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2551
Living Room / Re: Limewire shutdown, permanently
« Last post by app103 on November 01, 2010, 12:41 PM »
I love how folks find the necessity to defend this crap.  Here is the truth:

It isn't the protocol or program, it is what is done with said protocol or program.

If I am using the protocol or program to share my family photos, content I own or created, no issues.  Using the program or protocol to share other people's copyrighted works:  issues.  There is no defense or excuse for sharing the property of others without permission, profit or no profit.  It lowers us to the level of the money-grubbing companies who screw us and that need to get with the times.  Personally, I have pride and PAY for everything I own or want. If I cannot afford it, then I don't need it.  Guess I had better get to work and save some money. I am not going to be a lemming and try to be cool, get free stuff, and defend something that is wrong even over being illegal.
I wholeheartedly agree y0himba. I love the argument that companies should "Go after the user not the software" when the software, like it or not, is primarily used for piracy. Bit Torrent has many legit uses and is used by corporations across the world to help ease their bandwidth usage. Blizzard uses it for patch and game distribution, Microsoft for product distribution, quite a few movie companies use it for digital distribution of their products to the movie theaters, etc. Limewire, over the entire history of which I have seen the product, has not had a single legit use. Every person I've ever heard mention the product has referenced it in terms of piracy.

As the old saying goes, "If it walks like a duck, quacks like a duck, and looks like a duck...it almost certainly is not a horse". The whole "Hey, there is a linux distribution being shared on there so this service is legit" argument is tired and old. If I place a Linux distribution on an ftp server along with every current Microsoft product (including keys), that does not make the ftp server legit even if I start the ftp server only hosting said Linux distribution. The primary purpose of said FTP server is for piracy of MS products, not linux distribution.
There are some genres of music which get little to no airplay on mainstream commercial radio. If you happen to come across a song or two somewhere and want a starting place as to what to investigate, you may have a difficult time coming up with a list of artist names, and an even harder time knowing if any of the names you do come up with are worth bothering to investigate further. Any P2P network that includes chat is probably one of the best research tools you will ever find. What better way to explore what is available in these genres than by talking to the fans of the genres directly.

You don't have to share or download a single file to discover how useful it really is. Just pop into any chatroom advertising that genre as it's main topic of interest and start talking to people.

And speaking of not using a P2P application in the traditional way or for its "designed purpose", in its hayday, WinMX had close to 3000 chat rooms. That's 3000 rooms where people talked about all kinds of stuff, much the way people chat on IRC. In fact, one of those chat rooms was mine, hosted on software that couldn't share files, couldn't up/download files. It was nothing but a chat server...and most of the people in my chat room used chat-only clients that also couldn't share or up/download. In fact, quite a few WinMX plugins and applications that had nothing to do with the file sharing aspect of the network were developed by people from my chat room. They collaborated and worked on them together in my chat room. (my chat room was primarily about programming and had nothing to do with file sharing)

But the RIAA didn't care that this P2P network was also the home for a decentralized chat network that supported free speech in a way that no other network could (not even any existing IRC network). It was the chat that ultimately saved the network. It was the chat that made it worth saving, and the users that remained truly believed this and it was their whole reason for not giving up or giving in without a fight. It wasn't about files...it was about friends, it was about saving the chat rooms they called home.

Today there are around 800 rooms left on WinMX, nearly all of them hosted with 3rd party software incapable of transferring files, covering a broad array of topics and languages, many of which would be considered taboo on a lot of centralized networks. There is no censorship here...each room host sets their own rules for what is and isn't allow in the room they host on their own PC with their own bandwidth. There is nobody in charge at "the top" to say any topic is off limits...nobody to say you can't use certain language...nobody to ban you from the network if they think your user name is profane...nobody to ban your room from the network if they think your topic is too over the top. It's free speech at its finest.

Yes, there is still file sharing going on, still piracy, but a lot of expressions of free speech that are worth protecting, too. If you kill the network, you won't stop people from sharing files or downloading stuff...they will just do it somewhere else, use another way. What you do manage to stop is people from communicating with each other, you suppress the free flow of thoughts, ideas, and information, you cause friends to lose touch with each other....you kill a vibrant social community that is just as legitimate as any other online social community.

2552
If you find that it's caught in an endless loop of updating to the latest version and you already have the latest installed (do the flash player version check linked to earlier in this thread and find out first), you could try uninstalling it completely and reinstalling it. That often is all that is needed to get it to behave normally again.

