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Recent Posts

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1976
Living Room / Re: Recommend some music videos to me!
« Last post by tomos on February 19, 2016, 04:43 PM »
Great variety lately :up:



The Skatalites - Wood and Water (unusually, I think, for ska, some nice guitar towards the end)



The Skatalites - After The Rain
1977
Living Room / Re: What books are you reading?
« Last post by tomos on February 18, 2016, 03:13 AM »
Reading another book about English, this time about the future of the language: how it's changing in different ways all over the world; that it may even evolve into various languages.
The Prodigal Tongue: Dispatches from the Future of English (amazon)

This one is beautifully written, a pleasure to read. Moving all over the world, currently in Singapore exploring 'Singlish'.
1978
Living Room / Re: Need a new Keyboard - advice?
« Last post by tomos on February 17, 2016, 04:15 PM »
One thing to note about the Logitech K740 is that the Insert and Delete keys (above the cursor keys, between the main keyboard and the numeric pad) are non-standard.  The Delete key is double size and the Insert key has been moved above it to where the Print Screen key is on a standard keyboard.

I actually like that.  It keeps me from pressing it by accident when typing.  PrintScn is there, but the scroll lock key is now a function key.  I'm not sure what you mean by L-shaped Enter keys - it's pretty standard on that keyboard - a double sized enter key.

Yeah, I dont think that's a problem for me either -- it's closer to my last keyboard layout than the K800 is.
FWIW I'm getting kind of used to the Kensington keyboard for typing -- for the price it's wonderful -- but I know I'll have to change as soon as I go back to drawing work (i.e. using all those shortcuts repetitively). But gives me time to look around a bit more.

The danger is looking at negative reviews and then looking at more and more expensive keyboards.. :-\
1979
Clipboard Help+Spell / Re: ALT GR Key
« Last post by tomos on February 17, 2016, 04:03 PM »
i installed Clipboard Help...., latest version. To make it clearer : by typing ALT GR + q whitch should bring up the "@" sign, no sign shoes up. Instead of a sign the quick paste menu pops up.

Okay, got you.
You're using a qwertz keyboard I think (?)
You need to look at the hotkeys in the options:
right-click the CHS icon in the System Tray, select 'Options'

EDIT / I see you found it - good !
1980
Living Room / Re: YouTube finally forces creation of google+ A/C to comment
« Last post by tomos on February 17, 2016, 03:40 PM »
It's getting weirder:
if I go to my g+ page, without being logged in to google, I see one [1] post - and am no longer able to access the about page. Almost all my g+ posts were via Youtube -- *nothing* from Youtube is displayed. The about page had a link to my YT account and some scraps of info -- all gone. No info about followers or views are shown (settings only have an option to show views which is ticked).

I checked my settings:
Settings >Manage g+ activity:
here I can click on a dropdown that will show stuff like 'Comments', '+1 on posts', '+1 on comments', etc.
All this information is very dated. And none of it can be seen by visitors.

It really does look to me like google has decided to kill any connection between Youtube and g+. Alternatively this could be just on some accounts...
Either way, pity for me because that was my main use of it.
1981
Living Room / Re: Need a new Keyboard - advice?
« Last post by tomos on February 17, 2016, 10:14 AM »
Thanks for all that info wraith,
it sounds good to me :Thmbsup:
1982
Clipboard Help+Spell / Re: ALT GR Key
« Last post by tomos on February 17, 2016, 10:07 AM »
hi Chris,
eh .. which programme did you install ?

 :)
1983
Post New Requests Here / Re: Can DimSaver become DimScreen?
« Last post by tomos on February 17, 2016, 10:03 AM »
Hi I just downloaded Dimscreen and "ran it" and it immediately darkened my screen/ But I don't know how to turn it off, how to change the brightness, it doesn't open like a program where it shows the program, settings, etc. It just says run and keeps screen dark.

I just started using this lately on my win. 7 laptop.

