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Messages - Paul Keith [ switch to compact view ]

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1876
Living Room / Re: Hey, Fonts experts...
« on: September 04, 2008, 06:35 PM »
Sorry, I would try to take screenshots of this but I once installed a keylogger program that would minimize the window when you close it but it was buggy and when I removed it, it stayed installed so now whenever I switch virtual windows, it would re-open my closed applications and it's really messing up Screenshot Captor for me on this PC. I couldn't find one as close to what you want but here's the ones that are slightly similar based on my fonts collection. Note that all these appear more organized than the one you submitted just like the image from the replier above me.

Algerian:

http://www.newfonts....a=show_font&id=9

Anvil:

http://www.dafont.com/anvil.font

Blood Omen:

http://www.dafont.com/blood-omen.font

Chiller: (bold this)

http://www.fontfiles...s/Detailed/1039.html

Fire of Ysgard Carved in Stone (italicize this)

http://www.fonts101.com/xt_fontdetails_az_FID!22247~Fire_Of_Ysgard_Carved_In_Stone~font.html

Jokerman (italicize this)

http://www.fonts.com...etail.htm?pid=203999

Macabra

http://www.dafont.com/macabra.font

Mortal Kombat 2

http://tabmok99.mort...nline.com/fonts.html


edit by jgpaiva: fixed url link

1877
Living Room / Re: Request for suggestions: Group Bookmarking Tool
« on: September 04, 2008, 06:09 PM »
I agree with mwang but just to clarify, I don't think they have two active regulars or else they would have helped you. The group is seemingly dead nowadays, it's like the staff cherry pick what topic they want to reply to and the only user I've seen ever really active there was Maggie and that was in the past.

Sometimes Joel and Wade can be seen replying but often times Joel just expands on the technical features of Diigo and Wade reassures people that it is being looked into but neither one really does that at enough rate to be considered support.

I'm curious as to how you use Wired Marker because I made a thread here asking for an offline version of Diigo and to be honest I don't really know much about Firefox 3's bookmarking system except it has tags which I don't really understand why it's a plus. Maybe you can share your step by step example because I'm such a newbie to the Firefox bookmarking system that I didn't even bother to check how to export it.



1878
Just give me the Opera equivalent of an OS. Customizeable, lightweight, secure and disposable.

Ah ... so you want an OS that doesn't work properly a lot of the time [runs and ducks for cover ....]

What we need is an OS that doesn't include anything except for the absolute bare bones and is lightening fast. It should be possible of new 64-bit multicore technology so why does my system feel the same speed as it always has back to PIII days ?

Opera would be a bad model to use as the one thing such an operating system would need is a way to write extensions.

Ahh...fire in the hole  :-*

Time to be the contrarian. The Opera situation would be alleviated because in this case an OS unlike a browser is not subject to not functioning because developers won't support it and also unlike a browser, a OS system's worst problem would be security and stability rather than being supported by developers because additional external programs are not the main core for a functioning Operating System so an Operating System equivalent to Opera if we are to use the analogy that Opera plays ball by following web standards and it is in fact outside interference that causes most of it to not work then this would be a case where it's not a problem because this is already an infrastructural problem within an Operating System meaning the worst case scenario in such a situation will be that ALL installable programs for it won't work but since Opera is considered one of the lightest, fastest, featureful browsers, an Operating System with such similar build would not be so bothered by that. In fact it's a blessing because that means it holds up well out of the box instead of needing to customize it but it is also customizeable to an extent without risking breaking it or exposing it to a pesky buggy program that isn't necessarily a virus.

And Opera being a bad model for extensions is also for me one of the things that it would make a perfect model for a perfect OS. Think about it. No matter how perfect an OS, if there are less than perfect programmers working on it than don't you risk breaking it now and again?

This isn't much a problem when you want to break an OS but for most users what they want is just a working Operating System that isn't as complicated as Linux but works as well and would introduce them to advanced features as things go along. Again, something not lacking from Opera. At best, the official documentation would be shoddy but that is something that anyone including someone with no programming knowledge could contribute to.

