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Messages - JavaJones [ switch to compact view ]

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76
Further to this, Mousers software pages have been a headache to do, mainly because of the volume of information that has to be brought over...luckily mouser came up with an awesome way for us to manage certain aspects of these pages (Download Links, and such) that unifies every single software page, and makes things a whole lot easier to locate!

Is it a Directory System? ;)

Seriously though, thanks for the update, great work!

- Oshyan

77
Living Room / Re: How do you resist buying ever more powerful PCs?
« on: September 08, 2015, 03:53 PM »
Macs do it decently,

Bite your tongue! I had a macbook pro for years, and that touchpad was the bane of my existence!

Eep! Well, in my limited experience they do a better job than most PC laptops, but yes not perfect. The whole idea is just lame though IMO. Macs did it for aesthetics, I'm nearly sure of it (they can argue the one-button vs. two thing all day, but Macs now support right-click, so I thumb my nose at that argument), and like sheep the PC manufacturers followed.

- Oshyan

78
I was just noticing it seems small too, after visiting one of my other forums (default SMF config basically). But if I look at the CSS inspector it appears to be the same size and font. Looking at it I think for me it may be the fact that the background color is another shade of blue, it gets a little lost then, whereas on my forum links are dark-ish red. Which is to say, something is not working as well (for me) on this forum vs. the other one, but using the same solution may not be appropriate here as it is there. Perhaps change font size a bit? Maybe that's no less drastic than Bold...

- Oshyan

79
Living Room / Re: How do you resist buying ever more powerful PCs?
« on: September 08, 2015, 12:41 PM »
the Lenovo Flex 2 15 that I could actually see
Well, then thoroughly check out the mouse/track-pad as my Lenovo (y580) has a really crappy one, when pressing one of the 'buttons' the mouse moves because you're touching the touch-pad...
The Full-HD screen is quite good though.

Combining touch pad surface and buttons is the bane of my laptop experience. Macs do it decently, but overall I think it's a bad idea done largely in the name of aesthetics. Is it "convenient" to be able to "click anywhere"? Maybe, slightly, but I think it's more *useful* to know exactly where you can click *and not have any chance of moving the cursor*. Not to mention operations like click-and-drag, etc. Clearly the touchpad-as-button paradigm is not the end-all-be-all...

- Oshyan

80
Came to the forum this morning and went to my usual Unread: All view and *woah*, no eye strain/brain overload/whatever! It was seriously a strongly different feeling, almost *relief*. I know that sounds crazy. But needless to say I really prefer the non-bold links, at least in topic lists. Within threads bold links would be OK, though IMO not necessarily an improvement. But in big lists it's just fatiguing somehow (to me at least).

One notable benefit that has been mentioned but perhaps not focused on is that stickied topics are bold by default in SMF. I had forgotten that, but coming back to the forum I noticed immediately in the topic lists and remembered that I hadn't been able to tell stickied/important topics from others on the new forum. Just goes to show there are sometimes issues that you notice but can't necessarily identify or put your finger on. So experimentation is good, it helps us get new perspectives on things. :D

- Oshyan

81
I'd love to see what the unread:all page looks like without the bold. Was it set this way (all links are bold) in the previous forum? Because if not that might explain a sense of something being "off" here that I hadn't put my finger on yet, in which case I'd prefer non-bold links by default. I think changing the color of visited links to better differentiate them is a better solution than bolding them all.

- Oshyan

82
No, dear god, please no.

- Oshyan

83
General Software Discussion / Re: What online services do you pay for?
« on: September 06, 2015, 11:18 AM »
I was formerly very selective about what I'd support.  Then things started disappearing.  Good services that no one was paying for.  And I decided if I liked it, I'd be one of the supporters to try to keep them in business.

That, good sir, is a very good philosophy.

- Oshyan

84
General Software Discussion / Re: What online services do you pay for?
« on: September 05, 2015, 06:05 PM »
Good question!

I have 2 1/2 or more services that I pay for now, and a couple I've paid for in the past but don't any longer.

First, the 1/2 - Audible.com. I actually just this minute went and cancelled my membership! I had been meaning to do this for a while actually, but your post inspired me to deal with it once and for all. :D

For those who don't know, Audible one of the largest audio book sites, and while you can use it without a subscription, you do get discounts and stuff by subscribing, and your subscription fees basically can be put toward the cost of books (heavily discounted in many cases). So for regular listeners it's great. I just don't really have the time, or perhaps I should say I don't *make* the time for the dedicated listening that most of the material requires. I do often listen to things, music, podcasts, etc. but they're all either background, or short form so I don't have to dedicate large chunks of time to them. So for me it was not a great value, even though I got discounts on lots of books. I own many audiobooks now, but have listened to very few. I do hope and intend to find the time one day, and if I were making more money I might find the $15/mo to be of less concern and a reasonable expense as a monthly reminder and motive *to* find the time to listen. But for now it doesn't make financial sense.

