Here’s How To Make The Professor Layton Soundtrack Much Better

The Professor Layton games have long demanded a soundtrack a bit more sophisticated than the one they have—the plinky, “ooh boy, we have a mystery!” music is fine at first, but eventually I’ve found that it begins to grate. This is especially true of the first game that I played in the series, 2008′s Professor Layton and the Curios Village.

Thanks then, to the folks at Gamological Society, who have reimagined that game with an entirely different soundtrack—the French composer Yann Tierson.

Gotta admit—this sounds utterly lovely. hopefully with the 3DS’s larger storage space, the folks at Level-5 can afford to hire some real musicians to bring their next game to life.

Professor Layton and The Curious Village & Yann Tiersen’s Le Phare [Gameological Society]

Here's How To Make The Professor Layton Soundtrack Much Better

How to Stop Twitter Tracking your Personal Information

Users have a chance to stop Twitter tracking their personal information by opting in to the “do Not Track” scheme.

We have a love-hate relationship with social networks: on the one hand, they’re a great way to stay in touch with friends and family, develop our professional networks, and waste time looking at pictures of cats; on the other, they use our personal data for profit. while Facebook have metaphorically stuck their middle finger up at critics over concerns about how the social networking site is treating its users’ personal data, Twitter has taken a different approach.

Having announced they would be using data about users’ browsing habits mined from websites with an online Twitter button to create new follower suggestions, Twitter also revealed that users would be able to opt out of this practice.

The do-not-track feature is an integrated part of Mozilla’s Firefox browser, and other browsers offer similar extensions or plug-ins that fulfill the same purpose. once users have checked the right box and activated the feature, the browser adds the do Not Track header (DNT: 1) to all server requests. Websites that honor this choice (read: respect user privacy) won’t track your online activities or mine personal data from other websites.

Unsurprisingly, Facebook has chosen not to honor this choice, and it could have been very easy for Twitter to go down the same road. the fact that the social network has chosen to let users have a certain level of control over the company’s data-mining practices suggests that Twitter could purposefully be striking out, and positioning themselves as the network that cares about user privacy – a start contrast to Mark Zuckerberg’s recently-floated empire.

Activating the do-not-track feature

If you’re already using Firefox, you can activate the do-not-track feature using the following steps:

1. Open up a Firefox browser.

2. Click on the Firefox menu and select “Preferences”.

3. Click on the “Privacy” tab.

4. Check the box marked “Tell web sites I do not want to be tracked.”

“Do-not-track” on other browsers

If you’re not currently using Firefox, and don’t relish the thought of downloading Mozilla’s browser, you can still make your preferences known to the websites who have agreed to honor this feature.

Google Chrome users can install the keep my opt-outs extension, which permanently opts your browser out of cookies that are used to provide targeted advertising. like Firefox’s do-not-track feature, the extension depends on companies adhering to industry privacy standards – if they don’t, then the extension isn’t effective.

Note: even though the warning states that the extension can access your data across multiple websites, the developers do not track your online activities.

If you’ve installed Chrome 17.0 or higher, you can also install the do Not Track extension.

For Safari users, the process is slightly more complicated:

1. Open a Safari browser.

2. Click on “Preferences”, then select “Advanced”.

3. Check the box marked “Show Develop menu in menu bar”

4. Close the preferences window.

5. Click on “Develop” in the toolbar menu.

6. Select “Send do Not Track HTTP Header”.

IE 9 users can stop websites tracking their online movements and data by going to the Do Not Track test page, and clicking the link near the bottom to add a Tracking Protection list to the IE browser. once that’s done, click on “Add List”.

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How to Stop Birds from Flying into Your Windows

Ever found a beautiful bird dead outside your home? Chances are it smashed into your window and never recovered. For every dead bird you find, just imagine how many were snatched up by a cat or pulled into the brush by some other critter. Worldwide, window collisions kill close to a billion(!) birds every year. with spring migration currently underway in the northern hemisphere, now is as good as ever to make your home bird safe. The DIY experts at Stack Exchange tell you how.

Image by Sean Gallagher.

question:

Over the last three days, I have probably had over a dozen birds try to fly through my sunroom, only to be stopped by the 72″ x 52″ sliding windows. Three of the birds have died.

What can I do so that the birds realize there is something there, thereby preventing them from flying into the window?

— Dan McClain (originally asked here)

The NYC Audubon Chimes in

After habitat loss, the greatest threat to wild birds may be glass windows.

