Xenophilia (True Strange Stuff)

Blog of the real Xenophilius Lovegood, a slightly mad scientist

Archive for March 12th, 2011

Google Letting Users Blocks Sites from Results

Posted by Xeno on March 12, 2011

… Google today announced a new feature for Google Search that enables users to block certain sites from appearing in search results. …sometimes you may dislike the site in general, whether it’s offensive, pornographic or of generally low quality.”

If that’s the case, [assuming you are logged in - Xeno] Google has introduced a link that will appear when you click “back” on your browser to return to the Google results. This new link allows you to block all results from the site you just visited.

Google says you can block up to 500 sites …  [which] will only be blocked for you… [but ] the search giant may use every one’s blocking information to improve search ranking. …

via Google Letting Users Blocks Sites from Results.

Tried it. Liked it. Thumbs up. Well, one thumb for the cool idea. The other thumb will go up when it works as expected.

The AJAX removes the one page you block from your search results, great, but then click the next link and come back and remove that, and the first link you removed has returned. Bah!

You have to redo the search to get all of your blocked sites to really filter out. And you can’t block specific links to YouTube videos which are always at the top in my searches.

Other times it seems that the link to remove the site does not show up when you go back, but that may be related to the above.

Try this: Do a search for “Dani Johnson Scam” and block all of her junk marketing sites. Block any sites that say things like she is a “highly sought after” speaker, etc. Some of the crap sites were obviously not even written by a human. What language is this, for example:

“…Some people have been extraordinary as great as ask: How could Dani upon all sides herself as such an desirous as great as enormously in effect businessman as great as personality in a really initial year? Dani Johnson is flattering renouned as well, as great as there´s a singular TOP tip which really helped her to grasp such monumental formula in hold up as great as business.”

I highly suspect that this word salad is the result of phrase replacement software used to generate “different” text automatically for a crapload of scam web sites.

After working at it for 15 minutes or so I’m sorry to report that the Dani Johnson infection on Google can not be removed by this tool.

Here is the list of sites I blocked so far in trying to get a real review.

angelsofwarfare.net
articlesbase.com
betternetworker.com
blogspot.com
budapestangol.net
chinaveil.com
coastalvacationsnews.com
danijohnson.com
danijohnsonscam.com
databasesunlimited.com
doodlekit.com
doubledreams.com
ellabradlly.com
federalreviews.com
freebie-articles.com
funnyordie.com
hotklix.com
imreportcard.com
kkboss.com
marcwhittinghq.com
marketingpush.info
metacafe.com
mlmbrothers.com
mylivepage.com
myspace.com
newsvine.com
pointblanklucusule.info
robbcorbett.com
smallbusiness-plan.net
squidoo.com
stacyoquinn.com
the-marketing-center.com
veoh.com
viddler.com
wearpete.com
welfaremum.com
wharz.com
workwithdavidwood.com
xyzarticles.com
yourarticlesource.com

The problem is, she gets her propaganda pages put on good sites. The good hosts pull them down, but they still show up in Google searches. The way I understand this new Google tool, any scammer who can generate more than 500 crap web sites will beat even the most persistent searcher who wants to filter out propaganda. Here’s hoping Google continues to help the humans against the script bots.

Posted in Technology | Leave a Comment »

Japan investigates possible nuclear meltdown

Posted by Xeno on March 12, 2011

Japan has issued a state of emergency at the Fukushima No. 1 power plant after its cooling system failed. A nuclear power plant affected by a massive earthquake is facing a possible meltdown, an official with Japan’s nuclear safety commission said Saturday.

Ryohei Shiomi said that officials were checking whether a meltdown had taken place at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant’s Unit 1, which had lost cooling ability in the aftermath of Friday’s powerful earthquake.

Shiomi said that even if there was a meltdown, it wouldn’t affect humans beyond a 10-kilometre radius.

Most of the 51,000 residents living within that radius have been evacuated, he said.

Earlier Saturday, Japan declared states of emergency for five nuclear reactors at two power plants after the units lost cooling ability.

Operators at the Fukushima Daiichi plant’s Unit 1 scrambled to tamp down heat and pressure inside the reactor after the 8.9-magnitude quake and the tsunami that followed cut off electricity to the site and disabled emergency generators, knocking out the main cooling system.

Some 3,000 people within three kilometres of the plant were urged to leave their homes, but the evacuation zone was more than tripled to 6 miles (10 kilometers) after authorities detected eight times the normal radiation levels outside the facility and 1,000 times normal inside Unit 1′s control room.

The government declared a state of emergency at the Daiichi unit — the first at a nuclear plant in Japan’s history. But hours later, the Tokyo Electric Power Co., which operates the six-reactor Daiichi site in northeastern Japan, announced that it had lost cooling ability at a second reactor there and three units at its nearby Fukushima Daini site.

The government quickly declared states of emergency for those units, too.

via Japan investigates possible nuclear meltdown – World – CBC News.

