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3826
Living Room / Re: DC Social Club Love-In
« Last post by app103 on August 12, 2008, 04:36 AM »
Well it's nice to know if I ever start using pownce or kwippy that I have at least 1 person I can look up, so far. Thanks Allen!  :Thmbsup:
3827
Living Room / Re: which operating system you like most....
« Last post by app103 on August 10, 2008, 08:06 AM »
It depends what computer I am using as to which OS I prefer.

On my P1, I have only 3 choices to pick from: Win95, Win98, WinME.

I prefer ME because it's stable (at least on this machine it is). I would rather have the stability that ME offers than the faster speed of Win98. At the end of the day, Win98 isn't faster because of all the rebooting I'd have to do when something goes wrong, and that is a lot of rebooting.

On my other pc, I prefer XP. There is a lot more software I can run on it that I couldn't with ME. I miss some of the features that are in ME that are not included with XP though, and I have a feeling that if I get that machine running again, that I will have to go through an adjustment period all over again, learning to live without certain perks I have become acustomed to again by using ME for the last 6 months. (Why doesn't xp jump to a file you have selected, when you change folder view, like ME does? Why does it jump back to the top and make you scroll to the file again? That's annoying!)

My brief exposure to 2003 Server was about 1 day of wasting my time searching google for how to turn off desktop icons so none will show. I never did find out how. Unless I can turn them off, there isn't much hope of me liking that OS.

2008 Server, on the other hand, I turned off the desktop icons easily. But the Explorer windows have that ugly IE7 look and all the handy buttons that I like on the toolbar and can customize on older versions of Windows, are all gone. I don't like that.

I haven't tried Vista yet, but if I am forced to have desktop icons (like in 2003 Server), or the Explorer windows look like IE7 (like in 2008 Server), or they have taken away my ability to use old fashioned 9x style classic themes, I will probably hate looking at it enough to hate using it. And if my favorite software won't run on it, I don't see any point in trying it, nevermind buying it.

Just for an illustration--I was always terribly bugged with WinXP Explorer putting the newly created file at the end of the list and requiring refresh to position it properly. No more in Vista. The new file appears immediately just where it should be. A triviality, but it delights. And so on...

I actually like that feature in Windows...makes it much easier to find the file I just created instead of having to hunt for it in the list. The bottom of the list is easier to find a file, for me. I will actually keep an Explorer window open while downloading files, just to have it easier to find the new files when the download completes...they will all be at the bottom. Changing that wouldn't delight me.

Maybe I am starting to suffer from "old fart syndrome", getting too used to things and set in my ways and not liking all the "new fangled kid stuff".  :-\
3828
General Software Discussion / Re: Linux is Not Windows
« Last post by app103 on August 10, 2008, 06:40 AM »
I wasn't talking about you switching to Linux, Zaine. You did that of your own free will, you had your good reasons, it was right for you, and you are happy with it. That's great, wonderful, fantastic...I am happy for you. I would hate to think you were using an OS you didn't like, be that Windows, Linux, Mac, or anything else.

What I am about to say may or may not apply to you, all or in part. You will know if it does, or not. I can think of many Linux users that this doesn't apply to, but even more that it does...

The 'war' I was referring to is the harassment that Windows users get for not switching, where Linux users go out of their way to attack those that choose to use Windows and not switch their OS, as if somehow that would make someone stop liking Windows and switch to Linux. The abuse is even worse for Windows users that have tried Linux and gone back to Windows when it disappointed them and wasn't what they expected or wanted.

It's the battle of the desktop that gets a bit too personal, with Linux users thinking they have to crush Microsoft and convert all Windows users to their OS, no matter what it takes. They act like they are making a $1000 commission for each Windows user they convert. They have a "convert or kill" attitude when it comes to every Windows user they come across.

I like Windows, at least the last 2 versions I have tried, and I plan on sticking with them till I can't any more. And since I have a PC still running WinME, I am likely to be running XP longer than Microsoft would like, too. (and don't start with the security crap, my WinME is more secure than the average user's XP or Vista)

I hated 2003 Server when I couldn't figure out how to shut off desktop icons...and I hated the IE7 look of the Explorer windows in 2008 Server. (but I love RDP with both of them) Just because I like the versions I do, doesn't mean I love all versions, or that I love every single little thing about the versions that I do like.

