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10401
Living Room / Re: Please help me build my new computer, DC!
« Last post by 40hz on April 05, 2009, 07:05 PM »
OMG SB.

That case full of stuff looks like the 'Arm & Launch' box for a missile intercept system.

Do the house lights dim when you fire it up? ;D

10403
I kind of like the idea behind the reCaptcha though...

Really? Well...I'll bet your eyesight is a lot better than mine then. ;D 8)

10404
I'm beginning to see some download pages are now starting to use Captcha-type scripts.

I will concede that a program author has the absolute right to do whatever he/she wants regarding how to control downloading their application. But it's an inelegant solution to prevent hotlinking a download.

I hope this practice doesn't become widespread.

I hate Captcha. :mad:

10405
Just noticed this announcement from Microsoft. (I get about 30 emails a day from them, so it takes me a while to wade through them. ;D)

SharePoint Designer is now available to anyone as a free 296MB download.

While it's not a significant enough announcement to make me want to blow off the afternoon and go party, Designer is still a nice little tool for those of us who work in places where SharePoint gets used. If you design for SharePoint, you'll want a copy of this.

Information and download links here:
http://office.micros.../FX100487631033.aspx

10406
Living Room / Re: Check out my new avatar
« Last post by 40hz on April 03, 2009, 02:51 PM »
I'd hate to see some of DoCo's classic animated avatars (app103's busy kitty, nudone's shy little cody, Josh's wretched little gnat-thing, and a few others) disappear completely.

Well, maybe not 'hate' - but I do think I'd miss them.  :huh: An occasional (small) surprise on the forum isn't always a bad thing.

But you're right. It can be very distracting if not done right. Maybe you could require moderator approval for an animated avatar - or only allow them at certain times of the year like during the annual fundraiser?

Just my 2¢

10407
Living Room / Re: Old-School software archive
« Last post by 40hz on April 03, 2009, 12:10 PM »
You're quite welcome. I've just rediscovered the joys of .mod music files  :P

Heaven help this lad! Next thing you know, he'll be rediscovering the 'joys' of RIP graphics. ;D
10408
Living Room / Re: OS Re-install Tips?
« Last post by 40hz on April 03, 2009, 11:31 AM »
One thing I also always do is download fresh copies of all my antimalware along with a few other select applications and utilities. This way I don't need to spend a lot of time on the web downloading and getting updates.

Lunarsoft puts out a nice tool that makes getting a number of useful downloads very easy. It's called (misnamed IMHO) the Anti-Malware Toolkit. Info and download at:

http://www.lunarsoft...lware-toolkit-103125

It has been mentioned on DonationCoder previously. Although it sounds like an antimalware application, what it really does is batch download such applications from a list which you can customize.

anti-malware_toolkit.png

One nice feature is that it also downloads some other non-security apps probably you'll want, such as Firefox and Thunderbird. Great tool. :up:



10409
Living Room / Re: Check out my new avatar
« Last post by 40hz on April 03, 2009, 10:05 AM »
+1 with Nosh

Cute hack. But you might want to reconsider a few of them.

This one:

notgood2.gif

And especially this one:

notgood.gif

aren't gonna win you many fans.

Just a thought. :)

10410
Thanks for an excellent post Steven Avery



My take:

  • If in doubt - test in a sandbox (Returnil :up: :up:) prior to installation. (+1 with edbro on that)
  • For everything else, use Revo Uninstaller.

 8)

10411
Living Room / Re: OS Re-install Tips?
« Last post by 40hz on April 02, 2009, 06:29 PM »
@40hz Thanks for the reply. But it's my understanding that XP is doable whereas Vista doesn't have what it takes on the HD to create the slipstream like you can in XP. At least with VistaPE I had to use WAIK just to get a boot Vista so I could mess with NTFS files on the HD(for instance to use ERUNT recovery or whatnot.)


Wouldn't surprise me.

Also, sorry for not realizing it was Vista you were talking about. Can't be of much help to you there. I'm "one of those people" who has as little to do with Vista as possible. I'm skipping it and waiting for Win7. Fortunately, all of my clients are doing the same, so I just might get away with not knowing the ins and outs of Vista as well as I probably should. ;)

Thought: You might want to bounce your question off f0dder or some of the other Vista-savvy techno-mavens that hang out here. One of them might have an answer for you.

Luck. :Thmbsup:


10412
Living Room / Re: OS Re-install Tips?
« Last post by 40hz on April 02, 2009, 06:03 PM »
Might be worth a try, either as a replacement for MozBackup - or a...er..backup to it? ;D

why all the big fuss about thunderbird mail :-\
copy the profile folder, restore as in the link I gave above. seems the easiest and most secure to me ...