The other two main ones are iDrive for backup and Google Play Music for, er, music. I could write at length on my reasons for choosing both (in fact I already have in the case of iDrive: https://www.donation....msg381832#msg381832), but I'll try to keep it brief (not my strong suite).

iDrive is for me the best compromise of features and price for an online (and offline) backup service, so it's what I use. It has some problems and limitations that annoy me, but it's less intrusive and problematic in general than CrashPlan which I used before. Due to the sheer volume of data I backup (more than 3TB now, mostly my own photos), I am limited in the services I can practically use. Many have "unlimited" data, which means they won't kick me off just for having 3TB of data in their "cloud". But *getting* the data there in a timely manner is another story. I have 10mbit/s upload (about 1MB/s, practically speaking), and that will take a loooong time to upload. iDrive and CrashPlan are among a very few services that offer a "seeding" option to let you backup a significant portion of your data on a hard drive to avoid having to upload it all. So that's one of the primary reasons I'm choosing iDrive. In general I find it worth the money, though it is only affordable for me at the 3TB level because I got a deal. I hope they lower their prices in the future as storage continues to get cheaper. Many of their competitors offer lower prices for large storage quantities (often "unlimited"), but they don't offer the features that iDrive does. iDrive is definitely a good option for certain people...

As for Google Play Music, well I got in early and pay $2 less per month than new subscribers (so I pay $8 or something per month). I like consuming music in a streaming, radio-esque way, and I don't like Pandora's limitations and narrow focus (radio-only, no on-demand specific songs, whole albums, etc.). I use many other Google products and like that it's integrated. I like the "match" functionality which lets me upload my own MP3s and other audio files and play them anywhere "from the cloud". Back when I decided to go with Google Play instead of say Spotify, there were (and perhaps still are) some major reasons. One was that Spotify at the time did not have a web version, so you had to install a fricking desktop client software. Major dealbreaker for me. Yes the web versions can be resource intensive, but Spotify's desktop client (which I did try for a bit) was invasive and poorly coded (or buggy, whatever you want to say). And a major advantage of having an online music service is you can use it anywhere, but having to install a software client to do that is very limiting. With Google Play Music I can just open a web browser and sign in and I have all my music, playlists, etc. Spotify now has a web-based version I understand, but it's too late for my needs. Google Play has some limitations in terms of selection (The Beatles being an obvious one, and probably the most missed), but so does Spotify, and with Google I can just upload any tracks I'm missing and I can then play them anywhere. Google's radio features are adequate though not exceptional (I've had some real misfires from Pandora too, so I just feel the whole "play me music like this song" technology is still immature), and its other features and mobile app are all fine. It's not a mindblowingly awesome service, but I don't think any are. I found Spotify's UI to be maddening last I tried it. So I think it's the best option right now, at least for me. I'm very slightly curious about Apple's subscription music service, but not enough to bother switching.

I just remembered I also actually pay for web hosting, which might qualify for the thread topic (or not). I use Site5 mainly because I got a really good deal from them years ago and now have things all setup and configured there and don't want to bother switching. They've had their ups and downs but quite honestly I've found the service to be pretty reliable over the past few years (perhaps less so previously, though when I bought it was very good for a while too, so it was good, bad, then good again, hehe). There are lots of comparable services out there, Hostgator, etc, some are even free or notably cheaper than I pay (about $8/mo I think, I pay yearly). But inertia and the minimal difference I might see from moving keep me there.

I *used* to also have a "droplet" at Digital Ocean that I was hoping to host Redmine on, but it turns out Site5 does that adequately too (not as well as Digital Ocean I understand, but good enough for my needs). Digital Ocean is a pretty cool granular hosting service that lets you basically buy as many (or as few) resources as you need, in $5/mo increments. Pretty sweet, just not something I need right now.

In the past I have paid monthly in donation for an online radio station I quite liked, Radio Paradise: http://www.radioparadise.com/

I think that covers all of it, or at least all I can think of. ;) Oh, if Amazon Prime counts then I have that too. *Totally worth it*. :D And my girlfriend subscribes to Netflix, also worth it. And does a monthly contribution to Radiolab count? I think not as it's a free service that I get no real benefit or enhancement from paying for (except a really nice t-shirt :D), but I mention it just in case.