Like I said, disposable. One of the problems with Firefox or extensions in general is that you have to work with the extension creator and it's manageable but are you really having the time of your life scouring for programs and programs and seeing when they're updated? For most casual users, the answer is no. That's why many of them don't even ever get used to the habit of changing or updating their antivirus.

But what about those who want these features and consider them a must have for a perfect Operating System? Well, that's where being light and disposable works in Opera's favor because light and disposable also means portable and take less memory which means an Opera-like Operating System is suitable for dual booting, livecd/livedvd, usb stick, etc. kind of like what Puppy Linux is now only even better and less extensible. For me, the main important thing about an OS is you want it to be as secure and stable and quick to export as your brain when important files, data and a whole other thing comes around. Let others try to break your other OS while you play games, test programs by installing them and do a whole load on that stuff and go through user forums asking how to fix this error in that Operating System that mysteriously appeared and now you have to make a list of what you did that the Operating System didn't come by default with and as long as you keep the things you value most in that other perfect side dish Opera-like OS, from the software side of things, you have the perfect backup OS that functions even better than an OS for non-backup use with the exception of installable programs that's not only suitable for usage by a casual user but excels at that usage because of the focus on productivity with the Compendium, Incollector, ThinkingRock, YeahWrite based lay-out which is derived from the fact that one of the necessary qualities of a great productivity software is that it must function as a filesystem for your brain that you can trust.


1879
Living Room / Re: Request for suggestions: Group Bookmarking Tool
« on: September 03, 2008, 10:43 PM »
allen, yes it is. I just thought I'd post that in case mouser expected many of Diigo's features to work. It can be troublesome expecting to work on a stable service only to discover later on that a certain feature didn't work when you try to branch further.

1880
General Software Discussion / Re: looking for...a wiki?
« on: September 03, 2008, 10:39 PM »
Yes, for wikis, I third tiddlywiki because of it's popularity but from the screenshot, it sounds to me that what you really want is something like Compendium.

http://compendium.open.ac.uk/institute/

It takes a while but certainly less than trying to understand a wiki-syntax.

1881
Living Room / Re: Can you live with *just* opera?
« on: September 03, 2008, 06:57 PM »
One thing I don't understand. Opera says that web development people ignore them due to market share. This is why the suck so much in anything AJAX-y.

But then, safari (on windows, which probably gets 1/100th the attention of 1/1000 of the devs at cupertino) gets all those pages that fail with Opera right. And faster.

What am I missing?

I'm not a web developer but this is just probably a guess. Apple or Mac traction. Most developers are on average probably more willing to work on Safari after they have worked on Firefox and IE and only bother with Opera when there are complaints.

1882
Living Room / Re: Request for suggestions: Group Bookmarking Tool
« on: September 03, 2008, 06:53 PM »
Just a heads up. Recent topics made in the Diigo group has shown problems with bookmark syncing with magnolia.

As far as the group goes, I second that Diigo is a decent to great way to go if you can tolerate the interface and the quirks.

For simpler purposes though, FriendFeed rooms might just be what you are looking for mouser.



1883
Take notes in the shower? What the...? . I'll try to answer a couple questions, anyway.

Yeah, it's something I dare not ask the planner people but I probably should. I just felt like putting it in since many dabble here in notetaking and in the past it hasn't stop sites like Lifehacker which focuses mainly on software to have a topic on it. (Although I couldn't find the topic on Google now. It referred to an uncomfortable for outside while it's raining notetaking utility.)

We already have a few threads about those around here, but personally I recommend Feed Demon. It's quite fast, with an excellent interface, and various features to control how you read the feeds, and when they should be eliminated from the system, although by default it stores up to 200 entries per feed subscription. It's also the one that gives fewer problems with feeds, others tend to have problems with certain feeds, or ignore parts of them. You can do all the reading inside it as well, as it uses tabs and the IE engine to show them. But feel free to try the rest as well, I also recommend Newzie, for its unique set of features.

