ON CELL PHONES MENU MIGHT BE LOCATED BY SELECTING A SMALL SYMBOL, SUCH AS A SMALL SQUARE WITH HORIZONTAL LINES, RATHER THAN SEPARATE MENU BUTTONS AS ON A COMPUTER SCREEN
Select a page from the menu below. Left-click the button until the page name turns magenta color. Then scroll under the buttons to find a new page.
deanrichardkibbe.com
TOP SECRET (See also: deanrichardkibbe.net, deanrichardkibbe.biz; and, saintvibiana.com)
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deanrichardkibbe.com If you look at the page titled: "WHY BOTHER?", in the links above in yellow "buttons", you will see a screenshot of the opening page for the website builder template that I use to format most of the stuff you find on pages on this site. In the center of the screenshot it says: "No visitors yet", in one spot. Most people would realize that I must have actually had more than zero visitors, since I am obviously going to visit my own site to see how it looks after I add a new page. The reason there are no visits or "hits" listed in that spot is that I never installed an HTML hit counter like many websites do. A hit counter is optional for a website. I thought about it, weighed the advantages against the disadvantages, and decided not to install a hit counter. It is easy to install one if I had decided to. You just copy a little bit of HTML code and insert it on a page. And you can find HTML hit counters for free on the internet. They might be interesting. But, they also can make a page load slower. And, like any machine, the more moving parts there are, the more things there are that can go wrong. So, as a result, I have no idea how many visitors I have had to any of the pages on any of my websites, since I don't use hit counters on any of them. If I used a hit counter, what information would it really tell me anyway? Unless I install a mechanism to track the I.P. address of every hit for every page, (which is not that difficult, and is done by a lot more websites than you would expect), I wouldn't know if each hit was from a different machine, or the same device visiting a page more than once. If one page listed a lot of hits and another listed few, I wouldn't know if the reason was because a page was liked more or less than another, or if something about the title aroused morbid curiosity or some similar phenomenon. I might even be subconsciously influenced, if a page was more or less popular, to feel that my most popular ideas were more likely to be correct; although, that is unlikely for me because of the fact that I place little or no value on other people's opinions. I didn't knowingly use cookies either; although, I recently found out that the website builder I use apparently sets some type of cookies, supposedly to help the website builder app run better, unless you set your browser to block all cookies. I don't like the idea of cookies. Many sites require that you accept their cookies in order to use their site. You can always delete the cookies after you leave the site; although, for some sites, it depends on the type of cookies they use. For some sites, if they don't use tracking cookies, cookies might make it easier to navigate an account you have with an interactive website. You have to make a judgment call sometimes. My site is not interactive. You can copy anything or everything on any page, free of charge, for your own personal use. My websites are totally not for money. They are a hobby for me. If people get some enjoyment and/or enlightenment out of it that is fine with me. If they don't, it's their loss. On my site you will get no ads, popups, tracking cookies, (presuming the cookies set by the website builder without my knowledge for quite a while have no tracking ability), or any of the other garbage you will find on websites that are just trying to get into your pants, so that they can open your wallet. That's why it is easier for me to use a website builder template to put the pages together for this site than it would be if I wanted to start from scratch and write out the HTML code necessary to add text or images to each page. I can write HTML if necessary. I did that from scratch for one of my sites, deanrichardkibbe.org , which does not use a preset template. But, I find HTML boring. I haven't memorized all HTML code; although, I studied enough to do what I needed to do in an ebook about Dreamweaver software, which I have. Although I made a couple pages for deanrichardkibbe.org to explain the site basically for anyone who ends up there, and to put links on one page to two different versions I made of a simple instrumental, (two different instruments used), version of the Christmas hymn "Silent Night", I usually use that website for storage, in a public folder which is in "read only" format to anyone who has the link, of files that are more than 15 MB in file size. The reason for that is because a disadvantage of using a ready made template, like the one I use for my main website, deanrichardkibbe.com is that the maximum file size you can post by that method is limited to 15MB. That is large enough for most images. However, for larger file sizes than that, such as the one for the digital versions of "Silent Night", (which uses a high bit rate and high sampling frequency in an uncompressed .wav file, making a huge file size, even though it is a simple two instrument recording), I can upload an unlimited file size to the public folder on deanrichardkibbe.org and use a button on a page on my main website deanrichardkibbe.com to link to that file in a "read only" format. I decided it is redundant to put a button on a separate page on deanrichardkibbe.org when there is already a link on my main website. So, my site deanrichardkibbe.org is my equivalent to my own personal cloud. I don't even need to post a button to link to the file in the public folder. Because it is open to the public as "read only", I can just give someone the file path, which is just deanrichardkibbe.org/ with the actual file name following the forward slash, and they can type that into their browser and hit enter. Then, depending on their browser type and settings an audio, video, image, text, or any other type of file, can begin playing and/or downloading. Some larger file sizes might have to be downloaded first before playing, depending on the internet speed of the device being used. So, if I want to, I can place a "button", (the place where you click to go to a link), on a web page which links to a file of any size, and have the convenience of prewritten HTML pages, with little or no further HTML writing necessary, by using my "cloud" to store the large files. I can also, if I don't want to post a file publicly, just give someone the file path in text form and they can type it into their browser to go to the file. Because my website, deanrichardkibbe.com is "read only" and not interactive, you don't have to worry about popups, malicious code planted in interactive files, ads, tracking cookies, and/or any similar crap you risk with many, if not most, websites. It's just a "peep show" with no touching, which is how I want it. You can take as many pictures as you want from any angle. You won't see me naked though, for at least two reasons:
(1) If you saw me at my absolute worst, women would say: "Oh, I've seen better." ; and,
(2) If you saw me at my best, women would say: "Oh, come on! That has to be Photoshopped!"...
numbers DO lie