SouthPenn In chrome there three small dots in the upper right corner of the browser. Click on these three dots then click on 'settings'. In the window that opens scroll down to 'advanced' and click on it. You should see a box labeled 'Privacy and security'. Scroll down the last entry in that box 'clear browsing data'. The next window will give you options on what you would like to delete. Hope this helps.
In chrome there three small dots in the upper right corner of the browser. Click on these three dots then click on 'settings'. In the window that opens scroll down to 'advanced' and click on it. You should see a box labeled 'Privacy and security'. Scroll down the last entry in that box 'clear browsing data'. The next window will give you options on what you would like to delete.
Hope this helps.
hon30critter I use AdBlock on Google Chrome and the only interuptions I get are from websites asking me to turn the AdBlock off, which I can do momentarily if I so choose. After a few hours on the computor, the blocked ads number in the dozens some days so AdBlock is obviously working, and it's free (although they do ask for donations to support their work). https://getadblock.com/ Dave
I use AdBlock on Google Chrome and the only interuptions I get are from websites asking me to turn the AdBlock off, which I can do momentarily if I so choose.
After a few hours on the computor, the blocked ads number in the dozens some days so AdBlock is obviously working, and it's free (although they do ask for donations to support their work).
https://getadblock.com/
Dave
Dave, thanks for the tip about adblock. I installed it and it is working great.
I just had a look at my AdBlock history. To date, the service has blocked a total of 568,000+ ads! I think everybody should have it!
I'm just a dude with a bad back having a lot of fun with model trains, and finally building a layout!
rrebell Ok all you tecno geeks, how do you delete cookies and stuff but save passwords or is that a can't be done.
Ok all you tecno geeks, how do you delete cookies and stuff but save passwords or is that a can't be done.
Assuming you have Windows:
Open the Control Panel
Find "Internet Options" and click there.
A box called "Internet Properties" should open.
About 2/3 of the way down you should see something called "browsing history", and a delete button. Click on that button. Another "delete browsing history" box should open, with some check boxes that allow you to select what you want to delete. One of those boxes is for "saved passwords that are automatically filled in when you sign in to a website you've previously visited". If these are the passwords you are talking about, make sure the box is not checked.
Note that I have Windows 10. If you have another version, there is probably a similar path.
rrebellOk all you tecno geeks, how do you delete cookies and stuff but save passwords or is that a can't be done.
Maybe. The best way to deal with passwords is to have a password manager program. The problem with that is if you want to sync passwords between your smart phone, and laptop or desktop, nearly all the plans require a monthly subscriptions service.
I know for sure Chrome and Firefox will save passwords. Maybe all the browsers do, IDK for sure. Since every browser is different, google how do I delete cookies in (firefox, chrome, safari, internet explorer, edge) or what ever your browser is.
DoughlessDo ad blockers cost money to block the ads? It'd be a hoot if they were ultimately run by the same people who create the ads in the first place.
Maybe. I frequently see a banner ad at the bottom Youtube advertising an add on to block ads at the bottom of Youtube. On general principles, I refuse to click on it.
Henry
COB Potomac & Northern
Shenandoah Valley
[quote user="Sou
What web browser are you using?
[/quote]chrome
I just looked at this fourm not logged in and logged in and did not see anything like the OP does. My ISP is Charter and I use Firefox.
Rich
If you ever fall over in public, pick yourself up and say “sorry it’s been a while since I inhabited a body.” And just walk away.
Tinplate ToddlerKalmbach only has control over the content it puts on the its website, but not over any content superimposed on it by the likes of Google, Doubleclick, Facebook etc. which are automatically loaded to the page by your free browser, regardless of which it is.
That's not completely accurate. Kalmbach can choose to not allow external advertising on their website. ANY private website has that option. I own two sites, and have never considered allowing ads on either of them (not that anyone would want to advertise, with my visitor count...).
But they choose to allow advertising as an additional revenue source. If we don't like it, we can choose not to visit this forum.
Mark P.
Website: http://www.thecbandqinwyoming.comVideos: https://www.youtube.com/user/mabrunton
The ads all come from google, and are built into the web page. All you have to do is look at the page source. You'll see something like this: addService.googletag.pubads() This is what they call a publishing tag, which is defined as follows:The Google Publisher Tag (GPT) is an ad tagging library for DFP that can dynamically build ad requests. GPT takes key details such as ad unit name, ad size, and custom targeting, builds the request, and displays the ad on web pages.
7j43kKalmbach should be in complete control of their site.
This is wishful thinking in today´s world. Kalmbach only has control over the content it puts on the its website, but not over any content superimposed on it by the likes of Google, Doubleclick, Facebook etc. which are automatically loaded to the page by your free browser, regardless of which it is.
Happy times!
Ulrich (aka The Tin Man)
"You´re never too old for a happy childhood!"
7j43k Contrary to some opinions, I DO blame Kalmbach for irritating ads, because they own the website. And they either build or authorize the code for the site. I suspect they've been convinced they need a very complicated bunch of code, and whover has been assigned the task to impliment it can't handle it. Kalmbach should be in complete control of their site. Ed
Contrary to some opinions, I DO blame Kalmbach for irritating ads, because they own the website. And they either build or authorize the code for the site.
I suspect they've been convinced they need a very complicated bunch of code, and whover has been assigned the task to impliment it can't handle it.
Kalmbach should be in complete control of their site.
Ed
Accessing this site is free of charge beyond whatever fees you pay for your media service.
I think a friendly message that the moving ads impede the function of the site for many people might incent our hosts to look into it.
