In your mIRC options, you define a nickname and an alternative for connecting purposes. Unfortunately, if both the nickname and the alternative are in use, your connection stops, prompting you to enter another nickname. Perform the following steps to solve this problem:
Open the mIRC Scripts Editor window.
Select the Remote tab.
Enter the following code in the text box:
raw 433:*:{
nick SomeNick $+ $rand(1,999)
halt
}
NOTE: Copy the code exactly as is, then find the word "SomeNick" and replace it with a nickname you like.
The following file adds Japanese language support to reCAPTCHA MediaWiki extension v.1.7[1]. Simply replace the file ReCaptcha.i18n.php in the installation package or copy and paste the Japanese array. You may see the Japanese language support in action at KyotoWiki.
References
And it came to him then, as clearly and as certainly as if he had been watching it on the big screen at the Odeon, Leicester Square: the rest of his life. He would go home tonight with the girl from Computer Services, and they would make gentle love, and tomorrow, it being Saturday, they would spend the morning in bed. And then they would get up, and together they would remove his possessions from the packing cases, and put them away.
Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just,
And this be our motto: "In Debt is our Trust."
And the finance charges in triumph shall wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave.
After looking over the Mediawiki chat extensions[1] and failing to get any of those for IRC to work in MediaWiki 1.11.0, I grabbed the extension template[2] and created my very first MediaWiki extension.
To get the extension to work, complete the following steps:
Having used the MediaWiki sitemap repair script by Sy[1] for a while, I wanted to post my version of it which adds a submission feature for the generated sitemap. I think I saw some page mention a submission concept while I was researching the matter, so this is not exactly my idea.
Some time ago I had registered a couple of domains for a wiki for androids i.e. robots that look like humans. That plan changed rather rapidly on November 5, 2007, when the Open Handset Alliance announced Android, an open and comprehensive platform for mobile devices.
When it comes to community sites, I have grown to believe that there are two distinct sets of objectives. The primary objectives are basically related to functionality: up-to-date software and an optimized server are prime examples. The secondary objectives include all the eye candy: a sparkling look, the catchy logo.
If you are active on the Internet at all, there is a chance that hosting is a topic for you. Most people that I know started with shared hosting and then moved to virtual private servers and dedicated servers for performance reasons.