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2876
General Software Discussion / Re: Finally, a robust keyboard shortcut app!
« Last post by rjbull on May 23, 2006, 10:16 AM »
I'm using less than 500 hotkeys only

By the time you've added in all the hotkeys programs have defined for themselves, it would be interesting to know how many the average user does know...

but you could create GUIs with AutoHotkey to use for those actions you only perform rarely.

I would like a similar "instant search" FARR-like search GUI for AHK hotstrings too, cf. the threads on jgpaiva's hotstring importer and Harrie's review of Instant Text.  But I don't have that level of skill, and I also use Win98 systems some of the time, where AHK hotstrings don't work anyway.

Or you could create a simple .txt file for your hotkeys and let AutoHotkey pop that up with another hotkey - so you'll only have to remember that 'master' hotkey

HoeKey, which I've been playing with in only the last couple of days, encourages you to do something very like that.  You can scroll through the window, but I thought it was a pity that once you did, you couldn't instantly point-and-shoot from it.



2877
FWIW, here's another that claims to import The Bat!;  ForKeeps

The only other thing you can do (I think) is to re-install The Bat! as non-encrypted?

2878
General Software Discussion / Re: Finally, a robust keyboard shortcut app!
« Last post by rjbull on May 23, 2006, 05:58 AM »
For compeatists, here are a couple I found recently;

JDN Hotkeys
The author made a post on the NetEZ forum
here
with a few more details, like the fact that it has issues on Win98.  It does some unusual things, like using one hotkey to modify another.  In fact he recommends the simple, small and fast Hoekey, with AutoHotKey as a deluxe package, and his own JDN Hotkeys for experienced users.

Hoekey is incredibly small - the download is only 25K!


Like others, I find it hard to remember 1001 hotkey combinations.  Do any of these types of applications, preferably free or dirt cheap, allow you to pop up a menu and point and shoot?  I believe you can do so with Macro Express, but that's a big heavy application.  You can do something like it with PowerPro, which offers buttons with tooltips rather than a menu as such, but PowerPro is just too hard for most people.
2879
General Software Discussion / Re: Finally, a robust keyboard shortcut app!
« Last post by rjbull on May 23, 2006, 05:49 AM »
reko100,

I think you mean, you want a way of listing what hotkeys are already in use now, and which ones are still free, so you can avoid ones already in use?

I suppose the best we can hope for is a way of listing the keys Windows itself uses.  So many programs have so many hotkeys set already, like The Bat! for example.
2880
Post New Requests Here / Re: predictive text for ms word
« Last post by rjbull on May 23, 2006, 05:31 AM »
reko100,

Take a look at these two Donation Coder threads, which deal with text expanders, completers and the like:

jgpaiva's abbreviations importer
https://www.donation...dex.php?topic=2598.0
link to jgpaiva's AHK tools https://www.donation...dex.php?topic=3461.0

Harrie's review of Instant Text, and following posts
https://www.donation...dex.php?topic=2631.0

Productivity Talk - Harrie's own forum site for (primarily) Medical Transcriptionists
http://www.productivitytalk.com/

Jon Knowles site on typing productivity
http://home.earthlin...net/~agjon/index.htm

2881
- dtSearch.  Google them.  They build an index to quickly search everything.

dtSearch has a long pedigree.  It started as a DOS application.  It's got rather expensive now, at least last time I looked.  I thought it was more an "after the fact" data retriever, rather than an organizing tool.

2882
General Software Discussion / Re: TaskPilot for task management?
« Last post by rjbull on May 21, 2006, 11:31 AM »
Yes, quite relevant. I've seen ITSD a few places online, but haven't paid it much attention. I'm going to give it a try and see what it can do.

I just took another look at zridling's review.  ITSD takes an awful lot of memory.

2883
Finished Programs / Re: DONE: abbreviations importer
« Last post by rjbull on May 19, 2006, 04:39 AM »
I run a board heavily leaning toward MTs (but not totally, anyone, including you all, are so welcome there). 

In fact, I'm trying to get more non-MTs there, but it's difficult.  I made

I've briefly looked at your board, and may look further.  I expect most people could benefit to some extent from a text expander, but such things only come into their own when you have to type from a more or less large lexicon of technical jargon.  MTs are an extreme case of this; your jargon is both voluminous and polysyllabic.

Then, there are MTs still in the student phase, who generally have not used one of the major expanders yet.  I'm interested in offering as much as I can there and discovering as many tools for our trade as possible,

Good (and public spirited) idea; not everyone can afford top software, especially when just starting out.

I think we are way too tunnel-visioned in general.

It always seem so much easier to narrow one's mind than broaden it   :(

  Since starting the board, I have found through others AHK and ActiveWords, and I now consider these two programs indispensable. 

