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Ballymun (Baile Munna in Irish) is an area on Dublin's Northside close to Dublin Airport currently undergoing demolition and regeneration.

Located on Dublin's Northside close to Dublin Airport , it is currently best known for the Ballymun flats, a development of seven apartment towers and many smaller "step-up" blocks (i.e. no elevator). The seven towers are currently in the process of being demolished.

Historically, Ballymun was a larger area than it is now, but due to what were seen to be undesirable associations, the area has shrunk since the completion of the flats. For instance in the early days of Dublin City University, then called National Institute for Higher Education, Dublin, this institution was referred to as being in Ballymun (part of the "Ballymun Project") whilst today it is referred to and has a postal address in Glasnevin even though it has not changed location, indeed much of the present day Ballymun town center comprised of the northern site of Albert Agricultural College, the forerunner of the present-day university, Dublin City University. Despite these slightly negative associations Ballymun is in fact a thriving community with a high standard of living. New housing estates are currently being built and will most likely be bought by young aspiring businessmen as their first step on the Property ladder. The rest will be occupied by the former residents of the flats. Streets have also been renamed, for example the now Glasnevin Avenue was formerly called Ballymun Avenue. The term "Glasnevin North" also appeared to describe areas formerly part of Ballymun.

The lines "I see seven towers/But I only see one way out" in the U2 song 'Running To Stand Still' are a reference to the towers in Ballymun.

Moreover, in the U2 song 'Bad', the song and lyrical focus is on drug use in the Ballymun flats.

 

(Taken from Wikipedia article on Ballymun) 

 

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balcurris (4)  8th nov 2007
 

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Written by Administrator   
Monday, 07 March 2005
Now I know this is a site about Ballymun, but seeing as though you're using a computer to view it and that I'm very interest (and make my living) from computer technology, I've decided I should share some of the tricks and tips I've picked up.

If you haven't already tried Mozilla FireFox, the alternative browser (to Internet Explorer) I'd recommend you do... Not only is FireFox a proper standards compliant browser, but it is immune to exploits, vulnerabilities, spyware etc that has been developed to target Internet Explorer users. In fact, last year the US government has sent out a warning out to internet users through its Computer Emergency Readiness Team (US-CERT), pleading users to stop using Microsoft's Internet Explorer.

Mozilla FireFox can be obtained from here

FireFox can also be customised with themes and extensions which enhance its features.

Once downloaded you can implement the following 'How-To' - which will help you get more speed from Mozilla FireFox!

Click Read More for the full How-To How-To: Get more speed from Mozilla FireFox

1. Type about:config into the address bar and hit return.

2. Alter the entries as follows (by double clicking each entry):

Set network.http.max-connections to 48
Set network.http.max-connections-per-server to 24
Set network.http.max-persistent-connections-per-proxy to 12
Set network.http.max-persistent-connections-per-server to 6
Set network.http.pipelining to true
Set network.http.proxy.pipelining to true
Set network.http.pipelining.maxrequests to 8
(Any more and you may get banned from the site visited, as it may be viewed as DoS attack. Try a higher value say up to 32 but be prepared to lower the value if sites fail to load.)

3. Lastly right-click anywhere and select New -> Integer.

Name it nglayout.initialpaint.delay and set its value to 0.
This value is the amount of time (in milliseconds) the browser waits before it acts on information it recieves.

If you're using a broadband connection you'll load pages 2-3 times faster now, even if a dial-up connection it will still be faster than before.
 
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