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4176
Living Room / Re: Forum Angst
« Last post by app103 on November 27, 2007, 02:22 PM »
Most people organize their feeds by category: News, Technology, Humor, Cooking, etc.

If you have so many feeds, maybe it would help if you changed the method to grouping them by day of week: Monday, Tuesday, etc.

Place no more than 2 times the number of feeds you can handle in your allotted feed reading time in each folder.

Why 2 times?

On the first & third Monday of the month, you start at the top of the Monday feed list and work your way down, on the second & fourth Monday, start at the bttom and work your way up.

You will see everything from every feed you have at least once every 2 weeks.

If you go more than a month or 2 without anything interesting happening in a particular feed, delete it and don't look back with regret.
4177
Living Room / Re: Forum Angst
« Last post by app103 on November 27, 2007, 02:04 PM »
You have to set up some limits for yourself, not in terms of the number of forums & feeds, but the amount of time you will spend on them, and schedule it if you have to.

Then from your list, start at the top one day, at the bottom the next, maybe making a second list you will only touch on weekends.

You can have it all...but not in a single day.
4178
Which ones, specifically?

I think I used X-Setup Pro to add a few entries that lead to specific folders on my system (Old Computer & Downloads). It's a registry hack.  ;)

you can push it small so just the title "Desktop" shows on the taskbar,
But look at how much room "Desktop" and ">>" take up on the taskbar!

Ahhh...but it takes up less space than C: >>, D: >>, E: >>, etc, since it is all in one.
4179
GOE 2007 Challenge Downloads / Re: GOE 2007 Programming Contest for November 2007
« Last post by app103 on November 26, 2007, 01:06 PM »
very nice mouser & gjehle...at least once I replaced all the @'s with -'s. It was taking up 2 lines here.
4180
General Software Discussion / Re: Why the Windows Registry Exists
« Last post by app103 on November 26, 2007, 12:30 PM »
There is a 32kb limit?

Whoops! Someone forgot to tell Opera, AOL, Maxthon, Spybot, Flashget, Sierra, etc.

SNAG-0214.png

That 97kb one is from Opera, which seems to work just fine with an INI file that is 3x the 'limit'.  :huh:
4181
I don't know if you ever found a solution to this, but there is a way to do what you want without installing any software to handle it.

If you right click your taskbar and go to "Toolbars" and select "Desktop" you can push it small so just the title "Desktop" shows on the taskbar, and have access to all the shortcuts on your desktop, when you click the little arrow next to that.

Anything that is a folder on your desktop will be a tree, similar to the start menu.

And the best part...the "My Computer" menu item expands to show all your drives...and all folders on those drives, and all the files in those folders...just about everything on your pc from just that single menu.

Actually, most of those special Windows desktop icons expand into menus this way, so you will be able to access a lot more that what you originally asked for...all from the space of a single arrow & caption rather than having many of them taking up your taskbar space.

This screenshot shows what I mean. Keep in mind I have a bit of a different layout going on with a vertical taskbar instead of the traditional horizontal. But it should work like this on any Windows machine.

mcmenu.png
4182
Living Room / Re: Looking for Beta Testers for Satanic Music Detector :)
« Last post by app103 on November 25, 2007, 04:13 AM »
Found another one.

This is an original song by a friend of mine...the great Cailin! (yes, the same one that proposed marriage to Cody in one of the podcasts). She gave me distribution permission, so I can upload it for you guys to hear it.

Slow it down to -30...right around the 70 mark where she says "You're played by Richard Dean Anderson" that comes out backwards sounding like "What's your name? You sure are different."

And yes, I already know she is possessed (I have worse backwards stuff I can't share  :-[). That's why my cat hates her...only room for one demon in my house.  ;D
4183
Living Room / Re: Looking for Beta Testers for Satanic Music Detector :)
« Last post by app103 on November 25, 2007, 03:43 AM »

I'll check it out and see if I can reproduce it. It was looking fairly stable - can you let me know any details about your computer? OS - RAM - CPU. If you were zoomed and which direction you were going at the time?

