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Recent Posts

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2226
Living Room / Re: Visual history of Apple, 1976-2007
« Last post by zridling on June 28, 2007, 06:50 AM »
Ah, that NeXt computer was very cool looking.
2227
Living Room / Re: Visual history of Apple, 1976-2007
« Last post by zridling on June 27, 2007, 03:38 AM »
I tend to laugh at them. I remember that Mac Plus of '86 cost well over $5000. I bought a fully loaded PC with a big HD and lots of memory, a monitor and printer for less than $3500 that same year and haven't looked back. Reminds me of the guy who brags about his $7500 Rolex, and when I tell him my Casio cost $15 and is seven years old, yet does the same thing, he smirks like a certain chimp we all know. Hey, I got $7485 left to spend on rent and food, baby!
2228
Living Room / Re: Game of the day: Missile game 3D
« Last post by zridling on June 27, 2007, 03:33 AM »
Ha!! shows me — I never do a forum search first. And Ken finds the best software of anyone.
2229
General Review Discussion / Re: Best Archive Manager Review: Suggestions
« Last post by zridling on June 27, 2007, 12:18 AM »
Wow, thanks alxwz! Yea, I have to get in a manic, altered state to work on those reviews. I have an IV drip of liquid chocolate going right now to bulk up for a 'Best Archive Tools revision later this year. Once I hit 300, I'll sleep for a week, and then get to work. Oh, and thanks for the link. The Techarp review went nuts on the charts and graphs. I'm glad he took the time to tell us that media files that are already compressed (e.g., MP3) are "difficult to compress." Okay.

Maybe I'll go for a whole rewrite and reduce the number of apps. I use 7-Zip a lot and see a LOT of folks using PeaZip as iphigenie noted. I'm serious: if a software app can't perform, then it's really a waste of time to review it, telling everyone that it's bad in every imaginable way: You could install Ultra Crap Factor Pro on your system, but you'd be better off going with a nice fat Sasser worm.

You get the drift.
2230
Mini-Reviews by Members / Re: Evrsoft First Page 2006 Reviewed
« Last post by zridling on June 26, 2007, 11:58 PM »
Thanks dhuser, but it seems odd for a free program to have a nag screen. On top of Nvu, another neat, free, multiplatform editor is KompoZer.

kompozer1001.jpg
2231
Hirudin, I see your point. Photofiltre Studio and its free version, Photofiltre, have always been a basic image editing app, i.e., good for guys with simple needs like myself, but not recommended for big or professional jobs.
2232
Living Room / Game of the day: Missile game 3D
« Last post by zridling on June 26, 2007, 11:44 PM »
Missile game 3D is a nice time waster. Reduce mouse speed to get through the qualifier!

missile3d1001.png
2233
Lashiec, perhaps the reason why there's no DOpus/ XYplorer/ xplorer² on GNU/Linux is that the layout of the Linux filesystem is a different model than we know in Windows. Mayank Sarup does the best job of outlining it. This may be one of the hardest things to wrap my mind around. In Windows we have a "file manager" that manages files on different media — HDs, floppies, CD/DVD, old ZIP drives, network drives, FTP, and so on — CLICK-n-DRAG. And while you can manage your files on GNU/Linux this way, it's not efficient for that platform, since it follows Unix hierarchy. Instead, files in Linux, even executables, are fluid and mobile.

The day someone builds one, they'll be a hero. However, I think it would take a vast amount of money to support the programmer/s to do so. Even on the Windows side, it takes a special breed of brain to build a good file manager. The best file managers we have on the Windows side have all evolved toward their excellence.

As for your last question, I don't see why not. SourceForge hosts most of the apps, not the individual distros themselves. Oddly, not all software in the Ubuntu repository is compatible with Debian. But you don't know until it won't install.
2234
Best Text Editor / Re: Boxer Text Editor
« Last post by zridling on June 26, 2007, 11:10 PM »
David is one of the great guys in tech. He had a better idea and committed to executing it. I respect him a lot.
2235
Living Room / Re: Humorous, perhaps informative, article on forum trolls
« Last post by zridling on June 26, 2007, 11:08 PM »
Lashiec, I'm building a new page just for you, buddy! Ken, you're so funny! X's and O's to you, too. I love criticism, but hate the harrassment part. It's like someone standing too close to you in a queue: makes you want to ask what they want.
2236
Living Room / Visual history of Apple, 1976-2007
« Last post by zridling on June 26, 2007, 11:00 PM »
Edwin Tofslie recently put together a wallpaper-sized image of the Apple Form Factor Evolution that is cool. It’s a nice visual history of Apple products. By today's standards, they suck (okay everything sucked back then compared today). But back in '84, we thought that Mac was a lot better than that steaming pile of Radio Shack with the green plastic screen.

