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3626
The Snowden leaks and revelations about wholesale NSA surveillance have made a mockery of what we might have imagined to be true about the security/confidentiality/privacy of our personal Cloud-based data, services and telecommunications in general.
The abrupt closure of secure and encrypted email service providers Lavabit and then Silent Circle should provide more than sufficient justification for us all to worry about our own personal safety from threats from the State.

On 2013-08-15, Google announced: Google Cloud Storage now provides server-side encryption

I am underwhelmed by this and do not understand why Google chose to announce this at all, it seems so pointless. Maybe they were told to, to allay people's fears? Whatever the motivation, the unspoken implication seems to be that your data will be safe from access by others - e.g., (say) criminals - but that definitely doesn't preclude US State-approved surveillance of all that is yours.

Wuala and the few others like them would seem to be looking increasingly attractive.

And now we may have some new suspicions as to why Digital Lifeboat was shut down - refer Secure Cloud backup -e.g., Digital Lifeboat - what alternatives are there?
3627
Living Room / Re: factories in uk
« Last post by IainB on August 31, 2013, 11:44 PM »
I already suggested Kompass UK to you in another, similar thread.  Their records contain links to the company Web sites.
+1 from me.
3628
Yes. With a little bit of gumption, many users who might otherwise feel that MS Office was out of their reach could probably avail themselves of this package deal.
3629
General Software Discussion / Re: Best program to compare two files : word and pdf
« Last post by IainB on August 31, 2013, 05:41 PM »
Not sure whether this might be of use:
MS Word 2013 seems to be able to convert PDFs to a Word doc, and then lets you get on and edit it as such...
I haven't used it other than to see if it works. Seems to be pretty good - and fast. Tried it on a PDF with several images in. The Word doc file size seems to be a good deal bigger than its source PDF file size though.
In USA exists the "crisis" ?     :huh:

Take a look: MS Office 2013 US$9.95 Corporate/Enterprise Home Use Program - Mini-Review
3630
Mini-Reviews by Members / Re: Stick-A-Note + Universal Viewer - Mini-Review
« Last post by IainB on August 31, 2013, 08:08 AM »
@rjbull: I have only used the free version.

I also use Stickies.
3631
Someone pointed this one out to me. It's on an NZ auction site.
TradeMe glazing grazing - 2013-08-30 , 05_38_08 (small).png
3632
Originally posted:2013-08-30
Last updated2015-02-17

Basic Info
App NameMS Office 2013 US$9.95 Corporate/Enterprise Home Use Program
Thumbs-Up Rating :Thmbsup: :Thmbsup: :Thmbsup: :Thmbsup: :Thmbsup:
App URLhttp://www.microsoft...r.aspx?culture=en-US
App Version ReviewedMS Office Professional
Test System SpecsMS Win7-64 Home Premium
Supported OSesWindows 7 and Mac
Support MethodsExtensive  MS Office support
Upgrade PolicyAutomatic updates for this product version.
Trial Version Available?No. (This is a special offer.)
Pricing SchemeUS$9.95
Relevant linksUseful OneNote links

Intro and Overview:
This review is about purchasing/using MS Office 2013 under Microsoft’s Home Use Program.
If you or a family member works for a company that runs MS Office as part of the corporate licensing program, then you may be eligible for Microsoft’s Home Use Program.
Per worldstart.com:
Want Microsoft Office? $9.95 Could Get You A Copy
Sunday, January 27th, 2013 by Tim

The most popular office productivity software is Microsoft Office, with millions of users in schools, businesses and at home. The major complaint of almost everyone who uses Office isn’t about the quality of the software, but the price.  The full version of Office 2013 Plus runs close to $500.  How would you like to get a completely legal official copy from Microsoft for only $10?
MS Office Professional Plus 2013 - 01 Home Use Programme.jpg

The good news is if your company runs Office as part of the corporate licensing program, you may be eligible for Microsoft’s Home Use Program. This program allows you to download a copy for only $9.95. To check if you’re eligible, contact your company’s IT department or visit the Home Use Program website by clicking here.  Click “Don’t know your program code? Click Here” and type in your work e-mail. If you are eligible, you’ll be sent an e-mail with a link to be able to purchase it at the special price.
      