Last but not least, I too am pretty frugal with my software purchases. I tend to prefer supporting smaller developers/publishers and have seldom bought anything big or expensive.

Edit: I keep thinking of more possible candidates: domain name registration? If that counts, I have about 10 domains I maintain, not all of which are actively in use. I use Namecheap, used to use Godaddy. Left Godaddy because of their crappy, pushy upselling control panel and their (former?) politics. Namecheap is good, fine prices, decent control panel, little upselling.

- Oshyan

85
Hah! "Unearth hidden gems with our rails deep dive" somehow changes meaning completely with Papyrus font. Suddenly it evokes images of a LotR "Mines of Moria" quest or something. Amazing how much context a mere font can imply.

- Oshyan

86
Such speedy updates here, I love it! :)

- Oshyan

87
Cool guys. Keep up the great work! I look forward to seeing the fruits of your labor soon.

As far as the software listings go, the nice thing about a CMS is it's something that could be added fairly easily later when time/energy better allows for proper testing or even *coding* of options. I trust that the current approach is best for now. :)

- Oshyan

88
Separating posting my feature/fix request: I am very happy to see images popping up in lightboxes now (though I have yet to see whether images posted "full size" still can cause huge scroll bars in posts, a separate problem that I think needs its own solution). However I think the pop-up should be closeable by simply clicking on the background/outside of the lightbox, as is true in most other lightbox implementations. It increases usability and speed/ease of use quite a lot.

- Oshyan

89
^ Ah okay - you had moved the info-center - I thought you were talking about the default setting.

I still wonder if the info-center / active-thread should be on top in the default setting (I guess it would have to be separated from the other info, but dont know really - must try it at the top myself, see how I like it).
Try it Tom, because at whatever level of fanciness you work on, "nothing else matters". The scripts behind it are Turbo Fast at collecting posts, and if you look at time stamps (in the same area) you know that if you check it 4x a day you're mostly caught up. At worst, if you *know* there's a thread missing like my Ludum Dare adventures, you turn to one of the bigger pages and find it. But it really is damn close to a Golden Mean to keep reg DC folks updated.

Or just use Unread: All and always *know* you're up to date... right? I'm confused why people like the other approach frankly. It seems haphazard. But I've certainly come to realize that my consistent use of Unread: All pages is not really the norm, so maybe I'm the weirdo. :D

- Oshyan

90
General Software Discussion / Re: Windows 10 Privacy Concerns
« on: September 03, 2015, 02:48 PM »
ALSO, some people are unnecessarily hoarding bananas because at the time they got (or requested) theirs, nobody was worried about running out (no one realized that everyone would want bananas), or they thought they'd need more than they actually did. If we got serious about IPV4 address recycling/reclaiming, I think there'd be quite a few more years of availability.

- Oshyan

91
It might be interesting to see a system, either in the forums or in the CMS, where coding requests ("snack" or otherwise, hehe) can be made, and then those who have volunteered as coders can have a "coder" membership level/group and have the ability to rate the difficulty/time commitment, along with of course making replies/comments, posting files if they resolve it, etc. The original requester should have the ability to mark the request "resolved", and ideally in a better way than just by changing the title text. This suggests it might be better suited for being setup in the CMS where it would - I think - be easier to have custom content fields and permissions to handle this stuff. Maybe it's overkill, but if the idea is to encourage more requests *and* more fulfillment, and to better categorize and rank the challenge of these things, as well as keep track of longer-term and more challenging requests over time, then I think a semi-dedicated system (possibly based on a directory component or something) is really going to be needed. In other words if we want to see the "coding snack" concept not just supported but made to *thrive*, perhaps even take on a life of its own, then it needs to be promoted to first-class citizen on the website and given functionality appropriate to its needs.

P.S. Users voting on coding snacks they also would benefit from would also be cool, of course. ;) Then we can derive a value: level of difficulty/time vs. level of interest, and coders can make educated choices on what to focus on for the most bang for their time.

- Oshyan

92
WOOOOO-HOOOOO! It's been a long time coming. Congratulations mouser on getting started on this! And thanks Stephen for helping him out. He needs (and deserves) it. :)

My only feedback so far is that the look of the top menu is really quite... Windows 95. Any plans to change that? I know it's a somewhat minor quibble. :D

Edit: I realized I had another question - what are you using for the software listings!? I really hope you looked closely at using a directory listing type plugin.

