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1626
General Software Discussion / Re: photo duplicate scanner
« Last post by Innuendo on September 29, 2009, 12:54 PM »
Oh My Gosh! Don't look now, but there's a new sheriff in town. AntiDupl.NET is free, fast, accurate, and portable.

And holy crap! It's small. It's a mere 673KB download. I've downloaded it but not tried it yet, but I just had to comment on the small file size.
1627
While true the "Heft" isn't there anymore, I've seen several of the mid to high end business models take an incredible beating (Steady print volumes of twice their rating, etc.) and just keep going.

Agreed. Their commercial printers are still tops, but my comments were more in reference to what buyers are going to find in Wal-Mart or Best Buy, but to be fair, all printer manufacturers are guilty of that to one extent or another.
1628
General Software Discussion / Re: Win7: Anyone else getting excited?
« Last post by Innuendo on September 29, 2009, 12:14 PM »
Hi Innuendo! What innovations are there in Windows 7 that make people's lives easier? Not challenging, just asking, because I've seen plenty of screenshots, but haven't read much about any feature or usability improvements.

Oh, I know you aren't challenging as everyone I have discussed Win 7 with has seen plenty of screenshots, but a lot of what Win 7 is about can't be seen in the screenshots. Microsoft has improved the driver model for graphics drivers. If you use a WDM 1.1-capable video card you are going to see even more of the graphics load put upon the GPU which means you are going to have a faster Windows experience for one thing.

Aero Peek, Aero Shake, and Jump Lists are something that can be shown in screenshots, but you really don't start to realize how easier they make things for you till you start using them day to day. Keyboard shortcuts for launching apps that have been pinned to the start bar will be a welcome addition for those who are more keyboard-centric than mouse-centric. While we're talking about the taskbar, I'll mentioned that the system tray has enhanced functionality that will keep those two billion icons everyone has sitting in their system tray in line.

Vista had added security over XP, but that slowed down Vista's speed in some areas. Windows 7 has been optimized & now one would be hard pressed to find any area of Windows 7 that didn't behave as quickly as XP. Miminum system requirements have been dropped as compared to Vista as well. Older systems that could run XP, but choked on Vista will be able to run Win 7 as well or better than they ran XP.

Windows Explorer has been optimized and streamlined. Managing your files is easier as the more common file management functions are close at hand. My Documents has been put on steroids with the Library feature. Configure multiple directories for each category and all those files in multiple directories appear in one Explorer window.

Since you brought up UAC, you might be pleased to know that's been re-worked and optimized as well. There's now a four-position slider so you can fine-tune how you want UAC to work for you or even turn it off entirely. I will tell you, though, that I have been running it in the maximum protection mode & while I enjoy the same amount of protection Vista gave me I have seen maybe 1/10th of the UAC prompts that I saw with Vista. Part of that I attribute to MS adjusting things, but it's partly due to software authors finally starting to program in a more security-conscious way.

Faster boot and shutdown times magnitudes faster than previous Windows versions. What more can be said? Start working quicker. Finish working quicker. Those are the major highlights although there are a lot of little things you'll run into where you'll think, "Oh, that's nice. Why didn't they always do it that way?".


What does the new taskbar have to make up for the loss, then? (In the screenshots I can see there are no captions on the buttons. That's bad too - I use the captions.) I couldn't live without TrueLaunchBar!

First, let me say that you can bring back the captions and the old taskbar behavior if you want to, but I urge you to try the new way for a week or two as you may come to love it. Without the captions you can have a lot more programs open & the taskbar doesn't get as crowded or as unwieldy as the old way. With Aero Peek it's easy to see what each button is doing. Also, if a program has more than one Window open, just hover your mouse over it's icon on the taskbar & Aero Peek will show you thumbnails of all the app's windows & you are free to click on any of those thumbnails to bring the program to the front with the focus on the window you clicked. Trust me, it works a lot better than it does in the screenshots. Three people I know have said they'd hate having no captions when they looked at the articles on the internet. Once I sat them down in front of the Real Thing, however, they've all walked away with changed minds thinking the new way is way cool.
1629
General Software Discussion / Re: Copy a bunch of cd/dvd
« Last post by Innuendo on September 29, 2009, 10:39 AM »
Buying a NAS isn't the answer for everyone. A simple external drive would suit you well, but I would suggest you buy the drive and enclosure separately rather than buy an all-in-one solution. You will get a drive that has a longer warranty (external drives usually only come with a one year warranty) and if choose your enclosure carefully you'll get something with much more ventilation (which means longer drive life!) than a already-built solution.
1630
General Software Discussion / Re: Copy a bunch of cd/dvd
« Last post by Innuendo on September 28, 2009, 08:31 PM »
40hz: the software might be free, but the hardware isn't - and if you're using run-of-the-mill components, it's going to cost you in power consumption as well :/

