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Messages - Tuxman [ switch to compact view ]

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1851
Living Room / Re: Leave me in the clouds
« on: March 17, 2011, 11:23 PM »
Basically, similar thoughts made me decide that my Cloud life will only be with todo lists and (not confidential) notes.  :)
Not sure if my Dropbox account (with a couple of private image files) would be considered "public"; probably I should zip and encrypt my backups there. Good idea, actually.

1852
Living Room / Re: Leave me in the clouds
« on: March 17, 2011, 10:34 PM »
It is fine, although its successor, the SGS2, is about to be released...  :)

1853
Living Room / Leave me in the clouds
« on: March 17, 2011, 09:40 PM »
It took me a while to get there, but now I made it:
I'm in the Cloud.

Some time during Summer of 2010 I bought some Android smartphone, just for teh lulz. I didn't really need it, I already had two mobiles (one with a flatrate, one with a pre-paid SIM), but I had too much free time on my hands, so I needed some new toy. I could not imagine what that would mean for me.

I did all of my "home office" stuff with pen&paper and a laptop before I made the decision. However, it took me a couple of months to understand what is wrong with writing short memos into an "analog" notebook and copy them into a note-taking and another todo list managing application on my laptop later.

As some of you might already have noticed, I am a paranoid person. I try to avoid using software that stores stuff about me on a server I can not control. (No Google-Anything, that is.) However, while I sat on a raw draft of a web service for an AIR-based todo application I wrote a while ago and tried to manage that draft in my local Keynote-NF database (great application BTW), I stumbled upon "wunderlist", some free todo web service with Windows and Android clients, in a German magazine article about the Cloud. (Now that's ironic.) This moment was the moment I decided to give the Cloud a try. (Having to pay before actually having tested the particular product for a couple of weeks is not my preferred attitude.)

Long story short: My Dropbox account, used as an emergency backup fallback, is now in a row with my wunderlist todo list and my - also new - Evernote notes storage. Being able to share my thoughts with all of my devices is just great. (Although I still prefer to use a classic notebook for blog posting drafts. Typing long texts on a smartphone sucks.) I never wanted to do that (you know, paranoia and stuff), but it has got me. I walk the clouds.

Any discussion? Or sympathy at least?


Topic title taken from here:


1854
Fx4 is a usability disaster anyway. I'm rather happy that we have Dactyl/Vimperator and (on my main machines) add-ons that bring back my old Fx3 layout...

1855
General Software Discussion / Re: The best RSS reader?
« on: March 16, 2011, 12:44 PM »
For "reading stuff later" I use RSSOwl's "mark as unread" functionality and some Evernote stuff. Good old UNIX philosophy: One tool, one purpose.  :D

(A backlog of ~ 100+ articles can also be handled with RSSOwl BTW. Even in offline mode.)

1856
General Software Discussion / Re: The best RSS reader?
« on: March 16, 2011, 09:07 AM »
I use RSSOwl because of its filtering abilities. Would like FeedDemon but it is payware. Payware blows.  :P
(Other than that, RSSOwl is quite FeedDemon without ads in terms of functionality.)

1857
General Software Discussion / Re: Most Pirated Software?
« on: February 24, 2011, 07:06 AM »
Photoshop, I presume. Although most people who pirate it never actually use it, it's "cool" to have it.

Bloatware bs.

1858
General Software Discussion / Re: Bulk Creating Folders
« on: February 21, 2011, 11:34 AM »
BTW ac'tivAid can also do that :)

1859
I'm quite happy with DuckDuckGo and - sometimes - Yippy right now. Tried blekko, found its basic ideas interesting, but wasn't convinced of its search results. That said, I defined some slashtags for every now and then.

1860
The guys are working on Sublime Text 2 now. The "GoTo Anything" thingy seems to be hard to beat yet.  :o

A pity it is so pricey..

