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Innula Zenovka

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Everything posted by Innula Zenovka

  1. Stupid question, but have you tried applying this setting? (Screenshot from the Official Viewer -- dunno where it is in Firestorm). You can access it without being being logged in, though you may need to restart the viewer after turning it on. Alternatively, if that doesn't work, try rebooting your router. That fixes a multitude of issues, at least in my experience.
  2. This is from an example I made ages ago. I used llGetAgentList because I didn't want to worry about llSensor's limits, but that's not material. Anyway, instead of using stridied lists, I built two lists when I called llGetAgentList key k = llList2Key(lTemp,iMax); lNames +=[llGetDisplayName(k)]; lUUIDs +=[k]; I used the example that Rolig posted above to generate number buttons corresponding to a list of names in the llDialog caption, and then, in the listen event, when user chose a number, I looked up the corresponding name and key thus integer n = (integer)message -1; llRegionSayTo(kToucher, 0, "You chose: " + strChoice = llList2String(lNames,n)+", uuid "+(string)(kChosenUUID = llList2Key(lUUIDs, n)));
  3. As I understand it, the real question is "Is my prepaid Visa card one that will automatically approve the transaction when Tilia asks for payment or does it need to refer it back to the card issuer for approval?" If it's one that approves the transaction automatically, you can use it to buy L$. Otherwise, you can't. It seems that most prepaid cards do require authorisation from the issuing bank, which is why usually you can't use them, but some will issue the payment without needing authorisation. Unfortunately, you can only find out which type your card is by trial and error. That, I think, is why you're getting confliction information.
  4. At a business meeting I recently attended on Google Meet, someone asked one of the participants, when he asked for questions after his presentation, "Are you really calling in from the command deck of the USS Enterprise?"
  5. Could the original piece of furniture be ghosted? That would explain what you're describing, including the invisible object's not showing up in wireframe or area search. I'd suggest restarting the region if you can (or asking an estate manager or LL to restart it for you if you can't) to see if that fixes it.
  6. I am told there is, or was once (I can't find him in search), a Hoosier Daddy.
  7. Self-Publicists Anonymous probably wouldn't work too well.
  8. When I was undergoing chemo- and radiotherapy for throat cancer ten years ago I found the online help and support offered by the Macmillan Online Community invaluable. But that's run by the UK's leading cancer support charity, staffed and moderated by trained healthcare professionals. I also found invaluable the help and support offered by those close and trusted friends in SL with whom i chose to share my medical problems, but the two forms of help and support were very different. And I have to say that I often found my patience sorely tried by some of the pseudo-medical dietary and spiritual advice offered by some well-meaning friends in both First and Second Life. However, I could not really be too annoyed with them because I knew they were only trying to be helpful, so I suppressed the urge to tell them what to do with their crystals and nutritional supplements.
  9. I'm of an age (and background, perhaps) to have been taught never to set anything down in writing that I wouldn't be prepared to see published on the front page of a newspaper or hear read out in court. I can't say I've always followed that advice but I certainly do, at least most of the time and always unless I completely trust the possible recipient, online, whether in SL or elsewhere. That is all.
  10. Not today, but only recently did I learn that in Windows 10 and 11 holding down the Windows key + V opens up your clipboard history and allows you to paste items from it. Very useful.
  11. I remembered there was some discussion in this forum at the time about the privacy implications of the sweepstake, and once I'd recalled that, it did't take long to find the thread and a link to the rules. For what it's worth, it seems to me that if the winner wanted to publicise their good fortune inside SL, they could easily have started a thread here about "Whoopee! I Won the Car!
  12. I don't know why you're so sure the winner would not have opted for no publicity -- they might not have wanted to publicise their First Life details in SL (or vice versa). If you're that interested, their identity should be simple to discover, or perhaps would have been had you acted sooner. According the Sweepstake rules. to which all participants agreed Only one way to find out.
  13. At least in the EU and the UK, it's not a question of what data you display. It's a question of what data you store, for what purpose, under what conditions, who has access to it, and what consents the person to whom the data relates has given. All I'm saying is that it's probably not an issue for LL but it might well be an issue for the relevant data protection authorities, whoever they might be, so it's something people should take up -- if they feel sufficiently strongly about it -- with their local data protection authority rather than with LL (or in these forums).