Yet you use Instant Text, the leading program.  So are you using AHK for its more general features?

Another good reason for this script is that a lot of MTs work on company computers where they can't download anything, and you can run AHK on a USB stick.

This is becoming a serious problem.  Companies are big on paranoid security policies but don't want to know about their destructive effects on productivity.  I wish more Windows programs could be run without having to be installed.

  And some people won't spend the money or don't have it for certain expanders.

I can relate to that  ;)

  I'd seen where there were good scripts already made in AHK, but none that were exactly geared towards what we need, that including the tooltips.

It's easy to make basic hotstrings, but I wouldn't have thought to extend them to various forms of capitalisation, etc.  Good for jgpaiva :)

If you found ABCZ you found a jewel.  It so cuts down on remembering, it's not even funny.

I wish I'd discovered it before.  I've just rejigged the shorthand expansion file I use with (DOS) PC-Write using more ABCCZ ideas, with some input from the TextStat program you mentioned before to see which words were most "worth" abbreviating.  The PC-Write manual points out that the letter "q" is uncommon, so many of my old shorthands ended in "q".  I've now realised that this is in many cases redundant, but some of the shorthands are now so deeply embedded I don't think I can change them  :-[  Of course, the basic ABCZ teaching doesn't always work.  E.g. "quality" would become "quay" which is a legitimate word in itself.  Although it's one I'd be highly unlikely to actually use at work, I didn't want to confuse shortcuts with normal words.  But in many cases the system works excellently, especially as you can have a family of related abbreviations;

incd:included
ince:include
incg:including
incs:includes

I used to struggle with a less organised system.

still don't think I could get along very well without a visual expander, though.  Not when you have thousands of entries.  But many MTs do!

I've used Lil Red Notebook before.  Mostly for medical terms to reference when I needed to.

I would prefer a visual expander, though my problem is nothing like as acute as yours. And I thought asking for that would be a bit more than a coding snack  :)  But with LRN, I don't think they make it clear whether it types both shorthand and expansion, or whether it's more like a glorified "grep" that just helps you look things up, a bit like my acronym file.  What really made me perk up and take notice was LRN's ability to type things into DOS programs.  AHK can do that under Windows 2000   :Thmbsup:  but SuperKeys, for example, can't.

  I do think there are better programs, though.  I suggest trying mouser's PopUp Wisdom for remembering your rarer shorts.  Tell me what you think! 

I hadn't thought of that, as it's been "advertised" as more of a fun program.  Thanks for the idea  :)

PS:  By the way, on my home page I've had a link to DC for awhile now.  I love this place!

And how incomparably better than usenet  :)

Golly, what a lot of smileys.  I'll have to be more abstemious...



2884
Living Room / Re: Paris by night (panorama)
« Last post by rjbull on May 18, 2006, 05:37 AM »
I haven't got any stereo glasses
-Carol Haynes (May 18, 2006, 04:55 AM)

I could never make the "bare-eyed" techniques work either.  You really need the glasses....

2885
Finished Programs / Re: DONE: abbreviations importer
« Last post by rjbull on May 18, 2006, 05:24 AM »
Harrie,

As you're an Instant Text user, can I ask why the interest in AHK?  I can see one obvious one - the difference in cost!

Following your links, I found Jon Knowles Web site on typing productivity, with an onward link to Li'l Red Notebook  I haven't tried it, but on the face of it, it looks like a combination of AHK hotstrings with a GUI you can toggle to search (both "walk down the list" "instant search" and standard Ctrl-F) for shorthand you've forgotten.  That looks a very good idea to me; shorthands I use frequently I remember, but rarer ones are easy to forget.  If I implement some of the "ABCZ" ideas for constructing shorthands in an organised manner, that may reduce somewhat, but, how useful is it in practice to have a searchable interface?

@jgpaiva: please, do you have a Web site / permanent DC link for your software that you can put in your profile, so we can know where to download the latest and greatest?


2886
General Software Discussion / Re: TaskPilot for task management?
« Last post by rjbull on May 18, 2006, 04:53 AM »
Zaine Ridling's review of ITSD Organizer may be relevant?

2887
Living Room / Re: Paris by night (panorama)
« Last post by rjbull on May 18, 2006, 04:33 AM »
a full 360 degrees - shame it isn't formated so that you can just rotate seamlessly.
-Carol Haynes (May 18, 2006, 03:37 AM)

Won't help here I suppose, but you might take a look at what's is probably the world's narrowest-niche software at Muttyan's Home Page  Amongst other things, he offers programs for making rotating 360 degree panoramas in stereo.

