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Recent Posts

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126
Living Room / Re: Anyone know any good free font sites
« Last post by superticker on July 05, 2006, 09:37 AM »
i know from experience your stumbledupon reviews are worth reading..
but when i select fonts it doesnt load the page with your font reviews, it stays on the same page and this is in url:
http://superticker2....dundefinedundefined/
Could be my browser is acting up (ie engine)'
Looks like you hit a StumbleUpon bug.  I just reported it.  You could page through my entire SU blog at http://superticker2.stumbleupon.com/ and look for reviews tagged as fonts or desktop-publishing, but that would be 40 pages.  However, if you're into computer like myself, you may find this blog interesting.

If you have the StumbleUpon toolbar extension installed for Firefox 1.5 or IExplorer 6, you shouldn't get this error, however.  The pulldown tags menu should work as expected.

this link worked and was good though:
http://www.stumbleupon.com/tag/fonts/

clearly we need to start investigating stumbledupon more - it seems like it's a good thing.
If you plan to sign up for StumpleUpon (see http://www.stumbleupon.com/), install the SU toolbar extension in your browser first, then do the sign-up process.  This way, the sign-up process will set your SU password in your pre-installed extension.  If you use two computers, you'll need to set the SU password manually in the second computer.  SU should send you an e-mail telling you what your password and SU serial# is.  Save that, and enter this info into the SU toolbar of your second computer.
127
Living Room / Re: Anyone know any good free font sites
« Last post by superticker on July 05, 2006, 01:18 AM »
If you go into my StumbleUpon blog http://superticker2.stumbleupon.com/ and select fonts in the pulldown menu, you'll get a good listing with a paragraph description I wrote about each of these font sites.  Not all font sites are created equal, so using these social bookmarking services (although StumbleUpon isn't really a traditional social bookmarking service) is the best way to separate the seed from the shaft.

You can also use StumbleUpon's search feature to find other stumblers that have recommended more "fonts" sites here http://www.stumbleupon.com/tag/fonts/.  Go into their respective blogs and repeat the same procedure above to see their "fonts" site recommendations.  This is an exceedingly powerful approach to locating the best sites quickly.
128
Clipboard Help+Spell / Using F11 key to spell check active text box
« Last post by superticker on July 04, 2006, 11:01 AM »
This is a feature request to add SpellCheckAnywhere functionality to Clipboard Help+Spell, see http://www.spellcheckanywhere.com.  Basically, you press the F11 key to spell check the text box your curser is in.

Currently, with Clipboard Help+Spell, I have to [1] Select All (Ctrl-A), [2] Capture/View/Spell (Ctrl+Alt+V hotkey), [3] select each underscored word to correct, then [4] copy clip back to the last active window.  If I can do all that by just pressing the F11 key, that would be great.  Also, there's no need to actually involve the clipboard itself in this operation; if it's contents can be preserved, that would be preferred.  However, it would be nice to save the text box contents (being spell checked) into a new buffer within Clipboard Help+Spell so the original uncorrected version is temporarily preserved.

SpellCheckAnywhere is selling for $30, so if Clipboard Help+Spell could function like this, it should get quite popular.  :)
129
Many of my programs suffer from poor options display at 120dpi, it's normal and I'm still looking for the best solution.
Many of the fields in the dialog boxes are crowded.  If you simply spread the fields out more, that should fix 90% of it.  Unfortunately, the widgets in the display manager don't render with "relative" positioning as they typically would in an interpretive page-description language such as postscript.  I'm not sure how relative positioning can be reliably implemented "easily" if the underlying primitives don't support it.

In this case, the graphic primitives are not sensitive to varying font sizes when the DPI changes.  You would have to tell the display manager to (in effect) scale down the font sizes as the DPI is raised in a high-level layer when this should really be done automatically by the display manager (in a lower-level layer).  This is a gripe you should take to Microsoft.  Perhaps they can introduce a new widget data type that scales better between fonts and graphic objects.
130
Clipboard Help+Spell / Using the "Quick Add Note" hotkey
« Last post by superticker on July 02, 2006, 12:04 AM »
I press the Ctrl+Alt+A hotkey to start a Quick Add Note.  I finish my note, but how do I now get this note to appear on the clipboard or as a new clip in Clipboard Help+Spell?  Am I suppose to press and certain key combination to send this new note into the CHS database?