Don't call me an ignorant Vista lover, because I haven't even tried Vista. Don't throw it's flaws in my face. Don't use its issues to insult me, as a person. They don't affect me in the least bit, at this point in time. They are irrelevant.

Issues with Office and proprietary document formats don't affect me either and Office is not and has never been part of Windows (Wordpad is, but not Office), nor is it installed on any of my PC's at this current point in time. Almost everything I do is either in plain text or HTML. The only additional format that makes a difference to me is PDF, and for that I read them, not make them, and I use Foxit Reader, not Adobe.

It would just be nice if those that are loving Linux so much would stop trying to shove it down the throats of those that they know that are loving Windows.

Linux is not for everyone. Know that, understand that, and leave us that don't want it, alone. Don't insult us just because we use what we like. You wouldn't like it if the abuse was returned in the same manner as you have dished it out.

What some Linux users do is as offensive as the Mac or PC ads, and it's been going on a lot longer than Apple's campaign. Windows users are not all stupid by nature and shouldn't be treated as if we all are, just because our tastes are different than yours. Some of us actually don't have issues with spyware, malware, viruses & trojans, and have systems that work well and are quite stable and do just what we want, almost all of the time.

I am tired of the whole thing that has devolved into a childish playground brawl with 'kids' (adults) insulting each other with "my OS is better than your OS" crap that looks a lot like "my dad drives a better car than your dad".

It's right up there with the harassment my daughter got in school when she was 5 years old, for bringing in a liverwurst sandwich for lunch. Because the other kids didn't like liverwurst, it didn't matter to them that my daughter happened to love it. They couldn't just let her enjoy it in peace. It was them that made her miserable, not the sandwich, and she didn't stop loving liverwurst just because of their abuse.

I would like to enjoy my Windows, in peace. Launching a personal attack on me because I like my OS, doesn't allow me to do that, and just makes me hate you, not Windows. What it can also do is make me think twice about ever trying Linux, because I don't want to ever be a part of some culture that abuses people in the way that you do. This is one of many reasons why I will never own a Mac.

If you have made the switch and are loving your Linux, it's ok to tell others, but be careful not to do it to an extent or in a way that it becomes childishly abusive. And don't fall into rating the value of a human life by the OS one runs (or the ISP they use)...one has NOTHING to do with the other.

Bottom line: Don't act like a jerk.

And for the Windows and Mac users: that message is for you, too.


Edit: converted Typonese to English  :-[
3829
Living Room / Re: Blocking text-ads, no revenue left for web-writers?
« Last post by app103 on August 09, 2008, 08:16 PM »
I have a dynamic link list/blogroll that picks up feeds and fetches the favicon of sites listed in it...and Wordzilla's site is in the list.

I didn't know about the issue, and I'll remove the entry till it is fixed.

Sorry about that.
3830
Living Room / Re: Neatorama reads the DonationCoder.com Blog?!!
« Last post by app103 on August 09, 2008, 04:00 AM »
I saw that earlier today and thought it was so cool. I was saving the link for you for when I drop by the IRC channel later, in case you didn't see it...but I guess you did.

Nice to see the blog page is finally getting some good exposure.  :Thmbsup:
3831
Living Room / Re: Blocking text-ads, no revenue left for web-writers?
« Last post by app103 on August 09, 2008, 02:39 AM »
The problem is not the Adsense ads themselves on sites, but how some people display them. They are relying on a single type of ad, placing it in a rather obnoxious way, and it can be quite annoying. If used properly, Adsense works on the right type of sites, without having to resort to being obnoxious with them. It's the people that abuse the ads that are ruining it for everyone.

I have been playing around with various ads on my blogs and I have found there is 2 types of ads and 2 types of visitors, so figure out what kind of traffic you have and use the right ads.

1. Hit & run info seekers. They come mostly from search engines, mostly from Google, and they respond well to Google's own text based contextual ads. You only need a simple strip with a few ads in it across the top and bottom of each page they see...not a huge block that makes people have to scroll to get to the content.

