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DonationCoder.com Software / Timns Apps / Re: Auspex
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on: March 28, 2011, 10:11:54 PM
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There will be a new build over the first weekend in April...
Oh no! That means you'll be working on it on the 1st. One can only guess what might ensue… Well at the very least I'll add an Easter Egg for you guys. 
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127
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DonationCoder.com Software / Timns Apps / Re: Auspex
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on: March 28, 2011, 06:38:06 PM
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Hey there, sorry about the lack of response - been away for a week.
There will be a new build over the first weekend in April... I'll roll as much stuff in there as possible.
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128
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Other Software / Found Deals and Discounts / GoDaddy $1 domain sale
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on: March 18, 2011, 09:38:49 AM
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Register your com, us, mobi, biz, net, org, ca, co.uk for a buck, apparently... http://freebiest.com/web-...er-cheap-3.html#more-1110
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130
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Main Area and Open Discussion / General Software Discussion / Re: Best Text Expander software for Windows
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on: March 17, 2011, 07:23:02 PM
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I agree on regexes being an elegant solution to many problems, that would otherwise could be difficult to solve.
ppl scared of any regex, posted their opinion, that I quoted (without the quotes, sorry) above, that's the pessimistic group. I'm not in the pessimistic group...
It did occur to me afterward that it didn't really sound like your normal 'tone' 
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132
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Main Area and Open Discussion / General Software Discussion / Re: Best Text Expander software for Windows
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on: March 17, 2011, 04:31:05 PM
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in one elegant expression
Agreed, but the pessimistic still complaint that: You have a problem, you apply/throw a regex at it, then you have 2 problems... Not following you. We use RegEx to solve problems. Agreed bad regexes could cause problems, but so do a million other things... bad drivers, bad coders, out-of-date chicken... Now, I agree that a lot of people are scared of RegEx, but it's like a lot of things: take a bit of time to learn it and it'll repay you many times over 
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134
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Main Area and Open Discussion / General Software Discussion / Re: Lyx is the answer
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on: March 16, 2011, 04:41:53 PM
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Oh don't get me wrong - I was making a general statement about folks tinkering with layouts and styles and peppering it with my own personal opinion that different != better in many cases.
Of course not everyone is a programmer, nor has the time or inclination to create nice styles. But it may be that if you are able to exemplify exactly what you needed, some kind soul would step up to the plate and help you. Either here or on the Lyx site.
Or are you saying that you need a different style every time?
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135
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Main Area and Open Discussion / General Software Discussion / Re: Lyx is the answer
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on: March 16, 2011, 04:22:37 PM
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It's like a lot of rewarding things - you can't just dip your toe in, so yes I agree it's got a learning curve. Maybe it's just that I'm wired in the right way - I got on with TeX and LaTeX very well. To my eye it's a lot easier to comprehend than, say, perl.
I suppose the main question is just how much does one really need to fart around with those style files. 90% of the time, those predefined styles are going to work just fine. I do feel there's quite a lot of customize for customization's sake going on.
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138
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Main Area and Open Discussion / General Software Discussion / Re: Lyx is the answer
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on: March 16, 2011, 03:55:22 PM
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Please... don't "link" me to that quote...  LyX is effectively perfect for that type of stuff. (And I agree : not that complicated. The main matter here IMO isn't "complication" per se but needs and workflow.) Nevah! I had a feeling it was a quote from someone with quite limited experience 
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139
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Main Area and Open Discussion / General Software Discussion / Re: Lyx is the answer
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on: March 16, 2011, 03:35:25 PM
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I agree, Armando. I've been looking into it a little more and I think I have to stick to Indesign. I found this quote: The learning curve for LaTeX is both deep and broad. In my opinion it's harder to learn than C, C++, Java, Perl and the like. But learn it you must, unless you're willing to accept every LyX default for the document class you've chosen. And I find this quote... a load of baloney. I have just been getting misty-eyed over some old TeX and LaTeX documents I wrote way back when, it's not hard at all. Maybe the person who wrote that quote has not done much programming. \[ \frac{d}{dx}\left( \int_{0}^{x} f(u)\,du\right)=f(x). \] [attachimg=1] Does that look so hard? 10 minutes with a tutorial.
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142
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DonationCoder.com Software / Finished Programs / Re: DONE: Regex Sorter
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on: March 16, 2011, 11:57:00 AM
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Doesn't sound too bad at all - if no-one picks this up by March 28th, I'll do this one.
How I would do this: a bit of Java that reads a file and applies a regex to find the sort criteria in each line.
Say something like the following: ^.*?=thread\](.*?)\[.*?$
Sort on \1
Rewrite
This would actually be very easy to make configurable, possibly quite handy for other uses.