(Same with Java if it goes into an endless upgrade loop)
2553
Living Room / Re: Software... Heal thyself!
« Last post by app103 on November 01, 2010, 10:30 AM »
I wonder what would happen if you ran an application vanilla and it learned what is "normal", then later installed a plugin that added additional functionality through dll injection. Would this thing patch the exectutable to neutralize any attempts to use those dll injection plugins? I know a whole lot of people that would be mighty angry if it did.
2554
Living Room / Re: Ideas for christmas geek presents
« Last post by app103 on October 30, 2010, 08:43 PM »
I have been trying to think what the moderately geeky person would like for christmas:

There is the inevitable USB Mug Warmer:
 (see attachment in previous post)

I'd love something like that, but I don't think they make one big enough for my tea mug.  :(

mugs.png

my tea mug next to a large NANY mug for size comparison

2555
Living Room / Re: Changes Coming To My Home Network
« Last post by app103 on October 30, 2010, 08:39 PM »
That is one seriously beautiful desk!  :-*
2556
Living Room / Re: I'm thinking about learning how to program.
« Last post by app103 on October 30, 2010, 08:33 PM »
Another thing to take notice of is the plethora of fantastic tools you get in your context menu in Visual Studio.


It's hard for me to imagine any new learner being anything but negatively impacted by all of the plethora of tools and commands in Visual Studio.  I've been programming for 30 years and i still find these super powerful IDEs a bit overwhelming and distracting.. If you're just starting out learning how to program you might be better off using a simple text editor for your code, and focusing on the language itself and not trying to master a complex development editor/tool at the same time.

I felt that way about VS after having used an older Borland IDE (Delphi 6) exclusively. I actually thought that if I wanted to eventually move to C#, I was going to have to learn it first in a Borland IDE (UI already familiar enough to deal with) and then make the transition to using it in VS, so I wouldn't be complicating everything for myself by trying to learn 2 things at once. VS is scary looking compared to what I am used to...so are newer versions of Delphi, for that matter.
2557
Living Room / Re: Limewire shutdown, permanently
« Last post by app103 on October 28, 2010, 08:35 PM »
An important fact frequently overlooked: The RIAA only sues if the network or software is run by, developed by, or supported by a for profit company.

They have yet to go after anything open source, such as Ares (they tried before it went open source and dropped it as soon as the developer slapped a GPL on it and uploaded the source to Sourceforge) or WinMX (they tried there too, but the company "shut it down" and walked away as soon as they got a cease and desist letter, the users resurrected it and run it themselves now)

The problem for the RIAA in those 2 cases is they don't know who to sue. How do you stop an open source project that essentially belongs to the world and can be forked into a million similar projects by anyone that wants to? How do you stop a bunch of people in a bunch of countries that have taken it upon themselves to host peer caches in order to keep an old abandonware running, knowing if they receive a cease and desist letter, all they have to do is comply and pass the job of running a peer cache to someone else in another country? Overnight, it moves and is run by someone else. It's a game of cat and mouse, where the mouse always wins.

Napster, Kazaa, Limewire were all for profit companies that were easier targets and the RIAA could profit from if they won.

As far as torrents, as long as there is at least 1 open source torrent client/tracker, it can't be stopped. The RIAA can attack individual sites that run trackers, but if they manage to take one down, ten more pop up the next day to replace it, because the open source software to enable that is out there in the wild and distribution of that can't be stopped.
2558
I would get one of these for my OS drive:

17-994-074-TS.jpg



1. Remove current XP drive and set it aside
2. Add new drive for Win7
3. Install Win7
4. Swap out Win7 drive for the XP drive when you want to go back

Not as convenient as dual booting, but it would be a whole lot easier and less risk of messing up either your XP or Win7 installations.
2559
Living Room / Re: I'm thinking about learning how to program.
« Last post by app103 on October 26, 2010, 07:21 PM »
If you decide to go C#:


Dive right in!

If you decide to go Python:


Dive right in!

If you decide to brush the dust off old Turbo Pascal skills, it has grown up a whole lot and is now knows as Object Pascal or Delphi:

  • Free cross-platform IDE (I can't recommend a Borland IDE since Borland doesn't have anything to do with Delphi any more and Embarcadero doesn't offer a free or low cost IDE suitable for beginners)
  • Free books here and here
  • Free assignments

Dive right in!

