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Recent Posts

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2151
Living Room / Re: My Generation ...
« Last post by Lashiec on May 29, 2007, 03:35 AM »
"I hope I die before get old"

... well, in this case when you consider someone "old"? ;D

And considering Roger Daltrey is singing the same song being over 60...
2152
Living Room / Re: Free Acronis TrueImage for Seagate/Maxtor HDD owners
« Last post by Lashiec on May 25, 2007, 10:26 AM »
So they updated their software line. DiscWizard is a fine program, but it was getting old, with no support for SATA drives. They also changed the developing company, Acronis is a good choice.

I have three Seagate HDDs (two brand new) so I'm not doing something illegal :)

OMG! 100 MB!
2153
Living Room / Re: 'Big Brother' Google ?
« Last post by Lashiec on May 25, 2007, 10:15 AM »
What means "they're exempt from the provision"? Does that mean if they asked to provide information about their economical background, they could pass on the question?

Sorry for the political plug, but I can't help it ;D
2154
Living Room / Re: 'Big Brother' Google ?
« Last post by Lashiec on May 24, 2007, 06:59 AM »
Nevermind their intentions, governements can FORCE information out of them. Which would be fine if all governements in the world were perfect, but they aren't, and even if they were there's no guarantee that they forever will be. If the information is there, it's only waiting to be abused.

Yeah, I forgot about that. They're doing that in China, and people is getting punished because of it. In that case, its corporate ethics really fall short before the money maker such a big country could be.
2155
Living Room / Re: 100 days of Vista: Is it Windows ME all over again?
« Last post by Lashiec on May 24, 2007, 06:54 AM »
As long as it is like Windows ME in its role to fill the gap between two SO, that's good. For now, it doesn't seems the colossal failure in all terms that ME was.
2156
Living Room / Re: 'Big Brother' Google ?
« Last post by Lashiec on May 24, 2007, 06:44 AM »
I suggested an alternative, Ixquick, in the thread where mouser discussed Google's conflicts of interest. This doesn't record any personal information, and is a metasearch engine, searching in all the major engines, including Google.

Although dk70 said in the same thread that we shouldn't fear tracking cookies or Google storing personal information. I'd be inclined to agree, but companies are ran by people, and people is not foolproof, and something like what happened with AOL a bit ago could happen again. Not to mention they could do business with all this information. They pretty much know everything about what you do on the Internet, pretty fearful if you ask me.

Which leads to a question: why do the search engines need this information? I mean, do they really need it for its operation? I suppose not, but I like to hear an explanation about this.

On a side note, Eric Schmidt seems to be reading DonationCoder, particularly the thread I mention above, because a couple of weeks he said that Google is getting way bigger than they wanted, and this is creating ethic problems for them. I'd give you a link, but I read it in the newspaper, but I'm sure a quick look in Google (LOL) would locate something.
2157
General Software Discussion / Re: musicIP (as a player): wow
« Last post by Lashiec on May 23, 2007, 05:22 AM »
Memory usage is tiny compared with basically anything else (even virtual memory) : mediamonkey, foobar, even XMplay (!).

Blasphemy! You'll die in the holy fire!!

Wasn't this included as a plugin in Winamp?
2158
mouser, what are you doing there? ;D
2159
Developer's Corner / Re: Borland c++ BUILDER tutorials?
« Last post by Lashiec on May 21, 2007, 06:08 AM »
Just taking advantage of the thread, something I miss in Dev-C++ regarding Borland Builder (we use version 6 at the university) is the excellent and complete help. Do you know if there's something similar on the Internet (a page, a CHM file...) containing ALL C++ functions (much more like Sun's Java Help)? Thanks.

EDIT: OK, no wonder no one is answering. I didn't read App's post...
2160
General Software Discussion / Re: Is Firefox 3.0 the "Fat Elvis?"
« Last post by Lashiec on May 18, 2007, 12:12 PM »
It never wasn't a *light* browser to begin with, it was fast, that's true, but it's a fact that of the three major browser, he is the fattest in memory.

Really, I saw this one coming. Firefox 2 strange design decisions bugged me a lot, they were minor, but these minor things is what makes great programs. And I told to myself that Firefox 3 was the make it or break it release, as Firefox 2 was seen by many people as your regular update, that is, it losts the coolness factor. This was the moment I decided to go full with Opera, and since then I'm in a honeymoon ;D. Oh, I'm so crazy, look what I said LOL. And I was one of this die-hard fans, well, I'm a fan of Gecko since the Mozilla days, so Firefox is the natural evolution.