The version currently offered by Home Use Program is Office 2013 Professional Plus which includes Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, OneNote, Access, Publisher, InfoPath and Lync. This version is the full version and does not require you to have previously owned Office and is still valid even if you end up leaving your job. This version is for home use and can be installed on two computers. It is not controlled, monitored or paid for by your companies IT department so you can use it for all of your personal needs without worrying about if it’s allowed under the company’s IT policy.

Tim

P.S. Don’t qualify? Don’t despair, you can still download for free OpenOffice which is a free office suite compatible with Microsoft Office files. While it does not have the updated Office interface or all the bells and whistles, it performs the vast majority of office suite tasks fantastically totally free.
_________________________

Description:
MS Office Professional Plus 2013 - 02 Home Use Programme.jpg

Making the purchase:
MS Office Professional Plus 2013 - 03 Home Use Programme.jpg

Who this software deal is designed for:
Home use software and licence for people who work for a company that runs MS Office as part of the corporate licensing program (Microsoft’s Home Use Program).

The Good:
Incredibly useful and excellent value for MS' leading office package.
Works fine under Windows 7.
NB: Seems to be designed for full-featured optimal use with SkyDrive and/or corporate systems under Windows 8, and using integration with latest version of Internet Explorer (e.g., for SharePoint).

Needs Improvement:
(No notes on this. This review does not evaluate the programs in the MS Office suite.)

Why I think you should use this product:
Gives you the ability to run the full range of MS Office products from home-based PCs, integrating with remote corporate systems (e.g., SharePoint, Lync, InfoPath).

How it compares to similar products:
As it says in the worldstart.com: post above:
P.S. Don’t qualify? Don’t despair, you can still download for free OpenOffice which is a free office suite compatible with Microsoft Office files. While it does not have the updated Office interface or all the bells and whistles, it performs the vast majority of office suite tasks fantastically totally free.

Conclusions:
A no-brainer for eligible purchasers.
Incredibly useful and excellent value.
Flexible licence terms.
No-fuss, simple and quick purchase/download and installation.
3633
Sorry, I don't understand.
The worked example using xplorer² that I gave indicates that you set up and save a folder search as described - in your case, one each for:
   X:\basefolder
   Y:\basefolder
   Z:\basefolder

The repetitive task then boils down to:
  • 1. Double-click each of the saved search files (3 of them) and wait for the search to complete and display results.
  • 2. Select All, Copy to Clipboard the selected search results for each (3 copy operations).
  • 3. Paste the search results into spreadsheet (3 paste operations).

You could automate this further.

Would that not provide you with the desired result?
3634
Living Room / Re: Vocab tune-up
« Last post by IainB on August 28, 2013, 06:43 PM »
Depressing.
3635
2013-08-29: I just updated the OP mini-review with some of the comments above.
Thanks, chaps.
I too think the Logitech mice are superb. I shall probably do a review of the Logitech M515 ("Couch") Mouse that my daughter uses.
3636
Using xplorer², I just tried this now:
  • 1. Open xplorer².
  • 2. Select desired Root Directory in a Pane.
  • 3. Press: Ctrl+F (for FIND).
  • 4. Ensure "Named" = *.* (it usually is by default).
  • 5. Untick "files" (so it's folders only, otherwise files and folders are selected by default).
  • 6. Untick "search subfolders" (we're only going 1 level deep).
  • 7. Click OK and wait for search to complete.
  • 8. When the search results come up, select/deselect those columns for display that you want/don't want. Display shows columns for Folder Name, Folder Size, Creation or Modification Date/Time, Path.
  • 9. Press Ctrl+D (replaces <folder> with folder size).
    NB: at this point you could Ctrl+A (select all) and copy all items (Ctrl+C or Ctrl+P) in the search results (including column names) to Clipboard, and then paste into Excel for immediate use.
  • 10. Saved Search as "DCF dcwul62-01.x2fnd".
    NB: At this point you have a repeatable search/display pattern of the above, to run whenever required at some future point.

