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2076
General Software Discussion / Re: Blog steals Zaine's Great Software List
« Last post by zridling on November 16, 2007, 11:58 PM »
I've been out all week. Got to thank Chris (Veign) for the heads up on this. What's hilarious is that you can't do a URL search without hitting a dozen "my/good/great/ultimate/favorite software list" sites, and mine is just one among hundreds online. I should be flattered. Note the topic links still link to anova.org/software !!

That's like plagiarizing a paper written in Word and not removing the author's meta data.  ;D
2077
Living Room / Re: What Intel Giveth, Microsoft Taketh Away
« Last post by zridling on November 16, 2007, 11:53 PM »
Glad you listed this, Ralf. This was the first thing I noticed with Vista back in early February — it ate everything you threw at it. Office 2007 is the same way, as the post states, requiring 12 times the memory and 3 times the processing power as previous versions of Windows and Office.

Sorta ruins the notion of "optimizing" the codebase for better/faster/newer hardware. I'm sure they're already working on how to slow down Penryn chips.
2078
Oh man, I bought a Microsoft wireless mouse and keyboard about three years ago and quickly regretted it. I COULDN'T AFFORD TO KEEP THEM! I was replacing the batteries on both every 9-11 days. Ditched it for good ol' cable. I hated typing something and noticing that m w rds wer s ipping let ers.
2079
Living Room / Re: Technology Myths
« Last post by zridling on November 11, 2007, 08:32 PM »
Great topic, arunpawar!

Here's some of the biggest myths I've come across are:
(1) Vista doesn't run some games. I'm sure it doesn't, but it runs all my old ones quite well. (I'm not smart enough to figure out the new stuff.)

(2) Linux is hard to learn. Not really. If you setup any distro and leave it alone, the learning curve is microscopic, since so many apps are bundled with each distro. They already come loaded with OpenOffice, a text editor (or 3), multimedia apps, email/browser/PIM, archive app, up to 180 little games! and so on.

(3) Using third-party ink in your printer voids the warranty. Nah.

(4) You have to partition a large hard drive and/or defrag it often to get the best performance. Partitioning is a good idea to protect your data from the OS and system files, but defragging for performance improvement is really overrated on Windows, and never required on a GNU/Linux machine.

(5) Macs are safe from viruses. Nothing is, not even Linux. But OS X and Linux both have tens of thousands of fewer verified virus signatures than Windows. That said, Vista is certainly harder to damage than pre-2007 XP.
2080
Living Room / Don't throw out that iPod — fix it instead!
« Last post by zridling on November 11, 2007, 06:55 PM »
[via NY Times]:
Gadget-fixing is adapting to the modern era. Neighborhood repair shops are all but gone, and along with them the repairmen who could offer casual advice, even when that advice was whether it was worth repairing the device. But Web sites can help users find and share solutions that can save a device from the landfill. If the job is too tricky, a number of Internet-based firms offer highly specialized repairs via overnight mail.

fixit9932.jpg

Some nice fix-it sites listed in the article. Are there others around we should know about?
2081
General Software Discussion / Re: Maybe Vista doesn't suck?
« Last post by zridling on November 11, 2007, 06:42 PM »
Thanks nontroppo. My wish is to have several good/great operating system choices. Which I why I look forward to Vista's successor. After its first week in users' hands, Leopard ain't looking so great all the sudden with its data loss bug.
2082
Living Room / Re: Top 10 Signs You're Coding Too Much
« Last post by zridling on November 11, 2007, 06:37 PM »
Okay, I can totally understand #5. Just buy a new drive and save time.
2083
General Software Discussion / Re: OS Religious Wars...
« Last post by zridling on November 11, 2007, 06:32 PM »
Yes, that is the same sign used by Texas Longhorn sports fans, who cry "Hook 'em Horns!" when they cheer. I grew up in Arkansas; they were our biggest rival. I will always hate them.
2084
General Software Discussion / Re: Fedora 8 hits the streets!
« Last post by zridling on November 11, 2007, 06:29 PM »
Nothing wrong with a Linux distro catching up to Windows (they still have a ways to go on several fronts)! Lashiec, you got it — it's actually a theme composed of several different similar wallpapers, like a super-slow animated gif, and monitored through your UTC time setting.
2085
General Software Discussion / Re: OS Religious Wars...
« Last post by zridling on November 10, 2007, 02:44 AM »
This just in:

Satan Gives It a Big Thumbs Up!!

