topbanner_forum
  *

avatar image

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
  • Monday May 12, 2025, 4:40 pm
  • Proudly celebrating 15+ years online.
  • Donate now to become a lifetime supporting member of the site and get a non-expiring license key for all of our programs.
  • donate

Recent Posts

Pages: prev1 ... 11 12 13 14 15 [16] 17 18 19 20 21 ... 40next
376
General Software Discussion / Re: "New image organizer feedback wanted"
« Last post by CWuestefeld on December 10, 2009, 10:22 AM »
I've written the metadata to an alternate stream on the jpg so I could update the metadata and not even open the jpg.
-StCroixSkipper (December 10, 2009, 09:37 AM)

That will only work for NTFS, right? I keep my image archive on a NAS device, which I don't think supports that.

There certainly exist libraries out that that can update the metadata in situ.
377
General Software Discussion / Re: "New image organizer feedback wanted"
« Last post by CWuestefeld on December 04, 2009, 05:09 PM »
Skipper, I hope the momentum continues, because it looks like you're doing a great job.

I'm very interested in what you're doing. I haven't jumped in yet because, like a few others, I don't have MS search running. But I do intend to install it and limit it to just indexing images, just so I can try this.

One problem with MS Search, at least in years past, is that it didn't want to index network drives. I keep most of my archive on a shared drive so wife can see them too. So that would be a showstopper for me, unless that limitation has improved.

Also, the issue with re-encoding an image every time the metadata is changed is a showstopper.

I'd like to see more to enable workflow. In particular, I'd like to see a simple way to send a photo to any of a set of external apps of my choice. That is, one F key to send to a RAW processor, another F key to send it to an editor. Of course those apps should be editable (RAW Therapee and PaintShopPro in my case). And for bonus points, let it send a whole batch of photos to the RAW processor, if the app supports lists of some sort.

What if I changed it so that when the mouse flies over the thumbnail, I bring up a window ...
-StCroixSkipper (December 04, 2009, 05:04 PM)

That sounds pretty cool.
378
Living Room / Re: Should Illegal Downloaders Be Cut Off From the Internet?
« Last post by CWuestefeld on December 04, 2009, 10:00 AM »
I know very little about British law, so I can't address that. But in America, any unbiased hearing would have to throw out such a penalty.

Contra other claims in this thread, network access is not a human right. That is, you cannot force me to pay for your network connection through taxes. However, indirectly, network access is a necessary enabler to exercise many recognized human rights. For example, much of our interaction with government agencies is now done primarily through the web, so cutting access would have a significant negative impact on ones ability to participate in the democratic process.

The fact that the penalty is overly broad would also come into play. Penalizing a person who happens to live with me, who everyone agrees is innocent, for my personal transgressions, is a problem.

The lack of due process is probably where the rubber would hit the road. Certainly the Courts recognize the State's power to execute some punishments without due process. For example, the Emerson case upheld the "Lautenberg Amendment", which forever takes away a person's 2nd Amendment rights if he or she has ever been the subject of a restraining order due to domestic violence -- which can occur without any legal finding of guilt. But considering the other factors I mentioned -- its necessity for participation in the democratic process, and the effect on ones family -- I have to think that it would be struck down. However, courts aren't always honest: consider the recent Kelo decision, or google for "a switch in time saves nine".

People with lots of money are warping laws so they can get more, just plain old capitalism really.

I hate to be political here, but one thing I hate much more is the kind of idea that this represents. I don't claim that what Eóin is observing isn't happening -- it certainly is. But one cannot indict capitalism from it, because it is most certainly contradictory to capitalism. What we see in society today, where the political powers ally with corporate powers, is more properly called Corporatism or Corporate Fascism.

If one participant is coerced into a deal that he would not want to make (due to regulation, threats, violence, etc.), then the market isn't free and it's not Capitalist. Because so much of our political system has been captured by corporate interests for the purpose of rent seeking, it's clear that they are in alliance against the people.

In a real capitalist system, a transaction would only be executed if both sides agree to the terms. If your concern is, for example, that the entertainment industry is able to add unconscionable terms to their sales agreements (after the fact, in this case!), then the logical way to fix the problem is to throw out the Corporatist system and go back to real Capitalism. It's nonsensical to give additional regulatory powers to the government when the Corporatist system thrives precisely because of all the regulatory powers we've ceded to the State.

I find it incredibly frustrating that so many condemn capitalism as the problem, when in fact we do not now have a capitalist system -- and if we did, we probably wouldn't have the problem!
379
why not shoot in RAW+JPG? The JPG is usually processed "good enough" in itself by the camera.
That's a darned good question. The JPG my camera spits out is certainly good enough.