Well, it's not as easy as just hitting a button and getting everything into one nice neat compressed little file. And it's also not recommended by the Mozilla folks for a variety of reasons unless you need to do it that way, so....<*yikes*> 40hz just completely lost the point he was trying to make. ;D

computer08.gif

It's been a long day...


10413
Living Room / Re: OS Re-install Tips?
« Last post by 40hz on April 02, 2009, 05:06 PM »
...
nlite/vlite trimming is a really nice thing, also because it allows you to easily integrate drivers, hotfixes/servicepacks and create unattended setups - saves a lot of time.
...

Thing is on PCs I get the OS is preinstalled and they don't provide an install CD/DVD.  HP doesn't seem to go to any pains to tell you how to get one either. vlite insists you copy the install DVD to the HD afaik. Seems kind of risky to reinstall the entire OS just to find out, like if I bought such a DVD, if the thing works before I make a system image for reinstall.  Have you run into any work-around for us underprivileged that don't get the DVD with the machines? :)


It's doable, but a bit of a pain. A quick Google should point you to some how-to's. It's a fairly involved process you'll need to go through to make an XP install CD.



10414
Living Room / Re: OS Re-install Tips?
« Last post by 40hz on April 02, 2009, 03:26 PM »
I'm not real up on imaging or the genesis term.  So I have some research & reading to do too.

Sorry about the genesis term. Just me trying to sound educated.

From Websters:
    Latin, from Greek, from gignesthai to be born

I use genesis to denote the first or original image created after a fresh install as opposed to any later ones. A friend of mine refers to his as incept images.

BTW -My extremely educated girlfriend just rolled her eyes and said "Why don't you label them XP-Image#1 and XP-Image#2? and be done with it?" I'm tempted to reply that we could...but where's the fun in that?  On second thought...maybe I'd better not.

How do I backup my emails in Thunderbird other than MozBackup? That's the number one concern I'm having at the moment.

There was a write-up recently over at gHacks.net about a no-install application called MailBrowser Backup which works with Thunderbird. More info and the download can be found here:

http://alancla.110mb...g/mailbrowserbackup/

I've downloaded it and used it to backup TBird - but I haven't used it to restore anything yet. I'll have to test that when I get a minute. Backup was very quick, producing a 4Mb backup file.

MailbrowserBackup.gif

It looks like a nice little app. So far, it only (allegedly) works with Chrome, Firefox, and Thunderbird, but the developer has plans to support additional browsers and e-mail clients later on.

Might be worth a try, either as a replacement for MozBackup - or a...er..backup to it? ;D


10415
Living Room / Re: OS Re-install Tips?
« Last post by 40hz on April 02, 2009, 01:40 PM »
One question regarding MozBackup: Do I just run the restore when I reinstall Firefox and Thunderbird to restore all settings? Does it restore all of my emails?

It should, although I don't know how trustworthy it is. I've used it with no problems many times, but there were also two occasions when some things just didn't want to work.

Best I can suggest is to use the most recent stable version that's available and keep fingers crossed. That's pretty much what I do.  I also print out hard copies of individual e-mails I can't afford to lose.

BTW: I much prefer to use the FEBE add-on to backup Firefox. I also periodically export my bookmarks - but I'm a nit like that sometimes.

I think I should clarify that I am reinstalling XP from scratch, so if there's anything that should do differently from what you've said, do let me know.

Nope! I was talking about XP. Probably should have said that shouldn't I? ... :-[

Is there anything else I'm missing?

Make sure you have all you serial numbers, activation codes, and registration keys for those apps of yours that require them during setup.

40hz:
Thanks for the well written explanation.  Set-ups are user specific but I'd say your method would fit most most needs.
One more ques. Something I didn't do the last time was image.  It's been a few months, what would be the +/- of going ahead and doing one now instead of just after a true new install.

I think it's better to have an image than not have one. I keep a fairly current image of my working setup along with the genesis images. The only reason I do want Microsoft-only images is to avoid doing a lot of uninstalls if I decide to completely change my software down the road. I'll always use Windows and Office, but everything else is subject to change.

Minor note - maybe I should have also pointed out I use swappable hard drives with my main PC. In my case, the genesis images are more like a Windows XP installer on steroids for when I need to clone my base installation. I have something like seven drives (it varies) set up for various things. When I did the original images, I primarily wanted them to be as barebones as possible so I could use them to create my more specialized XP installations.


 I also have a work program I use that requires some time and effort to re-install.
Which, sorry,  leads to another ques. regarding the image.  Could be a dumb one, but here goes.
This program has a license I have to move on and off via a 3.5 floppy.  If I make make the image with the license still in place on the partition, what are the chances it will still work when I do the recovery from the image?  It is an image, so it should be there... right?

