I joined my.opera.com five years ago. …
It was about a month after started using Opera (8.01 was my first version). The primary reason of my joining was to learn about my new toy at the forums. NonTroppo's "30 days to becoming an Opera lover" was my ticket to discovering just how much this shiny new toy could do. First I took the "watch and learn" approach and did not make many forum posts.
What most impressed me about My Opera Forums was how friendly and helpful regular members were. I felt really comfortable posting newbie comments, which was not always the case with other user forums I contributed in the past. I stayed on but kept myself quite inconspicuous. In my first 12 months at the Opera Forums, I only made 55 posts. Later as my knowledge of Opera increased and I stared experimenting beta testing, I became relatively comfortable posting more and, in some cases, providing help information. This change of attitude in me probably played a role in the dramatic increase of my forum posts lately: over 600 in the last 12 months period! My cumulative forum posts now exceed the 1100 mark(some in the Japanese language user forums).
Recently I started exploring other aspect of my.opera.com: blogging and social networking. It's been less than three months since I started blogging, and I've already met several very good friends. I'm still watching and learning, and will be very cautious and slow in expanding my circle of friends. I'm sure my recently discovered new My Opera friends will be patient and understanding, and will set me right if I do anything wrong. 😀 And yes, I will keep posting at the Forums. 🙂
FYI:
"30 days to becoming an Opera lover", in an archived form, can now be found at:http://tntluoma.com/category/30days/page/3/
[Updated 20 August]
Here's my 1111th forum post 🙂
I am glad you started blogging. :up:I just checked my profile to see how many forum posts I have logged after being a member for a year: 10 😛
Originally posted by mimi_s_mum:
I really started with that too, but used 7.something mainly for it's email client and tab browsing. 6.x was horrible graphically, or maybe my computer was too slow.
Originally posted by mimi_s_mum:
Names, we want names !!
Originally posted by mimi_s_mum:
:eyes:
Originally posted by mimi_s_mum:
:yes: …. :devil:
Concerning forum post, I'm nearly zero, just because I don't need it often, I'm mainly reading the Opera Mini forum, and the problem are already exposed. Normally forum are made to discuss, but in fact, the blog posts are often forums and often with people you know or like, so forum is not really on my list.
I tried a topic but was closed 😥 http://my.opera.com/community/forums/topic.dml?id=632412&t=1282184087&page=1#comment6053782
Originally posted by debplatt:
Thanks, Deb. So am I, very much. :)Originally posted by arduinna:
You, Olivier, Deb and DH are the three first regulars to my blog. I've met other nice people, too. But you three are the best. :yes:Originally posted by arduinna:
:awww: Maybe I should take your name off the above "list" ?
Originally posted by mimi_s_mum:
🙂
Cute smilie, Deb. Japanese? 😀
Hai!
Originally posted by mimi_s_mum:
Dômo arigatô gozaimasu !(Does it make any sense to you, I mean how do you read rhe "ô" and "u" ?
Originally posted by arduinna:
or like this (then you don't have to worry about the "ô" and "u")
Originally posted by arduinna:
I went back and replaced the characters with an image.I don't think it is enough to have the encoding to utf-8; you actually have to have a Japanese font installed on your machine.The United States' Foreign Services Institute has developed a number of foreign language courses for our diplomats. Since the courses were developed with tax payer money, they have put the course materials (including audio) on the web so that tax payers can also have access to the language learning materials. I am assuming that people outside the U.S. can access the web site, too. Tell me if I'm wrong.I did try learning a few Chinese phrases, and soon learned that having the meaning depend on pitch was just too difficult for me. So for me, Japanese is way more accessible (though it's still pretty, darn difficult!!!). 😀
It doesn't work for me : the pages are set on Unicode utf-8 and maybe you used an other encoding PS : No pretentiousness, I just reopened a book and copy this phrase "Thanks a lot". I learned japanese a bit 20 years ago when we wanted to design a motor speed sensor for Honda . We had an Italian engineer that was mad about this language. I have no preference for Chinese or Japanese and I like both culture but the Japanese system with its Hiragana and Katakana avoid to memorize ideograms. I learned a few (really a few !! but get the trick to find them in a dictionnary) of Japanese because most of them come from Chinese thought the pronounciation is different. I see Hiragana and Katakana as an alphabet for Kanji Now today this is totally forgotten, but having a friend knowing English and Japanese could be a good motivation.My favourite to learn languages is http://www.assimil.com
Originally posted by debplatt:
yes this is certainly the problem, even Opera does'nt give that choice too as it probably don't find a good font. Do you see something (using Unicode hexa and htm) : ௪ ௴ ௪௴ ∏ ∑ ʁ
Originally posted by debplatt:
ah ah we should learn to sing, it is the same from another post !! Yes as MM (AKA Mimi's Mum !! ) told us Japanese pronunciation is less difficult, it's close to Italian and so it's the easiest for me .
Doesn't work well, the last one should be arabic and the two first hiragana , the other ones are more maths classical , why don't you all speak French 😥 !