satan-9932.jpg

oh wait, no? This more like it?

satan-9933.jpg
2086
General Software Discussion / Re: OS Religious Wars...
« Last post by zridling on November 10, 2007, 02:42 AM »
This is an odd phenomena, when you could do all this on your own, or just create a "theme" to switch to in the main OS. Also, Linux has a distro for every person and hobby anymore. The christian and muslim editions show quran and bible verses in their screensavers and such, and I think Firefox has some extra filters. God forbid anyone ever catch site of a breast. Hell will spawn a thousand new demons for every nipple slip.
2087
Mouser's Zone / Re: Mouser - a plea from your users!
« Last post by zridling on November 10, 2007, 02:38 AM »
The trick is to look outside the English language, or toward literature. For example, I'd rename FARR 'Odyssey.' But I'm sure some jackass has trademarked the name.

Yep, I looked it up and some jerk named "Homer" claims it. Keeps renewing it, too.  :P
2088
Living Room / Re: Today is my birthday- when is yours?
« Last post by zridling on November 10, 2007, 02:34 AM »
I figure it's got to be October. People get their freak on during those cold winter nights for some reason. Holodeck procreation is no-muss, no-fuss, no consequences!!  ;D
2089
General Software Discussion / Re: Maybe Vista doesn't suck?
« Last post by zridling on November 10, 2007, 02:22 AM »
Thanks Josh. Let me answer specifically from personal experience, using Vista x64. I'll take the long way, so be patient with me.
________________________________________________
DRM
From what Microsoft marketed to us on what Vista would do from 2004-06 and what we got, it's been really disappointing for me. And when you compare Vista to Apple's OS X Leopard and something like Fedora 8 or Ubuntu 7.10 on the GNU/Linux side, you quickly find it ain't so special after all, and includes an array of "features" that you don't want. These features will make your computer less reliable and less secure. They'll make your computer less stable and run slower. They will cause technical support problems. They may even require you to upgrade some of your peripheral hardware and existing software. And these features won't do anything useful. In fact, they're working against you. They're digital rights management (DRM) features built into Vista at the behest of the entertainment industry.

And unlike other OSes, with Vista you don't get to refuse them.

Microsoft has reworked a lot of the core operating system to add copy protection technology for new media formats like HD-DVD and Blu-ray disks. Peter Gutmann wrote a well-circulated article about it, and was widely attacked for it. Certain high-quality output paths — audio and video — are reserved for protected peripheral devices. Sometimes output quality is artificially degraded; sometimes output is prevented entirely (ask Sternfan network guys about this). And Vista continuously spends CPU time monitoring itself, trying to figure out if you're doing something that it thinks you shouldn't. If it does, it limits functionality and in extreme cases restarts just the video subsystem. We still don't know the exact details of all this, and how far-reaching it is, but it doesn't look good.

http://www.miraesoft...protection-in-vista/
http://www.theinquir...ins-drm-tale-in-blog

As you noted, the BBC, Apple, Disney, NBC, Sony, et al. love DRM, too. Some of these companies (including Jobs on music for iTunes, but not for movies) have realized that DRM just annoys their customers. Like every other DRM system ever invented, Microsoft's won't keep the professional pirates from making copies of whatever they want. The DRM security in Vista was broken the day it was released. Sure, Microsoft will patch it, but the patched system will get broken as well. It's an arms race, and the defenders can't possibly win. Every time Blu-Ray and HD-DVD is patched, it's broken within minutes or hours.

I believe that Microsoft knows this and also knows that it doesn't matter. This isn't about stopping pirates and the small percentage of people who download free movies from the Internet. This isn't even about Microsoft satisfying its Hollywood customers at the expense of those of us paying for the privilege of using Vista. This is about the overwhelming majority of honest users and who owns the distribution channels to them. And while it may have started as a partnership, in the end Microsoft is going to end up locking the movie companies into selling content in its proprietary formats.

Microsoft is reaching for a much bigger prize than Apple: not just Hollywood, but also peripheral hardware vendors. Vista's DRM requires driver developers to comply with all kinds of rules and be certified; otherwise, they don't work. Why else has HP simply chosen not to write Vista drivers for over 70% of their existing printers? HP publicly stated they wouldn't begin tackling that task seriously until Vista-SP1 was released. And Microsoft talks about expanding this to independent software vendors as well. It's another war for control of the computer market.