To repeat in future is a simple 2-step process:
  • 1. Activate the saved search file.
  • 2. Ctrl+A (select all) and copy all items (Ctrl+C or Ctrl+P) in the search results (including column names) to Clipboard, and then paste into Excel for immediate use.

I haven't tried it, but you could probably automate this further using AutoHotKey or AutoIT.

Hope this is of some use/help.
3637
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: BumpTop - last free version BumpTop-2.1-6225.exe
« Last post by IainB on August 28, 2013, 05:18 PM »
@Timmmmaaahh: Many thanks for that ^^.
What you say is rather interesting.
It rather seems as though Google had simply bought it (BumpTop) to kill it, but if that were the case, then quite what the motive might have been I have no idea.
Some people (not me you understand) might say that the killing of BumpTop would of itself be a very good reason for installing it and running it, just for spite, but I couldn't possibly comment.
3638
General Software Discussion / Re: Best program to compare two files : word and pdf
« Last post by IainB on August 28, 2013, 02:44 AM »
Not sure whether this might be of use:
MS Word 2013 seems to be able to convert PDFs to a Word doc, and then lets you get on and edit it as such...
I haven't used it other than to see if it works. Seems to be pretty good - and fast. Tried it on a PDF with several images in. The Word doc file size seems to be a good deal bigger than its source PDF file size though.
3639
Living Room / Deliberate hamstringing of Chromecast by Google?
« Last post by IainB on August 28, 2013, 02:34 AM »
Rather curious incident reported by ArsTechnica. Though not famous for their journalistic rigour/objectivity, they could be pointing to something new of potential concern about the NSA's co-operative behemoth:
(Copied below sans embedded hyperlinks/images.)
Chromecast could stream local files—until Google killed the feature
A developer writes that his mobile streaming app no longer works.
by Casey Johnston - Aug 26, 2013 3:00 pm UTC

Koushik Dutta demoed his app at the beginning of August. Its functionality dies with the most recent Chromecast update.
A Chromecast app that allowed users to feed local files from a mobile device directly to the Chromecast has been disabled with the most recent software update for the device. The developer of the app, Koushik Dutta, stated that his AirCast used code that had been hanging around in the Chromecast software for a while, but some new lines that Google inserted “short circuit everything but mirroring,” preventing apps that would circumvent Google-approved apps.
Per Dutta’s Google+ posts, the Chromecast extension app contains “video_playback” and “slideshow” cases that would allow the Chromecast to handle local files. Dutta reverse engineered the protocol and developed AirCast to take advantage of these capabilities and demoed the results in a video.
The latest Chromecast update now breaks that functionality with a few new lines:

Code: Text [Select]
  1. if("mirror_tab" != a) {
  2. return null;
  3. }
This code prevents “the ability to play media from external sources,” Dutta said.

It is still possible to play local files from the Chrome browser on the desktop by dragging them into a tab and streaming the tab to the Chromecast. That still leaves local files on mobile devices stuck without transfer to a PC. Dutta said that one of the sample Chromecast apps initially demonstrated mobile playback functionality, suggesting that the Chromecast was as capable of a streaming device as any “full fledged mobile computer.”

Google has not offered any public comment on why the video playback and slideshow cases were disabled, and the company did not respond immediately to requests for comment. We will update this article with more information as it becomes available.

Update: Google has provided the following statement:
   We’re excited to bring more content to Chromecast and would like to support all types of apps, including those for local content. It's still early days for the Google Cast SDK, which we just released in developer preview for early development and testing only.
   We expect that the SDK will continue to change before we launch out of developer preview, and want to provide a great experience for users and developers before making the SDK and additional apps more broadly available.
____________________________

Yeah, right.
Looks like some good old-fashioned prevarication there. There is also the use of that cliché "excited" again, which seems to often precede a major piece of bullshit from G.
3640
Living Room / Re: Nonplussed - Windows 7 random BSODS
« Last post by IainB on August 26, 2013, 12:45 PM »
If it was previously fine in the user's site, and if it worked fine and passed all CPU/RAM/disk tests whilst sited in CH's house environment, but now promptly BSODs again on return to user's site, then I would suggest an analysis of the user's environment. Something may have been changed in the user environment.

