famecaster gives his cast today and says 'wow I forgot how good I look'.
ya, but you sound like an idiot at times.
don't 'say' you look good, you . . . ego maniac.
famecaster gives his cast today and says 'wow I forgot how good I look'.
ya, but you sound like an idiot at times.
don't 'say' you look good, you . . . ego maniac.
when 'hands up' was a thing, the unicode symbol for the right and left hands, being up, was changed arbitrarily.
blah blah blah OCR.
deliberate serach replace and character kerning oddly only for the name of the director.
it's proved to be willful!
willfully down to concel or obfuscate!
here is an example where they do it, for the name 'nadler' as 'nacller' in a book, and the 'error' version is albetazed with the wrong spelling, so it had to be like that first.
the kerning is the part that makes it all . . . problemattic for the people who are doing this: it's proof of intentionality.
with snow on the ground, and the full moon at it's highest for the year, tonight should be a spectacular evening for a country drive through the snowy parts.
wow I didn't know about Venus and Saturn being so close together.
very nice.
Years ago when mars was super close I had this dream about being in England and the land was traversed by a canyon gorge that was like something form the the state of Arizona.
I always felt that dream was somehow related to the closeness of mars, and a full moon.
when the moon is high like it will be tonight, it's where the Sun would be in June during the day. The full moon is a mirror of the sun a half a year, and a half a day out of phase.
it is the strange kerning that is the noose that they put around their necks, whoever did this.
if it's a 'text' file the global replace is a simple matter using a single command line.
the rekerning? Depends on the markup. You put hte name in a span, and then set the kerning for that span to make sure that the 'r' touches the n'.
It's a willful thing to do this.
There is no doubt htat OCR will have this effect.
if so there would be the same effect for all the instances of 'm' in the document. in the IG doc only the instances of 'm' in 'Comey' were replaced by the 'rn' replacement. and only the 'rn' that showed up in Comey had strange kerning. In the instance with Nadler's name, the name is in alphabetic order as 'Nacller' which means it had to be like that during the sort for the index. As well, the instances of 'cl' that exist elsewhere in that documetn (which I think might have been a honey pot doc, becuase it had no reviews ) the other instances do not have the strange kerning (I didn't have the whole document).
And so that's it: the strange kerning is a willful effect that is inserted only for certain instances of the use of a character, and that is masked with the excuse that it is 'ocr' flaws.
Yes, there are OCR flaws that will do that, but this isn't a case of poor OCR from low res or degraded old documents. It's a case of global replace of a name with a span that has a different spelling, and a kerning that is different from the rest of the document.
Very strange indeed.
>>748343
and let us not forget that Q told us a very long time ago that misspellings matter.
also we don't know if authors of these documents even know that their words are being mangled and respelled with strange kerning.
expand your thinking. the strange kerning and respelling has been going on for a very long time.
who or why is really still a mystery.
Q knew about it, and told us about it.
but I doubt that Q edited a book from 2013 to have it in there, or that the author of the book even knows about it.
We can not conclude that this 'respell, rekern' thing is something that Q did. We do know that Q told informed us about it.
if you want to view a blocked page you can wget the file with wget, and then do a sed command on it to replace 'script' with some other word.
I also replace 'google' with some other word (doesn't really matter what word you use, as)
then all the scripts and calls to google will not work when you open that file in a browser.
It's a mschine gun approach, and I will also sometimes replace image links, and do away with svg (because they render the svg too large).
in you understand this post, then cudos to you.
if not, then just ignore it.
It's inside baseball on how to surf the web like a software engineer