For anyone who would like to see my new extension in action, but doesn't feel like installing it or does not use firefox themselves, I have made a video demonstrating it:
Here it is. I gave up on trying to play it automagically as swf, youtube does not display it at high enough quality to see the text, and the other options I've tried have not been conducive to switching to full-screen display.
For anyone who enjoyed my series of posts about bookmarklets, I've taken things a step further and written my very first firefox toolbar extension. It implements identical functionality to the Blogquote and Stylized Blogquote bookmarklets I last posted about; though without hot-linking to my site as the bookmarklet versions do. Plus you get a handy dandy toolbar just for the buttons to activate the blog-quote functions.
Feel free to install it, even just to play around with it. It's my first, so I'm inordinately proud of it. :) I'll probably polish it up more and add more features in the near-ish future.
Feel free to install it, even just to play around with it. It's my first, so I'm inordinately proud of it. :) I'll probably polish it up more and add more features in the near-ish future.
I vastly upgraded the Blog Quote Bookmarklet and Stylized Blog Quote Bookmarklet from my previous post. The links, info on what has changed, and instructions on how to use them are all available here, as LiveJournal breaks when you try to include links to bookmarklets.
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I should have anticipated the fact that LJ would not be able to handle javascript links for bookmarklets. The body of my post is now available here.
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Even if you start collecting bookmarklets that let you scan pages for certain types of hidden content, don't get complacent. Take the time, when you can, to view source and see what else may be hidden even on sites you visit frequently. Otherwise you never know, you might miss out on some hot elf sex... or other things even more interesting. Also don't forget that you can view the source code of each frame AND the whole frameset, on sites that use frames. Things like meta tags do not need to be the same between the various frames, and you never know what you might find buried in the oddest places. You may have never seen the important things on certain sites. Not all content has links leading to it. And sometimes the links that are there are designed not to be seen. Life is more than point and click.
That said, there won't be any hidden content in this entry. Well, not steganographically hidden anyway. Reading between the lines is, as ever, left to the reader.
I wanted to take the opportunity to also demonstrate a bit of the power of javascript (and bookmarklets) here, however it seems that livejournal strips script content from posts. This kind of annoys me, as there is absolutely no reason to do this. I'll try to set up a demo on another site when I have the chance, but for now I will instead point you to the following:
http://www.huddletogether.com/projects/lightbox/
A bookmarklet that achieves similar functionality is available here:
http://www-ui.is.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~kobayash/misc/bookmarklets.html
And to further elaborate on my cryptographic/steganographic musings, I give you:
http://www.fourmilab.ch/javascrypt/example.html
This uses javascript embedded into a page to perform encryption, but it is also a decent proof of concept to show that javascript can be used for this purpose. And if embedded javascript can be used to do this, bookmarklets can too. It's just a matter of coding them, and deciding exactly how tough you want to make the encryption. (Speed vs Security, as ever.) It also provides a javascript tool for performing basic steganography. It is very basic steganography at that, but again serves admirably as a proof of concept.
That said, there won't be any hidden content in this entry. Well, not steganographically hidden anyway. Reading between the lines is, as ever, left to the reader.
I wanted to take the opportunity to also demonstrate a bit of the power of javascript (and bookmarklets) here, however it seems that livejournal strips script content from posts. This kind of annoys me, as there is absolutely no reason to do this. I'll try to set up a demo on another site when I have the chance, but for now I will instead point you to the following:
http://www.huddletogether.com/projects/lightbox/
A bookmarklet that achieves similar functionality is available here:
http://www-ui.is.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~kobayash/misc/bookmarklets.html
And to further elaborate on my cryptographic/steganographic musings, I give you:
http://www.fourmilab.ch/javascrypt/example.html
This uses javascript embedded into a page to perform encryption, but it is also a decent proof of concept to show that javascript can be used for this purpose. And if embedded javascript can be used to do this, bookmarklets can too. It's just a matter of coding them, and deciding exactly how tough you want to make the encryption. (Speed vs Security, as ever.) It also provides a javascript tool for performing basic steganography. It is very basic steganography at that, but again serves admirably as a proof of concept.
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As everyone probably already realizes, my recent "Wizardry" post was not about magic. It was a veiled reference to some work I've been doing lately with computer-type stuff. But the real substance of the post wasn't in the (admittedly rather weak) metaphors about wizardry and spells... there was a hidden element to the post as well, one that I was hoping the line "For those who look beneath, much is revealed" would lead people to find. If you want to look deeper at a web page, there's only one way to go: View Source.
( Read more... )
( Read more... )
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