Yeah, I've read many of those kind of threads both from within and outside DC. Are you sure Feed Demon can? I've tried it before and it looked heavy in comparison to something like NFreader although I wasn't able to fully try it because I'm using a XP with a botched attempt of removing IE only to find that IE is more than a browser then I had to reinstall it only now it doesn't show images so I never got into fully importing all my RSS into Feed Demon.

With Newzie, it's just not for me. I've heard of it before, read some of it's past bugs (not sure if it's more stable now) but all those features is most likely going to take it's toll on my system.

Again I don't doubt you and I don't have adequate knowledge or patience to count how much specific memory consumption Feed Demon uses but I'm rather skeptical because we're talking about a fully featured desktop rss reader possibly being able to consume less memory than a bare bones portable rss reader with the same amount of feeds.

Don't even try to go through all plugins of a certain application, most times you are just losing time. The best approach IMO is to search for a plugin that provides some functionality you need, trying everything is fun for a while, but no recommendable. Like, "Wow, I'd like to do x with the browser", and you go to the plugin page, and search for it.

The problem with this is that often times there might be a functionality I might dearly need but I wouldn't know of until I switched programs.

Take the history feature of Meebo which saves previous conversation or a logging feature of a irc client. Little features that I find useful if things go too fast for me or I need to recall something but since I don't have a technical framework to understand how to have this feature in, I often suffer through just reading stuff like "Miranda/Pidgin is the best once you have all this plugins set up or yeah <insert x> Mirc scripts/plugins is awesome without really knowing what these people are talking about since I do want all these great features they're talking about but I'm just an average user who was indoctrinated to messengers with the Yahoo Messenger and used Mirc before because it was a program that allows you to chat that I keep hearing.

The Task Manager?

To be honest, I don't know where it is in the task manager. I'm using Process Explorer btw. If you mean the default task manager, don't you have to open it first which by the time your apps are eating too much, would be too late?

That sounds like Skrommel's ClipStep. Or try ClipX if you want some basic interface to manipulate clipboard contents, apart from extending it.

Yeah, those are the applications that led me to ask because I don't even know where to begin with all the features in them. All I use now is Ditto for Windows and Klipper for Linux and the only advanced feature I know of how to use is to set up groups.

first post looks a lot better all right Paul

Whew! Thanks. That was a pain to redo but at least I've learned something new. I've never tried putting tables before.

(Ah! A topic near and dear to me!)

Could you narrow down what writing function(s) you're looking for? The Writer's Store uses the following categories, which could give you some ideas to start with:

    * Story Planning
    * Craft Development
    * Outline / Brainstorming
    * Script Formatters
    * Word Processing
    * Film Production & Business

If you could give me an idea of what you want to do, I'd be glad to make some suggestions.

Wow...err... I honestly don't know which to choose. I'm just a writer who hasn't really finished a story and one day said "that's it, I'm going to surround myself with the right environment and poop out a passionate turd!" and novel writing software just sounds to me like something that would help instill good writing habits within me at a less costlier price than workshops because I don't know one near here.  I have read articles and books on writing though, I just at this point want to really do what it takes to up the quality and content of my stories aside from just writing often to get better.

All I know is that a novel writing software based on reading ywriter4 is a story planner and a future editor for when things needed to be changed so that's probably my primary intention when looking for one but story planning is such a vague term in itself. From the way it sounds it can fall under brainstorming either and yet at the same time it can also fall under such vague things like listing down your characters which is something I don't naturally do when I write/type before.

Craft development is something I haven't heard of before and I don't quite understand.

An outliner is something I want but not for the reasons of outlining but more for getting a better preview of what I've written which I don't find easy on many tree-based outliners so I'm on the fence with this one.

Brainstorming...I wouldn't mind suggestions but not having really used a novel writing software with suggested brainstorming before, I'm not sure I really need this because I rarely have problems with writer's block. More often it's writer's idea overload which leads to writer's too much self criticism leading to procrastination leading to unfinished work.

I probably don't need Script Formatters and Word Processors because I'm not intending to go pro (although it's more like I don't know how to) unless these features aren't what I assume they are which is something that formats my writing to a standard of some sort.