The only downside I can think of is that it slows down the camera when it has to save two files per shot. But that's the exception, and I could do those as RAW only when it occurs.
380
Living Room / Re: Be careful with your credit cards!
« Last post by CWuestefeld on November 27, 2009, 11:42 AM »
This morning I got into work and saw that our site had gotten 9 orders yesterday. Since we market to businesses and not consumers, and most of our customers are in the USA, I thought that was odd, so I looked at the orders in a little more detail.

With all five in front of me, and a little common sense, it's obvious that five of these were fraudulent. So obviously we're not processing the orders, and the accounting guys are contacting the credit card companies to have the card#s blocked. Sucks for the people whose cards were stolen.

Every fraudulent order I've looked at here has come from IP addresses in Africa. I'm thinking about having the web site block users, or at least orders, from anywhere in Africa.
381
The real power of RAW is in manual tweaking

No argument. I'm trying to get *everything* into a normal workflow. For those things that merit it, I can go back to the RAW processor and tweak. But if I can get most stuff good enough, I'll be satisfied.
382
N.A.N.Y. 2009 / Re: NANY 2009 Release: LifeSaver diary
« Last post by CWuestefeld on November 26, 2009, 03:24 PM »
First, are you still developing this? Looks nice so far!

I haven't done much in a while. I've got a number of unreleased enhancements, waiting because a bug in the database engine created a risk that they could corrupt the datafile. That's a very bad thing for an app like this, so I've been holding off.

However, they're recently released changes that should help. Now I've got to get off my butt and integrate the new version.

Second, does this just run from the setup file, like a portable app? Or does it install to Windows?

There is a proper installer. However, once installed, I think it could be copied onto a portable device. You'd only be losing the file associations.
383
I'm taking it as a given that there's no affordable way that I can get the entire workflow -- from import through RAW conversion, full-fledged editing, organization and management, and archiving -- in a single tool. I've already got PSP for editing, and (with reservations) ACDSee Pro for organization and management. So the features that a RAW converter overlaps with these functions are really just wasted on me.

What is most important to me in the RAW converter is the tool's ability to map color and exposure to a finished product. I think this is where the benefit of RAW over JPG or TIFF is realized: everything else I can do well in my editor. There's always a tradeoff here between accuracy and subjective appearance; I'd like to balance, with a preference toward the subjective.

To the extent that it can do so well, I'd also like good treatment of white balance, noise reduction, and contrast.

And since I'm insisting on good results from the defaults, it should be possible for me to invoke the tool from the command line, saying "process everything in directory X", as an automated part of my workflow.
384
I'm looking for a better means of processing RAW images from my camera. There are a bunch of apps to do this, some free and some commercial, some standalone and some integrated into image editors. I'd really like feedback about what you folks have experienced, most significantly in terms of image quality, but also in terms of ease-of-use.

Here's where I've looked
  • Paint Shop Pro - My camera outputs DNG, which PSP can read directly. But it seems a lame way to do this, it doesn't seem to give the opportunity to really use the additional information that's in the RAW data.
  • Photoshop (Adobe Camera RAW) - The expense of Photoshop pretty much eliminates this
  • ACDSee - I've been meaning for some time to start using ACDSee more for cataloging my photos, but haven't really given it a try in this respect yet. Has anyone out there?
  • RawTherapee - Does a very good job, but involves some effort, and I hate the user interaction. Free
  • RAWHide - Apparently decent quality, although I haven't really put it through its paces. Also seems to involve some effort (I'd prefer to be able to get good results from default settings, and go back to tweak just the photos that deserve it). Free
  • Silkypix - Apparently equivalent in quality to Adobe, but much more expensive than free.

Any suggestions that produce good quality, especially for default settings, is easy to use, and hopefully free or cheap?
385
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: AudialsOne on offer
« Last post by CWuestefeld on November 24, 2009, 07:47 PM »
Despite an annoying UI, this is a pretty good utility. It also handles (in conjunction with iTunes) Audible.com's protected audiobooks.
386
This is a fantastic deal, for anyone doing .Net WinForms development. I've used the Telerik controls for ASP.Net, and they're pretty good quality. So I think this post deserves a bump.
387
Living Room / Re: Help me build the ultimate metal playlist
« Last post by CWuestefeld on November 20, 2009, 02:08 PM »
Just finished reading "The 100 Greatest Metal Guitarists". Highly recommended.