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146
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News and Reviews / Mini-Reviews by Members / Mini-Review: Clock-on-Desktop from Positbolt Software
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on: March 15, 2011, 09:03:51 PM
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Basic Info| App Name | Clock-on-Desktop from Positbolt Software | | App URL | http://www.posiboltsoftware.com/ | | App Version Reviewed | Extended Edition | | Test System Specs | High-spec home-built PC running Vista 32 | | Supported OSes | Windows only: XP and newer | | Support Methods | Forum, email, FAQ | | Upgrade Policy | Lifetime updates and support | | Trial Version Available? | Yes, runs for 30 days | | Pricing Scheme | Lite: $9.95, Standard $19.95, Pro $29.95, Extended $39.95 | | DC Donation Link | Donate to Site here | | Relationship btwn. Reviewer and Product | Just a satisfied user of the product | Intro:Clock-on-Desktop is a pretty good name for this product really, since that's exactly what this software does: it provides you with any number of very elegant-looking clocks that sit right on your desktop. The software comes bundled with over 50 skins which means you'll probably find several that are to your personal taste. I chose it since I'm always on the lookout for ways to make my desktop 'just so' and I am a fussy old stoat. The clocks are skinnable, scalable and support any timezone. I have ended up with a fairly plain, very clear skin that complements my rainmeter theme nicely. This in itself is quite surprising since I am a terrible one for fiddling with the desktop. Anyway, initial impressions are good: the interface is very nicely designed, with smooth-looking icons and a reasonably intuitive GUI for setting up the basics. The guys clearly have a pretty talented artist working with them, and it's this that makes the software quite appealing. It's verging on the slightly-chubby, soft, Mac-like look and feel. Luckily we stay just on the safe side of twee. [attachthumb=4] Who is this app designed for:I suggest this software is really for an enthusiastic PC user who would like to have their desktop look just that bit nicer while offering a fairly practical piece of software. [attachthumb=1] [attachthumb=2] [attachthumb=3] To be fair, the Extended edition comes with a few other features which could potentially be quite useful, and make you feel a lot better about spending a few bucks on what is otherwise essentially a cosmetic feature for your PC. This is the complete feature list from their site: - Amazing and beautiful clock on your desktop
- Great skins pack sorted by types: analog, digital and mixed (more than 50 skins)
- Smooth animation and ability to drop shadow for clock and hands
- Multilanguage suport
- Tit-tac and cuckoo sounds
- Multiple clocks with different timezones on your desktop
- Effective alarm system that support various alarm types
- Easy-to-use reminders
- Birthday reminders with support of avatars and Gravatars
- Synchronization with any NTP server
- Replace default Windows screensaver with Clock-on-Desktop fully configurable screensaver
- Todo manager
- Colorful notes to pin to your desktop
- Personal dairy (I'm thinking they mean diary)
In practice these guys are offering a surprisingly good todo list, on-screen post-its and a personal diary. If I had not already commited to some pretty heavy-duty CRM software I do believe I would probably get some solid use from these features.The Good- As many clocks as you like on the desktop
- Pro and above gives you multiple clocks with different timezones
- Very pretty skins and smooth interface
- Clocks scale very well
- Reasonably low impact on PC resources
The needs improvement sectionFor some reason I was required to re-submit my registration a couple of times after the clocks went forward. Luckily it was just a case of a couple of clicks and everything is now smooth again. I also get the feeling that the forum will not really take off. I posted a couple of messages on there, and it's clearly checked by the developers, but there's no real feeling of activity. The software is stable enough that there is unlikely to be many new releases. This is both good and bad of course! You may feel it's too much to spend on 'fluff' software. Why I think you should use this productIf you're in the market for a nice desktop enhancement, definitely take the 30 day trial and put it up against the many other clocks out there. If you have a hankering for a pleasing-looking piece of software that does just a couple of things, and does them well, this could be for you. How does it compare to similar appsBoy, have I tried a lot of world clocks in my time. I picked this one mainly because when I installed the trial, it looked good, was very easy to set up the clocks how I wanted, and then it just sat there and worked. I usually install then remove software like this because there's always something thing that bugs me just a little too much. Among the issues I've bumped into with other software: - Does not 'stick' to the location I place it
- Uses too many resources
- Has intrusuve UI
- Clocks do not scale well and look all jaggy
- ... or just look plain lousy
ConclusionsI'm happy with this software. It starts up when my PC boots and shows me my little list of key timezones. I deal with folks from all around the world from morning to night. It's really nice to get local time for them at-a-glance without having to do advanced mental arithmetic while still smacking my lips and blinking gummily at my first coffee of the morning.
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147
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DonationCoder.com Software / Timns Apps / Re: March Fundraiser Pledge: teaser
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on: March 14, 2011, 01:28:59 PM
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I just decided to pick this up again next month. I trialled the other forum readers out there and they're not too good. The nicer one (forum pilot) appears to be abandoned and is pretty bad at picking up new posts.
1Topic crashes with "failed to register resource" and again the site has not been touched since '08.
Web Forum reader is a disaster to set up. It cannot seem to get the hang of the DC layout at all.
So: all-in-all, I think it IS time for a nice DoCo reader. I have the boring invisible stuff in place (download, threading, database) so it's now the fun things to be done: how to best present the messages, filtering, searching, sorting.
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149
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Main Area and Open Discussion / Living Room / Re: Note taking Methods and Software
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on: March 14, 2011, 11:16:31 AM
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I wanted to give Pagico a spin as well after reading about it here and seeing how neat it looked on their homepage. Unfortunately the beta version 5 did not work on my computer, whenever it got to the point of loading a database it just locked up. I sent an e-mail describing the problem, and got an automated response saying in part During regular business hours, it normally takes less than 2 hours (5 minutes in most cases) to get a response from us, and for holidays, it will be slightly longer but definitely no more than 48 hours. I thought I would share that line, since it has now been a week since I got it  . Hi Jibz, that's strange, since I've raised a couple of issues with them over the last year or so since I've been running it, and they've always replied quite promptly (no affiliation here, just stating my experience)
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