Yep, you take a look at a Qnap, Synology, or D-Link NAS and they use a mere pittance of power compared to a full-fledged PC running that free software. You eat up your initial savings pretty quickly.
1631
getting hard to find cartridges for it. So - a few years ago, I purchased an HP inkjet color printer.  I have no doubt that it was a fine piece of machinery, but the software I had to load with it bogged my system down to a crawl and constantly irritated me in ways too numerous to mention.

Alas, chances are that HP printer you bought was not a fine piece of machinery. It's been a steady decline in quality for HP since the LaserJet 4/5 days. Modern HP printers are pieces of crap that break easily and, as you found out, install an intricate web of software that chokes your PC to death.
1632
I don't know whether the HP LaserJet 5P is different from the 5, but I had a 5P for about 12 years.

I typed 5P out of habit...but how the lineup went was:

LaserJet 5 - the basic printer

LaserJet 5P - the printer with the PostScript cartridge installed

LaserJet 5M - the printer with the network card installed (M stands for multi-user)

LaserJet 5MP - the printer with both of the above options

The basic model can be upgraded to the others and is smart enough to identify itself on the network & to Windows as the model it is supposed to be. I bought a vanilla 5, but since I have all the goodies installed Windows does detect it as a 5MP.
1633
Do you plan to make Detalizer compatible with Windows 7?
Yes, the next software release is planned to be Windows 7 compatible.

I must have missed the little thing to click to read more. Good news for those interested in this program then.
1634
General Software Discussion / Re: Complaint: Softwrap (nasty eula)
« Last post by Innuendo on September 28, 2009, 02:56 PM »
There are rare occasions where this may still happen to users due to some strange system software or hardware setup but we then do our best to fix the issue for them or refund their purchase so they do not lose money for nothing. We are not trying to steal money from people.

Those remarks I made were in regard to DRM in general. I didn't mean to imply that those problems occurred when encountering SoftWrap. My experiences with your protection scheme are several years old, but I recall when I used something that was 'softwrapped' around 2004-2005 (or earlier!) the SoftWrap routines were only in the installer. Once the program was installed SoftWrap's job was done and wasn't present anywhere on the user's system, i.e. it was totally self-contained in the program installer.

I haven't had any recent encounters with your product so I don't know how much of that has changed.
1635
Comments under the listing imply it doesn't install on Vista or Windows 7 - maybe the authors will respond there.

Looks like the author left a comment answering every question except the one where one user asked if it was going to be made Windows 7-compatible. Sometimes what's not said is more teling than what is said. And no, the author didn't address the person saying it wouldn't install on Vista, either. Not a good sign...
1636
For my color printing I have a Canon i9900 for general color printing and an Epson Stylus 340 for printing printable CDs & DVDs.

I'd like to propose something to those who either print a lot or wish to print a lot of black and white:

Get thee to eBay and snipe yourself an HP LaserJet 5. This model was the last of the business LaserJet models that HP produced before they started cost-cutting on manufacturing and playing the "Let's screw with the amount of toner we'll put in a cartridge" game. What this means is that you are going to get a printer that is:

1. Made out of mostly metal parts rather than totally out of plastic.
2. Has an actual LED status screen and a complete assortment of buttons to control & set up the printer.
3. Is not a host-based printer which means you can print in any OS you have drivers for, even DOS.
4. Has a feature-complete, compact driver that was designed before the trend of shoving a toner and ink cartridge salesman component into the driver.
5. When buying toner you are going to have a printing cost of approximately US$0.02 (two cents) per page.

When I bought my HP LJ 5, it was used with a total page count of approximately 4,000 pages had already printed. I've actually seen other printers of this model in service in business with page counts of over 140,000 so I know this printer will last me the rest of my life I so choose.

I was also able to buy on eBay, a new never-used page duplexing unit, a new never-used add-on printer tray, a PostScript cartridge, expand the RAM to its max 46 MB, a new never-used 10/100 network card (which allows setting up the printer through your web browser!), and a hardcopy service manual if I ever need to service it.

