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Recent Posts

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1401
If you listen to security experts, much of "hacking" (which should be cracking, BTW) is just social engineering. Does that mean it will now be illegal to own a dictionary?
1402
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  gave $1.00 credit to allen (Thank you for saving me some time today by writing you comments on the Web 2.0 Strip Generator. You wrote what I didn't want to take the time to write.)
1403
And it is great for Fourth of July 2.0 !!!  ;)
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1404
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: Serial Dealers - a new discount software site
« Last post by tinjaw on July 05, 2007, 07:44 AM »
The part you might be missing is that most of them are only good for one year and you only get minimal support (which I take to mean installation support only). So you are not buying the software, you are buying a license to use it for one year. After that year is over, you can no longer use the software unless you purchase another license.
1405
Would anybody be interested in a plugin that did Shutdown, Standby, Hibernate, and Reboot?

Nevermind  :-[

It took 60 seconds for people to explain why it was a bad idea. And I agree with them.  :P
1406
Developer's Corner / Free Flash 9 / ActionScript 3 Compiler
« Last post by tinjaw on June 29, 2007, 11:57 AM »
I just came across a short blog entry at Blobs in Games on Learning Flash 9 that mentions mxmlc. He also has links to some tutorials and tips.
1407
In order that I prefer them 2, 4, 1, 3
1408
No problem. All I need to do is teach myself Visual Studio and C++ and I will snap up one of those mugs. (Don't think I'm kidding!)
1409
Living Room / Re: Please help [me make a game]
« Last post by tinjaw on June 28, 2007, 07:38 AM »
I already have RPG Maker XP and are making a game with it. but its not for online games witch is what i want to make

The Byond is probably your best bet.

Also, would you please be so very kind as to provide a micro-review of RPG Maker XP for those of use who have not used it?
1410
Living Room / Re: Please help [me make a game]
« Last post by tinjaw on June 28, 2007, 07:26 AM »
I suggest you take a good look at Byond.

It is not text-based, but you might want to take a look at RPG Maker XP. It is $60 USD, but it is a complete solution - you wouldn't need anything else.

If you want to do something like Fallout, then take a look at FIFE. It is still in development, but is open source. I am not sure how difficult it is to use.

Another option all together, that you may wish to pursue is to do a MOD. You can use Diablo, Morrowind, Neverwinter Nights or many others.

There is also a pretty comprehensive list here.
1411
General Software Discussion / Re: Is the Windows start menu dead?
« Last post by tinjaw on June 22, 2007, 07:34 AM »
I don't think the start menu is dead, per se. I would describe it more as the start menu taking a less prominent role. I think it still serves a good purpose as a way to see everything you have on a particular system. Especially if the computer is one you are not familiar with, like say a friend's computer you are using or a computer assigned to you at work.
1412
[[ Maybe I can do something like this as a FARR plugin]]  :-\

I had kicked an idea around for a utility for a while. Let me outline it here.

1 : Makes a copy of your existing "Start" menu and puts it in a toolbar called "Old Start"
2 : As you open a program from the Old Start menu it asks you to tag the program.
 2a: Tags can be hierarchical. For example "Programming - Win32" or "Programming - Web" or even "Games - FPS - Doom".
 2b: Each program can have multiple tags. For example Graphics, Editor, and Pictures.
3: The new Start menu is built using folders for each of the tags, with subfolders for the hierarchical tags.
4: If you use the "Windows" key the new Start menu is filtered via incremental searching.
5: The last 10 programs you run are displayed and accessible via 0-9.

Also I would use:
 - larger icons, probably 64x64, 128x128, or maybe even 256x256.
 - dynamically generated hotkeys (similar to Vista Start Menu) that update as the incremental search filtering is applied
 - Large fonts

And when it detects a new entry to the Start menu from newly installed software, after the installer completes, it would ask you which icons you wanted to keep, which you wanted to delete, allow you to rename them, and then ask you to tag each one and move them to the new Start menu.
1413
Official Announcements / Re: Winners of the June 2007 Software Giveaway
« Last post by tinjaw on June 19, 2007, 08:15 AM »
Congrats to all of the winners! Nothing like presents during the dog days of summer to get you excited about staying indoors while everybody else is outside. :-) We are all such geeks.
1414
Living Room / Re: Thank you for this site and the people here.
« Last post by tinjaw on June 19, 2007, 07:35 AM »
Please accept my sincere sympathy on the death of your wife. I am very sorry that she is no longer with you.
1415
Mini-Reviews by Members / Dr.Explain Mini-Review
« Last post by tinjaw on June 18, 2007, 03:01 PM »
Disclaimer: I was looking for an application to create a visual quick start guide for a program I wrote. I found Dr.Explain, downloaded the trial/free version and used it long enough to know that I would purchase a copy if I could only afford it. I then found this offer on the Dr.Explain website:

