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Recent Posts

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2451
Image Manager Shootout / Re: ACDSee - the best image viewer for large files
« Last post by JavaJones on July 02, 2006, 01:45 AM »
"Internal error, please try again later" on the download link. I've found that XnView opens up lots of images that are larger than a lot of other apps will do, actually. I wouldn't be surprised if ACDSee is a bit better still, but XnView isn't too shabby. :D I've opened up 300MB+ image files with it.

- Oshyan
2452
 :o According to the in-game timer in the vid it's not sped up but... good lord. I have to assume the video being recorded at only 30fps means we don't see everything he sees - in other words the pieces falling from the top. In the vid they just sort of appear at the bottom, lol. I'm guessing he might just be keeping an eye on the next pieces coming and have a mental picture of where the pieces are going, aided by peripheral, so he doesn't have to keep looking back and forth. But yeah, wow.

- Oshyan
2453
Good points on what Paypal does that Google doesn't. I have no idea whether Google is doing shipment tracking, but again I think they should, at least for those merchants that provide such info. Even for those that don't they could make it easy for businesses to setup such systems by providing a simple API and a central info tracking system that would link to the various shipping providers. That would be a big deal for me, at least.

Having dealt with a "possible account issue" with Paypal I suppose I speak from more experience than many about how Paypal may be to deal with on those sorts of things. I had done absolutely nothing wrong and Paypal never told me exactly why they flagged the account. They had full communication from me, the buyer, as well as the seller, throughout the "investigation". Eventually I was able to get my money through but it was a frustrating and longer-than-it-should-be process. That being said it was also frustrating dealing with my bank when they suspected that my debit card had been stolen, lol. So it's probably just the nature of these things. My biggest annoyance with Paypal and my bank alike is they never told me why they flagged the account so I could potentially explain it or avoid the problem in the future. I suppose there is some rationale behind that, something to do with security and fraud prevention no doubt, but from the customer end of things it's pretty frustrating.

Anyway, I don't plan to be using Google's system any time soon. I'm already registered with Paypal and it works acceptably. Personally I just wish banks would cooperate more directly and bank-to-bank transfers could be quicker and easier in general. I'm still amazed that I have to go get a cashier's check and take it to the bank with which the account I wish to deposit in is registered. Shouldn't the banks just be able to talk directly to each other? :P

- Oshyan
2454
I've used Paypal's services and it doesn't do everything I want, and not in the way I want. It does provide the "one user/pass" feature, which is nice, but as far as I have seen it doesn't allow a centralized place to track purchases. I mean yes the financial end of it is done that way, but it doesn't include shipping stuff (I have no idea if Google's does either, but that's definitely something that would get me interested). I also really, really, really don't like PP's business practices. It's more than possible Google will become just as "evil" now that they're dealing directly with people's money, but the inability to actually "store" money in a Google account seems to lessen that worry for me, and although many are complaining about it not being a "real payment service" because you can't put money in an account, I for one am very, very glad it doesn't work that way. Anyway I'd much sooner trust Google with just my credit card info than I would Paypal. Haven't tried the Yahoo, etc. services but IMO that's even more reason to be annoyed at everyone crying foul now that Google is trying this. If Yahoo and MS have already done it why is it a problem if Google does?!

- Oshyan
2455
Post New Requests Here / Re: IDEA: Email Attachments Browser
« Last post by JavaJones on July 01, 2006, 02:59 PM »
Yeah, sounds like that's a needed feature for X1. I've got 2+GB of mail myself. Whee!

- Oshyan
2456
There's lots of higher level discussion about the greater repurcussions of this move and the philosophical, economic, etc. impact. I'm curious why no one seems to be evaulating this approach from the consumer perspective though. I haven't used the service yet but from what I understand there are two major things it offers, both of which are *extremely* attractive to me. 1: A singler user name and password combo to handle payment on many different payment sites. Assuming this service gets adopted quickly, and being Google it should (especially given that they're undercutting other similar providers), that means I should have a much easier buying experience on lots of shopping sites soon. 2: Unless I'm reading these articles wrong it says I can "track the status of my orders" from Google's payment management console. If that's true, and if it extends to even tracking shipping details, that's huge to me. I hate having to go to each merchant's site to track each individual purchase! Especially when they are smaller merchants, they don't all offer the same services, or level of service, or do things the same way. If Google has figured out a way to provide a uniform level of service for partner merchant transactions that is of great interest to me as a consumer.

