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Messages - mrainey [ switch to compact view ]

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226
Living Room / Re: Laptop or Desktop — which are you?
« on: November 17, 2007, 07:41 AM »
I've been 99% laptop since I retired from my "real" job three years ago.

I sit in my Lazy Boy in the living room, feet up, news or music going on the TV, and work in comfort.  Computer sits on my lap (no surprise there) and keeps me warm.  I'm sixty, don't care if the heat messes with my sperm count.  ;D

The keyboard feels fine, the screen looks great, the sound is good through headphones or external speakers.  I can easily take the computer with me on trips, etc.

It's got all the power I'm likely to need for years to come.  I'm not into games or heavy graphics work.  Not into Vista either.

Repairs can be costly.  I bought the three-year warranty coverage that includes accidents and screen.  This may be expensive up front, but at least I don't have to worry.  I have a backup machine (my old laptop) in case repair time drags on into more than a few days.  My first laptop, a Toshiba, went 3 1/2 years before it had any problems.

It's just so damn handy.

227
From his February 2007 newsletter - http://www.scotsnewsletter.com/88.htm

"Bye-bye Windows! My three-month Macintosh trial may have ended, but my new permanent gig with the Mac is just getting started. Apple's computer and OS X are now my PC and operating system of choice. If you give the Mac three months, as I did, you won't go back either. The hardest part is paying for it — everything after that gets easier and easier. Perhaps fittingly, it took me the three months of the trial period to pay off my expensive MacBook Pro. But the darn thing is worth every penny.

In early November I began a total-immersion trial of the Macintosh as part of my research in gauging whether Vista is most people's best operating system choice. I started by making a brand new MacBook Pro 17 my primary computer. For a month before the trial officially started in November, and the two weeks that followed, I worked on selecting products, converting data, and setting up corporate software systems for my company, Computerworld, as well as finding solutions for personal use. Prior to my adoption of the Mac, I had one Windows computer for both business and home, so the Mac had to handle both sets of tasks too.

After hundreds of hours testing Vista and living with the Mac for three months, the choice was, well, crystal clear. I've struggled to sort out my gut feeling about Windows Vista, but the value and advantage of the Mac and OS X are difficult to miss. Microsoft's marketing materials for a past version of Windows used the phrase, "It just works." But the only computer that tagline honestly describes is the Macintosh. Don't translate that in your mind as, "Yeah, so what, the Mac is easy to use." Any new computing environment takes some getting used to. The easy-to-use aspect is nice, but not all that significant. When Mac users say, "It just works," what they mean is that you spend more time on your work, and a lot less time working on your computer."

228
General Software Discussion / Re: compare text files
« on: November 09, 2007, 08:59 AM »
I use UltraCompare Lite, which is built into UltraEdit.

229
General Software Discussion / Re: best clipboard program
« on: November 06, 2007, 07:07 AM »
I wouldn't use a program that crashes all the time and loses my work.  There are too many good programs available.

What program is doing this to you?

230
I unsubscribed for the same reason (plus, he ridiculed my favorite backup program, BootIt NG - he was much more concerned with how it looked than how it worked).

231
Developer's Corner / Re: Was My Posting To The Adobe Forum Stupid?
« on: November 01, 2007, 03:28 PM »
One forum I go to has a thread titled "Am I a thread killer?".  The first post reads "Seems like half the threads I reply to just die right after I answer.   Are you people trying to tell me something?"

The thread now has 290 pages of posts.   :D

232
Living Room / Re: Tourettes extension for FireFox
« on: October 30, 2007, 08:21 AM »
These are the same guys who laugh out of control when somebody farts or belches.  Nothing better to do with their time?   And yours?  :down:

233
Living Room / Re: Password Cracking Made Easy Thanks to the GPU
« on: October 26, 2007, 05:31 PM »
How successful might someone be if they guessed the userID on some of those protected pages was 'mrainey'?

Fortunately, not very successful.   ;)

234
Living Room / Re: Password Cracking Made Easy Thanks to the GPU
« on: October 26, 2007, 04:28 PM »
I guess I was thinking of a situation where a dialog requested a user name and a password as separate entries.  This is the way I protect certain pages of my website (using .htaccess and .htpasswd files).

As you can readily see, I don't have much of a handle on how all this works.   ;D

235
Living Room / Re: Password Cracking Made Easy Thanks to the GPU
« on: October 26, 2007, 12:16 PM »
I know next to nothing about this subject and have a question.  How secure would a well-designed twelve-character password be if it had to be used in combination with a specific user name?

