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Messages - Edvard [ switch to compact view ]

Pages: prev1 ... 112 113 114 115 116 [117] 118 119 120 121next
2901
General Software Discussion / Re: SPAMPAL replacement
« on: January 13, 2006, 06:58 PM »
I use K9. Works good, very configurable, light and stable. And I love this error message...

2902
ContextMenu Commander / Re: ContextMenu Commander
« on: January 13, 2006, 11:30 AM »
I use Context Edit and it does everything I've ever wanted to do to my context menu. Remove unwanted entries, add new filetypes and special functions for certain filetypes, etc. I can't remember where I got it, apparently pcmag wants money for it.

2903
General Software Discussion / Re: Best.Interface.Ever
« on: January 13, 2006, 11:01 AM »
Oops-Sentinel beat me to it, I knew there was a topic for this, I just couldn't find it.
https://www.donationcoder.com/forum/index.php?topic=830.0

2904
General Software Discussion / Best.Interface.Ever
« on: January 12, 2006, 02:52 PM »
OK, in keeping with the spirit of the "adjective.noun.ever" how about kudos to software that is actually encouraging and intuitive?
We could all learn from the mistakes in "Worst.interface.ever" but what about the white hats? What are the common elements that make an app easy and intuitive, yet powerful at the same time. I'm sure many of them have been covered at flow|state but I want to know what you guys think.
Here's one that won't make it to flow|state, but is an example of UI genius nonetheless and analysis may prove fruitful:
The perfect example of process control.

2905
Living Room / Re: submerge your pc in veggie oil - cool and quiet
« on: January 12, 2006, 12:06 PM »
Actually not a bad idea if implemented properly. Hams (Amateur shortwave radio operators) have done this kind of thing for years with antenna 'dummy' loads. What they do is sink the load coil in a large can of oil with an inner sleeve. As the coil heats up, oil rises up the inner sleeve and pours to the perimeter where it is radiatively cooled (good idea to have fins on that bucket...) and the oil sinks to the bottom where it is drawn back up the inner sleeve. If you could do that to the CPU...
Actually someone who commented on the Slashdot article I think is correct; The noise comes mostly from the interference of the airflow coming off the fan blade at an angle and smacking the heat sink fins. This is the same sort of thing that makes flutes go. Back the fan off the heat sink a little with a length of PVC or something ought to make it a little quieter if that's the case.

2906
No need Carol, we just might deserve it, conservative as I am to say that... Actually, it wouldn't take a depression, just for the countries we owe money to renege on the debts. Then it wouldn't be Mexico and Canada, it would be China :o

And for the record, My wife used to work in the shipping rack.. er.. business and yes she heard the Chinese delegate say "...when we take over America..."

2907
@thomthowolf: Just FYI- PowerPro does all those things. If you don't mind an app launcher that does about a half-billion other things, as well as being as easy to fully configure as a cold fish, it's pretty cool.

 Personally, I am hoping for a launcher that will do what I am asking PP to do, but without the zillion other things. PowerPro Lite, if you will.

2908
General Software Discussion / Re: Icon collector for ICL files
« on: January 09, 2006, 03:26 PM »
Nope, but I betcha Resource Hacker can. You'd have to start with a dummy .dll though... would just creating a file with .dll in the name do it? Hmmm...

2909
General Software Discussion / Re: Assembly coding
« on: January 09, 2006, 03:21 PM »
Agree to the delphi code... ick. Also agree that it is the programmer themself who determines the quality of the final product. As I mentioned before, I used to program the daylights out of Apple ][e's back in the day. I wrote some AWFUL-looking apps that worked pretty well, (a word processor that was about half the size and speed of the one our computer teacher made us use...) and some very clean coded (after the computer programming teacher got after me) things that either didn't work or were useless. I noticed my programs got a lot cleaner after I figured out the "gosub" command :)
Glad you like the analogy. As for the ability of such individuals to also clean up the sawdust, slag and coal ash, well, you know...

2910
General Software Discussion / Re: Assembly coding
« on: January 09, 2006, 01:35 PM »
Like cutting down a tree with a kitchen knife.

No, more like growing the tree to withing 1/16 of optimal diameter (measured weekly), mining the ore to smelt to iron, carving a mold for a wide-blade axe head, melting the iron in a coal-fired blast furnace (coal pilfered from train wreck site in desert), pouring the mold, sharpening the axe with medium grit to a knife-edge and heating to proper temper, quenching in oil (of course), sharpening again with extra-fine to a razor-edge, taking the axe to the tree and stripping off one branch about 2" diameter, tamping the axe head onto the branch, taking a modest swing and...

chopping the sucker off at ground level with one whack.

That's assembly programming. You're right. It doesn't take genius. Just a bull-headed unwillingness to settle for a $12.99 fiberglass-handle job from Wal-Mart...

There's a hacking pun in here somewhere, I just know it... :)

2911
General Software Discussion / Re: Icon collector for ICL files
« on: January 09, 2006, 11:01 AM »
Have you tried Iconshop?