In particular, I would suggest consideration be given to the possibility of "unclean" mains power supply fluctuations, nearby strong or high frequency radio transmissions, and proximity EMI (electro-magnetic induction). Also check that the mains has a PME (positive multiple earth).

EMI is pretty rare. I have on only one occasion come across a definite case of EMI in computing, and that was in a mainframe computer room environment, where the cause was one data-carrying cable lying on top of another, and we solved the problem by running the uppermost cable along a 3-inch high metal bridge, over the lower cable.

Also, don't overlook the possibility of a poorly mounted chip, or loose cable connection, or dry joint on the circuitboard (the bad connection may have been accidentally temporarily reconnected by moving to CH's house).
3641
Living Room / Re: German Government Warns Key Entities Not To Use Windows 8
« Last post by IainB on August 26, 2013, 12:24 PM »
^^ Yup. +1 from me. Kinda obvious, and goes without saying, but seems to need to be said in any event. We can sometimes be soo gullible.
3642
Living Room / Re: Knight to queen's bishop 3 - Snowden charged with espionage.
« Last post by IainB on August 26, 2013, 12:07 PM »
An interesting article at Wired on General Keith Alexander:
http://www.wired.com...xander-cyberwar/all/
...
Superb story. However, given the nature of the subject matter, one has to wonder how true any of it might be, or whether there are all kinds of embedded and deliberately misleading points and/or half-truths in it. Separate cases in point being the "Star Wars" and "Neutron Bomb" stories.
Some people (not me, you understand), might say that "War is deception" is the normal rule - whether it be according to SunTzu protecting his empire, or Muhammed his empire, or the British Raj protecting The British Empire, or the Marxist Manifesto, or CAGW alarmists fighting for The Cause of "The Greater Good" or World Government or whatever, or modern-day US military strategists fighting to support the preservation/continuation of supremacy of "The American Way" (as in the article you link to), but I couldn't possibly comment.

There is another, similar, great story that Hacker News pointed to here, the original source being The NYPD Division of Un-American Activities (see the whole thing here).
Interesting that these great stories seem to be coming out in the Internet media and more MSM outlets now...they seem to indicate that quite a bit of journalistic research has gone into them. However, as we can all observe, journalists don't really do much of any research nowadays, but merely just engage in publishing "leaked" and already formatted press releases and regurgitating other Internet posts - what they scatalogically refer to as "t#rd-eating".
3643
Living Room / Greek off-the-grid Internet
« Last post by IainB on August 26, 2013, 12:28 AM »
Might be of interest to a few people on this forum...
(Copied below sans embedded hyperlinks/images.)
Greek community creates an off-the-grid Internet
By Joe Kloc on August 19, 2013 Email

In an effort to buck the expensive rates of unreliable corporate telecom companies, a community in Athens, Greece has created its own private Internet.

Built from a network of wireless rooftop antennas, the Athens Wireless Metropolitan Network (AWMN) now has more than 1,000 members. Data moves “through” the AWMN mesh up to 30 times faster than it does on the telecom-provided Internet.

According to Mother Jones, this off-the-grid community has become so popular in Athens and on nearby islands that it has developed its own Craigslist-esque classifieds service as well as blogs and an internal search engine.

"It's like a whole other web," AWMN user Joseph Bonicioli told the magazine. "It's our network, but it's also a playground."

The AWMN began in 2002 in response to the poor Internet service provided by traditional telecommunications companies in Athens. However, the past few years have illustrated another use for these citizen-run meshes: preserving the democratic values of the Internet.

As the Internet has become a ubiquitous presence in day-to-day life, governments around the world have sought to control it. In 2011 for example, when former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak found out that protesters were organizing on Facebook, he commanded the country’s Internet service providers to shut down access, denying 17 million Egyptians access to the Web for days.

Later that year in the U.S., the city of San Francisco temporarily shut down cellphone service in its transit system to stop a protest.

As Bonicioli told Mother Jones, "When you run your own network, nobody can shut it down."

These DIY meshes are also used to provide Internet in places major telecom companies can’t—or won’t—reach. For example, one was constructed last year in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Red Hook after Hurricane Sandy knocked out resident’s access to the networks of major Internet service providers.

