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Mini-Reviews by Members / Re: Synergy: Sharing your keyboard and mouse
« on: February 13, 2006, 02:43 AM »
To be honest, the setup process for Synergy is a bit complicated and un-intuitive.  The configuration for primary and secondary machines is a little different.  On the primary PC, you set up the relative positions of your other PCs.

http://img216.imageshack.us/img216/7018/screenshot2132006123544am2xr.gif


http://img224.imageshack.us/img224/9462/screenshot2132006123615am8uu.gif


http://img216.imageshack.us/img216/4781/screenshot2132006123604am0ww.gif


However, there is a setup wizard available (actually I think it's developed by one of our own members!) which could be found here

Take a look :)


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The research found that the sweetener was associated with unusually high rates of lymphomas, leukemias and other cancers in rats that had been given doses of it starting at what would be equivalent to four to five 20-ounce bottles of diet soda a day for a 150-pound person.

Oh my, thanks for sharing.  I hope the study is flawed as I regularly consume 3-4 cans of diet soda every day (since they have them for free at work).

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Mini-Reviews by Members / Synergy: Sharing your keyboard and mouse
« on: February 12, 2006, 08:53 PM »
Hello all,

I did a search on the forum and didn't see it mentioned, so I figured I would share something that I use everyday.

Synergy

Do you have multiple computers on your desk with each comuputer uses its own monitor? 
Do you have a desktop but also have a laptop that sitting next to it?
Do you have a Linux/Mac machine on one side and a Windows box on the other?
Do you need the resources of mulitple computers but want to work with them as if they were a single unit?
Do you want to keep an eye on other things while playing your favorite MMORPGs on one monitor while the game runs on the other without any slow-down? (or control 2 characters at once?)

If your answer is YES, and you want to control multiple computers with a single keyboard and mouse, then Synergy is for you.  It is an application that lets you easily share a single mouse and keyboard between multiple computers with different operating systems, each with its own display, without special hardware (all it needs is TCP/IP).

At my workplace, I typically use 3 computers.  Two desktops and one laptop (each have its own display).  Before I discovered Synergy, if I want to control the other systems other than my primary, I typically remote control (vnc, funk proxy, rdp, you name it) to the box so I could use the same mouse and keyboard.  That might be good enough for most users, but Synergy allows you to do much more!

Redirecting the mouse and keyboard to another system is as simple as moving the mouse off the edge of your screen (with no lag time whatsoever!)



Playing a game and doesn't want it to jump screens?  No problem, just toggle the Scroll Lock key.

Another nifty feature is the sharing of clipboards of all systems, thus allowing cut-and-paste (text and image) between systems.  Copy a block of text in your Windows box and paste it to your Linux/Mac machine, no problem.  It even converts the newlines to each computer's native form so cut and paste between different OS works seamlessly.  It does it all in Unicode so any text can be copied.

On top of that, it also synchronizes screen savers so they all start and stop together.  If screen locking is enabled, only one screen requires a password to unlock them all.

I have been using this fantastic piece of software every day for almost a year and it definitely WOWs my coworkers.  I wouldn't say I haven't encountered any hiccups (it loses the SHIFT, CTRL key once in a while), but moving the mouse back and forth from the primary screen to the secondary usually solves the problem.  You may find the setup process is a little complicated at first, but try sticking with it.  It's free, open source, and I strongly recommend you to try it out and donate to the author if you found it useful.   Believe me, until you have used it, you don't even realize what you have been missing.

Note that Synergy is not a remote desktop application.  Each system continues to need its own monitor to display that machine.  Synergy just allows you to seamlessly move between the screens with just a single keyboard and mouse.

System Requirements
    * Microsoft Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows Me (the Windows 95 family)
    * Microsoft Windows NT, Windows 2000, Windows XP (the Windows NT family)
    * Mac OS X 10.2 or higher
    * Unix
          o X Windows version 11 revision 4 or up
          o XTEST extension
            (use "xdpyinfo | grep XTEST" to check for XTEST)

View the Full Features at http://synergy2.sourceforge.net/about.html
View What's new at http://synergy2.sourceforge.net/news.html
Download at http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=59275&release_id=379175

Before I end this mini-review, I would like to mention some alternatives that I have tried.  AFAIK, Synergy is the ONLY one that has full support on all three major platforms:  Windows, Linux/Unix and Mac.

Stardock's Multiplicity http://www.stardock.com/products/multiplicity/
This is NOT free and it currently supports Windows only.  OS X client is in development.  It has a very simple interface for setting up.  The Pro version costs $69.95 but it lets you copy files/folders (in addition to text/image) between machines (something that synergy couldn't do).  It allows you to control up to 7 computers (primary and up to 6 secondaries).  Standard version costs $39.95 and can only support 3 PCs in total.  Too expensive for my liking.



MaxiVista http://www.maxivista.com/ (what a strange name *grins*)
This app actually does a little more than the rest as it installs a virtual display driver on your primary PC, and allow you to "EXTEND" the screen of your primary PC to another one.  However, although you could drag an application or a window to another PC's screen, it's still taking up the processing power of your primary (so not good for my use). http://www.maxivista.com/multi_monitor.htm



Win2VNC http://fredrik.hubbe.net/win2vnc.html
This one is also free and supports multiple platforms.  But it's not as stable last I tried.

KMRemoteControl http://www.derman.com/KMremoteControl/KMrC-Overview.html
Costs $24.95.  I have not tried this one.

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Thanks m_s for the Archivarius review!!!  I am definitely going to try it out.

Quick question:  Does Archivarius let you specify certain file extension (*.py, *.cpp etc) as text files so it will index their contents?  Or does it only index their filenames but not the contents?  Thanks.

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I have tried GDS, WDS (MSN), Copernic and Yahoo desktop search.

I ultimately settled on WDS because I have a lot of CHM files that I want to index and AFAIK only WDS support IFilters that could index those.   I believe GDS also has a plugin that indexes CHM but I prefer a rich client to a browser interface.  Also, from my own experience, WDS gives more accurate search results (though a little slower) and its index size is smaller than GDS.

I would also recommend Copernic as they have a very nice interface and a very good search term highlighting in its preview pane which WDS doesn't have.  Copernic also exposes COM API allowing third party developers to create plug-ins enabling new file type but I couldn't find any out there.

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