2888
Living Room / Re: Madness is contagious!
« Last post by rjbull on May 15, 2006, 04:23 AM »
Only if you think I'm bored and tweedy ...
-Carol Haynes (May 14, 2006, 03:10 PM)

Well, we can't tell a lot from your avatar...

Just two things - life is too short to be bored

The process of earning a living rarely agrees with you   >:(

he does look a bit rough and tumblish (wishful thinking ;))

:D
2889
Living Room / Re: Madness is contagious!
« Last post by rjbull on May 14, 2006, 01:45 PM »
My only criticism of the whole concert was I have never seen anyone look so uncomfortable in evening dress as Gergiev. He has the sort of appearance that means he looks really quite fanciable (in a Lady Chatterly sort of way) ... but he looks peculiar in a penguin suit!
-Carol Haynes (May 14, 2006, 10:46 AM)

You mean, he looks the kind of rough trade that appeals to bored tweedy ladies?

See http://images-eu.ama...NIF6.01.LZZZZZZZ.jpg for the best piccy of him ...

Hmmm...  has he been around long enough to be the original of Mr. Worf?  ;)

That by the way is by a long way the best recording of the Rite of Spring available today

I've heard it, but don't know it well.  I love Petrushka and the Firebird.

By the way, congratulations to Mouser for founding the best British bulletin board in America  :D

2890
Living Room / Re: Hilarious spoof ...
« Last post by rjbull on May 14, 2006, 10:32 AM »
how sick is it that i like the music/singing in the spoof better than the real version?

There are precedents.  Stella Gibbon wrote a book called Cold Comfort Farm some time early in the 20th century.  It was a spoof of a certain kind of country house novel prevalent at the time.  The spoof has remained - people still occasionally read Cold Comort Farm and remember its catch-phrase, "something nasty in the woodshed," but the novels it was originally sending up have all disappeared without trace.

2891
Living Room / Re: Madness is contagious!
« Last post by rjbull on May 14, 2006, 10:27 AM »
Sorry can't listen to Barber without weeping ...
-Carol Haynes (May 13, 2006, 05:48 PM)

He wrote things other than the Adagio for Strings  :)

Just got back from a concert conducted by Valery Gergiev. Shostakovitch Symphony number 8.

Was that the one they played on Radio 3 last Friday?

I've heard before the idea that Mozart composed "like he was taking dictation from God," and that Schubert was the only composer who came close to that facility and fecundity of invention (this was before Bach got so popular).  In a literary parallel, H.Rider Haggard apparently wrote by pacing up and down, dictating to an amanuensis - and never needed to change anything.  By contrast, there's a story of Oscar Wilde at a houseparty.  They all met at lunch.  "What have you been doing this morning, Mr. Wilde?"  "I put in a comma."  They met again that evening at dinner.  "And what did you do this afternoon, Mr. Wilde?"  "I took it out again."  Hard work on the road to perfection...


2892
Best Dialog Extender / Re: FileBox Extender updated to 1.91.01
« Last post by rjbull on May 11, 2006, 07:49 AM »
Allen,

Sorry to mislead you - I was actually looking for Greg Kochaniak's free calculator MATH and had forgotten the FileBox Extender connection until I saw the site.  The update doesn't seem to be dated, which is a pity as it would make it clearer how old it is and therefore how worth mentioning.

2893
Best Dialog Extender / FileBox Extender updated to 1.91.01
« Last post by rjbull on May 11, 2006, 06:16 AM »
FileBox eXtenderâ„¢ - keep favorite folders at your fingertips
New! Ver. 1.91.01 is now available for download

Price still $20.

Quoting change log for details since version 1.90.05, as reviewed here at DC;

FileBox eXtenderâ„¢ Change Log

As you can see, FileBox eXtender receives continual attention as we listen to users' comments and suggestions. You may download the latest version at FileBox eXtender Download Page.

2006.03.06 Version 1.91.02

    * Fixed problem with not saving hot keys for opening Favorites and Recent menus
    * Information panel (visible by default in unregistered copy) about other Hyperionics products added.

2006.02.21 Version 1.91.01

    * Options to add "Always on top" and "Roll up" commands to a window system menu.
    * Added option to sort the "Recent" menu alphabetically
    * New, more logical layout of configuration tabs
    * Updated, hopefully more useful online help
    * "Switch Config" button added to Favorites tab to select a new configuration folder
    * -cf [folder] command line option to use a specific configuration folder
    * Updated to handle Visual Studio 2005 file boxes
    * Some small bug fixes

2005.12.06 Version 1.90.06

    * An issue with Directory Opus 8 "Click switch file box folder feature" corrected.