BTW, my video card is setup for 120 DPI, so some of the dialog box for the note is cut off.  Is that normal?
131
You can customize the separator string between merge clips from the options; I was thinking that when you trigger a merge it should probably pop that separate up in a dialog and let you customize it.
I would have placed a merge button on the clip-listing button bar that includes the append string.  The merge button would remain grayed out until two or more clips were chosen.  Such a button-and-string-box combo will need a popup description explaining their function.
132
beta update to version 1.10.02 is now released (1.10.01 had a bug).
has some minor but useful improvements.
According to the About dialog box, I'm now running 1.10.03, so I'm ahead of you.  ;)

The new merge function works well and meets my needs.  However, I'm not so sure a new user--evaluating the program for the first time and looking for append functionality--would discover this immediately.  (I don't think I would.)  This is where having a new hotkey with the associated description copy append would be more appealing--and intuitive--to the novice user evaluating the program.  But for the experienced user, the current merge implementation works well.
133
Backup Guide / Re: Restoring data to a larger system drive
« Last post by superticker on June 21, 2006, 09:51 AM »
... You can install to a bigger drive but recreate identical sized *partitions* on that larger drive.  Then ... use a partition tool to resize the restored C: to take up the full space.
Now can Partition Magic resize both the Windows and Linux partitions?  Will both of these partitions remain bootable without further work?  Yes, this is a dual-booted system.

Also, I read somewhere that Partition Magic is very old and that there's another utility people are using today instead.  I just can't remember the name.

I like the idea that True Image is faster than Paragon.  However, I don't understand why Paragon is MS gold certified and True Image isn't.  For the server product, Acronis recommends turning off the Windows shadow copy service during backup with True Image, and I'm wondering if that's why Microsoft didn't gold certify it.
134
Backup Guide / Restoring data to a larger system drive
« Last post by superticker on June 21, 2006, 08:48 AM »
Usually it's older drives that fail and usually you replace older drives with larger ones.  So will Genie or Paragon (or something else) let you restore to a larger drive?  I e-mailed Acronis, and they said their product would only restore to drives of like size.  :(

If you're restoring the system device to a drive of unlike size, will the boot blocks get restored correctly, or would you need to use the OS to rewrite those?  I'm assumng the latter, but since these backup utilities are designed specifically for Windows, perhaps they are smart enough to restore the boot blocks in the right places for the new disk size too (Or does that sound too dangerous?).

What I really want to do is be able to upgrade the system device using the backup utility when it's necessary.  Is there a backup utility that can do this?
135
Clipboard Help+Spell / Re: Doing an append to the clipboard
« Last post by superticker on June 18, 2006, 05:00 PM »
... which is faster ... might depend on how many of these you are doing.... If you are just doing like 2 or 3 at a time, then a special hotkey might be faster just because you wouldn't have to open up the chs window to operate it.
The hotkey would be faster whether you're appending 3 or 30 clips.  But being error proned brings up a question:

Whether we append using a "mode" approach as rjbull suggests in ClipCache, or use a hotkey append approach instead, can we be able to see--and edit--the accumulated clips as we build them?

For example, say I screw up on clip 5 (of 10 clips) and include some extra junk.  Can I fix that mistake in chs's window before appending clip 6?  If so, this would give me a "running picture" of how my accumulation looks, and I could fix any mistakes as I go.
136
Clipboard Help+Spell / Re: Doing an append to the clipboard
« Last post by superticker on June 18, 2006, 11:36 AM »
... just select several clips in the main window, and join them together, separated by some character. I think it'd be easier than adding another hotkey.
Well, the above suggestion is okay, but I also need a way to append clips from several different documents.

For example, I manage an e-mailing list, and I get bounces spread across 30 different e-mails.  I need to merge their address contents ("550 User unknown" from different mail daemons) into a single laundry list so I can unsubscribe them from this e-mailing list.  The append hotkey lets me do that easily.