NYC Audubon started Project Safe Flight in 1997 to address the issue in New York City. Daniel Klem, an ornithologist at Muhlenberg College, estimates that close to a billion birds are killed every year by flying into glass. a study he conducted, with NYC Audubon, found 1.3 birds killed per hectare per year in an urban setting, which works out to over 90,000 birds per year in New York alone.

All bird species are vulnerable, although migratory songbirds are the main victims. Most are killed instantly, but others succumb when they are stunned and fall prey to gulls, rats, or other predators.

We have rescued over 1,200 birds, persuaded buildings to retrofit their more dangerous windows, and published Bird-Safe Building Guidelines to help architects and designers develop solutions in new buildings.

Private homes as well as skyscrapers endanger birds. Most home owners have heard the unpleasant thump that means a bird has hit a window; many have also found bird carcasses near their windows. Birds do not see the glass as a solid barrier; they see reflections of trees or sky or a fly-through to open space beyond. This should come as no surprise, since even people occasionally walk into glass doors. For a person it is merely embarrassing, for a bird it is often fatal.

Homeowners can reduce the collisions and save bird lives in a number of ways:

- Bird feeders should be placed within three feet of a window, so that birds visiting the feeder cannot get up enough flight speed to hurt themselves.

- Installing a pattern on a window where birds are known to hit can be uncomplicated and inexpensive. Patterns with negative space no greater than 4 by 2 inches, the size of a hand, are most effective.

- Decals of hawks or other raptors are not particularly successful, unless the decals are spaced very closely— and then it doesn’t really matter if they are of birds of prey or an abstract design.

Some suggestions for temporary or seasonal fixes:

- Place vertical tape strips at a maximum of 4 inches apart or horizontal strips a maximum of 2 inches apart. ABC BirdTape, is long-lasting and more aesthetically pleasing than masking tape or electrical tape, though all are effective. Be sure to place the tape on the outside of the window for maximum effectiveness.

- Soap windows, or use window paints or tempera paints to obscure most of window.

- purchase or make your own window gel clings. Be sure to space them no more than 4 inches apart horizontally and 2 inches apart vertically.

- Draw blinds and move indoor plants away from windows. This will not work if there are strong reflections of the landscape in the window.

For more permanent fixes, ones that keep birds from striking glass or lessen reflectivity and transparency, we suggest:

Install a frosted or opaque window film. Collidescape is a film that looks opaque from the outside, but allows views out. Films are most effective when applied to the outside of the window. Most films are not guaranteed when placed on the outside surface, but many are reasonably long-lasting on these surfaces.

- Install awnings, louvers, lattice work, or shades in front of windows.

- Install mesh window screens.

- Install unobtrusive netting in front of window. a company called Bird B Gone has designed several types for glass windows and facades.

The ultimate solution would be a glass that is visible to birds but not humans. a product called Ornilux Mikado, manufactured in Germany by Arnold Glas, incorporates an ultraviolet spidery crisscross pattern within the glass visible to birds but nearly invisible to us.

Watching birds and nature from inside your home should be a pleasure. Bird fatalities are an unintended consequence of home design. But with some creativity and imagination, you should be able to see your birds and keep them safe.

— Answered by Glenn Phillips NYC Audubon

answer: more Options

There are two reasons birds fly into Windows, either they can’t see the glass or they see a reflection in the glass. The only real solution, is to make the window more visible or less reflective.

Unfortunately, making the window more visible to birds also makes it more visible to humans. so the solution may not be exactly… um… fashionable.

One solution: put decals, tape, paint, marker, or some other type of markings on the windows. you could also try hanging wind chimes, or other decorative items inside/outside the window.

Another solution that seems to be successful, is to hang fine mesh over the windows. The theory here is that the mesh will reduce the reflection on the windows, so birds will be less likely to think they are flying into whatever is reflected in the window.

The good news is, you may only need to do this during migratory seasons< (spring and fall). so you could pick up a window paint marker (~$5.00), and draw lines, squiggles, or patterns on the windows during migratory seasons.

You could try making up some detachable screens for the exterior of the windows, and put them up during the migration season. This might be a less noticeable solution.

— Answered by Tester101

Do you have a clever solution to reduce bird strikes? Leave your suggestion in the comments, submit it at Stack Exchange. Want to pass on your DIY wisdom in another way? Check out these unanswered questions at our DIY site. Stack Exchange is a place to trade expert knowledge on diverse topics from software programming to cycling to scientific skepticism. and that’s just a start.