Do you like poetic prose? Especially when it’s romantic? Maybe a little geekish?
Stay tuned.
and come to my world
Do you like poetic prose? Especially when it’s romantic? Maybe a little geekish?
Stay tuned.
Posted by
Ariel Guerrero
at
5:21 PM
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Labels: poetic prose
I just love this video, it’s one of my favorites of all time:
Note the whistle after the reaction with cesium.
Posted by
Ariel Guerrero
at
5:34 PM
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Until I can get a high enough number of readers. This might happen when I enter the University of Windsor this September. I have been admitted.
Posted by
Ariel Guerrero
at
12:47 AM
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Labels: personal news
This blog has been asleep for some time now. The time has come for this blog to wake up from its sleep.
Just to tell everyone that my papers have been sent to the University of Windsor for applying to their Ph.D. program in Chemistry, where Dr. Ricardo Aroca will be my thesis advisor.
By then I will surely have more English-speaking readers, so the visits to this blog will get increased. And there will be a real reason to have a blogging account, and my Twitter account will surely be updated in English.
By the way, did anyone notice I joined the Twitter network?
For Spanish-speaking readers, I really encourage you to visit my blog in Spanish, I update it way more often than this.
Posted by
Ariel Guerrero
at
8:57 PM
3
comments
Labels: personal news
Para los hispanoparlantes, versión en español de este post aquí
For today, yet another educative post I hope is as useful as the post about the US-Int'l keyboard distribution.
I remember the first times I used Windows 2000 and XP; both of them came by default with the Windows Language Bar visible, to change readily my keyboard configuration.
Don't know what's the language bar, much less what is it for? It usually appears in the taskbar, at the right side. I use Windows Vista Home Premium, here's a screenshot:

The first time I saw the language bar, I couldn't see any use to it at all. It offered me three options:
If my keyboard used only the first layout, why the hell should I change it at all? The language bar was just occupying space in the taskbar, so the first thing I did was to remove it. Then came XP, and there it was again, so I removed it again.
The first keyboard problems I ever had, appeared last year, when I had to make a PowerPoint presentation to show while I was in Canada. It was the first time I made a presentation in English. Even though I set the Slide Maste to write text in English, it just kept turning it to Spanish, and checking the spelling in Spanish. When PowerPoint finally understood the thing was in English, it changed my keyboard configuration to US English. Which caused a problem, for my keyboard was Spanish. I had no idea about how the language bar could help me.
I only came to understand the function of the language bar early in this year, when I bought my laptop and saw myself in need of typing both in English and Spanish. Then I was thankful about the existence of the language bar, which until then I considered just another Microsoft stupidity.
If, just like I did back then, you eliminated the language bar, you can bring it back by getting into the Control Panel, later "Change keyboards or other input methods", and later "Change keyboards...", and later choosing what you need in the "Language bar tab".
And how does the language bar work?
First, we have to know that the language bar controls two things:
There's something I still don't get, though: you don't keep switching keyboard layouts. Why the hell when you switch the entry language, automatically the system assumes you change the keyboard configuration? This is really bullshit. Fortunately, there's a way to fix it. For example, my laptop came with three possibilities:
where all three choices implied English as my entry language, with the three keyboard layout possilbilities stated above, and I only used the first, since that's the way my keyboard is printed. However, I write in English, Spanish, and from time to time in French... and I don't change my keyboard layout, but I want my spelling checked in the right language. So, using the same notation above, what is best for me to have in the language bar is:
My keyboard is a standard US keyboard. Why do I use the United States-International keyboard layout is explained in this previous post; if you have another keyboard layout, you should change this, and the instructions below, for the keyboard layout you really have.
This is designed for you to adapt the steps I will tell you now, which is what I did, to suit your own needs. The steps to obtain the languages and the layouts I want are the following:
And that's it. Now the language bar only allows me to change the entry language, and doesn't give me the possibility of changing the keyboard layout, which I don't intend to do either. It looks like this:

It's easier to change the entry language by pressing left Alt+left Shift in the keyboard, and the language bar will tell in which language Windows assumes I'm writing on.
I hope this post has been helpful to you. If it's the case, please leave me a comment.
Posted by
Ariel Guerrero
at
7:33 PM
4
comments