Also, I'm trying to select multiple discontinous words right here in Firefox.  Can Firefox even do this?  I know how to select discontinous cells in Excel; but not in Firefox, Notepad, or Outlook.  If there's a way, please tell me know.
137
Clipboard Help+Spell / Re: Doing an append to the clipboard
« Last post by superticker on June 18, 2006, 01:01 AM »
its one of the features that has been requested a lot - a merge functionality.. doesn't exist yet.... how would people like this functionality to work?
Please add a hotkey sequence to append the selected text to the current highlighted clip in Clipboard Help+Spell.  Honestly, I can't think of any other way to do this.  I suppose you could include a check box to add a line break (e.g. "\n" or arbitrary character string) between each appended segment.  In practice, the accumulated text will likely need to be edited anyway.

Please don't make this feature too complicated.  Simpler is beautiful.
138
Clipboard Help+Spell / Doing an append to the clipboard
« Last post by superticker on June 17, 2006, 11:06 PM »
How can I keep appending stuff to the clipboard in v1.08.01 of Clipboard Help+Spell?  Is there a hotkey or something that let's me do this?

Thanks in advance.
139
Living Room / Re: Is firewire better than USB?
« Last post by superticker on June 16, 2006, 06:53 PM »
Funny enough, the CPU load when I use my HDD enclosure is about the same whether I use USB2 or FireWire... FireWire gives better speed at (approximately) the same CPU speed, though.
This is a very interesting observation, which I wouldn't have expected.  One possibility is that the CPU workload for processing the IDE requests may be many times higher than the USB workload.  In other words, the IDE driver uses significantly more CPU cycles than the USB driver.  Let me ask you to run an experiment:

In both cases, disable all disk caching by the Windows OS and the disk controller chip before running these tests so all disk requests must go through the USB or 1394 interfaces.  You do not need to disable caching on the disk volumes themselves (and I'm not sure you can anyway from the Win32 API level).

1) Run the same comparison between USB and 1394 Firewire disks while doing an I/O intensive operation in the background.  The background task could be an I/O intensive search on a second, badly fragmented IDE drive.

2) Run the same comparison using SCSI disks instead of IDE disks so the CPU isn't tide up in the IDE driver, which may be the rate determining (slow) step for the E-IDE disk case.

Recall, servers always use SCSI and ISI disks because they have their own internal processor aboard each disk volume allowing them to do many disks operations in parallel (independently) when the CPU is busy.  Intelligent System Interface (ISI 2) is more commonly seen with main-frame OSes (IBM MVS) that demand variable-length block sizes to fit database records more efficiently.  Windows uses disks with fixed cluster sizes determined when the SCSI or IDE disk is low-level formatted.
140
Living Room / Re: Is firewire better than USB?
« Last post by superticker on June 16, 2006, 12:45 PM »
Good Pros and Cons of both technologies.
http://www.choice.com.au/viewArticle.aspx?id=104527&catId=100533&tid=100008&p=3&title=FireWire+vs+Hi-Speed+USB

Short version:
Firewire, uses a "Peer-to-Peer" architecture in which the peripherals are intelligent and can negotiate bus conflicts to determine which device can best control a data transfer
 
Hi-Speed USB 2.0 uses a "Master-Slave" architecture in which the computer handles all arbitration functions and dictates data flow to, from and between the attached peripherals (adding additional system overhead and resulting in slower data flow control)
Some people in this forum are probably not hardware savvy, so we need to clarify generalizations carefully.

Firewire is DMA and peer-to-peer, so it has much better real-time deterministic service times.  The DMA capability lets it write directly into DMA buffers without involving Windows and its drivers.  This means there's less CPU overhead for large file transfers and real-time activities (like watching videos) will be much smoother.

However, when TI defined the peer-to-peer IEEE 1394 (Firewire) standard, they did it only for the transport layer, not the session layer (middleware component as some call it).  As a result, if you plug a 1394 Sony DVD re-recorder into a Panasonic HDTV, it won't work.  If you plan to use the peer-to-peer features, you need to buy all your equipment from a single manufacture until the require middleware can be standardized probably around year 2012 or so.  When there is "eventually" a middleware standard, there will probably be a logo for it that you'll need to look for.

