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Recent Posts

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2276
I thought the fact that AVG was in his top 3 to be very interesting. It's particularly nice that there's a free version. :D His comments about AVG's questionable detection rate vs. other competitors were interesting too in that they called the standard antivirus tests themselves into question a bit. I've always wondered about the accuracy and reliability of those tests too and wished there were better, broader tests out there, with the results available free. Why there is no such resource yet I don't know!

- Oshyan
2277
Yes, it's similar to virtual desktops, although as I said I don't like those (at least not from my experiences so far). Here are the links for Groupbar if anyone else wants to try it: http://research.micr...m/vibe/groupbar.aspx http://www.patrickba.../groupbar/index.html I'll check it out ASAP as it does sound very interesting.

- Oshyan
2278
The "Setting up a secondary server for hosting member accounts" link doesn't seem to work. Otherwise looks great! Some awesome prizes this month. Not as many as some other months, sure, but it's all really high quality stuff, and some of it rather pricey too!

- Oshyan
2279
I could have sworn Scot Finnie's lengthy search for his ideal antivirus app had been discussed here before - in fact I remember commenting on his odd pickiness on certain criteria - but I can't seem to find the previous thread with a search. Must be SMF's broken search function. :P

Anyway, here's a snippet from his latest newsletter where he announces his "best antivirus app of 2006":

For those of you coming late to this party, over the last six months or so the newsletter has pursued an ongoing series on alternative antivirus packages. Back in December 2005 I wrote that I'd given up on Norton Antivirus and had been testing alternative antivirus utilities since the summer of 2005.

During the last year of testing, I've examined a wide range of antivirus product, and I've explored the features and options of many others. Products tested during this period include Avast 4.6 free and 4.7 Pro, AVG 7.1 Pro and Network Editions, BitDefender 9 Standard and 10 RC1, CA EZ Antivirus and eTrust Antivirus r8, F-Secure Anti-Virus 2006 and Internet Security 2006, Kaspersky 5 and 6, Nod32 2.5, Panda Titanium 2006 and Platinum 2006, and ZoneAlarm Antivirus. I've considered the features and specs of at least a dozen other products and rejected them because something didn't meet my ideal antivirus criteria.

Interestingly in the end it came down to AVG, F-Secure, and Nod32. Read his August Newsletter for his conclusions. Lots of other good info in this and his other newsletters too.

- Oshyan
2280
Sounds cool with support of SQL, PHP, etc. If you need something lighter there's also HFS, which I *love*.

- Oshyan
2281
General Review Discussion / Re: Daemon Tools
« Last post by JavaJones on August 04, 2006, 04:20 AM »
Daemon Tools is definitely a great app. Good review too! :)

- Oshyan
2282
General Software Discussion / Re: IDEA: Visual FileSystem
« Last post by JavaJones on August 04, 2006, 04:18 AM »
A few thoughts occur.

First, what is the expected value from this? I think the biggest thing noted so far is improved context for navigation and searches. That seems fairly worthwhile to me so it would be useful to look at practical existing examples of this to see how useful it is in practice. Some of that has been discussed above but more deliberate practical experimentation is in order.

Second, this sort of thing is precisely why I want a database-driven file system so badly. Such a thing would make this fairly trivial - merely a visualization of database info, like outputting a bar graph or pie chart, just a different visualization.

Third, along those lines it seems what we need is a hard drive cataloging application like Locate, Google Desktop, X1, etc. but open source and consisting mostly of the underlying searching, cataloging and database storage functions, upon which other developers can then build plugins for data interpretation and searching. With this sort of underlying system you could rapidly prototype these kinds of advanced file navigation schemes without reinventing the wheel. All of the search and visualization methods could use the same underlying database and info. Search by keyword, browse with a ring visual metaphor or a tree, group by file type or size or creation date, sort by whether it has a thumbnail or not, or whether there is an associated application, etc, etc. It could all be built easily and quickly with a robust data cataloging system. So where's the open source HD search tool?

Oh yes, and 3D navigation systems: the missing question seems to be *why*. :D People are working on this stuff but I really have seen *no* compelling examples of it being *more* functional than the current systems. Simply going 3D "because you have a whole new dimension to work with" is not reason enough.