Not a dumb question at all. (BTW -could that app be Quark Xpress or AutoCad by any chance? ;D)

It should work, although it largely depends on how cagey the programmers were when they created the floppy license key system (which most of us thought went out with Lotus 1-2-3 v2.0  and DBase-III back in the 80s). If the anticopy mechanism does something clever like check the Mfg ID/Serial number on the hard drive, then there could be problems if you're installing to a new drive. I doubt it's that smart however. Usually a software publisher resorts to a dongle or USB key scheme when they want that kind of security. And in most cases, they'll generate their hash key off the serial or model number of something you wouldn't normally be able to replace, like the BIOS chip.

The only real way to find out is to test it. But I'm 99.9% sure it will work with the restored image.

Related note: Last I checked, Microsoft's product activations do remain intact after an image reinstall. But since they're constantly futzing with their antipiracy measures, that may not always be the case. If it does turn out to be a problem (i.e. WGA tells you you're running a bootleg copy) you can always call Microsoft and let them know you've reinstalled on the same machine using a disk image. From my experience, Microsoft is usually pretty good about reactivating Windows and Office as long as the problem is not due to an obvious act of software piracy.

 8)
10416
Living Room / Re: Old-School software archive
« Last post by 40hz on April 02, 2009, 12:12 PM »
Awwwwwwwwsome!



Just scored a copy of of FIDO, CITADEL and RBBS-PC I've been looking for.

Thanks for finding that! :Thmbsup:
10417
Living Room / Re: OS Re-install Tips?
« Last post by 40hz on April 02, 2009, 11:24 AM »
tomos:
Any general recommendation on the sizes for partition 1 and 3?
Yes, I'd like to know recommended sizes as well. I'm using a 120GB.

That's one of those seemingly simple questions that's not easy to answer.

Partition-1: The basic question is how many applications you plan on installing. f0dder's 16GB partition would easily suffice for Windows, MS Office, and the usual handful of productivity apps. If you plan on adding a lot more than that, I'd suggest roughly doubling it - say 24-32GB. That should handle most people's requirements, but use your judgment based on what you're planning to load. I doubt you'd ever need to give it more than 40GB no matter what you're installing.

Partition 2: I'm still using 20GB as my standard. So far, this easily accommodates:

a) Two 'Genesis Images' - These each take up between 2.5 to 3.0GB on my machine. The first one is just the original Windows install with all the current MS updates and service packs; current hardware drivers; basic system tweaks and interface customizations, and the imaging utility. The second image is the same as the first, except it also has MS Office and all the current updates for that as well. DO NOT move My Documents over to Partition-3 until you've created these images.

Also be sure to test them. Take your Genesis-2 disk and do an actual recovery. That's right - use it to write all over that shiny new Partition-1 you just spent two hours setting up! If your recovery image doesn't work, now is the time to find out rather than one year down the road when you may actually need it.

b) Copies of all drivers. Create a separate folder and use a driver backup/restore utility like DoubleDriver ( www.boozet.org/dd.htm ) to make copies of them. Also be sure to include a copy of the installer for the utility you used to create this backup. If something happens such that you can't use the Genesis images, at least you won't have to go through the hassle of hunting down all your drivers again. And if you update any drivers later on, redo the backup so it's always current (Burn this driver backup to a separate CD and put it someplace safe. You'll thank yourself a million times over if you ever need it!)

c) Post install backups of various things: e-mail, bookmarks, passwords, etc.

d) A folder I call Installs. This is one of my most important folders.

How many times have you stumbled upon some incredibly useful application or utility by chance while you were cruising the web? If your machine crashed, would you be able to find it again? If you did, might it possibly have switched from freeware to a commercial product in the interim? Or been 'improved' to the point where you no longer liked it?

Don't take chances. Put the installers for all those neat little things you've found over the years in this folder and you'll always have them ready.

For your boxed applications, just use the original CDs or DVDs for reinstalls. Don't waste disk space on them, unless you downloaded some huge service pack for it and want to keep a copy of that on hand.

e) A complete and current system inventory. You can create these with any one of a number of products. Belarc Advisor ( www.belarc.com ) is one of the easiest to use. Advisor provides you with a complete list of what's installed along with a lot of other useful information. It's especially handy for helping you remember what you had on your machine in case you need to reinstall from scratch. Print out a hard copy of the generated report and put it with that driver backup you made earlier.

(You did do that, didn't you? ;D)

----
On my main machine, all of this - plus an 6GB image of my current configuration and a bunch of other backups - chews up about 16GB.

I could probably lose 3 or 4 GBs of that if I went through my Installs folder and dumped a pile of apps sitting in there that I no longer use - and also moved some other junk that really doesn't belong on that partition to begin with.