Members of the press and bloggers who wish to write a review on the Dr.Explain software are eligible for a fully functional free license which they may use not only for review purposes but for their real projects as well. Great chance indeed!
-Dr.Explain <http://www.drexplain.com/discounts/>

As a reviewer of this program, I received a free copy of it for my own personal use; in my discussions with the company we agreed that the review need not paint the product in a favorable light. The developer told me (I'm using my own words here) that constructive criticism in any review, favorable or unfavorable, would result in a better product and increased sales in the long run.

Basic Info

App NameDr.Explain
App URLhttp://www.drexplain.com
App Version Reviewed2.5.93 (Advanced License)
Test System SpecsCPU: Intel T2050 @ 1.60 GHz
RAM: 1.5 GB
OS: Windows XP Home SP2
Supported OSesMS Windows 2000 / XP / 2003 / Vista
Support Methodsemail
Upgrade PolicyDiscounted pricing on upgrades and new versions for existing owners.
Trial Version Available? You may use the free unregistered copy of Dr.Explain software as long as you wish, but you may have only 10 pages per project and all images will be watermarked.
Pricing SchemeThere are two versions: Standard $125.00 USD and Advanced $165.00 USD. Quantity discounts are available at 2-5, 6-10, and 11-25. Custom and Site licenses are also available. A variety of discounts are also available.
Author Donation Link Donate to Tinjaw, the reviewer
Screencast Video URLThere is an informative screencast available.


[attachthumb=#1][/attachthumb]

Intro:

Dr.Explain is a help authoring program with a focus on visually describing the Graphical User Interfaces (GUI) of programs. It is an excellent tools for easily creating those “Quick Start” guides that have lots of screenshots of the program and help you learn where everything resides in a program. It is also great for detailed user manuals that document all of the features and options reachable through a program’s GUI through highly annotated screenshots. Dr.Explain’s well thought-out design and intuitive workflow means even the default configuration produces attractive user-friendly interactive documentation with a minimal amount of fuss.

Who is this app designed for:

The core functionality of Dr.Explain centers around the introspection of a running application and gathering information from the operating system about what buttons, textboxes, and other widgets are on an application’s GUI. Dr.Explain then takes a screenshot of the GUI and automatically creates a breakout diagram of all the window's components. Dr.Explain takes care of creating links to placeholders for descriptions of the individual components allowing you to concentrate on documenting your application instead of fussing with cutting, pasting, linking, etc. It is very likely that you have worked on at least one documentation project that burned 80% of your time on layout. Dr.Explain lets you concentrate on explaining instead of the presenting.

There are two versions of Dr.Explain: Regular License and Advanced License. The Advanced License has some nice added functionality. More details can be found on the Dr.Explain website.

An excellent way to see an example of documentation produced by Dr.Explain is to view the online version of the Dr.Explain manual on their website. Of course it was created using Dr.Explain.

The Good

I can’t help but think of that stupid American commercial, “This is your brain. This is your brain on drugs.” and apply it to the two images shown below.

This is your screenshot.This is your screenshot on Dr.Explain.
[attachthumb=#2][/attachthumb][attachthumb=#3][/attachthumb]

Here is another example. On the left is an image from Screenshot Captor's home page. On the right is what Dr.Explain created.

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And here it is after a few minutes of quick changes.

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There are many help authoring applications available. Dr.Explain's stands out from the pack through the ease and speed with which you can document your application's GUI. Dr.Explain's many "Ease of Use" features are well suited for creating graphically-rich interactive documentation for your application's GUI.

Dr.Explain has many capabilities, like the necessary hooks to integrate its finished products through the Window's help system to your application to support "F1 Help". However, in lieu of simply providing a feature list that can be obtained by simply visiting Dr.Explain's own website, I shall provide a few examples of the "Ease of Use" features that I am discussing.

One of the best features is the ability to fully document any GUI form with a single screen capture, because Dr.Explain allows you not only to reference the full screenshot, but also to reference only portions of the screenshot without the need to create separate cropped images. This "Ease of Use" feature comes into play simply by defining a bounding box for the area you wish to document.

Look over my shoulder as I take Dr.Explain for a test drive. Watch an (unedited) three minute video as I tinker with Dr.Explain while working on this review.
[attach=#9][/attach]

Another "Ease of Use" feature is the ability to have global settings that can be overridden by project settings. For example, you may want to use a particular visual style for the majority of your projects, and thus set it as such in the global settings, yet for each project you can override that global setting and use a different visual style. Or, as another example, you may have a standard footer that refers to the GPL, but on one project you wish to reference the BSD license instead.