2. Loyal repeat visitors that usually end up blind to Google's ads on your site and respond better to something like Project Wonderful's 125 square ads and the smaller buttons, which a great many blogs and web comics use to advertise on each other's sites. This ad program is mega cool because of the interesting advertisers.

And if you publish a webcomic, it is better than adsense, because Adsense can't contextually match an ad to your comic images (there is not enough text), and usually gives crappy ads nobody will click.

I use both on my blogs and sites, but I use Project Wonderful a bit more. Rather than it being pay-per-click, it's pay-per-day and you will get paid whatever someone has bid on your ad box, regardless of whether anyone clicks the ads or not. (and yes, you are allowed to click the ads on your own site, unlike Adsense) You also get a lot more control over who is advertising on your site. The program has a lot of advantages for both advertisers and publishers.

I wrote a blog post a few months ago about my experiences with Project Wonderful. Things have changed a bit since then, and I am now making more off of their ads than Adsense, on some sites. (like I said in the beginning, what type of traffic you have makes a big difference) The article will give you a good idea of what kinds of sites are using the service and what you can expect to show up in your ad boxes. (the sites mentioned all advertised on my programming ebooks site) There is also both Adsense and Project Wonderful ads on my blog, and you can compare them and see, as a visitor, which are more appealing to you if you are not seeking info, and if you were.

Something else I noticed, is that turning off javascript in your browser will kill most ads (adsense included), preventing them from appearing on pages, but Project Wonderful ads will still show up.

There is also a wordpress plugin that will allow you to control who sees ads and which ads they see, which means you can show Adsense to people coming to your site from Google searches, and something else to everyone else.

You can also use it keep your site ad free for people coming from Digg, StumbleUpon, and EntreCard, since those people never click and showing them ads will just damage your CTR and get you budget priced by some ad networks, and in some cases get you accused of "artificially inflating page impressions" and your account revoked.
3832
Living Room / Re: DC Social Club Love-In
« Last post by app103 on August 09, 2008, 01:05 AM »
My list was only the ones I belong to, with links to my profiles.

The point wasn't to make a list of what social sites exist. It was to share your profiles and have dc friends on other sites besides dc.

If you belong to any of the sites I listed that I am a member of, look me up, provide the links to your profiles so others can do the same with you, and provide ones for sites that I am not  a member of.

Even list your myspace or livejournal if you have one. Just because I don't have an account on the site doesn't mean that you can't have other dc friends there.
3833
I usually surf with javascript turned off and only turn it on for certain sites that need it.

What is nice about the browser I am using (K-Meleon) is not just that it runs well on slower computers, it also has a lot of features necessary for them, like flashblock, flashkill, javascript block, java block, image block. And it puts most of it on a tiny toolbar that is easy to get to, if you turn the privacy toolbar on.

SNAG-00066.png

It's only on some sites that things are a real pain. They just won't work right without the javascript turned on, and when you turn it on it still doesn't work right because you are waiting forever for the page to load, then waiting forever to be able to do the simplest of tasks.

Another bonus about the lo-fi surfing is that it can be more productive by providing less distractions to draw you away from your purpose for being there.

Imagine being able to shop amazon.com and get just what you went there for and not everything else they threw images at you. It's faster and cheaper to use the mobile version. It's not image free, but there is a lot less of the extras trying to sell you a whole kitchen when you went there just for a cookbook. Great way to keep impulse shopping under control.
3834
General Software Discussion / Linux is Not Windows
« Last post by app103 on August 09, 2008, 12:05 AM »
I came across this today and wondered why is this page not linked to, anywhere on this forum, that I could find.

It's a bit old (2005), but still a great essay about why Windows users have such a hard time making the switch to Linux, why things don't work how Windows users expect, why so many say that "Linux isn't ready for the desktop", etc.

I think if all Windows & Linux users read it, the "war" will be over, and both sides will have won.

3835
Living Room / Re: Please share your favorite search engines.
« Last post by app103 on August 08, 2008, 12:34 AM »
RIAA Radar - Find out if an album was released by a member of the RIAA. You can search by artist, label, or album name.
3836
Living Room / DC Social Club Love-In
« Last post by app103 on August 07, 2008, 11:51 PM »
I got the idea from ProBlogger.