1861
Living Room / Re: What books are you reading?
« on: January 27, 2011, 10:52 AM »
I'm done now with the German edition of that one:



"Delete" looks at the surprising phenomenon of perfect remembering in the digital age, and reveals why we must reintroduce our capacity to forget. Digital technology empowers us as never before, yet it has unforeseen consequences as well. Potentially humiliating content on Facebook is enshrined in cyberspace for future employers to see. Google remembers everything we've searched for and when. The digital realm remembers what is sometimes better forgotten, and this has profound implications for us all. In "Delete", Viktor Mayer-Schonberger traces the important role that forgetting has played throughout human history, from the ability to make sound decisions unencumbered by the past to the possibility of second chances. The written word made it possible for humans to remember across generations and time, yet now digital technology and global networks are overriding our natural ability to forget - the past is ever present, ready to be called up at the click of a mouse. Mayer-Schonberger examines the technology that's facilitating the end of forgetting - digitization, cheap storage and easy retrieval, global access, and increasingly powerful software - and describes the dangers of everlasting digital memory, whether it's outdated information taken out of context or compromising photos the Web won't let us forget. He explains why information privacy rights and other fixes can't help us, and proposes an ingeniously simple solution - expiration dates on information - that may. "Delete" is an eye-opening book that will help us remember how to forget in the digital age.

 :)

1862
Yeh, "looking nice" FAIL @ most of the "modern approaches"...

1863
I wonder what all that "drop UIs users are used to" stuff is about. There are several good reasons that the current UI has been consistent for so long...

1864
Yeah but it only grey out domains, make them non-clickable right?
Right.

1865
A Firefox alternative is CustomizeGoogle or, as a successor, OptimizeGoogle, but they can only filter by domain or wildcard, so "random" domains are still there.

1866
Another point of view is internet has ALWAYS been full of noise, crap, copy-writing crap, attempts to get on top of any list, not just Googles.
Early "top lists" were manually generated, so they required a certain level of worthy contents. Google's don't.

I would never ever expect perfect results even when doing an advanced search.
So you arranged with Google's inability to provide good search results. That is your fault, not theirs.

Not solution but another amazing experience is when you see results pages as autoloading in 2+ columns. Suddenly you are no more victim to top 10, 20, 30 and can evaluate way better.
You still are, but it takes less time.

1867
These sites change their domains and contents quite twice a day. Once they are reported, they have a new name again and again and again. Seems to be a good business.

1868
I could use YaCy for that, but I'm not speaking about search engines here but about the splog market.

1869
Marco Arment wrote:

Now, massive amounts of technically-not-spam sites are generated by penny-hungry affiliate marketers and sleazy web “content” startups to target long-tail Google queries en masse, scraping content from others or paying low-wage workers to churn out formulaic, minimally nutritious pages to answer them.

Searching Google is now like asking a question in a crowded flea market of hungry, desperate, sleazy salesmen who all claim to have the answer to every question you ask.

(...)

And none of them actually know a damn thing about what you’re asking, of course — they’re just offering meaningless, valueless words that seem to form sentences until you actually try to make use of them.

They call this “content”. But it’s not, really — it’s filler. And by a more common-sense definition, it’s spam. But Google either doesn’t think so, or is so overwhelmed by its volume that it has seemingly stopped trying to keep it under control.

Well, thank you, Web 2.0 with your "user-generated" mindfuck.

Although I wonder why other search engines (cough, Yippy, cough) don't have such a massive spam problem, in fact we should all consider the consequences. What could be an efficient way to filter our very own web experience?

Just a thought.

1870
General Software Discussion / Re: Your most used SPECIAL programs
« on: January 03, 2011, 10:09 PM »
According to Wakoopa, my "most used" "special" programs besides browsers, media players, P2P stuff, etc. are PuTTy (KiTTy, to be precise), Comicrack and the Windows Command Prompt.

 ;D

Given that these statistics are cumulative starting a few years ago, it says quite nothing...  :D

1871
Living Room / Re: Are You Ready to Switch to GNU/Linux?
« on: January 01, 2011, 01:19 PM »
Well, it's cold outside!

1872
Living Room / Re: Are You Ready to Switch to GNU/Linux?
« on: January 01, 2011, 12:54 PM »
Sure, at a later point. :)

1873
Living Room / Re: Are You Ready to Switch to GNU/Linux?
« on: January 01, 2011, 12:44 PM »
I have.

1874
Living Room / Re: Are You Ready to Switch to GNU/Linux?
« on: January 01, 2011, 12:29 PM »
Development in Java takes more time than in C++ because you'll have to work around all its misconceptions.

1875
Living Room / Re: Are You Ready to Switch to GNU/Linux?
« on: January 01, 2011, 12:19 PM »
C++ is not "slow". Compare the startup time of a C++ and a Java application and shut up.

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