The programme shows in the system tray (right-hand end of the taskbar).
Once you find it (you can hold the mouse over each icon to figure out which one it is), right click for options.


EDIT// it is a portable app so there's no install. Once you find it you might want to close it down and then move it to an appropriate folder, as opposed to running it from your download folder. (I use a 'Portable' folder on my D drive.)
1984
Living Room / Re: In-Car Emergency Kit - Your Recommendations
« Last post by tomos on February 17, 2016, 05:37 AM »
Stephen,
I think you'll need a bigger car ;)
1985
General Software Discussion / Re: Anyone using Blackbird?
« Last post by tomos on February 17, 2016, 04:25 AM »
^ the blackbird page linked to gets me this (in palemoon / win.7)

Screenshot - 2016-02-17 , 11_19_37.png

In firefox I get to the page, but download gets blocked as per Attronarch, with no option to override.
1986
Living Room / Re: Need a new Keyboard - advice?
« Last post by tomos on February 16, 2016, 06:17 PM »
thanks for those comments :up:

I have that keyboard [Logitech K740] at work, am a reasonably fast typist, and have not seen issue 1.

do you know if three-key shortcuts work? Lots of gamers complain that some particular combos of three keys dont work on it -- I dont care about the gaming aspect, but do use multiple shortcuts with three, and even some with four keys.
1987
Living Room / Re: Need a new Keyboard - advice?
« Last post by tomos on February 16, 2016, 05:49 AM »
Logitech K740 (amazon) may be an option.
I always have a look at negative reviews, which can be off-putting:

  • type any three keys in quick succession and the third gets lost (including n't and ine). Appears to be hardware issue i.e. planned by Logitech. May not be a big problem for me as I slow typist.
  • black on keys getting worn away, backlight shining through -- this could be a problem, but guess I could send it back if it happened
  • is with cable
1988
Living Room / Need a new Keyboard - advice?
« Last post by tomos on February 16, 2016, 05:30 AM »
Need a new keyboard:
I dont type a whole lot, but use the keyboard *a lot* for keyboard shortcuts. I find for pressing shortcut keys, I need a keyboard with minimal resistance. I'd also like a better quality keyboard than my previous one (Logitech Deluxe 250 - see paragraph 3 below)

I recently bought a Kensington K72357 (amazon) which IIUC is mechanical. It's like a laptop keyboard, for typing it seems okay, but for pressing keyboard shortcuts, it has too much resistance. (I notice when typing, my hands are over the keyboard, so any resistance is less of a problem due to 'weight-of-hand'. When pressing shortcut, my hand/wrist is often resting on the table, so I have to use quite a lot of effort to press the keys. Considering my wrists are already half-wrecked from this work, I think I'll have to get something else.)

For the last few years, I used a Logitech Deluxe 250:
I see I bought it in August 2007, so it has served me well. For typing it wasnt that nice, but easy to use. For shortcuts it was great.

I'm considering the Logitech K800 (new egg). I wouldnt really want to have to pay any more than that (90$ / 80€) and would be happy if I got something cheaper ;-)
I dont like the idea of wireless though -- batteries are one more thing to worry about, I just want to be able to plug it in and that's it.

So open to any suggestions. TIA :)
1989
General Software Discussion / Re: Picasa to be 'phased out'
« Last post by tomos on February 15, 2016, 05:51 PM »
^ yeah, I know what you mean.
Guess I'm a bit disillusioned what with thinking lately of the insecurity of google products.
I dont even use Picasa myself, but have recommended it's to lots of more basic users I know. It had it's flaws, but also a lot of great points.

EDIT// it's also another step in the drift away from desktop...
1990
General Software Discussion / Picasa to be 'phased out'
« Last post by tomos on February 15, 2016, 02:03 PM »
Google kills off Picasa to focus its efforts on Google Photos - PCWorld

“After much thought and consideration, we’ve decided to retire Picasa over the coming months in order to focus entirely on a single photo service in Google Photos,”  Anil Sabharwal, the head of the Google Photos team said

google kills....