Similarly, Guifi, the largest mesh in the world, was built to address spotty Internet service in rural Spain. It has over 21,000 members.

Meshes have taken on new relevance in the wake of former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden’s leaks about the agency’s massive Internet surveillance programs.

It is estimated (albeit roughly) that the NSA touches as much as half of the world’s Internet communications each day. The agency gains access to much of this information through partnerships with telecom companies that allow the agency to install splitters on their fibre optic Internet cables. Privately run meshes would deny the NSA—and other government intelligence agencies around the world—this access point to Internet data.

As the New America Foundation’s Sascha Meinrath told Mother Jones, "We're making infrastructure for anyone who wants to control their own network."
3644
Living Room / Re: Nineteen Eighty-Four (Orwell) vs. Brave New World (Huxley)
« Last post by IainB on August 25, 2013, 07:35 PM »
It's been posted on DCF before:

George Orwell vs Aldous Huxley world (KillSwitchthefilm dot com).png
3645
^^ Thanks for the tips. I shall have to start learning about Everything's feature set now, and how best to use those features.

Meanwhile, a remaining issue seems to be the curious conditional "blindness" bug that I had tripped over that is displayed when using Windows Find and Locate32 - a bug that xplorer² and Everything do not display.
I would have thought that the Windows OS Search/Find would be certain to be able to find any and every filename in NTFS that it had let you create, but apparently not, even in Win7-64.     :tellme:
3646
@4wd: Many thanks for taking the trouble to test that out for me to prove it on Everything.
I have uninstalled Locate32 and downloaded and installed Everything-1.3.3.658b.x64.exe. It's very fast. Works a treat.
3647
Original post date:2013-08-24
Updated:2013-08-29

Basic Info
Device NameApple Mighty Mouse - Wireless (Bluetooth) Model No.A1197
Thumbs-Up Rating :Thmbsup: :Thmbsup: :Thmbsup: :Thmbsup: :Thmbsup:
Device support URLN/A (obsolete device)
Device information URLhttps://en.wikipedia...i/Apple_Mighty_Mouse
Device Version ReviewedThe version used is (including some notes from Wikipedia):
  • Apple Mighty Mouse - Wireless (Bluetooth) Model No.A1197 (obsolete).
  • Release date: August 2, 2005.
  • Discontinued: October 20, 2009 (Wireless).
  • Power: 2 AA batteries.
Test System SpecsMS Win 7-64 Home Premium
Supported OSesCompatible with Win 64-bit/32-bit and Windows XP
Support MethodsDriver/software is automatically identified as the mouse device is detected.
Upgrade PolicyN/A (obsolete device) superseded by Apple Magic Mouse
Pricing SchemeN/A (obsolete device), but can be bought as secondhand - for example, on Amazon.
Pictures of the mouse:
Apple mouse - 01b Mighty Mouse Wireless (clip small).jpg   Apple mouse - 02a diagram.png

Intro and Overview:
   Wikipedia has this to say about it - at https://en.wikipedia...i/Apple_Mighty_Mouse:
  • The Mighty Mouse is made of white plastic and has a recessed Apple logo on the mouse's face. The mouse has four functional "buttons": a left capacitive sensor, a right capacitive sensor, a track ball with a pressure sensor and side squeeze sensors. The track ball enables users to scroll a page or document in any direction, including diagonally. Two of the above-mentioned inputs are not physical buttons. Rather, the touch-sensitive topshell (mentioned below) and the pressure sensing trackball allow the mouse to detect which side is being touched or whether the trackball is being held in.

  • The mouse emits a sound when the scroll ball is rolled, but this is not a direct product of the ball moving; the sound is actually produced by a tiny speaker inside the mouse.[2] There is no way to disable this feature other than physically disabling the speaker inside the mouse. [3]

  • Currently, Mac OS X is the only operating system that fully supports the mouse without third party software. When used with Mac OS X, the sensors can be set to launch applications or trigger features of the Apple operating system, such as Dashboard and Exposé. If not used with Mac OS X, the mouse behaves as a four "button" mouse with a vertical and horizontal scroll wheel. There are third-party drivers (XMouse,[4] AppleM[5]) that provide more functions to users of other platforms such as Windows.

