On 15.09.14 10:38, Trent W. Buck wrote:
> Wen Lin <[email protected]> writes:
> 
> > This usually required with AMD or nVidia
> > <200b>, suggested kernel parameters:
> > <200b>in place of quiet splash
> > <200b>, adding<200b>
> >
> > acpi_osi=Linux acpi_backlight=vendor
> >
> > <200b>And it worked after that!
> 
> I read this list via gmane, and the above looks weird there:
> http://article.gmane.org/gmane.org.user-groups.linux.luv.general/4108
> 
> It looks the same in my newsreader.
> 
> At first I thought there were inline multipart MIME objects
> (e.g. between "parameters:" and "in place of"), but what looks like an
> underscore in Emacs is apparently a ZERO WIDTH SPACE (0x200B, or &#8203;
> in the HTML link above).

Looking at the post in mutt, a whole bunch of those "=E2=80=8B"¹ whatsits
occur in both the text/plain and text/html components of the message.

Curiously, they are invisible in mutts pager, but five of them appear
(in a highlight colour) as "<200b>" in the quoted text above, in vim as
I compose this reply. To render them at your end, I've converted each to
its 6 character rendering here.

There seems to be one immediately before or after every newline
terminating a non-blank line - almost. One blank line seems to have
caused the whatsit on the "acpi_osi=" line to occur early.

My guess is that the text was generated with some sort of M$ product.
(So perhaps, as in daily life now, we should be alarmed but not alert.)

Erik

¹ That's "= E 2 = 8 0 = 8 B", without spaces, in case mail agents
  perform contortions on it.

-- 
At the Victorian [era] version of the X Factor, the talent show format was
stripped right back to its bare bones. Just six contestants and a stage, each
and every man singing his heart out to impress the judges. While carrying a pig.
http://www.bbc.com/news/blogs-magazine-monitor-28982145- 
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