236
Living Room / Re: Leech Attacks
« on: October 23, 2007, 01:04 PM »
I got this one a while back.   ;D


"Hello Sir,
   My name is Dhanasekar, I am doing my B.E Manufacturing Engineering in College of Engineering,Chennai,India. Sir currently i am developing a software, "cost estimation Intergrated with knowledge" Which is mainly used to estimated the manufacturing cost and I am doing this as a part of my curriculum project work (NOT FOR ANY COMMERICAL PURPOSE). I download your ME Consultant Pro software sir, it is really a amazing software for cost estimation.I feel this software will be my model from which i can develope more.So i need some valuable help from you sir. GIve some inital source code you employed to develope this software or the database you used for this software.
Again I want to make sure that i am asking only for educational purpose. I promise you i wont distribute your valuable contributions to anybody. If u want i will send u my College Id.please help me to develope a new valuable software sir.

Regards,
 Dhanasekar"

237
After doing the upx thing, Firefox crashed every time I tried to download from one of my longtime favorites, Megaupload.com.  Reverting to uncompressed Firefox stopped the crashing.

Didn't seem faster anyway.




238
Living Room / Re: Dell Outlet Store!
« on: October 21, 2007, 09:16 PM »
their phone support sucks sometimes

I had an extremely bad experience with their warranty repair service a few years ago, and it was obvious from the postings on the Dell community forum that I had lots of company.  I will never buy another Dell.


239
Living Room / Re: The worst thing about Macs
« on: October 19, 2007, 02:11 PM »
I don't know from personal experience but, according to Consumer Reports, one thing you get from Apple for that money is consistently outstanding customer support.  That appears not to be true with Sony.

240
Living Room / Re: The worst thing about Macs
« on: October 19, 2007, 08:14 AM »
There are lots of people out there who like caviar - personally I find it a grotesque and unpleasant food

Know what you mean.  I got talked into trying Marmite once.   :)

241
General Software Discussion / Re: ERUNT - Restore Replacement
« on: October 18, 2007, 07:55 AM »
And don't forget, the author of ERUNT appreciates donations.   ;)

242
Zaine,

There's an Austrian guy on the IDM forum, goes by the name of Mofi, who has pretty much taken on the user-to-user support function as a solo act.  Judging by the depth of his answers, I'd say he's averaging several hours every day doing unpaid research and writing for the benefit of UltraEdit users.  I've pretty much become a bystander over there, and that's fine.  I'm not nearly as generous with my time as Mofi is with his.


243
I paid $62.95 back in May to upgrade to a lifetime license.  This after being a UE user for close to ten years.

Looks like a straight lifetime license is $124.95.

244
I don't recognize ANY of the programs he claims to be discounting.

245
Living Room / Re: Forum Signature Spam: Let's discuss how to handle..
« on: September 27, 2007, 06:15 AM »
I have a link to my commercial software site in my signature, not because I want or expect to sell machining software to DC folks, but instead just to show off what I've been able to create using a modern version of the "dreaded" BASIC language.    :)

246
Basic / Re: What flavors of basic?
« on: September 21, 2007, 12:08 PM »
I fully support your right to state your opinions.  That being said, the title of your blog posting ("Down with Emergence Basic and Ionic Wind") strikes me as a bit tasteless.

247
General Software Discussion / Re: IBM Lotus Symphony
« on: September 20, 2007, 10:48 AM »

Cybernetnews posted a short review and a download link.

So it's a slowed-down version of an older version of Open Office and requires a gigabyte of RAM?    :huh:

248
We put men on the moon in 1969.  How much time and money would it take before we could do it again? 

249
General Software Discussion / Stoned virus infection of German notebooks
« on: September 17, 2007, 02:38 PM »
Interesting post from Sunbelt Software CEO Alex Eckelberry.  Modern security measures fail against the spears and arrows of the past.

http://sunbeltblog.b...us-infection-of.html



"Thursday, we blogged that the ancient Stoned.Angelina virus had been found on some German notebooks made by Medion.  SecuriTeam has a round-up.

It’s worth noting that a) virtually no PCs ship with floppies these days, making infection of other PCs highly unlikely and b) the fact that an antivirus program can’t remove an ancient boot sector virus such as this one is open to debate.

The virus itself isn’t destructive.  And in Windows XP and Vista, you would have to have a floppy in the drive while the system is booting in order to get infected.  In a way, it's more of a novelty to see such an old virus (which is no longer even on the Wildlist). 