Unfortunately, we users are caught in the crossfire. We are not only stuck with DRM systems that interfere with our legitimate fair-use rights for the content we buy, we're stuck with DRM systems that interfere with all of our computer use — even the uses that have nothing to do with copyright.

So far in almost a full year of release, the market has not righted this wrong, because Microsoft's 92% OS position gives it much more power than we consumers can hope to have. It might not be as obvious as Microsoft using its operating system monopoly to kill Netscape and own the browser market, but it's really no different. Microsoft's entertainment market grab might further entrench its monopoly position, but it will cause serious damage to both the computer and entertainment industries. The EU fights this battle with Redmond daily. DRM is bad, both for consumers and for the entertainment industry: something the entertainment industry is just starting to realize, but Microsoft will continue fighting. The result of my Vista experience is that it was the final straw that drove me from Windows to GNU/Linux, and few people were bigger fans of Microsoft than I was.

In light of that experience, the only advice I can offer others is to not upgrade to Vista. It will be hard. Microsoft's bundling deals with computer manufacturers mean that it will be increasingly hard not to get the new operating system with new computers. Even Dell makes it hard to buy a laptop with either XP or Ubuntu installed on it. And Microsoft has some pretty deep pockets and can wait us all out if it wants to. Yes, every time someone shifts to Macintosh, we hear about it, and some (way) fewer number will switch to GNU/Linux like I did, but most folks are stuck on Windows. My real desire is for Microsoft to get on with Windows 7 development and get sensible. Stop with the 5-version OS nonsense; just give us the best OS you make, period.

________________________________________________
WGA
WGA is a barrier that makes it more difficult for paying customers to legally use Microsoft software and products. Why does Microsoft need to employ WGA against me, a 20+ year user of its products?
— I'm honest.
— I bought your software.
— I registered your software with the serial number and activation code you provided me.
— I didn't steal it.
— I'm not copying it.
— I'm not sharing it.

Why punish me? I don't steal software and I don't mind when people who do get caught. But when Microsoft's WGA servers went down for 24+ hours back in late August, I was one of those who took the hit. It’s not such a big deal until Microsoft starts branding you as a pirate and shutting down parts of your computer just because someone’s unplugged their Windows Genuine Advantage software DRM authentication service, as happened to 12,000 people back in August, me included. I didn't make a big deal of it because my principal OS is GNU/Linux and I booted up the Vista machine to see if it was out. True to form, I could surf the net for ONE HOUR, and then I was automatically logged out. That ain't right. My copy of Windows should be good, period, after it's been validated. It shouldn't have to be re-validated continuously. If Microsoft says it doesn't phone home daily, then how come my system went down that long day? How did it know otherwise that my Vista was bad, and on that day?

wga-9933.jpg

For argument's sake, let's you and me assume WGA is about preventing piracy. Like DRM, does it really, or is this another irony of Microsoft, who sells Vista for $775 in Denmark and $400/Ultimate in the US and $3 in China. $3?!! Why can't I have China's price?

Microsoft Happy with the Evolution of Windows Vista Piracy
Microsoft says college students can 'steal' Office
Why Piracy Hurts Open Source
Microsoft seals its Windows and opens the door to Linux
Microsoft Exec Admits That Company Benefits From Piracy
'Piracy reduction can be a source of Windows revenue growth'

Beyond the whole "trust" factor, it creeps me out that my PC phones home every day to Microsoft's servers to validate my copy of Windows not once, but — "It is important to note that WGA Validation still collects information that is used to determine whether the version of Windows is genuine" — any time it wants. Even Ed Bott is creeped out over it and notes how its malfunction tanked people's computers. Ed even wrote a more detailed post on WGA's continuing failures. If you're a business, you cannot — can never — allow another company to hold your data hostage. Again, I already bought, registered, and activated your software. You have my money. You have my credit card. You have my name, my address, my IP address, my email, and so on. How MUCH MORE does Microsoft need to validate me?

It's the equivalent of waking up every morning and calling your wife a cheating bitch... until she proves otherwise. It gets old fast. Keep treating her like one and you won't be married for long. Same rule of behavior applies to loyal users. Call them thieves long enough, and they'll bolt.

Microsoft's whole WGA campaign remains nakedly disingenuous (is that an oxymoron?). This Microsoft press release speaks at length about the problems that pirated software causes for businesses and users, and persists in the notion that WGA exists principally to help Microsoft's customers. It never once says, "We're doing this to prevent people from stealing the software we've spent millions to develop."