[attachthumb=#8][/attachthumb]

A third example is the confirmation dialog pictured below. It appears when you attempt to automatically generate Help IDs for your entire project while some are already set. This goes beyond what I would expect from many programs, which would be a dialog that asked, "You are about to change all of your Help IDs. Do you wish to continue? [OK] [Cancel]".

[attachthumb=#7][/attachthumb]

The features Dr.Explain provides for more conventional help authoring are sufficient but, in some cases, limited to core functionality.

All of the tools required for the core functionality of help systems are provided. When creating a help document, the document is organized in a treeview. The nodes of the treeview are each topics and can be nested. Each node takes a Title - used when the topic is displayed, Topic/Anchor - used to name the page or anchor, Help ID - used to link to the applications help system, Alias – used as a string alias for the corresponding Help ID numeric code, and Description – used as the text on the topic’s page. Keywords can be organized and assigned to topics.

One example of sufficient but limited functionality is the RTF editor provided for editing the Topic Description, the main text of a topic. Dr.Explain provides the ability to add nodes/topics to a help document that are not based on window captures, but there is no ability to add images. An example of where this is a limitation would be documenting a process, like an explanation of a workflow or a business process that required several images along with the text. A viable workaround is to create a series of topics, each topic using an imported “window capture” that is simply an illustration. The process can then be documented in a manner that requires the reader to read a series of pages/topic, instead of having it all on one scrollable page/topic.

The needs improvement section

An area that I feel needs improvement is the Screen Editor. Although the things it does, it does well, there are many features that it lacks in the area of adornments. The Screen Editor provides a simple variety of text boxes, but that's all. It doesn't provide even the basic capabilities that I have come to expect from programs like Screenshot Captor and SnagIt like various highlighting tools, the ability to add callouts, or apply simple effects.

Although I am sure the developer wants to focus on help authoring features instead of another full-featured screen capture application, I would like to see easy integration with external applications. For example, currently there is no easy way take a screenshot from Dr.Explain, pull it into another application, like Screenshot Captor or SnagIt, modify it, and pull it back into Dr.Explain. I can replace an image in Dr.Explain with a new image (with either a directly captured screenshot or an imported graphic file), but cannot easily get an existing image out of Dr.Explain.

The second feature I would like to see added is some form of internal version control. Dr.Explain projects are self-contained in a proprietary file format (*.GUI), and those could easily be put under conventional version control, it would not provide the functionality I would like. I would like to see the ability to version individual nodes in the project, and the ability to perform the standard functions available under version control, like rolling back only a single node to an earlier version, or diffing and merging two versions of a node. This would prove invaluable on large projects.

(I am also quite certain there are several features that Dr.Explain currently lacks that I won't know I need until Dr.Explain adds them in future versions, and then I will not understand how I managed to get along without them. :o )

Why I think you should use this product

Although there are several well established help authoring applications available, they tend to be heavy-weight feature-rich applications that attempt to provide every possible feature any help author might need in any circumstance. Many full-time technical writers require these very powerful tools, but often, especially for the casual developer, it is more desirable to use a light-weight tool, especially if you only plan on using such a tool infrequently. It would be very easy to once again be productive in Dr.Explain after several months away from it.

I would also like to take this opportunity to point out that, if your project is small enough, as many of the fine programs here on DonationCoder are, any developer can use Dr.Explain free of charge.

You may use the free unregistered copy of Dr.Explain software as long as you wish. With a free copy you may have only 10 pages per project and all images will be watermarked.
-Dr.Explain <http://www.drexplain.com/download/>

This generous offer should be very appealing to developers working on Coding Snacks.

How does it compare to similar apps

Dr.Explain occupies the middle-ground between screen capture programs and sophisticated help authoring tools, and has more overlap with the latter than the former.

Conclusions

The perfect projects to tackle with Dr.Explain are visual quick-start guides for large applications and complete technical documentation for small to medium-sized applications, especially for developers that will go long periods of time between the creation of help documentation. Dr.Explain is easy to learn, and a variety of features help it to score well in the "Ease of Use" category. I highly suggest trying it out on a small project that will only require 10 pages or less of documentation and see if it fits your work style well.

Links to other reviews of this application

The developer maintains a list of User Reviews on their website.
1416
General Software Discussion / Clipboard Text Scrubber
« Last post by tinjaw on June 18, 2007, 01:30 PM »
I use ClipMate, but this may be of interest to others that don't.