  14. That's what I did with RedZone way back when -- long story short, the British data protection authorities told me they couldn't touch them because neither RedZone nor LL kept any of the relevant data in the EU. However, the law has now changed and, were RedZone still a thing, they'd have the data protection authorities of several countries coming for them.
  15. "All the more unlikely to be acknowledged" by courts in which jurisdiction?
  16. Please direct me to the relevant law in the jurisdiction you say Progeny's database is maintained and processed.
  17. Yes, but my point is that whoever owns Progeny's database needs to worry not only about LL's Terms of Service but also about the relevant data protection law wherever they happen to be based, because failure to comply with that can result in the data regulator, not LL, issuing hefty fines. Since I don't know where Progeny's database is kept, what they store in it, or what there law is wherever they are, I have no idea if they need to worry about their local data protection law or not, but I do know they need to comply with that as well as LL's ToS.
  18. I'm not so sure about this -- whoever maintains the database must comply not just with LL's Terms of Service but with the relevant data protection laws in the jurisdiction where that data is stored and where it's processed. While I don't think a UUID on its own is personally identifiable data, a friend of mine who is more familiar with EU protection law tham am I argues persuasively that it is, or could be, at least as far as EU data protection law is concerned. I'm not wholly convinced, but I can understand the argument, and she certainly knows more about the topic than do I. Presumably it would be a matter for the courts to decide, if it ever became an issue. And I have no idea what the law on data protection (if there is one) has to say about the matter in the case of Progeny, because I don't know in what jurisdiction they store their data, or what data they store -- if they store anything in addition to the simple UUID, that could certainly make a difference.. So while I share your doubts that LL would regard uuids as personal data, I'm not so sure what view data regulators in different jurisdictions would take, and they're the ones with the power to levy hefty fines.
  19. As Rolig says, it's very much a matter of personal taste. For myself, I've never really see the attraction of Firestorm. I've got nothing against the viewer, though I was rather put off by the evangelical fervour of some of its more enthusiastic supporters back in the days of the "viewer wars," but it's always seemed to me to be a bit of a Swiss Army Knife, with a few features I find really useful on the odd occassion I need them, and dozens that I never use. That reflects what I look for in a viewer, of course, and probably also reflects the fact that I'm sufficiently old school that I became accustomed to using the debug menu to access various viewer settings well before Firestorm exposed them through the UI. I tend to use the Official Viewer most of the time, generally one of the release candidates, because I like to familiarise myself with all the latest features as soon as they become availalble, and Catznip, which has a very similar look and feel to the Official Viewer, when I want to do anything with RLVa. Firestorm I tend to use primarily to check that objects and scripts look and work the same way in that viewer as they do in the other two. Also, not so worried about condiments with chips as much as I'm concerned about how they're cooked -- heat lard or beef dripping (not vegetable oil) until it's starting to smoke, then deep fry them until they're just turning golden, remove them from the fat and drain them while reheating the fat until it's starting to smoke again, and then return to the fat until they're golden brown.
  20. I asked ChatGPT: "Dream. Explore. Connect. Repeat." "Virtual World, Real Emotions." "Beyond Reality, Second Life." "Discover, Play, Create, Live." "Imagination's New Reality Playground." "Live Twice, Dream Again." "Create. Interact. Experience. Transform." "Second Life, First Choice." "Reality’s Parallel Virtual Universe." "Every Day, Another Life."
  21. A friend once asked LL if she could apply for a remote-working job despite living just the wrong side of the border from where the job was based, in a non-remote working state, and if not, why not. LL explained to her that the tax laws in most US states mean that, if a business has even a single employee working from home there, the business becomes liable for that state's business taxes on all its operations everywhere, which is why they have to restrict the states from which they can recruit remote workers.
  22. No, I remember Void very well, and very fondly. She was hugely helpful and patient when I was starting to learn how to script, as she was with many others. I think it would be fair to say that, at the time, she was one of the few SL scripters who really understood how to use quaternion rotations (which you need not just to open and close doors by script but to rez, position and move stuff, too), was ready to share her expertise with others, and was able to explain it all in terms that non-mathmaticians (like me) could understand. My point was simply that, had you been at all interested in finding out what Void's open letter was all about, it would have taken you no more than a couple of minutes with Google.
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