I got some nostalgia from it, as well as some more depth on some music I was only partially familiar with, and some other stuff that was new to me (e.g. Ron Jarzombek in Blotted Science).
388
General Software Discussion / Re: At last: MP3 Lossless!!!
« Last post by CWuestefeld on November 13, 2009, 12:37 PM »
I know people like to hate MP3, in favor of OGG, FLAC, etc. But since I've upgraded to the latest LAME, I don't think it's worth worrying about at decent bitrates.

According to the LAME site (like this page: http://lame.sourceforge.net/gpsycho.php), the standard implementation that most encoders use is poor, and buggy on top of that. My personal experience when encoding my preferred genres (prog metal and power metal) is that the accuracy of top-rate VBR is actually superior to my audio equipment. Then nifty display of the encoder seems to bear this out: it's not showing much if any "overflow" data outside what fits inside the allocated frames.

I'm thinking that this is an example of something becoming ubiquitous because it's "good enough". Just like HTML has plenty of quirks, but gets the job done, and is now so entrenched that I can't imagine it going away, MP3 at a decent bitrate with a good encoder is just fine, and there's so much out there for it (both infrastructure and the music itself) that it's not going anywhere for some time.
389
Developer's Corner / Re: What's your Programming Language?
« Last post by CWuestefeld on October 26, 2009, 04:35 PM »
another thing I found annoying was they came up with auto_ptr without coming up with autoarray_ptr.

Hmmm. Never noticed. One reason is that by the time this stuff was being developed, I was already moving away from the language.

But also, Scott Meyers' Effective C++ really put me off arrays. I'd only use an array as a last resort, preferring other collections instead, since arrays are completely broken under polymorphism, and the philosophy of C++ is largely to assume that anything might employ inheritance.

That book, by the way, was the big eye-opener for me. Stuff like that warning about (non-)polymorphic arrays really helped me understand how the language really works. But as I said earlier, I still can't rate my skills as a 9 or a 10.

Speaking of different types of languages, did you know that C++'s templates (that is, not the core language itself, but its template facility) is Turing complete? See here: http://stackoverflow...ates-turing-complete
390
Developer's Corner / Re: What's your Programming Language?
« Last post by CWuestefeld on October 26, 2009, 03:21 PM »
The main pita with C++ is that '->' operator.  Sure an arrow implies "pointer" but until they come up with a typewriter with an arrow key that doesn't require shift, there should have been some sense used(like some languages let you use dot even if it is really a pointer and the compiler figures it out.)

One of my big "ah-ha" moments with C++ was understanding the whole point of references. Declaring a variable as a reference rather than a pointer lets you treat it as an actual instance of the object, rather than a pointer to it -- just what you asked for, you can use a dot rather than an arrow.

I've seen an idiom develop around this, too. By convention, if you're passed a reference to an object, then you're allowed to "use" it, but you don't "own" it. On the other hand, if you're given an actual pointer, then you are now its owner, which in particular means that you're responsible for cleaning it up when you're done with it.

On the other hand, the way that VB tries to hide pointers so that inexperienced people think they're always dealing with an actual object rather than a reference, has been the source of many programming errors that I've discovered in complex systems at work.
391
Developer's Corner / Re: What's your Programming Language?
« Last post by CWuestefeld on October 26, 2009, 01:18 PM »
javascript lends itself well to dynamic programming techniques that you might expect to need a Python or Ruby for.
None of these are programming languages. There is some structural difference, right?
I'd be inclined to include in the category of programming languages at least those that are Turing complete, because those are the ones that you can write any program in (with varying degrees of efficiency).

That would certainly exclude markup languages like HTML, XML, SGML. It technically even excludes SQL. But any language that satisfies the bare essentials for building a general-purpose algorithmic engine (and the bar is pretty low; have you ever programmed in, say, 6502 assembler?) ought to a candidate.

But then, I'm not the one who posed the original question.
392
Developer's Corner / Re: What's your Programming Language?
« Last post by CWuestefeld on October 26, 2009, 12:39 PM »
Java and C# are sluggish, resource hogging nonsense to me, while Delphi (which I actually like because it doesn't need a framework of any kind) is not a part of my knowledge...

Ahem. Delphi certainly does have a framework -- that's what BCL is. I think what you mean is that Delphi doesn't have any kind of virtual machine or abstraction layer in which it runs. Delphi is an excellent language, and it's worthwhile noting that it was designed by the lead designer of C#, Anders Hejlsberg. In any case, having a framework available is generally a good thing, that's why people take the time to develop them. They save time in custom-building your own infrastructure, and in the case of standardized ones such as BCL or ASP.Net, save a good deal of learning because you can leverage your understanding to multiple projects.