Posted in Earth, Radiation, Survival | Leave a Comment »

UCR Newsroom: Keys to Long Life

Posted by Xeno on March 12, 2011

… The Longevity Project, as the study became known, followed the children through their lives, collecting information that included family histories and relationships, teacher and parent ratings of personality, hobbies, pet ownership, job success, education levels, military service and numerous other details.

… When Friedman and Martin began their research in 1991, they planned to spend six months examining predictors of health and longevity among the Terman participants.

But the project continued over the next two decades – funded in part by the National Institute on Aging – and the team eventually involved more than 100 graduate and undergraduate students who tracked down death certificates, evaluated interviews, and analyzed tens of thousands of pages of information about the Terman participants through the years.

“We came to a new understanding about happiness and health,” said Martin, now a psychology professor at La Sierra University in Riverside. “One of the findings that really astounds people, including us, is that the Longevity Project participants who were the most cheerful and had the best sense of humor as kids lived shorter lives, on average, than those who were less cheerful and joking. It was the most prudent and persistent individuals who stayed healthiest and lived the longest.”

via UCR Newsroom: Keys to Long Life.

Wow. This is great. I work too hard, I persist, I stress, I’m involved in helping others and I don’t laugh much,  so I’ll outlive a lot of people my age … and I’ll have the last laugh. Looks like I need to get married, however … once and never get divorced. Sounds tricky. What about marriage do you suppose makes men live longer? If it is the part about being nagged, I’ll take the shorter life.

Many of the UCR findings fly in the face of conventional wisdom. For example:

• Marriage may be good for men’s health, but doesn’t really matter for women. Steadily married men – those who remained in long-term marriages – were likely to live to age 70 and beyond; fewer than one-third of divorced men were likely to live to 70; and men who never married outlived those who remarried and significantly outlived those who divorced – but they did not live as long as married men.

• Being divorced is much less harmful to women’s health. Women who divorced and did not remarry lived nearly as long as those who were steadily married.

• “Don’t work too hard, don’t stress,” doesn’t work as advice for good health and long life. Terman subjects who were the most involved and committed to their jobs did the best. Continually productive men and women lived much longer than their more laid-back comrades.

• Starting formal schooling too early – being in first grade before age 6 – is a risk factor for earlier mortality. Having sufficient playtime and being able to relate to classmates is very important for children.

• Playing with pets is not associated with longer life. Pets may sometimes improve well-being, but they are not a substitute for friends.

• Combat veterans are less likely to live long lives, but surprisingly the psychological stress of war itself is not necessarily a major health threat. Rather, it is a cascade of unhealthy patterns that sometimes follows. Those who find meaning in a traumatic experience and are able to reestablish a sense of security about the world are usually the ones who return to a healthy pathway.

• People who feel loved and cared for report a better sense of well-being, but it doesn’t help them live longer. The clearest health benefit of social relationships comes from being involved with and helping others. The groups you associate with often determine the type of person you become – healthy or unhealthy.

It’s never too late to choose a healthier path, Friedman and Martin said. The first step is to throw away the lists and stop worrying about worrying. …

via UCR.edu

Here is some more hard work I did on finding further details from this research:

Conscientiousness in childhood was clearly related to survival in middle to old age. This finding (a) establishes that childhood personality is related to survival decades into the future, (b) confirms the validity of the conscientiousness dimension in conceptualizing personality, and (c) points to likely and unlikely pathways linking personality to health. Contrary to expectation, cheerfulness (optimism and sense of humor) was inversely related to longevity, suggesting a possible need for reconceptualization of its health relevance.

via ScienceDirect

Previous research showed that conscientiousness (social dependability) in childhood predicted longevity in an archival prospective cohort study of bright children first studied by Terman in the 1920s (H. S. Friedman et al., 1993). Possible behavioral mechanisms for this robust association are now examined by gathering cause of death information and by considering the possible mediating influences of drinking alcohol, smoking, and overeating. Survival analyses (N = 1,215) suggest that the protective effect of conscientiousness is not primarily due to accident avoidance and cannot be mostly explained by abstinence from unhealthy substance intake. Conscientiousness may have more wide-ranging effects on health-relevant activities.

via ScienceDirect

Children from divorced families grew up to show a higher risk of premature mortality across the life span. The higher mortality risk for men was explained, in part, when 3 mediating factors were controlled: Men who had experienced parental divorce were more likely to have their own marriages end in divorce, obtained less education, and engaged in fewer service activities. Women who had experienced parental divorce smoked more and were more likely themselves to divorce, both of which predicted higher mortality risk.

via APA.org

Catastrophizing (attributing bad events to global causes) predicted mortality as of 1991, especially among males, and predicted accidental or violent deaths especially well. These results are the first to show that a dimension of explanatory style is a risk factor for mortality in a large sample of initially healthy individuals, and they imply that one of the mechanisms linking explanatory style and death involves lifestyle.

via SagePub

Posted in Survival | 1 Comment »

 
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