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"This web page (or a plugin it uses)
would like to play sound.
Allow/Silence/Stop Loading."
I don't think I have to explain why,
except to say that it allows the
computer to make its usual beeps and
boops, and that it halts any
animation while you answer the
question.
I'll be happy
to hear that it's
Baked (though it's very important
that it work for plugins like
Flash, ideally on all my
favorite platforms).
SMS
http://www.sms.ac SMS message [preetizinta, Feb 12 2002, last modified Oct 04 2004]
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Annotation:
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Ah! A fine idea. Should be rather bakeable, I would think. |
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You would think... except that
plugins communicate directly with
the OS sound API, so that may be
difficult to selectively intercept. |
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I just turn off my speakers. |
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Good idea. I had particular problems with angel's link on UnaBubbas battery hens post... |
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Pardon my ignorance, but if you switch off the sound card, does the computer not 'make its usual beeps and boops' through its own nasty little piezo speaker instead, which doesn't respond to sound-cardy-type sounds? |
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Rods Tiger: No sound card is golden? |
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Perhaps Google could set up a "silencer" option, similar to their "translate" option? |
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If they can translate the text of a page into English, I can't see why they couldn't comment out any superfluous multimedia using similar pre-processing. |
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Hitting the Mute button: The
damage is already done when that
annoying music or sound effect
starts blasting out. This is
particularly irksome in an office
setting. |
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Disconencting the speakers: Some
computer-generated sound is
perfectly fine; I don't want to
throw out the baby with the
bathwater. In fact, as
[waugsqueke] notes, I might even
be using the sound card to play an
MP3 of my choice. |
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Uncheck "Play Sounds": That
doesn't work for Flash plugins ...
does it? These days, Flash-using
Web sites have replaced MIDI as
the primary "oh my god, I wish I'd
never clicked *that* link" audio
blaster. (I also don't use MSIE,
but that's not really relevant.) |
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[goff]: Yes, that was my
inspiration, too. |
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Hmm, gets my vote. I don't like running on [X]Mute as I forget to turn sound back on for days. Maybe I enjoy the silence too much? Web browsers warn you about switching from SSL to non-SSL pages and a number of other things; like you can turn cookie warnings on/off and even reject cookies outright. Doing this for sound can only make sense. I've had some silly idiot's site blare the workplace awake. One, don't wake people from their after-lunch snooze, and most of all, don't wake up the BOSS! People who force sound on you without warning should be lynched (without warning). |
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Hear, hear (or rather, don't hear). The browser I work on would love to bake this, but as egnor points out, most sound these days comes through a third-party plugin (eg, Flash) and it's a bit harder to intercept the sounds there. |
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For IE 5.5, go to Tools > Internet Options > Security > Custom Level, and set "Run ActiveX controls and plug-ins" to either disable or prompt (at your whim). This will catch any Flash before it is played. |
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For Netscape, you can always delete the plug-in if you *never* want to see Flash. Otherwise, I think you're stuck with it. |
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Just turn off your hearing aid. |
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MrWrong: The trouble is that you still have no way of knowing whether the plugins will produce sound. Many (poorly designed, IMHO) sites are hard to use if you've disabled Flash, and most Flash isn't that noisy. |
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(For the specific case of Flash, it wouldn't be hard to scan the file for audio tags before giving it to the plugin to play, but in the general case of other plugins, you want to be able to trap the sound-output calls they're making.) |
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I usually turn off my speakers but have been caught a few times off guard with horrible midi elevator music that people post on their webpages. I give it a + |
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The pratical way: earphones. You know, the earmuffs with speakers in them. |
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The halfbakery way: look up. |
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What I would do: have a circut-breaker type thing, extended perionds, or loud sound clicks it off. (on the supply cable.) |
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