- Douglas
BigDaddy Advertising is part of financing websites, even commercial websites. There are so-called news sites that have click bait ads. There will be a picture of some attractive famous actress or athelete, with the line "See what they look like now" 40 clicks and 15 minutes of slow loading pages, you find out they look every bit of 20 years older than they were in the original picture. Bear in mind, we don't pay anything for this website. You don't pay anything for the Home Depot site or your bank, but they are making money off you or looking at it as a cost of doing business. Subscribing to this site, doesn't really make you buy a magazine subscription. That said, the responsibility for the ads you see is not entirely your fault. That statement will get this thread deleted, first thing Monday morning.
Advertising is part of financing websites, even commercial websites. There are so-called news sites that have click bait ads. There will be a picture of some attractive famous actress or athelete, with the line "See what they look like now" 40 clicks and 15 minutes of slow loading pages, you find out they look every bit of 20 years older than they were in the original picture.
Bear in mind, we don't pay anything for this website. You don't pay anything for the Home Depot site or your bank, but they are making money off you or looking at it as a cost of doing business. Subscribing to this site, doesn't really make you buy a magazine subscription.
That said, the responsibility for the ads you see is not entirely your fault. That statement will get this thread deleted, first thing Monday morning.
Well, back in the days of antenna TV and radio, the service was free. You just needed an intenna and device to grab the signals out of the air. Being subject to advertising was the way the entire infrastructure was paid for.
Then came cable TV in about 1975. Monthly subscriptions paid for the service and infrastructure, so said the salesmen. No ads, that was the allure, and was the justification for the monthly subscription fee to get the service.
Then in the 80s and 90s, paying a monlthy subscription fee AND being subject to ads became the norm. But my cable fee was only a few bucks a month.
Today, I'm paying huge amounts for basic media services, subscriptions PLUS being subjected to many ads that SHARE the screen at the SAME TIME I'm watching the content.
People tend to adjust their sense of normalcy over time, especially when there are few alternatives.
Do ad blockers cost money to block the ads? It'd be a hoot if they were ultimately run by the same people who create the ads in the first place.
I don't get any moving ads while on this forum.
Brunton I brought this up a month or so again - had never happened to me before - and received what came across as a somewhat short-tempered reply that this is not an appropriate forum topic so the thread was locked and would soon be deleted. I was surprised at the tone of the post from the MR staffer. Kalmbach's web site usability is being negatively impacted and they don't want to know? I wound up adding an ad blocker and have not seen the issue appear again. Neither do the ads that Kalmbach routinely places on the forums.
I brought this up a month or so again - had never happened to me before - and received what came across as a somewhat short-tempered reply that this is not an appropriate forum topic so the thread was locked and would soon be deleted. I was surprised at the tone of the post from the MR staffer. Kalmbach's web site usability is being negatively impacted and they don't want to know?
I wound up adding an ad blocker and have not seen the issue appear again. Neither do the ads that Kalmbach routinely places on the forums.
Yeah, again, I have an ad block on my home computers. I don't think this is malware. No, it's standard ad banners but the motion picture ones just KILL the bandwidth and bring thing to a herky jerky crawl. LIke I said, I have seen it on another forumt hat relies heavily on ads for it's existance.
OK. I'm expecting this to *poof away* Thanks for the remind that I can hit the X on the bad ones. That does help.
Rio Grande. The Action Road - Focus 1977-1983
Yeah, check and/or implement ad blcoking.
There's another possibility and that is a malware infection.
Neither has anything to do with MR. I'm sure Ms. Williams doesn't. I've never seen anything like that, but my computers are pretty well locked down behind the wife's very effective VPN due to work requirements.
Mike Lehman
Urbana, IL
I do not see them. I usually look at the forums when not logged in. Even logged in, I do not see them.
I also do not allow third party cookies and clear History when I close Firefox. I also have a couple blockers.
Lone Wolf and Santa Fe In the top right corner of the ad there are options to close the ad or not show irrelevant content.
In the top right corner of the ad there are options to close the ad or not show irrelevant content.
That actually does help, at least you can close the motion ads that cause the forums to stutter badly.
There are a couple of other forums where there are ad issues. I won't name it but there is a Train Forum that obvously relies on ads for it's existance. It always opens with several boxes you have to close out before you even bowse the topics. And it has ad banners all the time and sometimes you can barely type message there because it lags so bad and stutters. It is always like that when I go there and frankly it discourages me from even going there much.
I do have an ad blocker installed at home and more recently on another fourm I get a pop-up that says at the bottom that says:
"Can we talk?" Sorry, no. There is a point that you have to hold your ground and say enough is enough.
The whole advertising system, yes, I get it. But has been going to seed in the US over the past 50 years and is becoming a science in the internet age. But even before that it was getting bad on TV, Billboards and other print media.
On TV if you look at the original 1960's Star Trek episodes and they were around 51 minutes long with 9 minutes of advertising. What are "hour long shows" now? Approaching 40 minutes long with advertising close to 20 minutes per hour?
Of course this is a primary reason why I haven't watch regular, over the air, TV in probably 10 or 12 years. I can't tolerate the ads every 5 minutes. Netflix is solid programing for shows or Movies and for a minimal monthly fee - *ahhhhhh*
I really noticed the contrast in how bad advertising was in the US back when I went to Germany in the late 1980's. Advertising was only a tiny fraction there vs the US back then. Then I came back after a couple months overseas and whammo, "back in USSA now, you don't know how lucky you are, yeah." Reminds me of the old Beatles song. I digressed. Ads everywhere all over the place, pardeon the pun but AD nauseum.
Hello all,
These sure seem to be sucking-up the bandwidth.
I have never had so many "Problem Loading Page" errors than I have in the past few weeks.
"Uhh...I didn’t know it was 'impossible' I just made it work...sorry"
Well, I do use an ad blocker at home, and on my smart phone.
Kerry