What's the trade-off? Google gets my purchase data. Whoopdee-doo. I don't trust Google any less than I trust Joe-random merchant, and probably a bit more at least. And they also increase costs to advertisers, but those costs seem justified because the ads are a lot more targetted. Meanwhile my own ad-based search results, which have always been present, may potentially be more "relevant" *if I am logged in to Google when searching*. Say I want to not have those "relevant ads" - just log out and clear cookies. No problem.

So from an immediate perspective this definitely doesn't seem bad for the consumer. I think the only reasonable argument that it may be hinges on the assumption that product costs will go up due to increased ad cost. But, at least in theory, the ads are now more targeted and so advertisers get more value out of them in terms of purchases, and thus should have no reason to increase product price. In fact you could argue the opposite, that in theory since advertisers can basically now only pay for successful transactions, they can much more precisely determine their marketing overhead for each transaction and budget accordingly, thus potentially allowing them to reduce cost to be more competitive.

Ultimately I do see there are concerns with this. But just as I have always tried to be fair with Microsoft and each move they make, despite their "evil" reputation, I like to do the same with Google. It is good to be critical and cautious up-front with any major feature launch from a company like this, especially one that deals with money and your financial details in general. It just feels like most people are being knee-jerk reactionaries and calling foul based on a lot of assumption and an incomplete assessment of not only the facts but the possible outcomes.

Am I a Google fanboy? I don't think so, but maybe. I haven't used 75% of the new services they've debuted in the past 2 years. I don't use GMail (not because I don't like how it works, I just don't need/want it), I'm not interested in Google Desktop, I don't use the Google Toolbar, I rarely visit Google News. In fact my Google use has stayed pretty consistently focused on main search and image search for years now, with Google Maps on the rise in my use of late simply because I like the interface. I use a smaller percentage of Microsoft products, but they also have a much wider range of products. With both companies I am simply focused on trying to realistically evaluate their services, both from a personal (do I want to use this?) as well as broader (how will this effect things?) perspective. I guess maybe I'm just an optimist?

- Oshyan
2457
Living Room / Re: video on sushi etiquete
« Last post by JavaJones on July 01, 2006, 02:14 PM »
Hehe, very nice. I love subtle satire.

- Oshyan
2458
Just read the "Digg isn't de.licio.us" blog post. Am I missing something? I didn't find it particularly insightful at all. His examples and conclusions don't really jive all that well for me. Particularly the examples of "crowd thinking" from James Surowiecki. His examples seem to be much more representative of when artificial external forces try to control the crowd wisdom. They are mostly heirarchical systems that are only a "crowd" in the sense that a lot of people are involved. The intelligence failures on 9/11 for example were largely the result of beaurocracy, not crowd thinking. He then points out the failures of Digg-like sites vs. more individualized approaches like De.licio.us, which I do think is an interesting comparison, but he fails to show what may have been advantageous about any pre-Digg system, or the simple lack of Digg. Would the world be better without Digg? That seems to be one of his arguments, at least indirectly, but he never supports it with the counter-examples. This guy's conclusions may have merit, but not based on the train of evidence and ideas he presents IMO.

- Oshyan
2459
Very interesting experiment.

- Oshyan
2460
General Software Discussion / Re: GoogleX
« Last post by JavaJones on July 01, 2006, 01:04 PM »
They probably got rid of it because, while it kind of looks nice, it's a lot slower for the average user (who doesn't use search 100 times a day, thereby getting familiar with the icons). It actually takes a fair amount of time for people to memorize icons. Reading text is extremely quick for most people so text links are a natural. Plus they're lower on bandwidth which for Google, getting millions and millions of daily page views, could be a huge deal.

- Oshyan
2461
General Software Discussion / Re: desktop search guide page
« Last post by JavaJones on July 01, 2006, 01:02 PM »
Ugh, unwanted bundled software is definitely a huge annoyance. This sounds like a Podcast rant in the making. :D Adobe and Apple were the biggest offenders I knew of until recently. Now X1 and there are others I'm sure. I have done custom install as a general rule for years now, partly because of this and partly just because I want to make sure the app isn't doing anything else I don't want (like adding a quicklaunch shortcut).

- Oshyan
2462
Living Room / Re: Cody Figurines
« Last post by JavaJones on July 01, 2006, 12:57 PM »
Dalmation snake? lol, this is priceless!

- Oshyan
2463
Post New Requests Here / Re: IDEA: Email Attachments Browser
« Last post by JavaJones on July 01, 2006, 12:54 PM »
Wow, being able to load additional .pst's is really nice. This may finally give me a reason to archive off some of my 50,000 e-mails!