[edit]
Forgot the URL;  Hyperionics Web site
2894
Do any of these programs work with Google Desktop? 

tim254,

Jot+ Notes has a plug-in that allows Google Desktop Search (GDS) to search it.  There are two limitations: (1) GDS will find the text in a Jot+ file, but won't tell you which individual note; and (2) GDS will only index the first 10,000 words of a file, but that's a GDS limitation, not a Jot+ one.

Kingstairs (Jot+ Notes) Web site
Google Desktop Search Plugin (BETA)

2895
I mostly agree with Jim, except for OneNote's shortcomings. It's a great program in so many ways,

Hmmm...  zridling, as arch-apostle for OneNote, how about your asking Microsoft for a DC discount?   :D

2896
John Buckham's been mentioned here a couple of times, since he has a webpage summarizing the different outliners available (although it's a bit dated).

I like his page because the reviews are clear, fair, short but adequate, and literate.  The drawback is that it's more than a bit dated, it's very very dated.  IIRC, he doesn't even mention MyBase, or quite a lot of others; no Treeline, no TreeDB, not even Keynote.

I recently tried Jot+ which he calls the best two-pane outliner, but it's nothing special. 

One interesting thing; Jot+'s author provides import from a lot of other formats, either in Jot+ itself or via an external conversion program.  That might mean a more general translation program would be feasible.  If that were so, some of the concerns about committing to the "wrong" program would lessen, if not go away.

combine them into one perfect notetaking utility.  Kind of like Frankenote, or "The Ultimate Notetaker"

Frankenote?  Brilliant name!   :Thmbsup:

I wish I had a secretary to do my non work related tasks.

Don't you mean you wish you had a secretary to do your work-related tasks?  The non-work-related tasks are generally more fun...

2897
Post New Requests Here / Re: IDEA: HTML Organizer/Viewer
« Last post by rjbull on May 08, 2006, 09:48 AM »
I doubt whether anything truly valuable is placed in open view

??? Why would anyone even use the web then - and why would anyone want to republish stuff that is of no value.

Actually as I understand it just about everything published on the web is copyright (even if the owners don't know it). A lot of people won't be
-Carol Haynes (May 08, 2006, 09:39 AM)

OK, I phrased that badly, and focus on my own uses, but how valuable is valuable?  Most of the stuff I personally save from the Web is pretty much links to software sites, postings from a.c.f. and just occasionally "how to" articles.  To an extent, if I share that with anybody, it'sfree advertising.  I wouldn't bother to lift DC reviews or the like wholesale (unless I was afraid the site would disappear) but I'd just write a quick description and save the link.  Stuff that I would consider very valuable (or at least expensive), like Derwent patent information, I wouldn't share and isn't easily available on the Web even from subscription services.

2898
Living Room / Re: Madness is contagious!
« Last post by rjbull on May 08, 2006, 09:31 AM »
his music became more and more abstract. Some performers consider is virtually unplayable
-Carol Haynes (May 08, 2006, 08:40 AM)

I take it they don't like Stockhausen, Boulez or Xenakis, either  ;)

I am doing a degree in Humanities with Music (for fun really

Looks interesting, but well above my level.  Musical notation is just tadpoles on telephone wires to me   :-[

"For fun" sounds euphemistic, hard to do an OU degree on top of a job and everday life.  Oh, well, you might meet someone agreeably rich at the summer school  :D



2899
Post New Requests Here / Re: IDEA: HTML Organizer/Viewer
« Last post by rjbull on May 08, 2006, 08:25 AM »
The reason for my question was that as I see it Surfulator is designed for grabbing stuff for the web so that you can read/search and store a copy locally. Given that most of the material is grabbed in this way republishing any of it is likely to infringe copyright.
-Carol Haynes (May 08, 2006, 05:42 AM)

At work we use a service that interprets copyright so severely that they won't let us store "their" data for more than 90 days   >:(  But I think you're being too sweeping.  Yes, much stuff on the Web is copyright, but much of it is little more than advertising puff they would be pleased for you to disseminate.  I doubt whether anything truly valuable is placed in open view, and having to pay and jump through hoops to get it is likely make you very aware of its status.



2900
Living Room / Re: Madness is contagious!
« Last post by rjbull on May 08, 2006, 08:17 AM »
I have been studying Beethoven recently as part of my uni course.

Listening to one of his late works (Grosse Fugue Op 133) is enough to drive anyone insane - he plainly was when he wrote it.
-Carol Haynes (May 08, 2006, 07:32 AM)

Beethoven would have been deaf by then (I think), so he would have been under great stress.  Music of all things is subjective and personal; maybe you just aren't susceptible to classical music?

Ravel composed his famous Bolero near the end of his working life.  He apparently died of Alzheimer's disease, or something similar, and there's some thought that Bolero is as repetitive as it is because he was already affected.

What university course are you doing?

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