Gabriel Genellina wrote: > I use the Opera browser: http://www.opera.com > Among other things (like having tabs for ages!): > - enable/disable tables and divs (like you do) > - enable/disable images with a keystroke, or only show cached images. > - enable/disable CSS > - banner supressing (aggressive) > - enable/disable scripting > - "fit to page width" (for those annoying sites that insist on using a > fixed width of about 400 pixels, less than 1/3 of my actual screen size) > - apply your custom CSS or javascript on any page > - edit the page source and *refresh* the original page to reflect your > changes > > All of this makes a very smooth web navigation - specially on a slow > computer or slow connection.
Thanks! I forgot about that one. It does what I want natively so I will go that route for now. Still I think there must be some use for my method of filtering. It's just too good to not have some use :-) Maybe in the future -when web pages will add new advertisement tactics faster than web browser builders can change their toolbox or instruct their users. After all, I was editing the filter script on one screen and another screen was using the new filter as soon as I had saved it. Maybe someday someone will write a GUI where one can click some radio buttons that would define what goes through and what not. Possibly such a filter could be collectively maintained on a live webpage with an update frequency of a few seconds or something. Just to make sure we're prepared for the worst :-) A. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list