All this stuff cost me less than US$150 delivered to my door. It may not be as fast as some of the newer printers out, but it's a lot more durable and the cost-per-page is a fraction of what newer printers offer.

Handy tip for those thinking this might be a good idea: Don't get anything older than an HP LJ 4 Plus. The HP LJ 4 (no Plus in the name) and older did not offer any power-saving features so they'll really run up your electric bill if left powered on for long periods of time.
1637
General Software Discussion / Re: Win7: Anyone else getting excited?
« Last post by Innuendo on September 28, 2009, 02:20 PM »
Windows 7 is really an awesome addition to the Windows dynasty. It's going to make a lot of people happy & feel good where Windows is going as an operating system. If you have been unhappy with a lot of niggles and complaints in past versions of Windows then Windows 7 is probably going to be enough to keep you from switching to another OS or if you have switched it might be enough to get you to switch back.

If, however, you hate everything Windows & Microsoft stand for or are perfectly happy with your non-Microsoft Windows OS then I don't think there's enough magic in Windows 7 to make a compelling argument for you to come into the Windows fold, but there's still a bit of good news for you in that as with any new OS release Microsoft or otherwise, there are some nifty tricks & features present that other OS software authors will take notice of & they'll be mimicked in the OS of your choice.

As for upgrading from Windows XP,  that was a fine OS in its day and may feel like it has some life left in it, but the time is approaching that one must face the fact that XP is a seven year old operating system. That's a lifetime in the realm of computers. Many innovations have happened across all operating system platforms & it's just not as secure as a modern operating system can and should be. On October 22nd if you are one of the people running around desperately clinging to Windows XP as an operating system you are going to be roughly equivalent to that group of people who were desperately clinging to Windows 98 when Windows XP was released...and there's only a gap of four years between those OSes!

If you don't like any Microsoft OS after Windows XP then fine. Get a Mac. Switch to a recent Linux distro, but it's time to embrace a more secure operating system where it is much more difficult for trojans, viruses, and botnets to infiltrate and proliferate.

Will the new task bar make programs like True Launch Bar redundant?

The new task bar unfortunately makes True Launch Bar near inoperable. Gone are the days of being able to imbed all of TLB's nifty features into the Windows Task Bar. It's unknown if the author is going to be able to bring that functionality back, but now the way things are you have to set up a separate toolbar using a stand-alone version of TLB which, IMHO, takes away a lot of the gee-whiz handy benefits of the program.
1638
General Software Discussion / Re: Total Commander: Tips, Tricks, and Tweaks
« Last post by Innuendo on September 27, 2009, 01:18 PM »
Glad to see this thread. I've been a TC for a long time . But I don't have to time to dig it . Maybe now is the time :)

I don't think you would be sorry. I have used TC for years, but mostly used it with just a few plugins & I was quite happy. Recently, I have won a license to TC (thanks Mouser & Fenix!) and to celebrate my good fortune I sat down with the help file & configured all the options and all the .ini file settings. I then went through www.totalcmd.net and en.totalcmd.pl for every plugin for which I'd have a need.

It took quite a bit of time to get things just right, but I now have a copy of TC perfectly tuned to my needs. After a couple weeks of using this newly configured TC I've more than made up for the configuration time I spent with time-savings in file management.

I'm still tweaking things here and there, but I'm confident my file manager would trounce just about anything else out there. ;)
1639
General Software Discussion / Re: Rant: Firefox 3.5.x
« Last post by Innuendo on September 27, 2009, 12:57 PM »
Strange - I wanted to upgrade from XP to Win 7 Pro. There is no direct route so:

Apologies ahead of time to Miles for the off-topic reply, but....

Carol, MS in their infinite wisdom have decreed that no version earlier than Vista can be upgraded through the installer. This has to do with the new upgrade routines that rely on a WIM-aware OS being the one being ugpraded. That's what makes the upgrader do what it does so well.

Unfortunately, at this point in time the only other WIM-aware OS besides Windows 7 is Vista.
1640
General Software Discussion / Re: -Recklessly- remove hardware (from USB)
« Last post by Innuendo on September 27, 2009, 12:52 PM »
If I recall correctly, the latest versions of Windows don't turn on a write cache for USB devices so they should be safe to just "yank out" unlike back in the Win98 days when doing so would surely corrupt your data.