Hmm..maybe I'll do that today...

Partition-3 is easiest. Just use whatever space is left over after you created the first two. ;D

Hope this was helpful.

----

PS: To answer your original question - for Windows XP, I'll start with a generic  [40/20/"the rest"] partition scheme and then adjust as needed for specific users. On a 120GB disk, I'll usually reduce Partition-1 to 30-32GBs unless there's  good reason for making it bigger.

I try not to change Partition-2's 20GB size unless I'm really strapped for disk space. If such is the case, I'll drop it to something like 12GB, and only use it for genesis images; and backups for e-mail, bookmarks and hardware drivers.

10418
Developer's Corner / Re: Python performance boosting project launched by Google
« Last post by 40hz on April 01, 2009, 11:45 PM »
I've always found Python to be a bit of a pain to install, especially as each new point-release installs itself in it's own top-level directory.  I've had to reinstall everything on more than one occasion when environmental variables have got screwed up.

Then there's the whole issue with having to download libraries (e.g. wxPython for GUIs) and making sure you have the right version and it doesn't install itself in the incorrect high-level python directory.


There's a guy by the name of Perica Zivkovic over at www.portablepython.com who has felt your pain. He's cooked up portable Python development packages for three different versions (2.5.4, 2.6.1 and 3.0.1) of Python.

 
Portable Python is distributed as an installation package file which contains complete latest Python® distribution for Windows together with a few help tools/IDE’s which will help you to run your python scripts from your portable device. So all you need to do is to download Portable Python installer file for python version you need, install it to your portable device and you are done! Everything is preconfigured so you can start working on your python application right away.


I've only played with it (<2 hours writing some small apps :-\) so I can't really comment on how good Portable Python would be in a production environment. But from my limited experience, it does look promising.

Drop it on a 4GB USB key; add a few additional tools (portable versions of XAMPP, Notepad++, FileHamster, etc.); along with some PDF-format reference books and you'd have a nice little web development lab to take with you anywhere you went.

10419
General Software Discussion / Re: System Restore Cleanup
« Last post by 40hz on April 01, 2009, 11:03 PM »
However, I may have made it seem like I've used system restore more than I have.  By "a bunch of times" over the last few months, I meant somewhere between five and ten.

Well, that seems like a lot to me, but I don't load new software on my main machine very often, so I guess we travel down different cyber-roads. ;D

And they were almost all prompted by problems I encountered when I installed software that didn't play nicely on my computer (normally, just removing the program is all that's necessary, but there were some times when that wasn't feasible or sufficient).

Thought: if you're not using Revo Uninstaller ( www.revouninstaller.com ) to remove programs from your machine, you might want to consider doing so. It does a very nice job of cleaning up registry entries and artifacts left behind by a lot of installers. It's also available in a portable version. One of the better utilities out there IMHO - especially if you're one of those adventurous types that likes to try out a lot of new software.
 :Thmbsup:
10420
Living Room / Re: Conficker - The Facts
« Last post by 40hz on April 01, 2009, 06:20 PM »
The people pirating Windows generally use a WGA hack, so they get updates just fine.

That, or they just use any one of a number of freebie offline-WSUS apps you can find on the web. With these, they just grab all the updates off Microsoft's website and burn them to a DVD for use on multiple machines.

I'm 110% legal with everything (MS Partners don't dare screw around with that) but I still do all my MS updating via offline utilities.
 8)
10421
Living Room / Re: Should we have a yearly Best Avatar award on DC?
« Last post by 40hz on April 01, 2009, 04:51 PM »
Not knocking it. Change is good. Plus, it's always fun to see what people come up with. I've got a fairly boring and obvious avatar. Glad to see there are much more creative types than me here! ;D
10422
Living Room / Re: They drew first blood, sir!
« Last post by 40hz on April 01, 2009, 01:46 PM »
:nono2:

Smokes, I was hoping for better than this...

Yeah. It's good to still have a dream isn't it? ;D

10423
Living Room / Re: Should we have a yearly Best Avatar award on DC?
« Last post by 40hz on April 01, 2009, 01:44 PM »
I'm noticing a number of new avatars around here lately.

Could this topic have anything to do with it? ;) ;D

10424
Living Room / Re: Google April Fools joke... or is it?
« Last post by 40hz on April 01, 2009, 01:22 PM »
An

God help us... It's sentient


And it has Pandas!!! :tellme:

panda-costumes.jpg


10425
I mean, it's kinda neat to see what people are up to and all

I have a friend who feels the same way, but he uses a set of old fashioned binoculars. (He lives high up on the side of a valley in California.)

I wonder if he knows any of your husband's friends...
 ;D

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