  • The Mighty Mouse does not report whether the right and left sensors are activated simultaneously. In fact, it reports a right-click only when there is no finger contact on the left side of the mouse. Thus a right-click requires lifting the finger off the mouse, then right-clicking. This also means that the Mighty Mouse cannot support mouse chording, used by CAD software, games, and other applications where multiple functions are mapped to the mouse.
    ____________________________

I got hold of this mouse because a neighbour of mine was throwing out some stuff, and I offered to take it to the local Mission Charity shop - I regularly take all sorts of discarded but still useful stuff there (typically a car trunkfull a week), and they sell it in their various outlet stores.
On inspection, amongst my neighbour's stuff was this apple mouse. Interested, I opened it up, and saw that a sprung stainless steel piece on the inside had come away from where it was supposed to be and that it couldn't work until that was fixed. I stuck it back in place with some hot glue, popped in 2 AA battaries, enabled wifi Bluetooth on my laptop, switched on the mouse, and told the laptop to look for and acquire Bluetooth devices - which it did, and installed the appropriate drivers after a short delay:
Apple mouse - 03 Bluetooth device acquired.png

The properties checked out:
Apple mouse - 04 properties.png

- and it showed up in my Bluetooth devices list:
Apple mouse - 05a Bluetooth devices.png

The mouse was now operational, and I began to use it to see what it was like.
I have to say here that:
  • (a)  I don't usually like to use a mouse as it aggravates an old carpal tunnel injury (RSI). I prefer to use a touchpad and the keyboard a lot, as a mouse is just too tediously slow for my liking anyway.
  • (b) I have studied and applied ergonomic design principles in time and motion studies and computer interface design, and having had problems with my back since teenage years, and learning to safely weight-train despite that, I am now automatically acutely aware of good and bad ergonomics in anything to do with human movement, man-machine interfaces and printed and audio-video media.
    ____________________________

So what was the mouse like to use? I thought it a superb example of intelligent ergonomic design. Very nice to use.

Technical Features and Operation: (mostly from Wikipedia)
Repeated from above: There are third-party drivers (XMouse,[4] AppleM[5]) that provide more functions to users of other platforms such as Windows.

Features:
  • Touch-sensitive top shell
  • 360 degree enabled clickable track ball
  • Force-sensing side "squeeze" areas
  • Optical (LED) tracking in wired version
  • Laser tracking in wireless version
  • Compatible with Macintosh, Windows and Linux PCs
  • Programmable functions for the four "buttons"
  • Auditory feedback with built-in speaker[8][9]

Who this mouse is designed for:
People who might need or like to have an improved ergonomic interface with their computer.

The Good:
Seems like a very good, well-designed and well-manufactured product.

The needs improvement section:
I can't really fault it, so far, but Wikipedia says:
Although the Mighty Mouse can sense both right and left clicks, it is not possible to press both sensors simultaneously. The user must learn to lift the left finger off the sensor surface before attempting a right-mouse click.[10]
The scroll ball will eventually become clogged with dust and require cleaning. While there are methods to clean the ball without dismantling the mouse some users have complained that the Mighty Mouse is difficult to clean because the scroll ball mechanism is hard to take apart.[11][12]

Why I think you should use this product:
If you use a mouse a lot, this mouse could well make your computer use easier/more comfortable.

How it compares to similar mice:
Since I don't really like using a mouse, I did not try this one out for very long. I reckon that, despite it's design age (2005), it could still be ahead of many current mouse designs, and the cost would be low (you should be able to pick it up for a song).
However, real mouse users might have more useful opinions. For example: (per comments below)
  • @mouser: I tried one of these mice once, and was driven crazy by the lack of good tactile feedback on the left and right mouse buttons.
    yech, not for me.
  • @lanux128: as interesting as this review is, i prefer Logitech mice which comes in all shapes and sizes with superior (imo) ergonomic features.

Conclusions:
I really like this mouse, but would not be likely to use it much for myself. I would like to see if my daughter could take advantage of it instead of her Logitech wireless mouse (which is an excellent mouse), but unfortunately she has no Bluetooth functionality on her laptop. So I will probably not keep the mouse.
In light of @lanux128's comment, I might post a review of my daughter's Logitech M515 ("Couch") Mouse.