1991
General Software Discussion / Re: malware or ? #1454789523
« Last post by tomos on February 13, 2016, 04:27 AM »
I am beginning to suspect these are just arbitrary code numbers assigned by winpatrol to make me buy the pro version.

that's not their style -- well it certainly hasn't been their style in the past. (I used their free version for years before eventually going for the paid version).
1992
Sort of accidentally came across this on g+ which seem like a good explanation for people who dont have a clue about it:
We have observed gravitational waves!

Gravitational-Waves-Help-Astronomers-Understand-Black-Hole-Weight-Gain.jpg

This morning, the LIGO observatory announced a historic event: for the very first time in history, we have observed a pair of black holes colliding, not by light (which they don't emit), but by the waves in spacetime itself that they form. This is a tremendously big deal, so let me try to explain why.
I chanced quoting the rest of it here:
Spoiler
Yonatan Zunger
Shared publicly  -  18:52
 
We have observed gravitational waves!

This morning, the LIGO observatory announced a historic event: for the very first time in history, we have observed a pair of black holes colliding, not by light (which they don't emit), but by the waves in spacetime itself that they form. This is a tremendously big deal, so let me try to explain why.

What's a gravitational wave?

The easiest way to understand General Relativity is to imagine that the universe is a big trampoline. Imagine a star as a bowling ball, sitting in the middle of it, and a spaceship as a small marble that you're shooting along the trampoline. As the marble approaches the bowling ball, it starts to fall along the stretched surface of the trampoline, and curve towards the ball; depending on how close it passes to the ball and how fast, it might fall and hit it.

If you looked at this from above, you wouldn't see the stretching of the trampoline; it would just look black, and like the marble was "attracted" towards the bowling ball.

This is basically how gravity works: mass (or energy) stretches out space (and time), and as objects just move in what looks like a straight path to them, they curve towards heavy things, because spacetime itself is bent. That's Einstein's theory of Relativity, first published in 1916, and (prior to today) almost every aspect of it had been verified by experiment.

Now imagine that you pick up a bowling ball and drop it, or do something else similarly violent on the trampoline. Not only is the trampoline going to be stretched, but it's going to bounce -- and if you look at it in slow-motion, you'll see ripples flowing along the surface of the trampoline, just like you would if you dropped a bowling ball into a lake. Relativity predicts ripples like that as well, and these are gravitational waves. Until today, they had only been predicted, never seen.

(The real math of relativity is a bit more complicated than that of trampolines, and for example gravitational waves stretch space and time in very distinctive patterns: if you held a T-square up and a gravitational wave hit it head-on,  you would see first one leg compress and the other stretch, then the other way round)

The challenge with seeing gravitational waves is that gravity is very weak (after all, it takes the entire mass of the Earth to hold you down!) and so you need a really large event to emit enough gravity waves to see it. Say, two black holes colliding off-center with each other.

So how do we see them?

We use a trick called laser interferometry, which is basically a fancy T-square. What you do is you take a laser beam, split it in two, and let each beam fly down the length of a large L. At the end of the leg, it hits a mirror and bounces back, and you recombine the two beams.

The trick is this: lasers (unlike other forms of light) form very neat wave patterns, where the light is just a single, perfectly regular, wave. When the two beams recombine, you therefore have two overlapping waves -- and if you've ever watched two ripples collide, you'll notice that when waves overlap, they cancel in spots and reinforce each other in spots. As a result, if the relative length of the legs of the L changes, the amount of cancellation will change -- and so, by monitoring the brightness of the re-merged light, you can see if something changed the length of one leg and not the other.

LIGO (the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory) consists of a pair of these, one in Livingston, Louisiana, and one in Hartford, Washington, three thousand kilometers apart. Each leg of each L is four kilometers long, and they are isolated from ambient ground motion and vibration by a truly impressive set of systems.