2912
General Software Discussion / Re: software i love
« on: January 09, 2006, 10:33 AM »
For those of you who still use paper as their "second brain" (bah, we don' need no steenking hierarchal note-taking apps :)) may I suggest D*I*Y Planner. Printable pages for your planner (some for Moleskine and Filofax available Here) or just interesting pieces of paper to write stuff on. I am personally quite happy with PocketMod, but I see others here who would be interested.

2913
Have you checked the IBasic Forums? Read The Fine Manual? Did your installation come with code examples, snippets, etc.? With any language, Start out with the simple "Hello World" app that every manual teaches you to do, and go from there. In the cases of Download Managers and email checkers, you not only have to learn how to make the app perform functions depending on what buttons you click, keys you push, etc. but you also need to learn the language of internet protocols, email server authentications and header requests, etc. Back in the day, you could even check your mail with telnet if you knew this (don't ask me how, I did it once when my ISP's tech was troubleshooting our email system...) I'm not an IBasic user, so I'm sorry I don't have any really helpful answers, but there it is.

2914
I run PowerPro as a launch bar. Since PP does a gajillion other things I don't use/want/need a lighter launch thingie that is similarly configurable would be great. Some things mentioned that PowerPro can do that a replacement would ideally do:
Sit in system tray and popup a menu.
Hide at an edge and show (bar, menu, whatever) when edge is hit.
Use multiple methods for launching- shortcut buttons, menus, hotkeys, ?...
Group shortcuts or menu items visually by selectable criteria: category, type, alphabetical, whatever.

I have my PowerPro bar set up much like the launch panel from  XFCE( a linux window manager app ) where there are icons which represent my most-used app in that category and are activated by a left-click. Right-click on the same icon gets me a menu of other apps in that category. For example, my Firefox button of course opens Firefox when I click it. A right-click pops up a menu of the category "internet" that includes IE, Filezilla, Opera, and may also include Instant Message and IRC apps, Upload links, etc.

Two cents and all that.

2915
General Software Discussion / Re: software i love
« on: January 06, 2006, 11:30 AM »
Use it all the time; address/phone books, to-do lists, shopping lists, project planners, I could go on... Even made some custom pages for it. Tricky, but I figured it out. Works on Linux too. Many times I even find myself needing to take notes on a piece of paper and I end up folding it like a PocketMod :) Sure beats the living daylights out of writing phone numbers on the back of a Safeway receipt...

2916
How's about temporary ftp? There are like 50 or so services that do this where you upload a file, your friends get an email link, and it all goes away after 7 days. Here's a list:
http://www.jdempsey.com/2005/12/08/free-online-file-storagesending/

2917
General Software Discussion / Re: software i love
« on: January 05, 2006, 12:52 PM »
2 cents comin' through! I'll stick to stuff not mentioned before...

Winroll
Windowshading like the *nix guys, but more stable than freeshade or the ones you have to pay for.

JSPager
Orphanware Multi-desktop pager thingie. Stable and skinnable. Once you start using Virtual Windows, it's real hard to go back. Hosted at Skinnables.org (Thanks S.o!)

K9
Spam Filter extraordinaire. As good or better than Thunderbird's built-in and it's free.

PDFCreator
The best. Free.

PocketMod
Lets face it, PDAs are too expensive and cumbersome, and organizers are bulky and hard to carry around. Nothing beats a folded up piece of paper. That is until now.


2918
General Software Discussion / Re: Linux - Freeware or Shareware?
« on: January 04, 2006, 01:19 PM »
If I may, I would point you down the path I took getting to know Linux.

Step 1- To answer your first question, let me point you to http://www.linuxiso.org where you can find download links to the most popular distributions (distro for short). Yes, try a Live CD first- Knoppix is the most popular and hence, the most updated. As mentioned, it runs off of the CD so you can give linux a 'test drive'. No, it doesn't cost you money, but for your convenience, you can buy CD's, Books, etc. that will make things easier. You will have to pay for (and probably already have) a good net connection to download all those humongous .iso files and some CD-r's to burn them on. What it will really cost you is Time.

Step 2- If Knoppix or some other live distro turns your crank and you want more, your next step is to start reading. Really. A lot. Reading about it prepared me for the harsh reality of having a Linux system in my face. When the forum regulars start ranting "RTFM" they mean it. I've seen too many forum posts along the lines of 'Linux $ux0Rz- it doesn't do (insert desired task) followed up by "RTFM!" and "Yes it does, just (insert techie explanation here that could be answered by doing a little research)". Trust me, be prepared. Read about the "guts" of Linux so you know exactly what you're dealing with; the command line interface, the tools available from there, filesystem, man pages (Linux's version of 'help'). Go to your library and see what Linux books they have. They will probably have a Red Hat book (an ok place to start) get that one and if they have a Debian book or The Linux Cookbook or Linux in a Nutshell definitely get those (FYI Knoppix is an offshoot of Debian, Edit:and now Ubuntu). Go for the free Linux books available on the 'net. There's a whole lot to read atThe Linux Documentation Project, look under "Guides"and "HowTo's". I highly recommend 'Introduction to Linux - A Hands on Guide' by Machtelt Garrels. It's a tad old, but still relevant and info-packed Edit:(has recently been updated). Also Learn Unix in Ten Minutes is a short, great read. And while you've got your Knoppix system up and running, read the howto's and help files there. Figure out a few mundane things like setting up an internet connection, printing, etc. Go to theKnoppix Forum, LinuxQuestions.org or your friend Google will give you a zillion hits to whatever questions you might have.

