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Sardines

Well-Known Member
I have Adblock Plus as an extension. It just popped up a window and informed me that it has blocked 17,500,000 some odd ads for me.

When I was in 4th grade I had a notebook that I started writing numbers into starting with one as "1" and going in ascending order. My goal was to write numbers in the book until I got to 1,000,000. I did not get there. Eventually I found out how long it would take me to get there, and this was not just before google existed, it was before dial-up existed. So I didn't just spend 10 seconds doing an internet search. It's not impossible, but it would have taken something like 70 solid days of quick writing to do. That's 24/7 no sleep, no pooping, no eating, nothing but writing numbers at a clip of one entry per second. I can beat that until I get into triple digits, but beyond that I don't think I could keep pace. If I only worked on this 1 hour every day with no days off it would take 4.6 years.

At first my reaction to the pop-up was that I thought it was a bald faced lie. I'm not saying it isn't, but maybe I'm not thinking of all the different ways that ads appear. And the thing is, I still see ads. In fact I "green light" a lot of websites that request it and I "green light" places like this so long as it doesn't get stupid. Full disclosure, I think this site is blocked at the moment as there have been struggles to stop the ads from being overly intrusive, but I appreciate that ownership works to stop them from being overly intrusive.

Maybe 17,500,000 some odd ads have been blocked. I suspect adblock plus gives itself credit for blocking an ad and then blocking follow-up attempts to show the same ad, which I imagine makes up a huge part of that number.

I don't know, do you think that number has any possibility of being accurate? I am not sure why I care.
 
I have Adblock Plus as an extension. It just popped up a window and informed me that it has blocked 17,500,000 some odd ads for me.

When I was in 4th grade I had a notebook that I started writing numbers into starting with one as "1" and going in ascending order. My goal was to write numbers in the book until I got to 1,000,000. I did not get there. Eventually I found out how long it would take me to get there, and this was not just before google existed, it was before dial-up existed. So I didn't just spend 10 seconds doing an internet search. It's not impossible, but it would have taken something like 70 solid days of quick writing to do. That's 24/7 no sleep, no pooping, no eating, nothing but writing numbers at a clip of one entry per second. I can beat that until I get into triple digits, but beyond that I don't think I could keep pace. If I only worked on this 1 hour every day with no days off it would take 4.6 years.

At first my reaction to the pop-up was that I thought it was a bald faced lie. I'm not saying it isn't, but maybe I'm not thinking of all the different ways that ads appear. And the thing is, I still see ads. In fact I "green light" a lot of websites that request it and I "green light" places like this so long as it doesn't get stupid. Full disclosure, I think this site is blocked at the moment as there have been struggles to stop the ads from being overly intrusive, but I appreciate that ownership works to stop them from being overly intrusive.

Maybe 17,500,000 some odd ads have been blocked. I suspect adblock plus gives itself credit for blocking an ad and then blocking follow-up attempts to show the same ad, which I imagine makes up a huge part of that number.

I don't know, do you think that number has any possibility of being accurate? I am not sure why I care.
Remember that many pages will try to show multiple ads, and video ads are also blocked by it.
 
Let's to the math.

Counting to 1 million is easy to calculate. Let's assume 1 number per second. That is 16,667 minutes or 277.8 hours or 11.6 days. Round the clock, doing nothing else.

Let's assume 300 ads per page view, meaning every single time you change or refresh pages, in some way, as the baseline. I think that is an order of magnitude high (likely really between 30 and 50). But using 300, 17,5000,000 would be 58,333 page views. If we assume an equal number of page views per day, on average, that would be 159.8 page views per day for an entire year, and let's assume you have 8 hours per day to do nothing but view pages, that is 20 page views per hour, or 0.33 page views per minute. Or 3 minutes per page view. Doable.
 
Let's to the math.

Counting to 1 million is easy to calculate. Let's assume 1 number per second. That is 16,667 minutes or 277.8 hours or 11.6 days. Round the clock, doing nothing else.

Let's assume 300 ads per page view, meaning every single time you change or refresh pages, in some way, as the baseline. I think that is an order of magnitude high (likely really between 30 and 50). But using 300, 17,5000,000 would be 58,333 page views. If we assume an equal number of page views per day, on average, that would be 159.8 page views per day for an entire year, and let's assume you have 8 hours per day to do nothing but view pages, that is 20 page views per hour, or 0.33 page views per minute. Or 3 minutes per page view. Doable.
I think 300 ads per page is very high. I'd easily give you 12 or even 30, but 300? 300 ads on a page I have 3 minutes to view?
 
I think 300 ads per page is very high. I'd easily give you 12 or even 30, but 300? 300 ads on a page I have 3 minutes to view?

have a hamburger fatty!!!

images
 
I think 300 ads per page is very high. I'd easily give you 12 or even 30, but 300? 300 ads on a page I have 3 minutes to view?
Eh, I was trying to make it somewhat reasonable, and considering what most operators of these web pages might do to escalate their revenue, regardless of something as insignificant and meaningless as morals.
 
I love it when Rubashov gets cooking lol.





Preferably hamburgers. jk
 
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