applehistory1002s.jpg
2237
General Review Discussion / Re: Best Archive Manager Review: Suggestions
« Last post by zridling on June 25, 2007, 09:02 AM »
Alex, you're right on, and it's a fundamental weakness of the review. I hope by the end of the year to revisit and update the review. I've been waiting for another big round of upgrades, but this software category upgrades very slowly. So I might need an incremental approach. Again, thanks for your input, along with many others.
2238
Living Room / Britain's Got Talent — Paul Potts, we speak your name!
« Last post by zridling on June 25, 2007, 08:40 AM »
It was the hottest show on the planet and we Americans missed it. So check out the South Wales opera singer Paul Potts' debut on the show which demonstrates the power of opera:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=exyJ2CSfrHo

paulpotts.jpg

During an interview on the show the former phone salesman, who has now been dubbed 'Pava-potty' by the British press, told the audience of how opera singing has helped him overcome difficulties throughout his life. "My voice has been my best friend. When other things got me down, my voice has always been there," he said. The singer spoke about how he had been bullied in his youth and hoped that his story would serve as a "source of inspiration" to victims of bullying. He revealed that he still could not believe that he had won the contest saying: "I'm waiting for someone to pinch me and say: 'Get out of bed. You've got to work. You're late again.'" Asked about his first performance in public, Potts revealed that he had dressed up as Luciano Pavarotti while performing at a karaoke bar in 1998. The video is from UK TV Show: Britain’s Got Talent and the performers are judged by Simon Cowell, Amanda Holden, and Piers Morgan.
2239
Living Room / Re: Humorous, perhaps informative, article on forum trolls
« Last post by zridling on June 25, 2007, 08:09 AM »
I have trolls follow me around on and off for years at a time, just posting insults right after I post something. I work hard to ignore them, but sometimes you have to engage. I've found that more often than not, retaliating got ME banned. So for one particular jerk, I created my own page for him and whenever he posts another slam, I just follow it up with this link: Ouch, the stupid, it burns!  (R-rated for rantly cursing)

ralphwiggum02.jpg
Ouch, the stupid, it hurts!
2240
Living Room / Re: Thank you for this site and the people here.
« Last post by zridling on June 25, 2007, 08:02 AM »
Jeff, my wife has been going through a series of surgeries this past year (4 and counting) and I understand how medical priorities and life gets in the way of tuning into the net. I appreciate your broad contributions to this site and to its personality. As others have said in various ways, we're grateful to know you and cherish your friendship here.
2241
General Software Discussion / Re: Ultra Explorer; I am impressed!
« Last post by zridling on June 25, 2007, 07:57 AM »
Couldn't get this to download. Any mirrors?
2242
Hirudin, I forgot to mention that Photofiltre Studio 9 does support layers, but costs you €25. It's transformation features have greatly improved, too. If you get a chance, check out the cool copyright feature.
2243
General Software Discussion / Re: My favorite software! What's yours?
« Last post by zridling on June 25, 2007, 07:09 AM »
bugis, you have some good tastes, my man. I've been enjoying GIMP lately, to my surprise. I've rejected it a dozen times in the past, but now I can finally get past the fact that it has no background workspace. That crap always drove me crazy, but suddenly it doesn't. Go figure.
2244
General Software Discussion / Re: The Great Software List
« Last post by zridling on June 25, 2007, 07:07 AM »
IE7? Because it was so much better than IE6, that's the biggest reason. Still pretty much bites with some CSS though. Thanks for the mention, mouser!