With any luck we will be seeing a NANY project from you next year.  :)
2560
Living Room / Re: Just when you thought all the good ideas were taken!
« Last post by app103 on October 25, 2010, 11:42 AM »
This one is from the logs of my chat room. (sorry, no image)

The Pizza Protocol
2561
Living Room / Re: Facebook, The vein of all our lives.
« Last post by app103 on October 24, 2010, 05:37 PM »
There is also Socnode, a proof of concept project for a distributed/decentralized social network.

This one was created in response to the purchase of friendfeed, by facebook. A lot of people weren't too happy with that, considered facebook to be the devil, and decided the time had come for the community to get together and roll their own.

Having just had our social home sold, the idea was to come up with something where that couldn't happen again, since no single entity would ever have that kind of control and ownership of the entire Socnode powered network. It also would make it a lot cheaper to run the network, since each user would own and host their own node, much in the same way that many people have their own Wordpress blogs. In fact, one of the ideas was to make a Wordpress plugin based on this, which would allow anyone to easily set up their own node on the network.

The project seems abandoned. I don't know if directeur has any plans on continuing development. The last statement from him about it was back in February, at which time he did say that he had plans on continuing work on it. But he has since allowed the socnode.org domain to expire. I had to do some digging to find the appspot site that the domain name was originally pointed to.

There is also a friendfeed group related to this project, although it has gone mostly dormant.

The code is here, released under a very generous open source license. If you want to continue development on this, fork it, port it, whatever, I think it would make a lot of people very happy.
2562
Living Room / Re: Welcome to Hell... iHell that is...
« Last post by app103 on October 23, 2010, 04:45 PM »
Hmm... interesting points, app. My understanding of the brouhaha over Apple and Flash was that Apple devices like the iPad and iPhone not only do not ship with Flash but their OS's don't support Flash, rendering the choice over whether to install it or not, moot?

This doesn't refer to iPhone/iPad...it's about OSX, their desktop OS.
2563
Living Room / Re: Welcome to Hell... iHell that is...
« Last post by app103 on October 23, 2010, 04:16 PM »
But as soon as there's big financial interest involved, and considering censorship and the license terms Apple enforces on the iPhone App store - ugh. And there's rumors that apple might be removing Flash and Java support for OS X...

Nah, they're simply not bundling them with Lion, so if you want any of those two, you're on your own. It's not the brightest idea Apple ever had as, unlike the iPhone, you need Flash on desktop computers, and Oracle does not yet have a Java runtime for OS X, which it's in their best interest to get resolved soon, considering the number of Java developers working with Macs. In the end, it's just another step towards Apple absolute control over their own products.

I don't see a problem with this. Windows doesn't come with Flash and Java pre-installed either. Some OEMs do install it, but Windows itself doesn't come with it. What Apple would be doing is not something that represents having any more control than they did before. If anything, they are giving their users a little more control, protecting them (and themselves).

I can only speak here from the perspective of the Windows world when it comes to the effect that OEMs preinstalling Flash and Java has had.

By the time a user gets a new PC, often the pre-installed Flash and Java stuff is already outdated. And typical user behavior is not to upgrade stuff if whatever they want to do still works. So as long as the flash games on Facebook work and they can watch Youtube videos, they will keep the older version of Flash. The problem is that older versions of Flash and Java contain security vulnerabilities that are being exploited in the wild. There is a whole lot of malware getting on to users PC's because of this.

And really old versions of Java have an additional issue: upgrading it doesn't remove the older exploitable versions. Sure, they have improved this slightly and the latest installers do remove some of the older versions, but there is a point at which it stops and doesn't remove really ancient versions...the highly vulnerable and widely exploited 1.4 that so many OEMs still pre-install gets left on the machine to continue to be a security threat.

If OEMs didn't pre-install this stuff, then the user wouldn't likely have java or Flash on their machines unless they needed it and installed it themselves, and if/when they do, it will be the latest version and not something already outdated. Even if they are the typical user that doesn't update stuff unless they have a problem with it, they would still be better off starting with an up to date version rather than something pre-installed by the OEM.