I'm reading/writing from USB flash drives all day long & I'll confess that I'm a yank and run kind of person and never mess with "safely remove". I've been practicing this 'bad behavior' for a couple years now and data has never gotten corrupted.

But don't use my bad behavior as an excuse for you to act badly as well. :)
1641
Mea culpa, Innuendo. You are 100% correct. I should have stated that this version of WinX DVD Ripper Platinum will work lifetime, but that's clearly distinct from a lifetime license. What can I say, I have my good days and my bad days. :-[

Everybody makes mistakes and this little nugget of info wasn't exactly prominently displayed on either page, either.

More significantly, I look forward to determining if their "high definition encoding engine" is marketing bull or legitimate terminology.

I hope you'll report back and let us know your findings. Quality aside, it looks like a very capable program in its abilities. I don't think there's a freeware equivalent anywhere.
1642
This is supposedly a free lifetime license for a commercial software which I've heard good things about. And away I go to download...

Not exactly a lifetime license. According to the ghacks page:

"A quick chat with one of the representatives of the company revealed that minor updates will be available for free as well while major updates, e.g. a version bump to 6, would not be free but could be purchased for a small amount of money. Updates are not mandatory on the other hand which means that users can work with the version of the DVD ripper for as long as they like."

Still...not bad for free.
1643
Found Deals and Discounts / Free License Give-away for USB Safely Remove v4.1
« Last post by Innuendo on September 26, 2009, 01:28 PM »
Starting September 26, 2009 USB Safely Remove is giving away 10,000 licenses for their software. The only limitation of the license is it is only valid for the current version of their software (v4.1).

Grab your free license here:

http://safelyremove.com/giveaway10K.htm
1644
General Software Discussion / Re: Rant: Firefox 3.5.x
« Last post by Innuendo on September 26, 2009, 12:29 PM »
What's the advantage of reinstalling my apps yet another time?

Miles, I was thinking more of an upgrade install. Microsoft's upgrade install procedure with Windows 7 is scary good. I did a few upgrade installs during the beta & couldn't tell the difference than from a clean install. It was that efficient.

I, of course, did a clean install once I got my mitts on the RTM. Apple better enjoy getting their shots in now. Once October 22nd comes a lot of the smack they've been talking will be moot points.
1645
General Software Discussion / Re: Copy a bunch of cd/dvd
« Last post by Innuendo on September 26, 2009, 12:25 PM »
Wish I had ESata port.  I got one of those USB docking stations and it's very convenient.  Kinda' slow with USB 2.0 though.  Fine for doing backups and getting files off the main HD.  It reads just fast enough I can do a 16x DVD burn from it if I have to.

The future is network attached storage. External enclosures that connect to your network providing ready file access to your files without having to have power-hungry PCs hosting teh files. Once you get out of the bargain basement product category you can get pretty speedy units that can do more than just host your files (provide media servers, bittorrent clients, etc.).
1646
General Software Discussion / Re: Rant: Firefox 3.5.x
« Last post by Innuendo on September 25, 2009, 11:06 PM »
W7 7077? Why haven't you at least upgraded to the public RC build 7100 candidate?
1647
Living Room / Re: Best Laptop Input Device?
« Last post by Innuendo on September 25, 2009, 11:04 PM »
You can buy keyboards that have trackpads or trackpoints (those little rubber knobs that stick up between the keys that rjbull was talking about). There are even keyboards with integrated trackballs as well.

1648
on the second offer (2010 version) I get offered this file when downloading:
0295a2d39665838dd928b057c42e9705.exe

do you happen to know if that correct?

With a filename like that I'd wager it was an auto-generated-upon-request filename that changes every so often to prevent hot-linking. If so, no one will be able to answer you. What to the file's properties say?
1649
General Software Discussion / Re: video player software.
« Last post by Innuendo on September 25, 2009, 01:11 PM »
I've had KMPlayer crash on me a couple times when it couldn't find the right codec for a file, but have never had to force-close it so maybe that's why I have never had to deal with it losing settings.

The good news is that after you get your settings the way you want them you can export them to a .reg file so if you ever lose your settings it's a simple procedure to bring them back.
1650
General Software Discussion / Re: .flv thumbnails
« Last post by Innuendo on September 25, 2009, 01:05 PM »
A more sweeping, and drastic 'fix' to your problem is to install the K-Lite Codec Pack. One of its configuration options, if I recall correctly, is "Allow Explorer to show more media thumbnails" or something similar.
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