Here's what I saw as a result of your unicode/hexa/htm experiment:Originally posted by arduinna:
I agree the pronunciation of the phonemes is easier. Getting the rhythm right and not increasing the volume of long vowels is a bit harder. Understanding all the politeness levels and social implications of various wordings, harder still. :faint:Originally posted by arduinna:
I can't learn to sing. I'm just physically not able to do it. :awww:
Originally posted by debplatt:
Yes I know, same to me, or maybe we should really try and not shout it from the rooftops before to be sure.
:lol:You know, good prose can be as good as poetry. :p
Minasan tanoshisou desune! (You guys seem having good time!)I'm very impressed, younz 😉 And you are welcome to sing all you like in my blog 😆 I'm known to sing rather loud myself. :DI've just downloaded the latest snapshot and will be off line for a short while while installing it. Back soon. ) [15 minutes later]I'm back!
All that practice you might be good by now 😀
Happy blogiversary
Thanks, DH. I actually made a blog when I first started five years ago but didn't make public. I made a grand total of two posts(both poems! But then I realised poetry is not for me. Just imagine what if I had carried on :p). 😀
Originally posted by arduinna:
I'm sure people would rather hear me shouting this from the rooftops than hear me singing. 😆
I wouldnt know the difference 😀
😆
Just updated the post with my 1111th forum post evidential image 🙂
Time-wise, I don't think I could handle both blogging and socializing at the Lounge. 😛
They are going to do the big upgrading of My Opera. Maybe you can post feedback or question when that happens. 🙂 Or you can always post in The Lounge topics, such as "What have you just eaten or drunk?" :p
I am happy where I am I think…
Good post, darkesthour 😀
I will have to try one of them forum posts sometime :whistle:
Yeah, I'm finding it hard to strike the balance between blogging/social networking and other stuff. Some days I think I'm online and chatting away too much, other days I feel I neglected everyone. Tricky.
Keep it simple, thats what I reckon
Thanks for advice, DH. 🙂
Kiwis are quite active those days :whistle: !!
:no: 600 posts in the last 12 months would have sounded as some harassment to your audience, yes, "keep it simple", keep it at your human pace … we are not professional yet !I like your blog as it is, forums are more crowded ?
I checked out my account statistics this week, and here's a portion of my visitor map. The two little dots in New Zealand represent you and DH. And it amazes that over this vast distance we have come to know each other to some degree and that we chat on a fairly regular basis.:)
Or MM and Darkest have many offices, houses, … (PS: not Photoshop, but … :p )
@Olivier – You are quite popular with the New Zealand crowd. 🙂
@Deb, the dots on you map seems a bit off. DH's supposed to be a couple of hundred km north west east from me. And I'm at the southern most tip of the North Island.@ OlivierI've no intention of getting another house, which would mean more painting! :pI'm impressed, too, with how popular you are to the kiwi's. ;)Unfortunately my ISP provides me a static IP, therefore I've no privacy at all on the Net. 🙁
Originally posted by debplatt:
Possibly. I thought your stat service (hitslink is it?) map itself was off.
Originally posted by mimi_s_mum:
Right, hitlinks. Well, I guess you get what you pay for. 😆
Originally posted by mimi_s_mum:
My husband would love having a static IP. They provide us one that stays the same for some indeterminate amount of time, then it shifts to something else.
Originally posted by darkesthour:
Maybe there's someone with cellphone following him who is on a trip around NZ? :p
Hmmm, looks a bit fishy to me 😀
Originally posted by debplatt:
Very true 😆
Originally posted by mimi_s_mum:
Hmm. Maybe the dots represent the headquarters of your service providers? You two are the only kiwis I know, so it must be you. :confused:
Originally posted by mimi_s_mum:
If you use "Opera Turbo", you will use Opera servers and not your IP.Originally posted by mimi_s_mum:
And I did'nt mention the sailing boats :rolleyes: .
Morning Olivier :)Unfortunately I don't think Turbo hides your IP. If I'm really desperate and in need of hiding my IP, I use OperaTor, though it takes about 30 times longer to download a page, compared to the naked Opera :pOriginally posted by arduinna:
Yeah, I noticed 😀
Turbo hides you as it compresses the web pages where you are going something like : you–> operaserver –>visited pages, in it uses Opera Mimi server, ooops, Opera Mini servers. You can try on your own pages, you will see you coming from Poland, Norway, or something like that. But you can also be disconnected from the Internet at all, it works well to protect your private IP !!! ( Concerning Turbo, the point is that it can switch automatically to the normal behaviour, if it is too fast; in that case you can use WiFi with a slow connection , I mean with a distance from the router to slow the speed down … Or coming back to the old analog modem … Well advance backwards :ko:
Originally posted by arduinna:
:DOriginally posted by arduinna:
I didn't realize this. That's interesting.Originally posted by arduinna:
Gaming the system to have a slower experience to make Turbo kick in… that's also interesting. 🙂