- Oshyan
2283
You know, an interesting - albeit obvious - thought occurs to me: Remember all the discussion about sliding scale pricing and general price reduction on the "Why is so much software cracked" thread? In a sense donationware is the realization of that. If you find a good donationware or open source project that takes donations, and it is clear it's well-maintained and that the developer reinvests support in the app, then donating to that app could essentially be like buying its future. You contribute to The GIMP and it gets a bit closer to Photoshop perhaps? This would only work for well-maintained, long-term (stable) projects, and would work best in conjunction with feedback to the developer on features you want, but it makes some sense. There's more to it that's percolating in my brain but it's not quite digested yet. ;)

- Oshyan
2284
Living Room / Re: Metaphysik II - another cool game web game
« Last post by JavaJones on August 04, 2006, 03:45 AM »
Damn, addictive is right! Once you start you just have to finish, especially after the first 20 levels or so. Played it through in one setting, not the greatest score (kept dying repeatedly, especially in the last few levels), but here it is:

1378 seconds
622 deaths
grade 0% (compared to creator's score of 581 seconds)

The trickiest thing is recovering your proper direction right after dying!

- Oshyan
2285
I mean seriously, haha! http://xkcd.com/c136.html (warning: sexual content :D)

- Oshyan
2286
lol! You know, I've checked out a fair amount of web comes lately, and really liked a few of them too. Some are pretty funny, some have *amazing* art, and some are just fascinating and beautifully written. This is one of the few that actually made me chuckle and laugh out loud. So far the math hasn't lost me, either. Good stuff!

- Oshyan
2287
Awesome offer! But I agree, donate to the authors, and the site as well if you have spare. I'll do both myself. :)

And I'll try to get in some mini-reviews too!

- Oshyan
2288
Now we need article versioning. :D That's one of the (few) things I really love about the actual *implementation* (not the idea) of Wiki's - built-in, always-on versioning.

- Oshyan
2289
Living Room / Re: Interesting Links
« Last post by JavaJones on August 04, 2006, 01:50 AM »
yes.com is pretty cool too. I actually went there earlier today from a link on a local radio station's page, but it just went straight to their specific section, not the overall map, so I didn't see how cool the site is really. I mean the cool thing I guess is the random song flashing map. Pity you can't seem to click on the stations as they flash up and listen. But cool nonetheless.

- Oshyan
2290
Living Room / Re: awesome animated long exposure pictures
« Last post by JavaJones on August 04, 2006, 01:41 AM »
Oh wow, that is just super cool!

- Oshyan
2291
I don't think this is something you'd want to use for every app - after all that's what a task bar is far - but it *could* be handy for creating custom "groups" of apps, if you want, sort of like custom desktops (except I find those more cumbersome than I'm imagining this to be). This would be similar to XP's default "group similar taskbar items" I suppose, except I hate that. This would at least be customizable - only the apps you chose would end up in a given container. So for example let's say I'm working on coding a web page. I have my design app open (Nvu), 3 or more browsers for testing (Firefox, Opera, IE), a graphics app for doing my web images (ImageReady perhaps), and at least one and probably several folders open for quick file access. Now I also have my email app, Winamp, IM client (with multiple chat windows - could be tabbed, but I prefer not), 2 VNC windows, and a Word file open. A good half of the icons on my taskbar could be "collapsed" into one with a system like that suggested. It would be my "web design workspace" so to speak.

Now in itself that doesn't sound all *that* cool. Here's where it gets more interesting though. What if you could save the "sessions", just like Opera (or any other competent tabbed browser)? So let's say I have the previously mentioned "Working on a web page" workspace. I save it, and then I can just re-open it at any time and it brings up all the same apps, so I'm immediately ready to work on a web page again. Super cool! It would be very useful just to launch the apps all together in a neutral state, but even better if it could actually re-load previously loaded data. And along those lines let's see if we can go a step further - could such an app literally "save state", sort of like a workspace-specific "Hibernate" mode (Windows 2000/XP)? That would truly be awesome! With lots of HD space you could temporarily shut down memory-intensive apps to do something else, like play a game for example when you had just been working in Photoshop, and then just jump right back to where you were after you're done by loading the session. Obviously loading the session would take a little while, but not *that* long - coming back from hibernation doesn't even take that long on a 3GB machine (my main system here).

So, now does this sound more promising? :D Ok yes it's probably well beyond the scope of a coding snack now, but even the first idea, if possible, could be useful for some, especially those who don't like working with multi-desktop systems.