Links to other info sources/reviews of this application:
Just the Wikipedia link above, though a DuckDuckGo search turns up a lot of references to this mouse.
3648
Mini-Reviews by Members / Re: Logitech Wireless Gaming Headset G930 - Mini-Review
« Last post by IainB on August 24, 2013, 12:36 AM »
2013-08-24: Updated software/driver version and operational details, and documented a fix re dongle storage.
The Logitech G930 is still one of the best headsets on the planet, IMO.    :)
3649
Mini-Reviews by Members / Re: Microsoft Security Essentials (MSE) - Mini-Review
« Last post by IainB on August 23, 2013, 10:37 PM »
2013-08-24: Minor update and new example of threat (Worm) quarantine.
Latest version details updated:
  • Antimalware Client Version: 4.3.215.0
  • Engine Version: 1.1.9800.0
  • Antivirus definition: 1.157.246.0
  • Antispyware definition: 1.157.246.0
  • Network Inspection System Engine Version: 2.1.9800.0
  • Network Inspection System Definition Version: 107.2.0.0
3650
I have been trialling Locate32 (latest 64-bit version) for a while, and yesterday I was puzzled because some files that I had just created and that would have been indexed by Locate32 in its latest database update were not showing up in Locate32's results page. At the same time I got an error - which was not repeatable.

I wrote to the developer of Locate32 per email:
​I was using Locate32 and searching for files/folders named ..Audio
After sorting the results list, I got this error message:
CLocateDlg::SortNewItem:Something is wrong! Contact jmhuttun@{redacted}
I have established that Locate32 seems to be unable to catalogue/index folders with a preceding dot (.) or preceding two dots (..) in the folder name, and it cannot seem to catalogue/index the files within such folders either.
System is Win7-64 Home Premium.

He replied:
​Looks like that you are trying to something strange. I should recommend not using '.', because it's meaning is quite vague in GUI programs.

However, I see nothing strange about it. Windows File System allows for preceding 1 or more full stops in file/folder names and quite a lot of programs use at least 1 preceding full stop in file-naming - e.g. Google Picasa. I have been using folder names with preceding dot(s) (.) for years with no issue until now - and my File Manager is xplorer² (I rarely - if ever - need to use Windows Explorer).

This is an example of a typical filename and path that seems to be causing difficulty for Locate32:
C:\Workdata.007 (Media 1)\..Audio\Personal + Family\2012-01-31 224456 - Meeting notes at Labour MP office (9m 48s).amr

Puzzled, I did a comparison, using different tools to do the searching:
  • 1. Using the FIND command for files/folders in Windows Explorer and also using Regex ".*.*" or "..*.*" seems to indicate that it is partially blind. That is, it:
    (a) can find non-specific folders with preceding full stops (1 or 2) with no problem, but
    (b) cannot find a specific ..foldername or specific filename.ext within that ..foldername, but
    (c) can find files with specific .ext but a non-specific filename within those folders;
    (d) can find a specific or non-specific foldername within those folders.

  • 2. Using Locate32, it cannot seem to find those specific ..foldername folders, nor non-specific ones, and cannot find any files - specific or non-specific - within those ..foldername folders. It seems to be "blind" to the ..foldername and any files/folders nested within it.

  • 3. Using FIND in xplorer², it can find specific and non-specific ..foldername folders and any files/folders (specific or non-specific) nested within them, with no difficulty.

Q1: Am I doing something wrong here, or have I tripped over some kind of a bug in Windows and Locate32?

I rather like Locate32 because it is fast, but if it fails to actually catalogue certain undefined and apparently legitimate types of file/folder names in NTFS without your knowledge, then I shall have to use an alternative, or go back to using xplorer² (which, though it seems to be fail-proof in this context, is slower, as it does a real-time search the first time you search for something). If I can possibly avoid it, I certainly don't want to have to change my long-established folder-naming conventions to accommodate Locate32.

Q2. What alternatives are there to Locate32 that would not have this ..foldername problem?

(Thanks in anticipation.)
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