It can be rather lonely on social networking sites when you don't have many friends. And even if you have plenty, who couldn't use some more?

For this to work, you will have to list the profiles you have on various social networking sites in which you are a member. Then we can all be friends not just here on DC, but everywhere, too.

And if you are not a member of one of these sites and become one at some point in the future, you can come back here and have plenty of friends from DC, to start you off.

Just list the links to the profiles, so they will be clickable. You can list any social site you are a member of, not just the ones I am. I know we are not all members of all the same sites.

I'll go first:

3837
laggy.png

Recently, while I was having a lot of trouble getting the Digg site to work on my old slow computer, I found a couple of alternatives that could be very helpful to anyone in the same situation.

Digg, Digg Lite, Digg Ultra-Lite

Taking it a step further, I wrote another article that will be of use to anyone struggling with an old slow computer on the internet, or even a newer one on a slow dialup connection. There is an entire hidden internet out there, that is friendly to old machines and slow connections!

It's a case of where new technology gives new life to the old.

And if you surf the web on your phone or PDA, you can help others by providing some information that you might be more familiar with, and maybe even pick up a few links for yourself.

The New Breed of Snails are Good News for Old Snails
3838
Living Room / Re: Weird websites
« Last post by app103 on August 05, 2008, 07:50 AM »
A classic "weird" site that I just love would have to be http://homokaasu.org (not everything is in english, some stuff is in Finnish)

I have wasted way too much time on their simply designed, not always that easy to play, strange flash games.
3839
Living Room / Re: Skimp or splurge?
« Last post by app103 on August 03, 2008, 04:57 AM »
I think I need to write a book on how to shop, because I am the queen of frugality.

It's not about skimping or splurging...it's about quality, and when does it matter. Good quality doesn't have to cost more, and in fact, it can actually cost substantially less, if you know what you are doing. (rebates, coupons, specials, sales, clearance, etc)

Think about how many times you want to buy a particular item during the course of your lifetime, then decide if it would make sense to pay more for that better quality. Then try to get the item at a discount that would make it near the same cost (or less) as the cheaper quality item. Except in the case of consumables like food, aim to buy it only once, if possible. And don't impulse shop!

And sometimes it depends on who you are buying the item for and how destructive they are. You can control your own actions, and take better care of the things you buy, but you can't control other people.

It makes more sense to buy my husband the cheapest portable CD player as possible, and the headphones from a $1 store...since they aren't going to last very long no matter how much you pay for them. With as destructive as he is, the $50.00 one will last the same amount of time as a $3.99 one.You are better off in his case investing the extra money you save, on blank CD's and making copies of everything he wants to listen to so he won't be touching the originals, because he will play them once and destroy them.

It makes more sense to buy the highest quality portable CD player for myself, since I am not destructive, and it is likely to last till it's well beyond obsolete...as long as my husband never borrows it for a day.  :D

Consumables:

Milk: you don't need to pay an extra $0.50 for a gallon of the name brand stuff. The milk with the store brand label came from the same cows. And besides, paying more won't make you have to buy less. It will be gone in the same amount of time.

Toothpaste: If there is a brand that will allow you to keep your teeth longer, buy it...but get it on a good sale and stock up, since you plan on brushing your teeth for as long as you have them. And for bonus savings, grab the packages that come with the free toothbrush attached.

Cheese: There is stuff out there that costs less and looks like cheese, but the individually wrapped slices taste a lot like the plastic they are wrapped in. Make sure it actually says "cheese" on the package. Spend more for that one single word.

Household goods:

Drinking glasses: Buy tempered glass, heat & break resistant, and pay whatever you have to, to get them. It's safer and they will last long enough for your great-grandchildren to throw across the room and they still won't break.

Sheets: Don't ever buy anything with a thread count less than 200, and don't buy anything that doesn't list a thread count, since it's likely to be about 120 if it doesn't say. High thread count sheets get better with age, they soften with repeated washings and take on an almost velvet-like texture.

Cheap, low thread count sheets will get irritating fuzz balls on them, often before the first washing. They get worse with age. Most sheets with prints designed for children are very low thread count. Invest in better quality sheets that they won't "outgrow" and will last till they move out. The latest fad cartoon character sheets, you'll be lucky if they last as long as your kid's interest in the character, but a simple solid color high thread count sheet set will last through college, and possibly long enough for their children to sleep on them.

