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Making Firefox faster: editing your about:config

January 5th, 2007 @ 3:52 am by Rich | Share This | 11 comments
Filed under: Links, Random Miscellany

Get FireFoxAs I mentioned previously, my workhorse laptop was stolen late December, 2006. Since then I've been using a much older laptop circa 1988. Okay, it's not that old, but it's a Pentium 4 with only 500 MB of RAM ... and it turns out, my Firefox browser occasionally likes to suck up about 3-400 MB of that RAM in one sitting.

Of course, that might have something to do with all 47 of my favorite extensions ("My Firefox on crack: the best extensions I could find").

Every time I install Firefox on a new machine, I wind up tweaking its registry settings to improve its page-load time and network connections to give me a better browsing experience. This time I needed to do the same thing, but also minimize some of the RAM I'm using. While doing the research for my tweaks, I thought I'd share my results with you in case you're interested and brave enough to muddle around in the Firefox about:config settings. Also, I wanted to save my notes on my blog so I won't have to trawl the Net again the next time 'round.


Del.icio.us links for October 22, 2006

October 22nd, 2006 @ 2:24 am by Rich | Share This | 4 comments
Filed under: Links

Rich's Delicious LinksThese are a few of the things I've recently found interesting, but don't have the time to properly blog on. I don't necessarily like or agree with the links here, I just think they're interesting. And just in case you do, too, enjoy.

(You can view past Del.icio.us links here or subscribe to my Del.icio.us feed here. Subscribe to Rich's Delicious Links)


Del.icio.us links for September 21, 2006

September 20th, 2006 @ 7:18 pm by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: Links

Rich's Delicious LinksThese are a few of the things I've recently found of interest, but don't have the time to properly blog on. I don't necessarily like or agree with the links here, I just think they're interesting. And just in case you do, too, enjoy.

(You can view past Del.icio.us links here or subscribe to my Del.icio.us feed here. Subscribe to Rich's Delicious Links)


Lyman Abbott

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: ChurchRodent

Puritan, born in 1842. He was one of America's most influential ministers in the 1890s, but was affected by rampant liberalism of the early twentieth century. In 1892, while pastor of Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, New York, he wrote The Evolution of Christianity, based on the premise that the church, faith and religion evolved in the same manner as did man. He saw evolution as the vehicle of God's revelation. He is often considered the major popularizer of the New Theology movement.

[tags]blogrodent, church-history, churchrodent, evolution, history, lyman-abbott, liberalism, puritan, theology[/tags]

Peter Abelard

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | 3 comments
Filed under: ChurchRodent

(1079-1142)

Eldest son of a minor noble of Brittany. Gave up inheritance rights to younger brothers, roamed France to sit at the feet of the great masters. Lectured in Paris. Wrote Sic et Non. A couple quotes:

"By doubting we come to inquiry, and by inquiry we arrive at the truth."
And...
"Faith has no merit with God when it is not the testimony of divine authority that leads us to it, but the evidence of human reason."

At the age of 36, Abelard was a leading intellectual in Paris when he began an illicit love affair with one of his students, 17-year-old Heloise. The affair produced a child, Astrolabe. Heloise refused to marry Peter because she knew how precious his genius was and she feared their marriage would hinder his career. Subsequently, Heloise entered a convent but her uncle accused Abelard of denying his responsiblity. Heloise's uncle hired men who attacked Abelard and castrated


Act of Toleration

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: ChurchRodent

(1689)

While the Independents and the Dissenting Brethren of Westminster were effective in developing and spreading a new tolerant attitude toward other faith-groups with their new denominational theory, this view of the church found only limited acceptance in England, where the Church of England still retained a favored position, even after the Act of Toleration in 1689 recognized the rights of Presbyterians, Congregationalists, Baptists and Quakers to worship freely.

[tags]Act-of-Toleration, Baptists, BlogRodent, church-history, Church-of-England, ChurchRodent, Congregationalists, Dissenting-Brethren, history, Presbyterians, Quakers, Westminster[/tags]
 

Addai

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: ChurchRodent

Supposed founder of the church at Edessa. Supposedly one of the original seventy disciples of Jesus.