If a gravitational wave were to strike LIGO, it would create a very characteristic compression and expansion pattern first in one L, then the other. By comparing the difference between the two, and looking for that very distinctive pattern, you could spot gravity waves.

How sensitive is this? If you change the relative length of the legs of an L by a fraction of the wavelength of the light, you change the brightness of the merged light by a predictable amount. Since measuring the brightness of light is something we're really good at (think high-quality photo-sensors), we can spot very small fractions of a wavelength. In fact, the LIGO detector can currently spot changes of one attometer (10⁻¹⁸ of a meter), or about one-thousandth the size of an atomic nucleus. (Or one hundred-millionth the size of an atom!) It's expected that we'll be able to improve that by a factor of three in the next few years.

With a four-kilometer leg, this means that LIGO can spot changes in length of about one-quarter of a part in 10²¹. That's the resolution you need to spot events like this: despite the tremendous violence of the collision (as I'll explain in a second), it was so far away -- really, on the other end of the universe -- that it only created vibrations of about five parts in 10²¹ on Earth.

So what did LIGO see?

About 1.5 billion light years away, two black holes -- one weighing about 29 times as much as the Sun, the other 36 -- collided with  each other. As they drew closer, their gravity caused them to start to spiral inwards towards each other, so that in the final moments before the collision they started spinning around each other more and more quickly, up to a peak speed of 250 orbits per second. This started to fling gravity waves in all directions with great vigor, and when they finally collided, they formed a single black hole, 62 times the mass of the Sun. The difference -- three solar masses -- was all released in the form of pure energy.

Within those final few milliseconds, the collision was 50 times brighter than the entire rest of the universe combined. All of that energy was emitted in the form of gravitational waves: something to which we were completely blind until today.

Are we sure about that?

High-energy physics has become known for extreme paranoia about the quality of its data. The confidence level required to declare a "discovery" in this field is technically known as 5σ, translating to a confidence level of 99.99994%. That takes into account statistical anomalies and so on, but you should take much more care when dealing with big-deal discoveries; LIGO does all sorts of things for that. For example, their computers are set up to routinely inject false signals into the data, and they don't "open up the box" to reveal whether a signal was real or faked until after the entire team has finished analyzing the data. (This lets you know that your system would detect a real signal, and it has the added benefit that the people doing the data analysis never know if it's the real thing or not when they're doing the analysis -- helping to counter any unconscious tendency to bias the data towards "yes, it's really real!")

There are all sorts of other tricks like that, and generally LIGO is known for the best practices of data analysis basically anywhere. From the analysis, they found a confidence level of 5.1σ -- enough to count as a confirmed discovery of a new physical phenomenon.

(That's equal to a p-value of 3.4*10⁻⁷, for those of you from fields that use those)

So why is this important?

Well, first of all, we just observed a new physical phenomenon for the first time, and confirmed the last major part of Einstein's theory. Which is pretty cool in its own right.

But as of today, LIGO is no longer just a physics experiment: it is now an astronomical observatory. This is the first gravity-wave telescope, and it's going to let us answer questions that we could only dream about before.

Consider that the collision we saw emitted a tremendous amount of energy, brighter than everything else in the sky combined, and yet we were blind to it. How many more such collisions are happening? How does the flow of energy via gravitational wave shape the structure of galaxies, of galactic clusters, of the universe as a whole? How often do black holes collide, and how do they do it? Are there ultramassive black holes which shape the movement of entire galactic clusters, the way that supermassive ones shape the movement of galaxies, but which we can't see using ordinary light at all, because they aren't closely surrounded by stars?

Today's discovery is more than just a milestone in physics: it's the opening act of a much bigger step forward.

What's next?