- Oshyan
2292
General Software Discussion / Re: Situation re: unsupported software
« Last post by JavaJones on August 04, 2006, 01:16 AM »
I'm sure there are projects out there that focus on reviving/recoding abandonware, but I don't have any links to such sites (I don't recall having come across any). Does anyone know of any such projects or communities? AbandonWareCoder.com? ;)

- Oshyan
2293
Podcast Radio Show / Re: Podcast #4 Submission Time!
« Last post by JavaJones on August 04, 2006, 01:14 AM »
I can put up an FTP area and/or some other web-based file upload form if desired. I'm also on all major IM clients so I can take file transfers that way. I can easily get them to Mukestar (he's producing so he'll need them in the end). There's also HFS, which I want to do a mini-review of one of these days.

Looking forward to hearing all your contributions guys!

- Oshyan
2294
Living Room / Re: Storm the House
« Last post by JavaJones on August 04, 2006, 01:03 AM »
Hehe, very cool actually. The strategy element adds a lot! I got to day 12 and then somehow missed that the enemy now had a rocket dude that my missible battery wasn't hitting and it took down my fortifications pretty quick. :( I was looking forward to seeing what the sniper rifle did too. :D

- Oshyan
2295
General Software Discussion / Re: SQL-based replacement for Filemaker Pro?
« Last post by JavaJones on August 02, 2006, 04:01 AM »
Ruby is great, but it's really totally wide open. It's a reasonably generalized coding environment, not a specific tool for creating Filemaker-like visual databases. If we just wanted a raw database I could probably manage that with simple direct SQL access and maybe output to one big form with all fields accessible or something (this basically becomes like a simplified version of PHPMyAdmin perhaps). What we need though is a way to organize, customize and visually style the database interaction, entry and display fields, buttons, etc. as well as created limited functionality like buttons that move from one "layout" (or "form") to the next or fields that calculate based on the values of other fields.

Filemaker Pro really is pretty much the ideal product for us so it makes a very good model for the kind of product features we need in a replacement. Filemaker really does almost everything we need from a database management perspective. It's just that we are coming to the point where lots of systems need access to the data to automate or expand services and functionality and Filemaker is not great at doing this, especially with web-based applications like forums, etc.

Anyway the suggestion is appreciated but I think using something as low-level as Ruby is really more than we need, and would entail more work than we have time to invest.

- Oshyan
2296
Yes, it's good to allow for people to do as little or as much as they want. But personally I find the template to actually *reduce* work. I'm more likely to create a mini-review now since I'm inclined to usually write *too much*. This will keep me in line. Different problems for different personalities. ;)

- Oshyan
2297
General Software Discussion / Re: SQL-based replacement for Filemaker Pro?
« Last post by JavaJones on August 01, 2006, 11:00 PM »
Hmm! I shall definitely check that out, thanks!

While I'm looking into Oracle, here are some other things I'm contemplating.

First, it seems like it might be fairly easy to integrate/link our existing FMP system with an SQL DB. This would allow us to interface some PHP-based web tools and systems that could operate on the data, while still using our existing FMP licenses, database, layouts, etc. So this isn't a full solution but might ultimately be the best as it means much less retraining. Really the best of both worlds. The only drawbacks are dual database formats, translation speed issues, and license costs of Filemaker.

Second, there is this interesting product I'm looking at: http://www.servoy.com/
Sounds like it might be a bit more complex/difficult than I'm hoping for, but if I learn the system it might be just right. It claims to have "WYSIWYG" form design, for example. And there's some kind of free trial available, so I'll definitely check that out.

Whatever we choose I'll report back here about it for those who are interested.

- Oshyan
2298
General Software Discussion / Re: Situation re: unsupported software
« Last post by JavaJones on August 01, 2006, 09:15 PM »
My understanding is that, unless the copyright is expired (which is unlikely with software - I think copyright terms are long enough to be outside the timeframe of mainstream software development thus far), then it would still be illegal to copy, distribute, or otherwise acquire a version not officially licensed by the publisher. This is true even if said publisher goes out of business or is bought out. This is pretty unfortunate, I agree, but companies do have a right to control their products, even if that company is now owned by another (the parent company then has that right). So it sucks, but it makes a bit of sense. I just wish if companies weren't planning to actually replace the app in question they'd sell it or open source it.

- Oshyan
2299
Woah, lemme say that new review template looks sweet in action! Good review, and great little program too. :)

- Oshyan
2300
Living Room / Re: National Novel Writing Month (nanowrimo)
« Last post by JavaJones on August 01, 2006, 09:06 PM »
Wow, 42,000 participants with 6000 actually completing? That's way more than I would have thought! Too many aspiring novel writers. ;)

- Oshyan
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