However, the point is that if you’re infected, you would want to clean it, and a number of notebooks shipped from Medion with this virus.  BullGuard, the antivirus product included with the notebook, was initially unable to remove it, although the company has an update on its website which should do the job.

Here is more from Andreas Marx:

    Introduction: Medion shipped some notebooks together with a boot virus from 1994 (!)... and it looks like quite some AV tools had problems with the detection and/or removal of this critter. For example, the AV software installed on the system reported this virus on every reboot, but was unable to remove it.

    To my surprise, Stoned.Angelina is working very well with Windows Vista (x86) — the system gets infected and it is still bootable.
    Windows Vista won't display any message or other kind of warning regarding the boot sector change (unlike Windows 98, for example.).

    The virus is only able to spread to further disks when Windows [itself] is not yet started,…the virus can infect further disks at boot time, but not after Windows has been started.

    Testing: First, we infected a PC with an installed Windows XP SP2 or Windows Vista with "Stoned.Angelina", which is quite easy to perform — you only need to "forget" an infected floppy disk in the A: drive and try to boot from it. The virus will instantly infect the system area of the hard disk. However, unlike some other boot viruses, Windows is still able to boot up and it won't display a warning messages. The virus can infect further floppy disks as soon as it's activated (on every reboot) and under DOS. As soon as Windows 2000, XP or Vista (or Linux or any other protected mode OS) is started, the virus code won't be called anymore -- the system is still infected, but the virus itself cannot spread further until the next reboot.

    For our testing, we used the German versions of Windows and the currently available "2007" or "2008" consumer versions of some anti-virus software or security suites (in German language, using updates as of yesterday or today, 2007-09-14). We have tested a total of 10 products (on two OS): Avira AntiVir Personal Premium (v7), G Data (AVK) Total Care 2008, BitDefender Internet Security 2008 (v10), BullGuard Internet Security 7.0, Kaspersky Internet Security 7.0, McAfee Internet Security 2007 (the 2008 version is not yet released), Symantec Norton 360, Microsoft OneCare 1.6, Panda Internet Security 2008 (v12), Trend Micro PC-cillin Internet Security 2007 (the 2008 version is not yet released).

    The following scanners were able to detect and successfully remove the "Stoned.Angelina" critter on Windows XP and Vista:

        * G Data (AVK) Total Care 2008
        * BitDefender Internet Security 2008 (v10)
        * Kaspersky Internet Security 7.0

    The following tools were able to detect and report the infection, but unable to handle it:

        * BullGuard Internet Security 7.0 (updated information from BullGuard, here).
        * McAfee Internet Security 2007
        * Trend Micro PC-cillin Internet Security 2007
        * Avira AntiVir Personal Premium (v7) -- BUT the scan of the system areas (master boot record) is disabled by default, so it has to be enabled or AntiVir wouldn't report anything, as it's not scanning this sector.

    Two of the tools were able to successfully report and clean the virus on Windows XP, but they shred the system area on disinfecting a Windows Vista based system after the infection was found — this means that Vista wouldn’t start anymore after a "successful" cleaning and it has to be repaired (e.g. by booting from the installation DVD and selecting the option to repair the system, see the Bullguard website link above for details):

        * Symantec Norton 360
        * Panda Internet Security 2008 (v12) -- BUT you need to start the tool with administrator rights or disable User Account Control (UAC) or Panda wouldn't be able to scan for the virus on disk and report the system is clean, even if it's indeed infected.

    This leaves one tool -- Microsoft OneCare 1.6 -- which is completely unable to scan for boot viruses on disk (tested on Windows XP and Vista), so the user wouldn't get a notification that his system is infected. As nothing is found, nothing can be removed, of course."

250
Basic / Re: What flavors of basic?
« on: September 11, 2007, 07:19 AM »
I would highly suggest you to avoid IONICWIND, their website, forums, applications because after all you get is grief!

That's a little rough.   :(

I've been using IBASIC and/or EBASIC for the past five years and have managed to stay happy and be productive with them.  I'm not a "follower" any more than some people here are mouser's "minions" (from an alt.comp.freeware post).  There have been some rough moments on the Ionic Wind forum, I agree.  Hopefully the new freeware business model will make things better.

Those languages, along with Aurora (OOP) and the new CBASIC interpreter, are powerful, stable, and fun to use - and all are now freeware.

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