It's my opinion that the ultimate thing in charge of Firefox problems is the XUL toolkit. Who knows. Anyway, we'll see what happens in the future. At least memory problems would probably be a thing of the past, since they coded a garbage collector in latest alphas.
2161
General Software Discussion / Re: Firefox
« Last post by Lashiec on May 18, 2007, 12:03 PM »
Use Launchy if you want to view a page in IE, or in another browser, or in any program ;D

Seriously, IE Tab is freaking fearful. The Firefox people always screaming about IE dangers, and they embed its engine in a tab.
2162
Living Room / Encyclopedia of Life
« Last post by Lashiec on May 18, 2007, 11:48 AM »
Well, these are old news, so you must probably read this in other site, or even you saw it on TV, as it was featured on the news, but I think is quite interesting, and no one mentioned it so...

I'm talking about the Encyclopedia of Life, a quite ambitious project to encompass all the knowledge about know living species in a single page, much more like Wikipedia, but unlike this one, the Encyclopedia of Life is peer reviewed by real experts and funded by powerful institutions, not with donations. For now, you can only view a  few examples of pages, and search around its FAQ and partners page, to find out more on the project's future. You can also register yourself for future involvements. Ars Technica wrote an article on the subject discussing the possible threats to the future of this wonderful project.

2007-05-18_185206.png

Talking about peer reviewed sites, Citizendium is now truly open (yes, finally), unlike the last time I posted about it. There are 19 (yeah, count them!) approved articles, and 1815 more are in the reviewing process. A quick review is showing that the quality is above that of Wikipedia, which is quite logical. Some of the articles include a lenghty one on Life (no, not the retired magazine, life itself), literature, dogs and Linux's mascot, Tux. I'm hoping this starts to gain momentum, to displace the failing Wikipedia, which, as everything that goes mainstream, is slowly transforming into a f****** mess, as anyone who ever contributed to it must know.

via TVE (Spanish public television)
2163
Well, maybe I'm going to get all wrong, but I think the author is not that tech savvy by not being aware of the latest developments on computer technology, not to mention you guys have misread the article.

Probably the AMD guy said the new GPUs (Radeon 2xxx) would have HDCP included in all models, unlike the Radeon 1xxx, which only had these kind of annoyances in certain models (like the one I bought the other day). So this are old news. As you may know, for a PC to be able to play HD contents (HD DVD and Blu-Ray) in its full glory you need "compatible" hardware. That is, a monitor with HDCP output, a graphic card with HDCP input, a compatible SO (right now, only Vista can, but I'm sure Leopard will, and Mr. Torvalds has this discussion with the GNU guys about how the GPLv3 ruled out DRM, the people over at the FSF finally changed the new license terms to make Linus happy), and a "approved" player (no VideoLAN or commie software like that LOL). If any fails, you'll get a worse movie, in terms of video and audio quality of course), or no movie at all (not sure about the latter, though). Before you think: "we'll buy NVIDIA", consider that GeForce cards have the same thing. Oh, and this'll probably extends to the Torrenza technology as well.

If I'm really wrong, and you're right, some questions arise. First, is truly possible for a technical point of view to put this kind of protection inside the CPU? I mean, HD playback is currently very taxing for the computer, even with high-end GPUs, due to the real time decryption of the contents the CPU has to make, and encryption is what it made of HDCP the ultimate hack ('til the good reverse engineers came around ;)). Are they going to put an extra step in the core for ultimate protection? How are they going to achieve this? Embedding a list of certificates with the approved companies? Are you going to get a "Please input your password" next time you say "Hey, Scarlett Johansson looks pretty here, I'm going to make a capture"?

Second, is people really going to tolerate these abuses? Remember what happened when Intel wanted to put an unique ID inside every Pentium III to help people with online shopping and bad guys with online tracking? And how the public backslash made Intel put the ID as "Off" by default? I'm sure that if AMD does this, people will get upset again. Unlike HD opticals, with a technical specification made almost in secret by the various companies developing them, who in turn have a good reason for the DRM as a few are also involved with content creation, AMD doesn't have this conflict of interests, and they surely have to make everything public. And for the illiterate computer users part, I know people want to play their legally acquired media in their computers without using the physical disc, and if the computer denies the possibility, they surely hit the P2P world or the streets in mass to correct this bug. Besides, this is not a good move for AMD future, as f0dder said Core 2 Duo was a big hit for them, and being mean is not the best way to make GOOD friends...