I go through waves of changes to the list. I try to use an app for no less than an entire month (often exclusively) before adding it to the list, so adding them takes time. I really should "date" the list, by listing how long each app has been on it — 1, 2, 3,... years. As more Web 2.0 apps become established (not just "fantastic" startups), I'll be adding those over time, and the list will naturally change as more apps are written to take advantage of 64-bits. I've been asked a 100 times to create a GNU/Linux list, but I know so little about them that I'm not qualified to do so. Although, that might be a short list, ha!
2245
urlwolf, not that I can tell. GNU/Linux will greatly benefit from the many Web 2.0 apps out there like MindMeister (online version of Mind Manager). And note, these are great "ideas" not great apps. In my mind there's no question that Windows wins that battle over any platform, but not in every area (web admin, for example). But until someone builds an AutoHotkey for GNU/Linux, then I'm not going to even try. There's an alternative to everything, but to me, that's not the question. The goal is for the operating system to be transparent; i.e., just ran the apps without adding problems or slowing them down. Perhaps the best reason to choose a particular OS is the apps themselves, since 90% of my entire day is spent among a half dozen apps:

  • Opera (has a Linux version, and I don't mind using Firefox at all)
  • NewsLeecher (does not, though there are decent alternatives)
  • XYplorer (no real alternative to this or Directory Opus, period)
  • EmEditor (Emacs and vi are high-end, but their usability suffers by comparison. gEdit for Linux is like a light TextPad)
  • XnView (has a Linux version)
  • PhotoFiltre Studio (although I'm really liking GIMP now, a lot, and may switch to it on the Windows side, too)

On the other hand, almost all GNU/Linux distros come with tons of games, can run most multimedia "out of the box" (or one download away for a driver or codec), they build in little things like a screen capture app, CD/DVD/ISO burning tools, keyboard shortcut (for the system, like a lot of WIN key apps) office suite (okay, OpenOffice), and image editing. Another app I'm really liking is Quanta Plus, an HTML/CSS/PHP editor.
2246
The [unspecified] ones I've come across so far were not insurmountable. There's either an alternative, or I was not doing something right. After only two weeks, I'm comfortable spending most of my day in GNU/Linux, which has surprised me. It also means that by year's end (the next round of distro updates), I will likely make Windows my background machine and work primarily in GNU/Linux. If/when I do that, I will also put XP on my old machine (removing Vista), and use it to download usenet porn nonstop. Then I can run a 64-bit version of GNU/Linux on the newer machine.
2247
That's coming, and will likely be the last or close to last post, as I continue to immerse myself in this! Most of my own gripes are directly counter to my Windows experience, and they are very specific. Parts 3 & 4 just list a couple.
2248
Every OS comes with some great ideas, and just like software, I've always wondered: why not combine the best of each to make a super OS? Ah well, I'm sure there's a simple answer, like "because." But here are some good ideas I've seen so far in GNU/Linux.

(01) Live CDs/DVDs.
Just boot straight from the CD to test GNU/Linux in any given distribution. If you don't like it, exit, and remove the disc. You're back to Windows, no harm, no foul.

(02) Automatic partitioning.
If you do decide to install the distribution, it will automatically partition your drive to cooperate with Windows. While this is not unique to GNU/Linux, the way it's done is pretty stupid-proof, and guys like me; that is, guys who are scared to wreck their existing systems, need this kind of help since it's one less thing I have to learn from the start. I haven't tested every distribution, but most all of them provide this option in a clear manner during setup.

(03) "Package Managers" or software installation managers.
There are several different ones depending on your taste, but these will list all the applications known to work with your chosen distribution. Every time you boot, it updates every piece of software on your system from the package manager. No worry, no conflicts, no fuss. You don't have to mess with .exe or .msi files, and the manager even cleans up installation debris after it's done. Each Linux distribution comes with hundreds and possibly thousands of application programs included. This alone can save you thousands of dollars for each desktop system you configure. For the more technically inclined, development tools, such as compilers for the C, C++, Ada, Fortran, Pascal and other languages, are included as well as Perl, PHP, and Python interpreters. Editors and versioning tools also are included in this category. Whether you are looking for Instant Messaging clients, backup tools or Web site development packages, they likely are all included within your base Linux distribution.

(04) No rebooting upon updates.
One of the most frustrating things about installing or upgrading programs on certain operating systems is the constant need to have to reboot. This is especially true with drivers or system files. The only thing that requires a reboot is if you upgrade the kernel itself, which incidently, is named "Linux." How is this possible? When you open a file, the kernel follows the link, and assigns the inode a file descriptor (a number that it keeps track of internally). When you delete the file, you are "unlinking" the inode; the file descriptor still points to it. You can create a new file with the exact same name as the old file after deleting it, effectively "replacing" it, but it will point to a different inode. Any programs that still have the old file open can still access the old file via the file descriptor, but you have effectively upgraded the program in place. As soon as the program terminates (or closes the file), and starts up (or tries to access it again), it accesses the new file, and there you have it, a completely in-place replacement of a file!