[tags]Addai, BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, history, Jesus[/tags]
 

Gustavus Adolphus

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: ChurchRodent

(Reformation)

Lutheran warrior, King of Sweden. He entered Germany as the new leader of the Protestant cause. A series of victories carried him south as far as Munich. The "Lion of the north" died at the Battle of Lutzen in 1632, southwest of Leipzig, although his Swedish army won the battle.

[tags]BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, Gustavus-Adolphus, history, Reformation[/tags]
 

Aesculapius

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: ChurchRodent

A heathen god, who protected the sick and the hospitals. While a man lay sick in bed, a priest would walk the aisles chanting to this god. This presented some difficulty for the Christians who desired to help the sick and infirm.

[tags]Aesculapius, BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, history[/tags]
 

Alaric

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: ChurchRodent

The Visigoth leader of A.D. 410 who besieged Rome with his Arian hordes. Plundered the city, excepting the churches, proclaiming himself a Christian.

[tags]Alaric, BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, history[/tags]
 

Albigenses

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: ChurchRodent

A group commonly called Cathari, meaning "pure ones." Since they were especially influential in and about the town of Albi in southern France some people called them Albigenses. Although most of what we know about the Albigenses comes from their enemies, it is likely that they filtered into Europe from Bulgaria. Like the gnostics in the early church, the Cathari held that the universe is the scene of an eternal conflict between two powers, the one good, the other evil. Matter, including the human body, is the work of this evil power, the god of the Old Testament. He had imprisoned the human soul in its earthly body. To escape from the power of the flesh the true Cathar was supposed to avoid marriage, sexual intercourse, eating of meat, and material possessions. Here was a radical poverty, but not one based on the example of Jesus so much as on


Alcuin

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: ChurchRodent

An Anglo-Saxon in charge of Charlemagne's school at Aix-la-Chapelle. Began the task of reviving learning by writing textbooks on grammar, spelling, rhetoric, and logic.

[tags]Alcuin, BlogRodent, Charlemagne, church-history, ChurchRodent, history[/tags]
 

Alexander, Bishop of Alexandria

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: ChurchRodent

A bishop who disputed Arius, pastor of Baucalis Church, over his doctrines concerning Christ's humanity and God-hood. Around A.D. 320 called a synod at Alexandria to confront Arianism.

[tags]Alexander-Bishop-of-Alexandria, Alexander, Alexandria, Arius, BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, history, Arianism[/tags]
 

Ambrose

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: ChurchRodent

Bishop of Milan who deeply affected Augustine by his eloquent and intelligent messages. Threatened the Christian emperor Theodisius in Milan with excommunication for killing 7,000 Thessalonians in A.D. 390. His threat eventually humiliated the emperor, and its precedent set a pattern for the Catholic church to this day.

[tags]Ambrose, Augustine, BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, history[/tags]
 

American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | 2 comments
Filed under: ChurchRodent

The first foreign missionary society, founded in 1810. It was formed on the initiative of a group of students at the new Congregational Andover Theological Seminary.The leader of the group was Samuel J. Mills.

[tags]American-Board-of-Commissioners-for-Foreign-Missions, BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, Foreign-Missions, history[/tags]
 

American Council of Christian Churches

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: ChurchRodent

In the early 1940s American Evangelicals created two organizations: The National Association of Evangelicals and the American Council of Christian Churches. Both were loyal to orthodox Christianity but differed in their structure and in their attitude toward conciliar ecumenism. The American Council was especially critical not only of the National Council and World Council of Churches but of all who were in any way associated with them.

[tags]American-Council-of-Christian-Churches, BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, history, National-Association-of-Evangelicals, World-Council-of-Churches[/tags]
 

Anabaptists

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: ChurchRodent

(See also "Schleitheim Confession")

A movement beginning on 21 January 1525 in the house of Felix Manz by men who believed that the Christian Church of the New Testament was not dictated by the secular government, i.e. separation of Church and State. Called Anabaptists by their opponents because they "re-baptized" believers, holding that baptism followed confession of personal faith in Christ, not something one does to infants to keep them saved. Their goal was the restitution of apostolic Christianity, a return to churches of true believers.