AND third, and most important... uhm, well, there's no third. My excuses for the long post.
2164
Hey, thanks João! OK, I fall into Bachelor's net then. My university offers Computer Engineering in two flavors: one, which is the one I'm at currently is directed towards economy and things like that, and lasts three years; two, is the real engineering, and lasts two years. Most people study the first one, and then either does the second or goes to another university for a different Master. I guess this is the price of studying in my home city, you have to go through accounts, statistics and all the nasty things associated with the economical world >:(

* Casts vote *

Now things are balanced again, mwahaha!
2165
Living Room / Re: Cool Google trick: search file types
« Last post by Lashiec on May 16, 2007, 05:20 AM »
Oh, that's why it didn't return much information about some sound formats
2166
General Software Discussion / Re: Hackety Hack — the Coder's Starter Kit
« Last post by Lashiec on May 16, 2007, 05:06 AM »
The design is cool! Now the only thing you need to be a true hacker is a "clickety clack" keyboard ;)
2167
General Software Discussion / Re: Faststone Image Capture now Shareware
« Last post by Lashiec on May 16, 2007, 05:03 AM »
 :wallbash:

CRAP! I was using this program instead of this Screenshot Captor thing you rave about ;D. Three options now: buy, keep the old version, or look for another alternative.

I find curious that he didn't make Image Viewer shareware.
2168
Living Room / Re: Cool Google trick: search file types
« Last post by Lashiec on May 16, 2007, 05:00 AM »
Hey, that's neat! I'd like to add that I didn't know about this Google Trends, and it seems that docx is winning :o
2169
Errr, I don't have the slightest about what I'm studying ;D.  I mean, I know what I'm studying, but I don't know its correspondence with the above options. Can anyone explain (an European guy if it's possible)?
2170
Yeah, of course :). Carol's typos ;D

EDIT: Your signature is hilarious!
2171
and also rearranging your disc data and application layout to improve performance.
-Carol Haynes (May 11, 2007, 12:34 PM)

Questionable statement on developers' side, but...

By the way, is Vista defragger developed by Microsoft or derived again from a third party?
2172
I'm a long-time fan of PowerTools, but have learned never to upgrade to a new version until two or three bug-fix releases have made their appearance.

That's true, the latest versions had been very buggy, even after fixing lots of bugs during the beta testing phase. And in my case it was much worse, as the program runs much better in XP than in 98SE. Fortunately, Jouni Vuorio is aware of the situation and he coded an special debugger for the 2007 beta versions.

I'm still with Diskeeper 8, since I didn't find anything really worth in newer versions to justify the upgrade price. I wasn't aware of the yearly contracts, but $30 for a program that rarely receives any update 'til the new major version it's a bit greedy. It's not like an antivirus where you pay for using their servers for updates. $9 is a nice price. If it wasn't for the free upgrade to PowerTools, I surely give it a try.
2173
AHEM! I suppose they've been fearing the new PowerTools, which would include a defragger for a mere $30... Not to mention that, for the first time in years, there are a few companies releasing freeware defraggers. I'm not sure about Raxco upgrade policy, but Diskeeper's is not the best, since they always demand you to pay for every upgrade, although they have been including somewhat stupid features in the latest versions, including ones that they claimed were not useful in a defragger, like the placement on the files over the disk for quick access. They're turning into Symantec! ;D
2174
Interesting read... but you can do most things in Windows, and those you can't are not convincing me to do a total switch (not that I'm after convincing arguments). After all, you can get the benefits of both worlds by dual-booting, without much hassle, the confidence of being able to criticise both open source and proprietary software actually knowing what you're talking about, and the joy of using excellent software everywhere.

By the way, you've got to restrict the capture area next time. We can spy on you! ;D
2175
Some months ago I read an interesting article about creating a distributed Internet o_O. Seems like the page hosting it went down, so I searched for a copy, found in in this forum. Yeah, it's in Spanish, a copy in English for those who can't understand (not that Babelfish does a perfect job, but it's better than nothing). As I said the idea is quite interesting, but it seemed a bit utopian and impossible from a technical point of view, but you guys are more clever than me ;)

In case it wasn't clear, i was being sarcastic and suggesting that yes, a search engine is one of those things best funded by citizens and kept out of the grand game of trying to maximize profits.  App may be right, that the alternative to a privatizes money-gobbling corporation running search engine is worse, i just can't help but think that some things are best taken out of this game of maximizing profits and just funded by the citizens for the benefit of the citizens at large.

Sarcasm... wonderful thing, but considering that we have problems in Real Life to notice it, you can suppose how hard is in the Internet ;D

EDIT: 200 posts... I didn' take my screenshot :(
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