Film Production and Business... I'm on the fence with this one. If it's something that can help me output a more professional level story than it's always in line with quality and I want that but it can be just again a less competent editor and I already edit my work. Film Production I'm assuming is script writing and while I don't intend to be a scriptwriter, I do want to make a Visual Novel/Ren'ai game using Ren'Py so it's something I want but it's not something I thought of when requesting for alternatives because I thought they were a separate program from novel writing software.

The best place to look would be back at the mothership itself. Zotero documentation can be found at the following link:

http://www.zotero.org/documentation/

Yes, I have seen that before but the problem with someone on a non-techie level like me is that often times I drift between "How to use this mode" and "whether to use this mode" because I have no foundation or idea on what the hell the software is about but I'm drawn to the term "researcher's tool" so this documentation never makes sense to me.

I know it sounds like a bad case of "RTFM" avoidance but I since realize that some people just might need other ways of introducing applications to them to get them hooked and willing to look into it further and some don't because they are hooked but they don't know how to start while in between thoughts, they're wondering whether this is what they're really looking for. I think a good example is a PC user who wouldn't touch Linux because it's complicated but would use it once it's installed for him even though the real reason he's not getting into problems is because he just uses his PC for the basic stuff which most user friendly distroes like Ubuntu already has set up by default (which if he has tried, he would know that it would be just as easy to install as Windows if he did it by himself)

For me, my main issue with Zotero is the lack of formal background on how to do proper research. You see, I can never tolerate nor understand the value of bibliographies, footnotes, citations, timelines and reports but would be willing to learn those if the right program shows me that this would help me in my research.

Zotero is the reverse of that. It's the program that gives these options to those who already know the value of all these things and can tolerate them so when looking at the documentation, I can only be left wondering if "This is just Evernote with report and bibliography support" which I definitely don't need but then there's a risk like many seemingly unorthodox programs and services like Opera (from the perspective of a user who's only been introduced to IE), Diigo, Linux, Launchy, Pop-up Wisdom that they can not only be just what I'm looking for but something that would fuel my desire to not only consume information but be able to transform those information into something that would help make me remember and go back to them and value their information instead of just a black hole.



1884
Thanks. I'll try to do that.

Edit: Phew! How's that?

1885
General Software Discussion / Re: Best Firefox security addons?
« on: September 03, 2008, 07:37 AM »
This isn't really as good in the hands of someone's who's willing to go through NoScript but it's still a good extension for warning you of sites when you get sloppy:

WOT

and here's a new online password manager that many don't recommend but it does come with a password generator:

LastPass

At some point though, I don't really know what better way to secure your browser than using a decent to great antivirus and anti-spyware scanner. I've since removed noscript and I've yet to find my browser ever being compromised.



1886
How's the feedback in that forum so far mwang? It seems it's just a bunch of early adopters right now with no replies from the dev.

1887
Sounded cool at first, but I got discouraged due to others experiences. I am still looking for something like this myself for Windows (currently using Vista/XP Desktop Manager, I think that's the name...). I don't want to boot to Ubuntu just to have my 256 desktops (I normally use 25, but Ubuntu supports up to 256, and I tried it out of curiosity - interesting, but you can't see anything on an individual desktop :P).

How do you set your virtual desktops to not eat the panel?

1888
Thanks for sharing your thoughts. If you find out more about this flaw, please keep us updated.



1889
it's an interesting point - would you hope that they simply hold the backup until you pay up ?

I don't think that would fly from a business sense (sorry if you were being sarcastic) but to be honest I don't know how these online backup services appeal to anyone in the first place.

It would probably be interesting if they added in something like extra cash = permastorage but I can just see the rich ones abusing that feature and leaving them dry. Also in order for that to be convenient, a company would have to break your privacy by allocating some data as a permanent storage and others on a subscription level and it does seem rather stupid that you would charging your paying customer an additional charge for basically the same purpose.