Clipboard Text Scrubber is a handy little application that sits in your system tray and monitors your clipboard. When it finds any text on the clipboard it will “scrub” (or “clean”) that text, to remove all formatting. This is great for copying and pasting text into emails, documents or anywhere else. Anyone that uses notepad to scrub their text will love this application. You can have Clipboard Text Scrubber automatically scrub text as it detects it, or you can manually scrub it by right-clicking on the system tray icon. When Clipboard Text Scrubber is scrubbing text the system tray icon will turn green, just to let you know it’s hard at work.

[attachimg=#1][/attachimg]
1417
Living Room / Flash Game: Momentum Missile Mayhem
« Last post by tinjaw on June 18, 2007, 01:25 PM »
I haven't played this, but a friend mentioned it.

Momentum Missile Mayhem
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1418
This thread got me thinking. (I know. I know. Shut up. I have been know to think on occasion.) I was wondering if my personal quest of finding a Start Menu (Linux as well) organizational method that actually saves me time instead of wasting time is a universal quest. Lately, I have been finding a combination of FARR and Direct Access to be the closest to what I find the most intuitive, and only using the Start Menu occasionally. But I still feel the urge to reach Start Menu Nirvana.

For a while I used an alphabetical system with 26 lettered folders, but that didn't work particularly well and has been replaced by FARR. I always feel the urge to categorize all of my programs, with many programs being put in multiple categories, but that seems to be too much work to maintain and I can never seem to find a good category system.

I think if I could borrow, steal, or adapt somebody else's category system, and combine it with FARR and Direct Access, it might actually be productive.

Have any of you found a system that works particularly well for you?
1419
Just a general sort of service announcment: Poser, which complements Bryce (and if memory serves, the platform that the graphics for Second Life were created on) by animating characters has been offered free in the past as well. The last time within a week of Bryce 5 being given away, so keep your eyes out for an offering from them soon as well (I could be talking complete rubbish but I'm shameless!).

Poser looks cool. If anybody has an older version they want to sell (Windows only), PM me. I'm not sure I want to spend that much money on the latest version for what is just a passing interest at this point.
1420
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: TextAloud @ Giveaway of the Day 6/16
« Last post by tinjaw on June 16, 2007, 10:27 AM »
So please allow me to ask for your opinion on which voices to buy?

I'd imagine it is really going to be up to your personal taste. However, the two voices I bought to use with it are AT&T Mike and AT&T Ray. I am also not sure if there have been any voices released after those that are better. I may end of buying another if there is a newer one that is better, but I am pleased with Mike and Ray.
1421
Found Deals and Discounts / TextAloud @ Giveaway of the Day 6/16
« Last post by tinjaw on June 16, 2007, 05:33 AM »
Get it. Get it. Get it. Get it. Get it. Get it. Get it. Get it. Get it.  :up:

TextAloud is the program today at Giveaway of the Day. I own this program and it rocks.

TextAlouds unique Text to MP3 or WMA conversion can save your daily reading to audio files to download to your portable player. Listen to email, online news, or important documents while you exercise, work or commute. TextAloud is easy to learn so you can put it to work for you right away.

Everything is user friendly, from the help function to the VCR style playback controls. It has never been easier to keep up with the information you really need. Includes Firefox toolbar. Support for Natural Voices, Neospeech, Cepstral, Acapela BrightSpeech and Elan, and ScanSoft RealSpeak Voices.

Developer's product website is here.
1422
I bought 6.0 today. I have never used Bryce before. But I downloaded 5.5 and then upgraded to 6.0. When you do they offer you a free interactive tutorial and give you a 30% off coupon for any additional purchases. I poked around and found a bunch of stuff already 50% off, and tried the 30% off coupon and it worked. So I sent $60 and left there with version 6 and about $200 of add-ons. I guess I now need to learn how to use it all. :-)
1423
Sorry, I misunderstood what you wanted.  :-[ I do not know of any tools to do what you want. My guess is that you will have to write your own custom code. If you do find an existing product that does what you want, I would be interested in knowing about it.
1424
Self-extracting compressed file. For example you can use WinZIP to turn a ZIP file into an EXE, or use WinRAR to turn a RAR file into an EXE.

For more information search on SFX.
1425
Developer's Corner / Re: Educational Videos on JavaScript from Yahoo
« Last post by tinjaw on May 23, 2007, 08:29 AM »
Today Jeff Atwood, on his Coding Horror blog posted about Javascript and mentioned these same videos. I again urge you to watch them if you are seriously thinking about learning Javascript. These videos are long, they are just like college lectures, but if you devote an afternoon to them you will have a very good base upon which to start your exploration of Javascript.
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