If Apple's Macs become more popular, then it will be very important to their users experience not to have this old stuff on their systems. The more popular their OS becomes, the bigger target their users become, and the more malware we will see targeting them and the software they run. It would be a wise move for Apple not to repeat the mistakes made by OEMs in the PC world. And it would also be wise not to repeat the mistakes of Microsoft. (Does anyone remember what happened to MSJVM?)
2564
Living Room / Re: Windows Mobile 7 Review
« Last post by app103 on October 22, 2010, 07:36 PM »
Here is another review: http://arstechnica.c...7-the-ars-review.ars

Better set aside a big chunk of time for this one...it's almost 20 pages!
2565
Living Room / Re: The Monitor is a Limiting Form Factor
« Last post by app103 on October 20, 2010, 05:36 PM »
I understand the etiquette is left ear for Linux and right ear for Windows.

And through the nose for Mac?  :P
2566
Living Room / Re: Interesting Emoticons
« Last post by app103 on October 19, 2010, 09:39 AM »
This was the host user name of my chat server:

«(Ò¸ó)»

And this was its backend:

«(  ¸  )»
2567
Living Room / Re: Postcard to our past selves.
« Last post by app103 on October 19, 2010, 12:41 AM »
To my 10 yr old self: "Be patient and stay put!"
2568
Living Room / Re: Facebook is starting to tick me off
« Last post by app103 on October 17, 2010, 05:42 PM »
They probably changed things so you can't have a list there any more.

But all hope isn't lost, if you are willing to have a list on the right side instead of the left.

That little chat thingy on the right has it's own options panel and if you check off all the boxes like this, it will give you a list that stays open, with names instead of images:

Screenshot - 10_17_2010 , 6_39_00 PM.png
2569
Living Room / Re: Windows Mobile device in $100-150 range on ebay..suggestions?
« Last post by app103 on October 17, 2010, 03:24 PM »
This looks like a pretty sweet deal if you can get it (you'll have to bid, there's no buy it now price): http://cgi.ebay.com/...;hash=item3f03de1af1

Runs Windows Mobile 5 and isn't locked to any particular carrier. You don't even need a carrier if you use it with Wifi. Also comes with a heavy load of software.
2570
N.A.N.Y. 2011 / Re: NANY 2011 Teaser: Auspex - a Windows Productivity App
« Last post by app103 on October 17, 2010, 02:50 PM »
- chicken ?
You're egging me on!
-cranioscopical (October 17, 2010, 02:46 PM)

python-time-machine.png

Is that what I think it is?

If you are thinking that I zapped Cody with a time machine script written in Python, then yes, it is.

2571
Living Room / Re: Windows Mobile device in $100-150 range on ebay..suggestions?
« Last post by app103 on October 17, 2010, 02:42 PM »
It's time to think about replacing my Dell Axim X51V, the second PDA which I had to retire due to a bad digitizer.

Maybe you should check ebay for a replacement digitizer instead. It would only cost you around $8 to replace it.

http://shop.ebay.com...+Axim+X51V+digitizer
2572
General Software Discussion / Re: remove objects from photos
« Last post by app103 on October 17, 2010, 09:47 AM »
Here is my list of places to get free stock photos: http://cranialsoup.b...ock-photo-sites.html
2573
General Software Discussion / Re: remove objects from photos
« Last post by app103 on October 17, 2010, 09:30 AM »
This is a lot of work, and I normally work on much larger images, but if you are willing to give me enough time, I can do the rest for you too.

apples-s.jpg

Unfortunately, I may not be able to do the ones with the glasses. Removing an object from around something is a whole lot easier than from within something.  :(

If you need stock photos of these items, I could help you locate some free ones more suitable, without the extra objects in them.
2574
Living Room / Re: Request: Facebook Sharing
« Last post by app103 on October 16, 2010, 12:46 AM »
It doesn't have everything on DC, but we do have a fan page with all the threads that are featured on the blog.

http://www.facebook....an-Page/324161622488

Like it, follow it, share the posts with your friends!

Another thing you can do is connect your personal DC feed to autopost to your wall whenever you make a post here. There are a few ways to do that. You can use Friendfeed and the friendfeed facebook app like I do, or something like Social RSS
2575
Developer's Corner / Tuts+ free file of the month: Getting Good with Git ebook
« Last post by app103 on October 14, 2010, 09:04 AM »
Usually $10, Getting Good with Git is free for the month of October.

So, you want to learn about Git, the fast version control system? Then you’ve come to the right place!

In this eBook (free for the month of October! Usually $10), I’ll be guiding you through the sometimes-confusing waters of using Git to manage your development projects. The eBook clocks in at a solid 104 pages.

All you have to do is create an Envato account and you will have access to all the monthly freebies, on all 8 of their sites....and that's a lot of goodies for commercial use and learning!


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