I did read something like that but I haven't heard of S3Drive before. Based on the screenshots, it reminds me of GDrive using S3. (I'll be honest, I don't really have the techie knowledge to understand what S3 is)

That's my dilemma though. I just don't feel that extra security for paid storage because I'm not notable enough to need extra security and I bet most poor or middle class people are in the same position. I think what these paid services appeal to me is stability and longevity but the model...I don't know. I can't envision an alternative model for a lifetime backup though and for the occasional back-up if not external hard disks, there are lots of free software with syncing features already.

Ex.:

Evernote for Notes
Google Docs for Documents
Topic Scape for Mindmaps
Diigo for bookmarks, annotations and highlights

That pretty much encompasses what I really need to back-up with the exception of some quirky file extensions like ThinkingRock and Compendium exports and I'm just looking for a safety net service of sorts besides my own memory because you never know when these services can fall. That holds true for the back up  service too but that's why I made a thread asking about this.

I think everyone has potentially the capability to have notes and other PC snippets that would be useless to everyone else but would be valuable to them to the extent that their greatest fear isn't to lose these files because someone manage to extract these data because they didn't use TrueCrypt but rather because they fear that one day, they won't be able to gain the luxury of the internet or a PC and that keeping their usb sticks or external hds aren't really the most reliable way to store their back ups especially in a disaster scenario. I probably fall under that and it might sound paranoid but I wouldn't really categorize it as any less different than someone who uses TrueCrypt or other ways to make file access inconvenient for them for the sake of security.

Still think you should separate the topics more within the first post - I get a headache trying to read it !

Same here that's why I added this last entry:

What are some recommended softwares for making forum formatting easier?

I've already tried jotting notes down and re-organizing them but as you can see, with this level of texts, it just too much to format at times and it still comes out jumbled.

Any suggestion would be much appreciated. I'm still reading that notetaking thread.


1890
Thanks for the quick heads up.

Edit: btw I'm not a security expert but is this flaw only available if you download a file using Chrome?

1891
I have to say if this browser ever gets ported into Linux, it is a mouse gesture and session away from dethroning IE. This is a really strong first start from Google. The user interface is bare bones but this is like the default look I've been clamoring for Opera to have and I wouldn't be surprised if word gets out that this is the Microsoft OneNotes version of Internet Explorer for those who don't know what a browser is.

It stole or mimicked (I'm still on the fence at this point) what was considered by many a poor design by Opera and turned the address bar below tab bar MDI into something hip and innovative and it manages to cross the look barrier by making it look like IE but not exactly a carbon copy of it that old and new users alike would feel very comfortable with using this browser.

It even has the one click private browsing which I loved in Safari and for basic uses, I find it hard to find fault with this one especially considering that this is basically the 1st beta.


1892
Yes, I have. Actually I've been talking to someone on the DC chatroom and I've pretty much concluded to let this topic stay here for awhile as I try to to separate the threads since I was recommended to post some of the notetaking questions in this thread but I haven't finished reading it.

Thanks for the reference though. I did read both topics and unfortunately neither of them gave any clues as to what would happen if I suddenly got stranded on an island, lost all my money and 50 years later come back to the service. I know it sounds extreme but I just don't see the point of online backup services if their level of reliability is just a costlier external disk that you have to regularly maintain with your wallet.



1893
Unorthodox Notetaker/To Do:

Is there a better version of Incollector for both Windows and Linux?
Quality:

1. Easy to export
2. None-notepad like (template box)
Problem:

As much as Incollector is my preferred bookmarking and snippets taker because of it's non-writing notes feel and easy on the eyes preview of contents, it doesn't have a one box template where you can just write something without putting a title on it.

How do you use Wiki-style notetakers? (I can’t seem to get my head around on how a wiki-style’d note is easier to read than other kind of notepads. In Wikipedia alone I can find myself clogging my browser with 100 tabs opened all from starting with one Wikipedia article)
Is there a similar but better program than YeahWrite? Often times when I paste paragraphs in Outline mode, each paragraph break gets inserted into an Outline so I have to re-edit it. Also I like the cross between Latex style formatting and word processing because I’ve yet to learn Latex yet.
Other Problems:

I couldn't get YeahWrite to work in Wine but it's probably because I don't know how to import fonts in Wine. At the same time though, I'm also starting to see breaks in my Yeahwrite on Windows. I wonder if it's because I started changing the language for non-unicode programs into Japanese in the regional settings of my Windows.