- Oshyan
2464
Living Room / Re: Today's Newspaper's Front Pages online
« Last post by JavaJones on July 01, 2006, 12:38 PM »
Hey, that's pretty cool. Not really something useful for me, but it's novel. :D

- Oshyan
2465
Living Room / Re: Satire on the web
« Last post by JavaJones on June 29, 2006, 01:44 AM »
Mouser, it is my belief that you are 100% right. :D

- Oshyan
2466
Developer's Corner / Re: blog: 40 ways to be a better (game) designer
« Last post by JavaJones on June 27, 2006, 02:37 AM »
Some very good stuff in there. I liked the distinction between compromising and settling in particular. That applies to much more than just game design. :D

- Oshyan
2467
so a natural question might be: how could you improve the cost function to better reflect the aims of the site

Yes, yes! This is why reward for input interests me so much.

Great discussion guys. A lot of new insight here I think.

- Oshyan
2468
Living Room / Re: Coolest superhero... ever!
« Last post by JavaJones on June 26, 2006, 09:48 PM »
Yes, my feelings exactly. Properly educating people about copyright is fine but I don't think wrapping it up in a "cool" superhero package does anything for the author's credibility. :P

- Oshyan
2469
Living Room / Re: Treasure Box Cool Artistic Explore Toy/Game
« Last post by JavaJones on June 26, 2006, 09:10 PM »
Hmm, interesting and pretty but a bit frustrating. Like many such Flash excursions. :D

- Oshyan
2470
General Software Discussion / Re: desktop search guide page
« Last post by JavaJones on June 26, 2006, 08:24 PM »
Hmm, looks like a good start anyway. A feature matrix would not go amiss and I'd like to see if they had a personal favorite at least. Also no Locate, eh?

- Oshyan
2471
Living Room / Re: French rival to Google Earth announced
« Last post by JavaJones on June 26, 2006, 08:21 PM »
I've been trying to access the site since it launched last week. It's supposed to have photos of some areas down to 20cm! But I haven't been able to get in to see. :(

- Oshyan
2472
Living Room / Re: Coolest superhero... ever!
« Last post by JavaJones on June 26, 2006, 08:21 PM »
Um. Wow. I love propaganda. :D

- Oshyan
2473
Living Room / Re: I don't think I read this properly
« Last post by JavaJones on June 26, 2006, 08:18 PM »
Or act as a broker to the businesses. Resell their stuff on the sly with a tidy little markup. :D

- Oshyan
2474
Living Room / Re: Browser discussion
« Last post by JavaJones on June 26, 2006, 08:17 PM »
Ironically I agree with just about everything T-C-L said, in principle at the least. It's the things he doesn't mention, particularly the demonstrable fact that Opera has more trouble rendering a wide range of popular sites properly than FF and IE do, that really put me off. Along with the unwillingness to implement certain features that I consider basic and very important, like auto-complete as has been mentioned. Judging by the quality of some of their other features I think Opera's devs could do a knock-out Roboform-type implementation natively in Opera; if they added import for Roboform settings to it I think they'd have a lot of converts based on that alone. Who would bother with an addon/plugin when you could get it natively in an already highly capable browser?

The bottom line with Opera is I'm left to wonder just what their goals are, who their target market is. And here is where it might be better if I was more familiar with the Opera community and developer intentions. I honestly *don't* know what they're aiming for. For all I know they may prefer serving a niche, implementing cool new features that a certain target market is interested in. It seems clear *to me* that they are not *as* interested in courting the mass market as one might think; not as interested as say Mozilla is. If that's really the case perhaps Opera and I are doomed to a tragic romance, where I see so much potential and so many wonderful features, but simply can't deal with the few but key missing features and rendering issues. The sad thing is these are things the devs should be able to easily fix yet they focus on other things like the really IMO irrelevant Bittorrent support. You have to wonder why.

For now I continue to use Opera as my primary browser - it's still a better experience than FF for me - but I continue to be on the lookout for a replacement. Maybe Maxthon...

- Oshyan
2475
Post New Requests Here / Re: limiting audio to one source
« Last post by JavaJones on June 25, 2006, 11:58 PM »
I'm still getting to grips with IndieVolume and having a few problems, but the functionality is really good. It just doesn't always work. ;) I need to work on some other issues on my machine too and am wondering if it may also relate to soundcard drivers (not sure exactly how IndieVolume works), so I haven't posted a proper mini-review of it yet. Anyway long story short it's worth a shot at least.

- Oshyan
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