donation, cheers. Script is now compatible with Firefox, Chrome Safari and Opera.

 

TIP: Another way to find a group quickly, is to click inside the select box once with the mouse, then type the first few letters of the group name, the selector should automatically jump to the group you are looking for.

 

Get Flickr Multi Group Sender

 

This greasemonkey script and all my other GM scripts are available here: steeev.freehostia.com/flickr/.

 

Please Donate! If you appreciate my scripts and would like to thank me for the time and effort i have put into them and to support further development and maintenance, please consider making a donation, large or small, every little helps. My paypal link is available on my my website and also on my profile page.

Generated using javascript/canvas and HTML5

Generated using javascript, HTML5 and canvas

I have created an Instagram page for the game Classic Space Adventure. You can follow it here if you are intrested.

 

Classic Space Adventure is a free fanmade webgame I have created that you play in your browser (Chrome or Firefox) using your keyboard, It is inspired by the Classic Space theme by LEGO®, so you will notice many of these sets in the game, recreated in a pixelated style.

 

Play the game here, or check out the webpage for the game here.

 

There is also a Facebook page for this game that you can follow.

Generated and rendered in Structure Synth using javascript Math functions to generate the more flowing features.

2 images generated using hjavascript/canvas/HTML5 combined as layers

This is a neat little program, "the son of defdb and pngthermal," posted on encode.ru, a forum about compression algorithms. The program is available for Mac, Windows and Linux. The author explains the colours here. For example, red is "expansion" (>= 8 bits), with "midnight blue" being "strictly less than a bit."

 

Interestingly, the author makes the argument that if you really want to shave bytes, write your HTML5 <!DOCTYPE> in lower-case; it compresses better that way. (2 bytes, he says.)

 

The program can export varying widths and sizes, and also has a color-blind mode.

 

This is a cropped screenshot of the soundmanager2.js file, which actually compresses very well overall (there is much more blue further down the image.) To make these sorts of images, gzip whatever.js and then run gzthermal on the resulting .js.gz output.

 

I also need to thank a co-worker, probably Bert Saw, for sharing this. I've had that forum post open in a tab for a few days now, and have completely forgotten where I found it.

JavaScript generated animation. It's so much fun to play with it :)

Here are all the mobile phones I've owned. Starting from the left we have:

 

Ericsson SH888

Originally introduced in 1998, I was given it in about 2000 by someone I used to work for who worked for Ericsson. It was one of the earliest dual-band phones and also one of the first with built in infrared. I think I managed to get it to talk to my Psion 5 once. Very solid and dependable.

 

Ericsson T39m

In 2001 I took out a contract with Vodafone and chose this phone to go with it. It features tri-band, Bluetooth, predictive text, GPRS and a WAP browser, nice clear screen and very good battery life. It's also very light and thin. It's seen a lot of use: I used it for just over two years I think, then I lent it to my housemate who used it for a year or so. It still works fine, though it is a little worn. One of the best phones Ericsson made.

 

Sony Ericsson T610

Oh dear. I don't know what came over me with this one. I thought it was time I had a new phone on renewing my contract and the T610 caught my eye with its retro styling. This was in 2003 or so. Ericsson and Sony had joined forces to make phones and my good experience with the T39 lead me to believe this one would be OK. How wrong I was. Sony brought nice styling to the partnership, unfortunately rather than combining it with Ericsson's robust content they apparently discarded it altogether. It features a colour screen which is unreadable outdoors and a camera which not only takes pointlessly small 288x352 pictures, but the sensor lends a green tint usually and the optics distort to the edge of recognition. The software is very sluggish, especially when opening the text message inbox. The keys and joystick are not great, though they're even worse when mango chutney is applied I found. Yet another negative is the level of bastardisation by Vodafone, most annoyingly that the right-hand soft key always goes to "Vodafone Live" which I hardly ever used and was not allowed to change.

 

Nokia 6630

Just as soon as that contract was up I got this phone. I realised my mistake and so was much more careful choosing this one. Put off Sony Ericsson I decided to switch to Nokia and to splash out some extra cash to get a fairly high end smart phone. Definitely content over looks this time, it is a bit bulbous, funny looking and bulky. After the T610 the content is a very large breath of lovely fresh air. The very first thing I did was reassign all the shortcuts on the standby screen, because I could. Features a nice bright screen which is very legible in all lighting conditions, especially with the sensor which varies the backlight brightness depending on the ambient light level. It has a 1.3MP camera with reasonable optics though like nearly all phone cameras it doesn't cope well with bright lights in the shot. Has 3G and the keys are good and responsive. The main feature though is Series 60 which is a version of the Symbian OS. There's a fair bit of software available for it, including a version of PuTTY which is very handy. It takes a reduced size dual-voltage MMC memory card, it took me a while to find a compatible one, but I eventually got a 256MB card off ebay. It didn't take too long to fill it with music, pictures and text messages. One gripe with the software implementation is the lack of integration between the Symbian apps and the phone functions, for instance the clock and calendar applications have no connection so there is a lack of sophistication in how alarms can be set, one can't have different alarms repeated on different weekdays. I'd like to be able to set alarms which switch profiles for meetings, lectures etc. One can include a person's birthday in their entry in the contacts database, but it doesn't show up on the calendar.