Exporting is also hard to figure out with all the letters and stuff.

Is there a to do list/notetaker aimed at the “important but not urgent” “Important but urgent” “not important and not urgent” and “not important and urgent” system? I know that this can be done on paper but I’m looking for something like a grid over grid software.
Ex. You create 4 full squares with entries fitting each of these criteria on a specific category but then it zooms out and scales off and handles all your entries into another box.

What’s the best software for organizing quotes? I always seem to fail when using paper, word processors or spreadsheets because the output is not that of a level of an offline quote database. Yes, I love popup wisdom but am looking for something less random and more structured in categories.
Is there a to do list software which can organize a to do list into “must do” and “like to do” column after the entries were inputted? Sort of like ThinkingRock’s process item section. No tagging please.
Backup:

How to determine which free/freemium online file storage is reputable and won’t die down one day. I’ve heard of ftp but I don’t know how those work.
Quality:

Won't suddenly store all your backups if you've become dirt poor and can't afford their monthly subscription services. After all, what's the point of having an online backup service if it's only while your rich or can afford to pay it? Might as well settle for an external hard disk.

P.S. It's only for personal usage.
Currently considering:

Jungledisk
Problem:

I need to shell out cash to test it out.


Writer Tools:

Are there any other free novel writing software besides ywriter4?
Problem:

Novel writing software can be hard to get used to as is so i'm hoping to get a selection of different softwares to see the difference and realize what makes for a quality novel writing software that would work for me.

I’ve never understood word processors and spreadsheets programs. What are the advanced options available to it that might be of use to a casual surfer or writer? I ask this because I can never fathom how a newbie (as in someone with totally no idea except for a keyword) can go to Google and do “internet research” and become slightly less credible than an expert but you tend to hear that many things that require books can be found free on the internet, you just have to go look for it. Unfortunately when I do, it often gets pushed back in a corner of my bookmark or some place else. I know often times it can fall just under sheer determination but I was just wondering if there’s a key in notetaking or using word processors that allow people to do proper research and proper learning especially in this information overload age.
RSS:

What offline rss reader has the best specs or is configured for lots of rss but slow reading (I think online rss readers tend to remove articles of a certain date or number)
I'm currently using Google Reader now but to be honest I'm not really comfortable using it. I much preferred the lightweight feeling of a desktop rss reader outside my browser but when I try to set all my feeds to update, it just slows down my 1gb ram pc.

At first I settled for Opera's RSS Reader but then I got annoyed because I realize I still needed to open a browser everytime and I'm already in tab hell. Then I settled for nfreader and at first it was the lightest rss reader I used but then it slows down too. This isn't helped by the fact that I have a disorganized list of RSS that I'm still organizing that has around 300 feeds. Around 50 probably not so important ones like programming blogs because I don't know how to get into that and hope to gleam some information from those, craigslist and other blogs for monitoring and the usual about.com, wired.com kind of feeds with several categories.

Memory Hogs:

Is there a lighter version of ThinkingRock?
Quality:

Cross-OS
Template Box-Style entering that doesn’t disappear once an entry has been entered (allows for quicker addition of items)
Exportable
Filter Mode or Process Thoughts Filter as the program calls it (This is the key for me to stay organized as notepad like GTD programs are too hackish to make me comfortable to jot down notes on them and leave them be because their structure produce temptations to turn them into black holes)
Problem:

It's a Java program so I can't multitask with it because I usually have around 200 tabs opened which slows down my 1gb PC and I don't know what specs is recommended to alleviate this problem. (100 tabs in Firefox, 100 tabs in Opera sans sessioned tabs)

Research Tools:

Is PDF the key to having a basic highlight/annotation word reader? What else can be used that way? Alternatively, is there a better alternative to the Scrapbook firefox extension for annotating/highlighting webpages and saving them? I can’t seem to quite grasp the export - import option and it’s the only thing I’ve found that can have one kind of highlight overlapping another highlight without hacking a word processor's macro.
Also is there an offline equivalent to Diigo that is just as easy to use?
Problem:

Online applications are slower and needs browser to be opened and highlights webpages only.
I've just found out recently that diigo prioritizes annotated highlights over normal highlights so in the expand view of the bookmarks page, if you try to use Diigo as a cliff's notes viewer of what you want, the end result is that the page is disorganized because the annotated highlight is on top instead of how the article entries are order based on their locations on the webpage.