In constrast, USB is not DMA; therefore, there's much more CPU overhead in moving data around between USB buffers by the CPU.  The speeds of these moves will be non-deterministic, which will cause jitter in real-time traffic, especially with a heavily burdened CPU doing lots of background I/O.

Because USB is not typically peer-to-peer, the smarts (or middleware) required to make it interoperable is programmed in the daughter half of the USB driver.  This daughter half can be made smart so that it will negotiate resources such as power, bandwidth, response time, etc when it gets connected.  This is why it takes forever for you computer to boot up with lots of USB devices are plugged in--time is required for this negotiation between devices, which is a good thing BTW, because you get the best trade-offs.  But try booting with your USB devices UNplugged and you'll see it's much faster.

Embedded system engineers love the negotiation feature of USB because it avoids a lot of end-user service calls from users trying to overload their USB bandwidth or create device conflicts.  For the non-geek, USB is plug-and-play.

There is a peer-to-peer version of USB called "USB on-the-go".  Some of your peripheral devices (especially cameras and photo printers) may have this feature.  Check on the box that your photo printer came in.  It's based in part on Universal Plug-n-Play (UPnP), which Microsoft developed.  If your USB device supports UPnP, then it probably supports USB on-the-go as well.  If you can plug your camera directly into your photo printer, then you must have it.

I like USB better for non-computer geeks because it's smarter.  But for professional use, 1394 is faster and deterministic, which is important for real-time data streaming.  In the commercial environment, you should pay the price and buy a 1394 camera for streaming data transfers.
141
Living Room / Re: SPAM reaching epidemic proportions
« Last post by superticker on June 16, 2006, 10:33 AM »
There is a pretty simple solution to avoid that - use a different email address for every contact - then you find out who the idiots ... are.

You can do this quite easily with Yahoo and others by using the anonymous email address generator, [and] still get all your mail in one place ...
-Carol Haynes (June 16, 2006, 03:12 AM)
Spamgourmet is the best proxy service for temporary e-mail addresses.  You can let these tmp addresses automatically expire based on frequency of usage or by expiration date.  You can also define allowed senders and sender domains for each tmp e-mail address that won't count against their expiration frequency.  Moreover, you can make your tmp addresses up on the fly without ever re-visiting the Spamgourmet site.  http://www.spamgourmet.com/

All the features are a little complicated to figure out at first, but you can start using it with the most basic features right away.  It's open source, so DonationCoder could setup their own spamgourmet service.  :)

My problem ... is ... I had spam in my inbox when I opened it for the first time !!
-Carol Haynes (June 16, 2006, 03:12 AM)
Geesh, you really need to change your name.  :P
142
Living Room / Re: SPAM reaching epidemic proportions
« Last post by superticker on June 16, 2006, 09:51 AM »
I presume I can use:
carol.*(carol)+.*
for 2 or more occurrences of the string?
-Carol Haynes (June 16, 2006, 03:00 AM)
Yes, but if you apply that to your entire header, your ISP only has to mention Carol twice to flag the message.  Be sure to tell MailWasher to search only the To: and cc: lines, not the entire message header.

Another, less efficient approach would be to have the regex check for To: or cc: at the beginning of the line when searching the entire message header.  You need to terminate the search.  I used an end-of-line $ meta character, but using something like ^Subject: would be better since a long To: or cc: line may wrap before reaching the next Carol occurrence.
^(To|cc): .*carol.*(carol)+.*$
143
Living Room / Re: SPAM reaching epidemic proportions
« Last post by superticker on June 15, 2006, 10:03 PM »
@carol: I'm not a big expert in regex, but i think that this should do it:
carol.*carol.*carol+.*
Actually, placing the + in front of the "l" in carol will only cause the "l" to repeat.  You want to enclose carol in () so the whole word repeats instead:
carol.*carol.*(carol)+.*
I use Courier for my e-mail client, and it has very good regex filtering and such.  The only thing MailWasher has over Courier is that (1) the regex's are slightly better, (2) it can bounce messages back to the spammer, which you may occasionally want to do, (3) it knows about spammer IP addresses and spam sources, (4) you don't have to download the entire message body (including the spammer's gif attachment) if you only want to scan the message header.
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