(05) GNU/Linux runs well on old hardware.
This extends the life of your computer, and saves money. I can get behind that idea. Because of a combination of the internal design of Linux and development contributions from a diverse community, Linux tends to be more frugal in the use of computer resources. This may manifest itself in a single desktop system running faster with Linux than with another operating system, but the advantages go far beyond that. It is possible, for example, to configure a single Linux system to act as a terminal server and then use outdated hardware as what are called thin clients. This server/thin client configuration makes it possible for older, less powerful hardware to share the resources of a single powerful system thus extending the life of older machines.

(06) Way too many distros! But wait, this is good.
You have a choice — to choose a distro based on your goals and your system. For example, there's a gamer distro; server distros; graphics/video editing distros; "small" distros that install only the basics and then let you install whatever else you want to customize your system; enterprise distros; distros for education; distros for kids; 32 & 64-bit distros, and so on. Your choice. Vista sorta has this idea, but everything under Vista Ultimate merely disables features, and the Mac OS comes in one flavor: vanilla.

[attach parsix-0.90-small.png][/attach]

(07) The command line. Not as bad as it sounds for us Windows users
because of all things, I left the command line behind when I left DOS. Every time you here command line, instead think "shortcut." Every distro I've worked with so far didn't require me to even go near a command line if I didn't want to. But running a few commands allowed me to solve the mystery of where my second drive is (within the larger "filesystem"). Much like DOS, most everything you do at the command line is no more than 12-20 commands, and that's if you're the power geek. Learning the Shell will make you a command-line master in a very, very short time.

(08) It's a Community Relationship, not a Customer Relationship.
Like, oh... DonationCoder.com! Other operating systems are the products of single vendors. Linux, on the other hand, is openly developed, and this technology is shared among vendors. This means you become part of a community rather than a customer of a single manufacturer. Also, the supplier community easily can adjust to the needs of various user communities rather than spouting a "one size fits all" philosophy. This means you can select a Linux distro (or vendor) that best addresses your needs and feel confident that you could switch vendors at a later time without losing your investment — both in terms of costs and learning.

(09) It's free.
If you download a user-friendly distro like PCLinuxOS or Kubuntu it will fit on a single CD, so a single CD-R disc is all it will cost you. Heck, Ubuntu will even send you a CD for free. It's free in a more important sense, too: no one stops you from copying Linux: the trademark is owned by its creator Linus Torvalds, and the code is owned by many programmers worldwide, but the actual code is released under the GNU Public Licence (GPL) so anyone can do what they want with it. You can install it wherever you like on as many PCs as you want, copy it, sell it, give it away, create your very own distro and distribute it, even hack into the code and change it if you know how. You never need to activate, validate, authenticate, or register it.

(10) Interoperability.
GNU/Linux is built for networking, even beginners can connect to the internet, create a SoHo network, even communicate with Windows PCs thanks to Samba, which is software that allows Linux to act as a client on a Microsoft Windows-based network. In fact, Samba includes server facilities such that you could run a Linux system as the server for a group of Linux and Windows-based client systems. Shared printers on a Windows PC are accessible from a GNU/Linux PC and vice versa. Once again, Linux is very strong in this area. In addition, Linux includes software to network with Apple networks.

________________________________________________
Part-01: My journey from Windows to Linux
Part-02: Which Linux distro to choose?
Part-03: First impressions and first problems after installation
Part-04: The "User Guide" as life raft, more n00b problems
Part-05: Ten Great Ideas of GNU/Linux
Part-06: Software Management is not that different
2249
Living Room / The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs [humor]
« Last post by zridling on June 20, 2007, 11:25 AM »
Oh daff, have some fun and check out The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs.

[attach stevejobsdiary.png][/attach]
2250
General Software Discussion / Re: I will kill thee a 150 ways...freely
« Last post by zridling on June 19, 2007, 03:06 AM »
Claus's list illustrates how many software titles there are even in obscure categories. Once you start digging, you're often amazed at how much is out there.
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