[tags]Anabaptists, BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, Felix-Manz, history, Schleitheim-Confession[/tags]
 

Anthony

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: ChurchRodent

A revered Egyptian monk from the early fourth century, subject of Athanasius's book Life of Saint Anthony. Regarded by many as the first monk, born in A.D. 250 in Koma, died at 105 years of age. Went into hermitage at twenty years of age, living in a tomb.

[tags]Anthony, Athanasius, BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, history[/tags]
 

Anti-Semitism

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: ChurchRodent

The obvious example of overt anti-Semitism may be found in the Nazi regime. Nazi theoreticians developed a barbaric doctrine of anti-Semitism. To regain the lost innocence of the past, Germany, they argued, had to purge the present of its impurities. The Jews served as scapegoats. They were the source of all modern evils, the"culture-destroying race" that gave the world both capitalism and Marxism. Hitler declared that even the Christian faith was a Jewish plot.

[tags]Anti-Semitism, BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, history[/tags]
 

Apollinarius

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: ChurchRodent

A pastor of Laodicea and friend of Athanasius. Approached the Christological debate from a psychological perspective. Postulated that Christ's humanity was found in his body and soul, but that his divine nature displaced man's animating and rational soul. The second General Council of A.D 381 in Constantinople silenced his teaching.

[tags]Apollinarius, Athanasius, BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, history, Constantinople[/tags]
 

Apologists

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: ChurchRodent

Christian scholars and philosophers and writers who arose near the end of the second century to defend the Christian faith from secular attack. Included men such as Aristides, Justin Martyr, his disciple Tatian, Athenagoras, Theophilus of Antioch, the unknown author of the Letter to Diognetus and Melito, bishop of Sardis in Asia Minor.

[tags]Apologists, Aristides, Athenagoras, BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, history, Justin-Martyr, Melito, Tatian, Theophilus-of-Antioch[/tags]
 

Apostle’s Creed

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: ChurchRodent

A brief summary of Trinitarian and Christological belief probably from sometime before A.D. 250 designed to protect the church from heresy.

[tags]Apostles-Creed, BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, Creed, history[/tags]
 

Thomas Aquinas

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: ChurchRodent

(1224-1274)

Dominican monk of noble birth; brilliant, tireless and gentle. Honored reason above all other human attributes, and was faithful to the church as well as scholarship. Was sent from Italy to counter the spread of Greek philosophies at the universities in Paris. In Summa Theologica, he countered the tenets of Averroes, Maimonides and Aristotle point by point, refuting some points and reconciling others with Christian doctrine. Held that theology and philosophy were distinctly different, but non contradictory, that both are fountains of knowledge and truth, for both come from the same God. Held to seven Sacraments, with the Lord's Supper being primary.

[tags]BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, history, Thomas-Aquinas[/tags]
 

Aristides

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: ChurchRodent

One of the first of the Christian apologists who arose near the end of the second century to counter critic's claims that Christianity could only manage appeal to the ignorant and the low.

[tags]Aristides, BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, history[/tags]
 

Arius

January 1st, 2006 @ 1:00 am by Rich | Share This | No comments yet
Filed under: ChurchRodent

Pastor of the influential Baucalis Church in Alexandria where Alexander was bishop. Around A.D. 318, Arius challenged Alexandrian teachers by asserting that Christ's divinity was not of the same order of God's, since he was a created Being — sort of half-God, for "the Son has a beginning, but … God is without beginning." He spread his doctrines with simple jingles. His teaching appealed to the common people and former pagans, since it resembled the Gnosticism of their youth. Quarreled with Bishop Alexander at a synod in Alexandria in A.D. 320 and won the partial support of Eusebius, the Bishop of Nicomedia. His heresy spurred the formulation and acceptance of the Nicene Creed. All bishops present, excepting Arius and two others, accepted this creed. Arius and the remaining two bishops were consequently exiled.

[tags]Alexander, Arius, BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, Creed, Gnosticism, history, Nicene-Creed[/tags]
 


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