How do you use Zotero?
I also should probably ask this in the Zotero forums but I'm not sure if this is a bibliographical or citation newbie question or a Zotero question. Also I read a topic here that once praised this forum over Opera's own because it's friendlier so I thought I'd start here for all my software questions.

Customization:

Programs with plugins, is there an easier way to learn them? Besides the new FF3 plugin search, every program with plugins seems to be overwhelming to figure out. Sure, some are manageable because there are few plugins or that a non-expert can differentiate between a plugin that they need or don’t need but once it devolves into something like Miranda plugins or bblean, plugin searching devolves into looking for pages and pages of features trying to sort them out and often times asking for help results into what I need but many of the plugins I want often times come from me not even considering them. (Ex. FF Taboo’s firefox extension) or worse, from me realizing that I don’t need them or I'm so messed up that I don’t realize I need to learn them first but have tried them already. (Ex. Losing Scrapbooks because I never thought of focusing on exporting/importing because at the time I wasn’t educated to the need for backups)
Is there an easier way of previewing RAM without using a RAM optimizer?
How do you use advanced clipboard manager’s options? One of the features or habits I’m looking for is to be able to copy paste multiple entries in any order and then be able to re-arrange them so that each ctrl+v results into the next entry and the next entry being pasted but using basic clipboard managers, I only go so far as two copies before I have to self organize the entries.
Windows Vista: Why do people prefer it over a dual boot Xp and Linux?
I know the common reasons, I just want to make sure I'm not missing something crucial because it seems it should be a disaster but I read people using it.


Applications with the feature “from commandline”? How does that work?
What can I say, commandline tools seems like the most minimalistic programs but I have no idea how to quickly get the frame of mind to use them. File managers especially. I keep reading this real men's file managers over real men's file managers but for the love of God, I'm already losing my vision staring at a dual pane and asking myself "How am I productive because of you?"

Is there a Windows equivalent to PCMan File Manager?
Do you recommend any guides for setting up a minimal OS for a casual user?
I've tried Puppy before but somehow I ended up botching things up and I can't reboot from my session from a livecd and it's not set up for hard disk installation from what I read in the past. Besides that, I find Linux to be a poor minimalist OS right now because you either have to be an advanced user or you'll always hit the deadend of the problematic AbiWord/OpenOffice syndrome.
Meanwhile I'm really aiming for bblean but that is also like trying to tackle a Linux interface. It's taking time and I have to probably have to lurk in their forums to understand all the plugins thing and how it is different from litestep and other things.
Basically what I really want is a free desktop with a PIM, MS Word fast word processor or even better a Yeah Write like fast word processor, both ThinkingRock and Compendium opened and both Firefox and Opera opened each with 1000 tabs (ok, that's a large estimate but it would be oh so nice if there's an OS that can handle that) and have all these small systray apps like Incollector, Pop-Up Wisdom, Antivirus/Antispyware if necessary, launchy, desktop lighter, pop-up wisdom, firstcap, process explorer, ram optimizer and virtual desktop all without slowing down but I don't know how to set this up.

Security:

Public computers. They still scare me because of the threat of keyloggers. If needed to sign into an account, what’s the best option/software to securely do it? Does copy pasting from a password manager really work because I use a clipboard manager and it still captures the entries.
Problem temporarily solved:

I now use LastPass and it has a virtual keyboard so that makes me feel safer but I'm still not sure if that's enough. I would try portable browsers but they can be a bitch to customize and I have no idea how the whole Tor thing works.