Furnature: Buy used, classic style, real wood...the older, the better, and preferably oak. Refinish it if necessary. Do not buy anything made of that sawdust crap that is sold in most stores today.

Light bulbs: If you get good quality light bulbs, you can often get more light with a lower wattage and they will last longer. The money you save after purchase will exceed the extra amount you paid for them.

Cookware: Even if the only thing you do is make pancakes on Sunday morning, invest in professional quality cookware and learn how to take proper care of it. The number of pancakes to cookware cost ratio will be much better, and you will actually make better pancakes.

Clothing:

You have to be careful with clothing, and pick a classic style rather than something trendy. Otherwise you run the risk of looking like an old fart in an out of style polyester suit from the 70's. Buy something that was in style 20 years ago and is still in style today. Chances are, it will still be in style 20 years from now.

Shoes: These are so important, because if your feet aren't happy, you will never be able to be happy, yourself. Get the best shoes you can get for your feet...well fitting, good construction, quality materials...but get a classic style that won't look funny on your feet in 10 or more years, and buy them cheaper by buying a discontinued style from last year, off the clearance rack. Protect the investment by identifying the area of the heels likely to end up worn out first, and attach heel protectors to them. Replace the protectors when they are wearing out so the heels of the shoes never get damaged. If the bottoms do wear out, before buying a new pair, find out if replacing the bottoms would be cheaper, first.

And never skimp on quality when it comes to children's shoes. If you do, you could be setting up your kids for a lifetime of foot problems. Growing feet need good shoes. So even if they will outgrow them in 3 months, get the good stuff.

Kids clothing: They only have to last till the kids outgrow them, maybe 2 kids if you have a younger one of the same gender. Remember that when you shop, and don't cave in to the requests of your kids for the expensive trendy designer stuff. As a parent, you are teaching them how to shop and buying the trendy stuff just because they won't shut up till you do, teaches them to not only keep whining and taking advantage of you, but you will also be teaching them to be bad shoppers, something that will haunt their wallets for the rest of their life.

Blue jeans: Why would you pay more to have someone else's name on your butt? Better off getting a pair where the company has a reputation for making things that last, than a designer that has a reputation for being trendy. Back in 80's, during the hayday of designer jeans, if you invested in a good pair of classically styled Levis at $20 rather than Sergio Valente at $75+, you would still be wearing them now and nobody would give you a funny look for it....and you would have paid much less for them.

Seriously, maybe I should write a book, because I really could go on & on & on.  ;D
3840
Living Room / Re: Weird websites
« Last post by app103 on August 01, 2008, 03:58 PM »
Came across this strange, ingenious product a long time ago...was amusing enough for me to add it to my collection of links on my website:

Uncle Boogger's Bumper Dumper

3841
General Software Discussion / Re: Your most used SPECIAL programs
« Last post by app103 on August 01, 2008, 03:32 PM »
I am just going to list a few weird and/or obscure things that most people may not know about, that I use either often or constantly...

dirHTML - generates custom index.html files for directories on your hard drive.

Xerver - small, cross platform, lightweight, easy to use, Java based web server that is great for testing out PHP or Perl scripts. It can be optionally configured to only accept connections originating from localhost, so nobody outside of your machine would be able to access anything. Runs quite well on an old slow 9x machine, as long as you have it configured to run in non-gui mode.

Rutgers University Physics Lab Wave Generator - This is always running in the background generating a 25Hz tone that can't be heard through my cheap pc speakers (silent noise). I have a combo modem/soundcard that performs much better if sound is constantly playing. Without it, I would need to run Winamp with music playing all the time, otherwise my pc will lock up and I'll get disconnected from the internet, if any sound plays on my pc, such as a system sound or IM notification sound.  It also generates white noise and other sounds, which some people might find relaxing or as an aid to concentration in a noisey environment.

Run and Hide - this is used to minimize the wave generator to my tray.