LIGO is going to keep observing! We may also revisit an old plan (scrapped when the politics broke down) for another observatory called LISA, which instead of using two four-kilometer L's on the Earth, consists of a big triangle of lasers, with their vertices on three satellites orbiting the Sun. The LISA observatory (and yes, this is actually possible with modern technology) would be able to observe motions of roughly the same size as LIGO -- one attometer -- but as a fraction of a leg five million kilometers long. That gives us, shall we say, one hell of a lot better resolution. And because it doesn't have to be shielded from things like the vibrations of passing trucks, in many ways it's actually simpler than LIGO.

(The LISA Pathfinder mission, a test satellite to debug many of these things, was launched on December 3rd)

The next twenty years are likely to lead to a steady stream of discoveries from these observatories: it's the first time we've had a fundamentally new kind of telescope in quite a while. (The last major shift in this was probably Hubble, our first optical telescope in space, above all the problems of the atmosphere)

The one catch is that LIGO and LISA don't produce pretty pictures; you can think of LIGO as a gravity-wave camera that has exactly two pixels. If the wave hits Louisiana first, it came from the south; if it hits Washington first, it came from the north. (This one came from the south, incidentally; it hit Louisiana seven milliseconds before Washington) It's the shift in the pixels over time that lets us see things, but it's not going to look very visually dramatic. We'll have to wait quite some time until we can figure out how to build a gravitational wave telescope that can show us a clear image of the sky in these waves; but even before that, we'll be able to tease out the details of distant events of a scale hard to imagine.

You can read the full paper at http://journals.aps....ysRevLett.116.061102 , including all of the technical details. Many congratulations to the entire LIGO team: you've really done it. Amazing.

Incidentally, Physical Review Letters normally has a strict four-page max; the fact that they were willing to give this article sixteen pages shows just how big a deal this is.

1993
Living Room / Re: More good web comics you've discovered
« Last post by tomos on February 11, 2016, 01:51 PM »
This series is so cute, tessandlion, Important Cat Jobs:
[..]
https://www.instagram.com/tessandlion/

very good :D
1994
How did it go?
1995
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: 2GB additional Google Drive storage for free
« Last post by tomos on February 10, 2016, 08:52 AM »
^ missed that.
I used deozaan's link above. It wasn't fully clear when the security check was finished, and the extra storage took a while to show (was there within an hour though).
1996
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: 2GB additional Google Drive storage for free
« Last post by tomos on February 10, 2016, 07:18 AM »
There was no notification of the extra 2GB -- but now (~ hour later), I see I do now have 17GB showing on my GDrive page.
Thanks!
1997
Living Room / Re: Would a 41 megapixel camera get you to buy a Windows 8 phone?
« Last post by tomos on February 10, 2016, 04:56 AM »
The OP was about Nokia 808 with 41MP camera and Symbian OS.
Apparently no smartphone since has matched it's image quality (including followup Nokia/MS smartphones w. 41mp).

Two recent threads from the dpreview forums:
Why is the Nokia 808 still the pinnacle in Smartphone Photography?
Nokia 808 still rocks! or "Keep quarelling. I'll just shoot..." :D
1998
Living Room / Re: Recommend some music videos to me!
« Last post by tomos on February 09, 2016, 12:01 PM »
^ That one's very different isn't it -- much more staccato. After having listened to the Kempff performance a lot, I had to listen to this a couple of times to adjust.
It really is wonderful, thanks for the tip!
1999
General Software Discussion / Re: malware or ? #1454789523
« Last post by tomos on February 09, 2016, 05:52 AM »
WinPatrol Plus doesnt have any info about this either -- they say they now have it on record because I searched for it (just in case they tell you there were enquiries!).
I would definitely contact them.
2000
3. We have ad filters at work. All I see at the download link is a bunch of "Access blocked - content alert" windows and a download link. Like... LOTS of content blocked. MediaFire?  Eww.
    -  I will upload elsewhere if Mediafire is causing issues.

Using Firefox + uBlock + ask-to-activate Flash here: with uBock disabled, I just saw a bunch of ads.
In other words, with an adblocker it's fine imo.
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