What bullshit are you referring to?
Like answering "Javascript" when you're asked for your favorite programming language.  :P

That's a rather elitist remark. IMHO, it also reveals a lack of understanding of javascript. The language gets a bad rap, but if you look more deeply at it, you'll find that there's really much more substance to it than immediately meets the eye. For example, in the hands of someone who understands it, javascript lends itself well to dynamic programming techniques that you might expect to need a Python or Ruby for.
393
Developer's Corner / Re: What's your Programming Language?
« Last post by CWuestefeld on October 26, 2009, 09:26 AM »
My primary tools these days are SQL and C#.

I find that SQL is a royal pain in the butt, especially using MS's extensions to it in SQL Server for writing stored procedures. Pain that it is, it's still the most effective tool available for this kind of work.

I grew up with C and changed to C++. The subtleties there are just horrific. When I did technical interviews for C++ developers, I'd always ask them to rate their skills 0-10. Anyone who said 9 or 10, I'd immediately assume they were lying. From this I dabbled in Java, but found it didn't live up to the hype.

I did a lot of work in VB 5 and 6 - not that I think these are good languages, but it was a great platform for building COM/ActiveX applications. Accomplishing that in C++ was like root canal.

But then Microsoft came out with .Net. And C# captured almost everything that was good about C++ and Java, and added some niceties of its own. So that's where I mostly am for application development today.

However, over the past year, I've been dabbling in Python. I find it easy and elegant.

@bgd77 -- I thoroughly agree with your implication about understanding. It's one thing to intellectually accept the technical benefits of something. It's quite another to grok it so that you can effectively leverage that theory.
394
Living Room / Re: Anybody else playing with Wave?
« Last post by CWuestefeld on October 16, 2009, 09:36 AM »
One thing we've discovered is that a Wave can quickly get so full of gunk that it's not usable anymore.
395
Living Room / Re: Anybody else playing with Wave?
« Last post by CWuestefeld on October 15, 2009, 11:53 AM »
FWIW, I think that GW, when used by a single person, is a lot like OneNote. But that's ignoring a huge point of GW's capability, the collaboration features. (OneNote has some sort of collaboration, but I've never used it. I'm sure it's not as robust as GW's.)
396
Living Room / Anybody else playing with Wave?
« Last post by CWuestefeld on October 14, 2009, 04:31 PM »
I got my Google Wave invite, and played with it a bit during lunch. It's kinda cool, but for the rough edges (which is why it's still in preview).

But the majority of the Waves in the server now are "Testing Wave" and "Is this thing on?" kind of thing. Are there any DC people in the heap, especially if you're experimenting with anything interesting?
397
General Software Discussion / Re: Win7: Anyone else getting excited?
« Last post by CWuestefeld on September 28, 2009, 09:08 PM »
AIUI, you can't upgrade an XP system directly to 7 -- the upgrade program only works from Vista. XP users must repave their whole darned system. In the end that's not a show stopper, but it means it's going to take at least 2 years for 7 to really take hold.
398
Living Room / Re: The Pricelessware Scam (Alt.Comp.Freeware)
« Last post by CWuestefeld on September 24, 2009, 01:00 PM »
I think alt.lang.asm might be worse
Well, sure, that would be bad. Consider the name of the group; how can you consider Assembly to be a language? I mean, it's really just a collection of mnemonics for machine language. Without any lexical analysis or grammar, how can you call it a language?
 :trout:
399
Living Room / Re: The Pricelessware Scam (Alt.Comp.Freeware)
« Last post by CWuestefeld on September 24, 2009, 12:18 PM »
** 40hz sits down next to f0dder, passes him a beer, and says: "Is this a rerun?" **
Yes, it's a rerun. See https://www.donation....msg142117#msg142117

ACF has to be the most dysfunctional group ever. Even the brawls on alt.atheism didn't have this much vitriol.
400
General Software Discussion / Re: Do you touch-type or hunt-and-peck?
« Last post by CWuestefeld on September 15, 2009, 11:41 AM »
skwire: true, but see this: the more they type, the better people get at touch-typing.
No, the more hunt-and-peckers type, the better they get at hunt-and-pecking. They'll never become touchtypers without a concerted effort.

Typing was one of the most valuable classes I took in high school, and has helped me considerably through my career.

If you ever saw my handwriting, you'd be glad that I type everything. But so am I -- I can type much faster than anyone can write longhand, or h&p.  I am much more efficient this way.

On the downside, I'm almost completely incapable of using nonstandard keyboards, either with odd keyplacement (who decided to move the home/end keys?!) or in sizing. Notebook computers give me fits.
Pages: prev1 ... 11 12 13 14 15 [16] 17 18 19 20 21 ... 40next