3- Now that your head is exploding, play some more, get comfy with Knoppix (or any Live distro you may have chosen) and get ready to dive in headfirst.
When going dual-boot:
-Rule 1: Install Windows first. If you install second, Windows will get all 200-pound gorilla on you and wipe out whatever you have going. Linux plays nice and happily goes to the corner you send it to.
-Rule 2: Find out what Lilo and Grub are and choose which one you would rather use as a boot loader, which is what will let you choose between Windows and Linux at boot-time.
-Rule 3: Learn about re-partitioning (if you don't already know) what it is and how to do it as safely as possible to make room for Linux. Learn about and choose a filesystem to format your new partition with. NTFS support is incomplete in Linux as yet, but there are many workarounds so stay tuned.
-Rule 4: If at any point, you are not sure you know what you are doing, stop and read some more, ask more questions and maybe consider doing this whole process on a "play" box, a computer you don't mind making mistakes on. Don't put the screws to your working box with your really important files on it unless you've backed them all up and are ready to give Windows the heave-ho.

4- If all goes well and you have a working Linux system that successfully dual-boots to Windows (if that's how you have it set up...) then pat yourself on the back, go out and do something with a friend or a group of friends entirely not involving computers for at least a few hours. I have found that Linux auto-installs cobwebs in my head and I found that a beachcombing session or a hike in the woods or a dip in a cool swimming hole clears them out pretty good. Welcome to Linux. Buy a bumper sticker.

2919
Living Room / Re: Happy Near Year 2006 to all DonationCoders
« on: January 03, 2006, 03:09 PM »
Happy new 'un all! I just wish my neighbors would sing Auld Lang Syne instead of torturing me with bass louder than the fireworks. Does that make me a grumpy old man?

2920
Orisinal.com has just the kewtest widdle fwash games on the who' wide web!

Admit-One Mental Gymnasium is yet another blog, but with amazing pictures and some of the wildest links. Like boingboing for conservatives.

Speaking of conservatives... Little Green Footballs would like to kick your liberal tushkin as of 9 seconds ago... (Warning: quite political, quite conservative)

The solution to end terrorism? Nuke The Moon!

404 got you down? Remember that freeware thingamabob that was sooo essential on your Win95 box and now you need it and can't find it or the homepage? Angry because that politician pulled a quote off his webpage then says he never said such a thing? Professor! To the WayBack Machine!!

Ever got an itch to build a vacuum powered tube amp from scratch? The AX84 folks are there to hold your hand.

Pun of the Day. They got a million of 'em!!

2921
Living Room / Re: Create an Indestructible Shared PC
« on: December 30, 2005, 10:44 AM »
My local library has been doing something similar to this for years. Somehow, these are security locked to run ONLY the library's internet and book catalog software, though you could download and install temporary things like flash and java plugins which are all gone the next time someone logs in. I always wondered how they did that on W98 machines...
Another library in town has thin-clients hosted on some 'other' os, I think QNX, based on the look of the browser.

2922
Living Room / Re: Been asked a MILLION times...Internet explorer
« on: December 29, 2005, 06:08 PM »
From all I've heard, and your mom is ok with trying linux, and you want the least amount of headaches, you should try Ubuntu or, if you want a KDE Desktop, Kubuntu.
I have no experience with either, but just about everybody says this IS your mom's distro.

2923
And there is a linux version! And satellites! Man I miss this app, I ran it quite a bit back in 2001-2 or so and always got lost at some orangish star somewhere watching the universe wheel around me..................

For more space exploration fun, try Noctis
From what I gather, you are exploring a universe and it's assorted planets. You then send descriptions of your explorations to the big Noctis Inbox where Noctis users from all over the net also leave their descriptions; kind of like Hitchhikers Guide to an imaginary universe once populated by an ancient race of cat-beings who inexplicably left...

2924
Living Room / Re: Looks like linksysinfo.org got hacked.
« on: December 27, 2005, 02:49 PM »
I am not generally a fan of hacking, but a friend of mine played with the recently-regrouped-and-broke-up-again punk band the feederz. What's that got to do with anything? The singer/guitarist Frank Discussion is a rather smart cookie with a chip on his shoulder labeled "George Bush". I have no such chips, but the fact that he and some friends hacked (these are screens of REAL HACKS, folks) CNN, Yahoo! and MSN (couldn't find a link to that one) with some chuckle-worthy results bears mention.

2925
Living Room / Re: Generate graph paper and more online
« on: December 27, 2005, 02:04 PM »
You can still find Graph Paper Printer version 4 (the last freeware version) still hanging out some places, though that website prints just about everything v4 did. Version 5 can print scads more types of graph and pattern papers (Targets!! Woohoo!!) and is much more configurable, so is worth the shareware price (even if the interface is VERY win95-ish).

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