 

Nokia E70

I've just got this one. After a fair bit of research, I was seriously considering the N93 with its 3.2MP camera with auto focus and 3x optical zoom, but then I saw some results and came to the conclusion that the quality is still not that good. So Instead I went for this phone, the most exciting feature of which is the full and very nice to use qwerty keyboard, or is it the 802.11G wireless networking? Probably both equally. SSH on this phone is a joy, nethack is quite playable though the 'b' key is on the other side of the screen to the rest of the direction keys. The WLAN really is great, if I'm at home or near an accessible network (including unconfigured netgears) I can use the networking features of my phone without worrying about paying for every byte. The browser has had mixed reviews, I think it is mostly very good. It copes with just about every page, including flickr with all its javascript, and though you get a little frame view onto the entire page it always seems to be wide enough to fit the main text column without having to scroll sideways to read the text. A major problem with it is the lack of RAM. It often runs out of memory on graphics heavy pages, though sometimes just reloading helps. Quite a hassle for me is the lack of ability to download a file linked to from a page, all it can do is attempt to open it with an installed program. I can't even find a way to copy and paste the linked url nor indeed any text on a web page. Again it suffers from a lack of integration between phone and application functionality. Yesterday I looked up a restaurant's phone number on their web page and wanted to dial it, all I could do is commit it to memory, switch to the phone interface and type it in.

'Nuff said. The good parts aren't that hard to learn. Use 'em.

It looks even cooler while it's drawing.

 

Go to Silkbrush

Keyboard on the foreground with blurred Javascript on the background.

(function(w,doc) {

if (!w.__utlWdgt ) {

w.__utlWdgt = true;

var d = doc, s = d.createElement('script'), g = 'getElementsByTagName';

s.type = 'text/javascript'; s.charset='UTF-8'; s.async = true;

s.src = ('https:' == w.location.protocol ? 'https' : 'http') +...

 

zatvor.net/umirajushhaja-sobaka-najdena-na-ulice-i-polnos...

 

zatvor.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/mange-sick-dog-resc...

A little more customizable, colours and size can be changed. (I couldn't be arsed to make scaled-up versions of the play/pause buttons, but those should be larger as well.)

 

Also, this UI can be used to scrub through video - though I'm not sure it's appropriate given the simple, standard behaviour of scrubbing linearly across the width of the video, but the idea here is to experiment.

 

This was inspired by Apple's UI for the preview feature in the iTunes app on the iPhone, and other circular things. This is a demo which will be included as part of a pending SoundManager 2 release.

As a kid, I used to print program source code and would make edits while on family road trips during summer vacation. When I got back home, I'd type in the edits.

 

In taking a road trip I hadn't done in perhaps 15 years, it felt appropriate to revisit some old habits - this time, with about 45 pages of JavaScript.

 

Despite software's "virtual" nature, I think it's good to occasionally print and work on a physical copy of your ideas. Even if you don't work all of your notes back into the code, you still benefit from the mental exercise of thinking through and editing your work.

playing more with javascript and canvas. this is a brush to be controlled by mouse, though i could apply my epicycle engine to it as well.

Unofficial JavaScript "JS" logo as a LEGO mosaic.

This is an app that I built using Flickr's API. It shows a slideshow in your browser of anyone's photostream, or a search for photos with particular tags. Or just interesting photos! It's less polished than Flickr's own one, but at the time I wrote it, Flickr's own slideshow was sorely lacking (no fullscreen).

 

This is the original photo.

Keyboard on the foreground with blurred Javascript on the background.

It looks even cooler while it's drawing.

 

Go to Silkbrush

(Or, "Programmer/nerd humour") .. A little friday-afternoon fun on my dev environment.

JavaScript: The Good Parts

Book for learning Javascript

office, commercial and domestic - I agree.

 

And how delicious.com is that logo?

Part of the JavaScript code that was attached to an e-mail as a fake invoice in a zip file.

 

Once the user opens the malicious zip file the JavaScript code is executed and the ransomware software is downloaded from an infected website.

 

When the ransomware software is running it will encrypt all files that match particular extensions.

 

After encryption, a message (displayed on the user's desktop) instructs them to download the Tor browser and visit a specific criminal-operated Web site for further information.

 

Read more: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ransomware

Part of the JavaScript code that was attached to an e-mail as a fake invoice in a zip file.

 

Once the user opens the malicious zip file the JavaScript code is executed and the ransomware software is downloaded from an infected website.

 

When the ransomware software is running it will encrypt all files that match particular extensions.

 

After encryption, a message (displayed on the user's desktop) instructs them to download the Tor browser and visit a specific criminal-operated Web site for further information.

 

Read more: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ransomware

Part of the JavaScript code that was attached to an e-mail as a fake invoice in a zip file.

 

Once the user opens the malicious zip file the JavaScript code is executed and the ransomware software is downloaded from an infected website.

 

When the ransomware software is running it will encrypt all files that match particular extensions.

 

After encryption, a message (displayed on the user's desktop) instructs them to download the Tor browser and visit a specific criminal-operated Web site for further information.

 

Read more: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ransomware

Part of the JavaScript code that was attached to an e-mail as a fake invoice in a zip file.

 

Once the user opens the malicious zip file the JavaScript code is executed and the ransomware software is downloaded from an infected website.

 

When the ransomware software is running it will encrypt all files that match particular extensions.

 

After encryption, a message (displayed on the user's desktop) instructs them to download the Tor browser and visit a specific criminal-operated Web site for further information.

 

Read more: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ransomware

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