What’s the key difference between anonymous browsing and private browsing and are the benefits worth it?
Misc.

What is the 2nd best most efficient and cheapest way to take notes while showering
Obviously I can use my brain but I was wondering if there's a cheap trick to getting a notebook that doesn't get wet without buying a customized one. It seems anytime I have an idea, it's when I'm showering and it can get highly annoying to forget what I write but then again, I still haven't solved the mystery of how anyone could have a dream journal because when I try to have one, all I can do is input keywords with my eyes closed otherwise it becomes too much a bother.

What is a Newsgroup reader?
I think I know what a Usenet group is but I just don't get how useful a reader is when you can just go to a browser and visit Google Groups or Yahoo Groups.

What are some recommended softwares for making forum formatting easier?

I've already tried jotting notes down and re-organizing them but as you can see, with this level of texts, it just too much to format at times and it still comes out jumbled.

1894
I'm not a programmer so I'm quick to please.

Just give me the Opera equivalent of an OS. Customizeable, lightweight, secure and disposable.

Give me compendium's functionality without all the menus. Just a big blank screen that functions exactly like it and because it's part of the OS, I don't need to worry about indexing reference files to it and worry about losing them during the backup phase.

Dual panels that on one side covers all the help documentations and another side contains all the mini-features like RSS and PIMs.

Right panel contains the Incollector interface and left panel contains special temporary folders for copy pasting and storing with 4 categories. Personal, Important, Someday and Pending.

Upper area contains a mini-menu bar that can be hidden and functions like bblean's look.

Lower area contains a Yeah Write like interface with multiple tabs that act like ticklers that can be added at will.

Ex.

Entry 1: MS Word, Entry 2: MS Excel, Entry 3: MS OneNotes

so on and so forth. Basically a simplified panel docklet with an advanced button on the right side.

When advanced is clicked on, the bar rises revealling all the advanced equivalents of those tools.

Ex.

Entry 1: Notepad with autosave
Sub Entry 1: emacs or notepad++ or whatever advanced users might need

Add in a simplified launcher like Launchy for advanced searching, a Taboo Firefox extension interface for quick bookmarking of RSS Feeds within the Operating System and a virtual desktop with set jobs (i.e. a virtual desktop specified to open the browser and a notetaker when a user goes to that space which then automatically reverts to a normal virtual desktop space once that functionality has been set so as to avoid accidentally re-opening the browser)

Finally, a lighter native copy of ThinkingRock, an offline Diigo service and a Export mode level that when pressed outputs a compendium export file that can be transferred to the main application for other browsers, an incollector export file, a ThinkingRock export file and a YeahWrite file with all the highlights and annotations extracted to it in separate sections.

I guess for me, the perfect OS is one where it isn't the perfect OS but the perfect complimentary OS just as how Opera is the perfect complimentary browser for other browsers. I know, so far two of my posts are Opera related but really I'm not that die hard of a fanboy but when thinking about the perfect OS, there's just something I love about an app that can handle lots of stuff assigned to it but remains fast enough that you can just close and forget.

1895
alphahumanoid, can you be more specific?

I see you found wikidpad and treepad notable. Both are well praised and I would recommend you check out BasKet Notes and Tomboy Notes for Gnome/Kde if that's the application you're looking for but I'm not quite certain what kind of organizing you are doing based on the information you provided.

Maybe you could give us an example of what you want to do.

1896
Living Room / Re: Can you live with *just* opera?
« on: September 02, 2008, 11:00 PM »
Hello everyone.

Yes, you can live with just Opera just as some can't live with just Opera or Firefox in that case.

Opera's main nemesis is Google Applications. For casual usage, (barring the services who use extensions or the rare poorly configured site) that's the only thing holding it back but this is like saying people can't live with just a text browser. It's just not true.

Think about it. Some can live with just IE and I couldn't live with just IE or FF. I would at this point just as much quit surfing if Desktop Opera goes away. That's why I'm glad Google came out with chrome. Two lightweight browsers = more space for multi-browser use.

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