Here's the irony: when you make it difficult for registered users to legally use your software, you encourage piracy at worst, and switching to other alternatives at least. When it's easier to download a copy of Vista (or XP or Office) from usenet that has all the latest updates and bypasses activation and registration than it is to comply, it's bad news for Microsoft.
2090
No, XP is not too good; rather, Vista is that bad, as in embarrassing. Also, XP is Vista's biggest competitor. How many tens of millions — or is it hundreds? — of people are using a version of Windows? The larger the base, the harder it is to move.
________________________________________________
Person-1 has a laptop with XP on it. Laptop boots in 40 seconds, runs great; is 2+ years old. Has tons of great software available to run on XP. All its hardware only has drivers written for XP. Not enough memory to upgrade to Vista. So why should he?

Person-2 has a desktop with Vista on it. Boots in 115 seconds, runs slow; is brand new with multi-core processor. Freezes and stalls coming out of hibernation. Can't upgrade hardware without buying another copy of Vista and reinstalling everything. Gets Automatic updates whether she turns them off or not. Is subject to being locked out of their computer if their copy of Vista is not continuouly validated. Can't downgrade to XP because new desktop hardware only has a few XP drivers written for it. Also, count how many clicks it takes to get anywhere in Vista compared to XP. Start with networking.

Result?
Person-2 is bloody pissed.
Person-1 is productive.
2091
General Software Discussion / Re: Perfect Software?
« Last post by zridling on November 09, 2007, 04:31 AM »
If a software app does achieve perfection, it's only transient until something else changes and it becomes inadequate. The idea of perfect software for me is that which enables other software, such as AutoHotkey. In any given year, there are some fantastic apps. XYplorer File Manager, for example, had a very good 2007. But so did Opera browser and ACDSee 10. EmEditor is going to have a knockout 2008 with its version 7.

I still lament the death of Ecco Pro. Hey, and what about Wolfenstein 3-D baby!!
2092
General Software Discussion / Fedora 8 hits the streets!
« Last post by zridling on November 09, 2007, 04:15 AM »
Fedora 8 is the kind of GNU/Linux version that makes you want to stop distro hopping and settle. With a new visual style, artwork, and several new features, this version was designed around expanding Web 2.0 on the desktop.

fedora8-screen01.jpg   fedora_8_cd.png

One of the most impressive new features included in Fedora 8 is the PulseAudio sound daemon, which will allow users to set the volume for each application individually, move streams between devices, redirect audio streams to other computers on the local network, and much more. Pulse Audio alleviates the headaches of various sound systems fighting for access to the sound device (finally!!!) and implements many exciting new features to bring the Linux sound system out of the stone age. With a new visual style called Nodoka that mixes beige and bright blue, it has light gradients, subdued scrollbars, and gradients on inactive tabs.

fedora8-screen02.jpg

Fedora 8 includes an optional color-changing wallpaper, which will rotate through shades depending on the time of day. Doesn't sound like a big deal unless you live in the US, but work on German time. By noticing the color of the screen, you can know what time of day it is. Here's the full feature list. If for no other reason, a good Linux distro like Fedora comes with more "out of the box" software than any other OS. With the USDollar at all-time record tanking levels, I could save some dough.

fedora8-screen03.jpg
2093
General Software Discussion / Re: Maybe Vista doesn't suck?
« Last post by zridling on November 09, 2007, 03:39 AM »
For me (notice I emphasize that), Vista has been a poor experience in a wide variety of ways, among them driver support, DRM issues, price increases, and the continuing WGA/validation debacle. It also will eat as much hardware as you throw at it. Quad-core screams on Linux, but suddenly crawls on Vista x64. I could go on all day, but that kind of crap really makes me mad.

In the meantime, to get the bad news about Vista behind them, notice the increasing number of "Windows 7" leaks to the media over the past three weeks. Vista will join the infamous ranks of "ME" in the history of Windows OSes. Think of it this way: Vista has been so "suck-sessful" that record numbers of users are using other OS platforms, including me. Microsoft's HALO team should take over coding Win 7!
2094
The difference among distros [to me] is much like the difference among various versions of Windows. They've shared the same desktop environments for the past ten years, starting with Gnome. Installers or package managers still work virtually the same, and there are really only two for the major distros (open up the manager, select the checkbox to install, remove, or update — incredibly simple). Linux, Solaris, and BSDs have much in common — all are free and open source operating systems, and they each use many of the same open source packages available on the Internet.