"Internet Glue" - through trial & error (and partly by accident) I discovered exactly what will keep my dialup isp from disconnecting me for inactivity. It works where all other such utilities have failed. I have not quite finished it yet, so it is not currently available to the public. It needs a few options and some polishing up first. (if anyone knows of any stable safe fast loading search engines, as clean as google's, containing no flash, graphical ads (text based ads are ok), or other crap, please PM me and share the URLs so I can finish this and release it)



I'll add to this list at some point in the future, when I am on a better pc and can run more goodies.   8)
3842
Living Room / Re: Wordle: Create Beautiful Word Clouds
« Last post by app103 on July 31, 2008, 10:32 PM »
I'd love to throw some old chatlogs through it, usernames & all. (after cleaning out the timestamps)

You'd not only get to see what we talk about the most, but you'd see who the biggest blabbermouth in the channel is, too. (in theory, of course) :D
3843
You could make an additional toobar on the taskbar of each account, to act as a "mailblox", and use a folder that is accesible to all users, and save a text file to the folder.

One can be notes for you...the other notes for your wife. You can save things to her folder and she will see it on her taskbar when she logs in.

You can save notes to yourself to your folder and you will see them when you are logged in.

She could also save notes to that folder.

This is how I did it when I shared a pc with my daughter.
3844
General Software Discussion / Re: Getting rid of "Google Goo"
« Last post by app103 on July 31, 2008, 04:53 AM »
Not all Google users will get this tracking garbage in their links, and the ones that do will not have it all the time.

It only happens if you have some sort of google account (like gmail, adsense, blogger, etc) and are logged in. Once you log out the links are clean again.
3845
Living Room / The Software Behind the Mars Phoenix Lander
« Last post by app103 on July 27, 2008, 09:03 PM »
The Mars Phoenix Lander Mission is a short-term mission to Mars to search for signs of water and a potential habitable site for an eventual manned mission to the Red Planet. This mission is a collaboration between NASA and the University of Arizona Lunar and Planetary Laboratory.

Sending hundreds of pounds of equipment millions of miles through space to land and operate independently from direct control presents several interesting software development challenges. O'Reilly News recently discussed the project and its technology with NASA's Peter Gluck.

(mp3 of interview is available for download)

3846
Living Room / Re: Wordle: Create Beautiful Word Clouds
« Last post by app103 on July 27, 2008, 02:09 AM »
the SQLNotes thread sounds like a good candidate - enough there for a whole wardrobe...

I think the note-taking thread has enough text to clothe a small country.  ;D
3847
Ok, I guess I will pledge the first real item with a realistic "price tag"...

I discovered a lot of vintage yarn awhile back and I am crocheting something with it. I have no clue what it will be when I am finished, probably an afghan of some sort. It will be pastel colored...pink, blue, pastel ombre. It could be quite large and most likely round. I am really not sure how big it will be.

I don't know how long it will take to finish. I am just going to keep crocheting till I run out of this yarn. Might not be available to send to the recipient till some time in the winter, maybe a bit longer.

But for a $50 donation to the site, when it is finished, I promise I will mail it to you.

Just in case it is important to you, I do have pets (a cat) and I am a clove smoker. I will wash it before mailing it. (I am disclosing this info because things like that matter to some people)

NOTE:  Please do not place a claim on this item until the fundraiser officially begins.
3848
And before he changes his mind, these 2 are from the chatroom:

<mouser> 1 million = your own personal mouser
<mouser> 100,000 = i will come to your house and make homemade lassagne and ice cream

 ;D
3849
Living Room / Re: The Long Tail and it's Doubters
« Last post by app103 on July 24, 2008, 09:40 PM »
I think the current buzz phrase is "niche marketing".
3850
Living Room / Wordle: Create Beautiful Word Clouds
« Last post by app103 on July 22, 2008, 04:03 AM »
Wordle is a toy for generating “word clouds” from text that you provide. The clouds give greater prominence to words that appear more frequently in the source text. You can tweak your clouds with different fonts, layouts, and color schemes. The images you create with Wordle are yours to use however you like. You can print them out, or save them to the Wordle gallery to share with your friends.

This is a Java applet, so you will need Java installed and enabled in your browser, to be able to use this.

In order to save the images, you will need to make a screenshot. (If you don't already have something for that, this would be a great time to try mouser's Screenshot Captor)

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