- Oshyan

93
Living Room / Re: Anti-Necrospamming
« on: September 01, 2015, 02:48 PM »
People need to just be aware of the context of the thread they're responding to, *regardless of how old it is*. If people see a thread for the first time and jump to the most recent post and start replying to *that* without reading the full thread, it causes the same problem, no matter how old the thread is.

- Oshyan

94
Ooo, more RSS reader options to investigate! I'm not sure if I'm more excited or dreading the possible desire to switch, haha. But Bazqux sounds promising.

- Oshyan

95
Living Room / Re: Anti-Necrospamming
« on: September 01, 2015, 02:14 PM »
Personally I think the whole "necro thread" fear is a bit of barking up the wrong tree. IMO threads *should* be revived *instead* of a new thread *IF* the subject of the new thread is directly relevant to the old one. This keeps continuity and avoids lots of similar but separate threads where discussion gets fragmented, people aren't aware of prior context, etc. I see this happen a *ton* in the forums I manage and it's frustrating. I prefer to see the opposite, old threads being revived preferentially. Yes, you can run into problems on the other end of the spectrum, threads getting monstrous, overwhelming, and no longer on the original topic, but this is not strictly a "don't revive old threads" issue, rather it's a more general and useful "keep threads on topic" issue. If everyone stuck to that much more clear and useful rule, then not only would old and long-lived threads be kept on topic, *all* threads would be! On some of my forums we have 10 page threads that occur over the space of only a week or two, so the long topic issue is not confined to necro thread posting, and sometimes indeed these threads go off topic, so again it's more an issue of keeping on topic IMO.

Just my 2 (or 3 or 4 :D ) cents.

- Oshyan

96
If you use Pocket to keep track of links like that, it's actually *less* functional than RSS IMO, which at least gives you a preview of the content so you can decide what to read and when. The limited content is a choice by the content provider, in most cases, and perhaps you can guess why it's done. It's generally not a technical limitation (although there are *some* limitations in Feedly itself -and other feed readers - that make certain content like embedded videos only work in limited cases). It's the fact that the Internet is largely powered by advertising, and it's harder to do ads well through RSS. Most content providers don't want you being able to read the entirety of their content off of their own site as you won't see their ads. So until that motivation changes, I think *any* "content aggregator" solution will be necessarily limited by the provider's intentions/desires.

- Oshyan

97
I agree with mouser on threaded discussion. Have tried it several times, it works OK for some forums, but it brings as many (or more) problems as it resolves.

Regarding anti-spam (because I just saw another spam message, hehe), mouser I'm pretty sure I mentioned to you the two plugins I use which are highly effective. I would definitely recommend trying them before you implement anything custom because they'll save you time. Plus they're both focused on stopping spam *before* it happens, while your systems seem to more get rid of it quickly *after* it happens. So they'd be complementary in the end.

- Oshyan

98
There's something about the formatting of the Unreal All page that kind of bugs me, but I can't put my finger on it. Other than that the new site is pretty good aesthetically, and functionally it's great, snappy, etc. Well done mouser!

- Oshyan

99
That sounds like a nice workflow with Pocket, a tool I've been meaning to try to use (I have the extension setup in my browser but never use it, heh).

That being said I really *don't* see a lot of advantage in that setup except for one thing, which is a limitation of many RSS feeds, and maybe in some ways of the RSS format itself (or at least how it is commonly used): limited content length. Many RSS feeds only give you a snippet of the full content, or content differently formatted than the main website. In these cases having a Pocket version of the (presumably) full content is definitely ideal.

Anyway, I *do* still use RSS quite heavily. I use Feedly, which finally gave me a view close enough to the old Google Reader that I am happy with it, at least on desktop web. I tried the Digg reader and others, but none really "did it" for me. Feedly finally got there and I've stuck with it since, at least a year now (I have a G+ post on my experiments somewhere in my feed history, I can dig it up if anyone is for some reason curious about the details). On mobile (Android) I use GReader free, works great. And honestly I find I can pretty much use it just as that quote describes above, except I do filtering/selection of interesting content somewhat concurrently with reading. I can always save articles for later reading if desired, star them, etc. in my reader app. But I tend to read as I go, for the most part. Works well for me.

So for me RSS is not dead, and I hope it doesn't get killed. Given that the workflow quoted above relies on RSS as the content starting point, and I'm not aware of any other real replacement for it for getting updates from general websites, I don't think then that RSS is going anywhere any time soon. Hopefully... Maybe it's just a matter of finding the right reading tools/methods for you?

- Oshyan

100
Nice. Go µBlock Origin! I discovered it recently myself, thanks to another DC member, and it's been good so far. Nice to see my impressions confirmed. :)

- Oshyan

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