Instead of looking at the 600+ distributions as confusing, focus instead on the major distributions, whichever one best suits your needs. For most folks, that's Windows! However, I would definitely buy this computer for a school-aged kid as an entry machine. You could always slap XP on it later if you wanted.
2095
General Software Discussion / Re: Paint Shop Pro X2 - installation from hell ...
« Last post by zridling on November 06, 2007, 05:28 PM »
tsaint's experience is the reason I finally had to drop CorelDRAW, a program I used daily for more than a decade. Much like Vista, Corel has made its products too difficult to use legally. I now avoid programs that like to take over the computer, and these usually are companies such as Corel and Adobe. I don't deny their greatness, but their overhead isn't worth the hassle.
2096
Not really, Lashiec. First, ODF is controlled by the OASIS, which is the OpenDocument Alliance; The OpenDocument "Foundation" was just three guys in a garage with a website. They spent much of their ODF time ragging on other members. CDF is instead a framework for a variety of open documents, built around the ideas of mobility and portability. CDF takes the emphasis (of code dependency) off the platform and off the app and places it on the format itself, something neither MS-OOXML nor ODF currently do.

Here's the problem. In the last sixty days, over a dozen new applications have implemented ODF into their code, many as the native file format. Beyond its ISO certification, the ODF has undergone three revisions. It takes OpenOffice alone 2-3 years to code those changes throughout the software, meaning applications — any app that deploys ODF — will always be running behind the spec. Meanwhile changes are submitted to ISO to update the specification and there's nothing to test them on.

CDF is in fact a good idea. But it does not replace ODF, rather it puts ODF within a family of other open formats under the W3C umbrella.
2097
General Software Discussion / Re: You MUST See the Price for this Software
« Last post by zridling on November 01, 2007, 10:29 PM »
It's a great idea for first-time buyers. Consider that they're using it far beyond the trial, perhaps in comparison to a competing app, and as justice hinted, over time you could more accurately gauge its value to you.
2098
General Software Discussion / Re: Good websites/blogs/programs for managing money?
« Last post by zridling on November 01, 2007, 10:21 PM »
MrCrispy, I just turned 46 years old and the only thing I know about money is "impulsiveness." That's why I have $13 in my checking account at this age!

mouser's recommendations are solid, the getrichslowly guy starts out with the sound, "Pay yourself 10% off the top," but after the bills are paid, who the hell's got 10% left? (Oh, that's right, people with real jobs!) Anyhoo, for short-term spending, also check out The Consumerist, which will keep you away from scams and teach you how to get your money back and not get ripped off. And then look at Zen Habits on living simply and staying productive with what money you have.
2099
General Software Discussion / Re: SyncBackSE vs. SuperFlexible
« Last post by zridling on November 01, 2007, 10:12 PM »
What mwb1100 said. You won't go wrong with using what you like. As for Ken, well, we're working on him!
2100
General Software Discussion / Re: SyncBackSE vs. SuperFlexible
« Last post by zridling on November 01, 2007, 06:33 PM »
DBC, test them all and find what you like. Super Flexible File Synchronizer (SFFS) is built for enterprise use on top of desktop use, so it not only does Delta synching, but can handle almost any remote task — a great feature when you're somewhere/anywhere else. Super Flexible Software primarily caters to enterprise clients, meaning, they don't have time to deal with mistakes. Although it's pricey, we're lucky to have this software available to individual users.

SFFS can detect and merge changes in files — even in different locations using 'SmartTracking' — or it can copy the entire file if you choose to do so within your profile. SmartTracking does what you're talking about; that is, track changes that have been made between the various invocations of your files rather than creating duplicates by merely copying files between the left and right locations. SFFS also has an advanced algorithm for efficiently comparing source and target directories while sending only a little bit of data across the wire, and copying only changed parts of files, saving bandwidth when using FTP or S3.

You decide what SFFS does by properly setting up your sync profile. In attended mode inside the Synchronization Preview dialog, you can even choose the action of any specific file, one-by-one. Therefore, I think you misunderstand the nature of delta synchronization, which is a process method, not an algorithm. You can create a variety of algorithms to run a delta synchronization of your files.

SFFS is updated frequently and also has a Linux version. So you can take it with you to anothe platform and not have to buy another license. After using the others — all of which are good! — I really, really like the power and feature set of Super Flexible File Synchronizer.
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