XP Home SP2 (fully up to date), a gig of ram, P4 Prescott 3.2ghz...not zoomed beyond the default 10...can't remember which direction

Ah! My Bastard Fairies album download is complete! Time to check that out now! :D

(I f*^&ing LOVE that - it's just way too funny!)

I was picking songs by title. I thought it was a great title for this and I got lucky with it having that bit near the end of the song.

I prefer picking things others can verify, but that can be hard sometimes since I listen to a lot of stuff most people have never heard of.  :-[
4184
Developer's Corner / Re: Ideas vs. Inventions
« Last post by app103 on November 25, 2007, 02:42 AM »
I would hold off on getting a patent on a bad design...that was what part of my point was.

Rather than trying to patent a laser powered mousetrap, work on it some more and then patent the method of safely and reliably powering a terrawatt laser from a pair of AA batteries. 

THAT patent would be more valuable than the one for the mousetrap. You could license the technology to defense contracting companies and any other industry that would need a high powered laser with a very tiny cheap portable power source.  ;D

And you are right...just because you have designed one solution and patented it doesn't stop anybody from designing a better solution to the same problem and getting their own patent. This is why you should carefully think it through and try to make the design for yours the best it can be, rather than something just slapped together in a rush to patent your 'idea', since it's the designed solution and not the idea that needs protection. Just make sure the solution is for a real problem, first.
4185
Living Room / Re: How good are you at spotting spyware, spam & phishing traps?
« Last post by app103 on November 25, 2007, 02:13 AM »
I don't know about anybody else, but when taking these tests, I looked at the sites & emails with suspicion, taking my time, thinking they were all evil until 'proven' good.

Is this how I normally approach things? Do I always read the privacy policy before handing over my email address? No. Most of the time I don't even know if the site even has one. (maybe I should, but I don't)

Rather than trying to find some holy grail for eliminating spam, maybe we should start treating any site that wants our email address a bit more suspiciously, and at least read their privacy policy. (not that I am currently throwing my email address mindlessly all over the web, mind you)

Honestly, I think these kinds of things are purely scams.

"Hey! Take this test to find out that you suck and that you need to buy our products!"

It's pure scareware.

Bottom line, it doesn't matter what security software you buy and use, you can still be fooled into trusting when you shouldn't. Don't let your guard down. Don't let any software give you a false sense of security and think that since you run it you are allowed to be stupid.

I have always said that Common Sense™ is the best antivirus, best antispyware, best antispam...anything else is a backup for when/if that fails. And upgrades are available daily, meaning your defenses improve with experience.

If nothing else, consider whatever you got from these quizzes as a minor upgrade to your Common Sense™, even if all it was, was just a tiny bugfix that leads you to be a bit more careful than you were before.

It's this kind of thing that undermines my faith in security software and the security industry in general. They prey on fear rather than reality.

I for one would like some honesty for a change. Am I asking too much?

It is asking too much.

Who do you want it from, any way? The spammers? the phishers? the spyware makers? They are not about to be honest with anybody, and we really do need to sharpen our noses more every day to stay on top of things and not get fooled.

Now if you want honesty from the anti-nasty industry, you will only get it partially from any of the 'reputable' companies. They still need you to want to use their product, and any notion that their product is unnecessary doesn't translate into being able to stay in business for long.

A popup when your firewall blocks something inbound...the only purpose is to scare you into thinking that you better never get rid of your firewall...it's 'evidence' that it is actually doing something. It could just as easily block and log without bugging you. (personally, I wish it were possible for that 'blocked inbound' popup to be replaced with a popup for when it fails to block something inbound/outbound that it should have been able to block. That would be more useful.)

Up until Blaster hit, the majority of PC users didn't even know what a firewall was. Now we all not only know what one is, we also all know we need one.

Which is better? That people should wait until they have a disaster to understand the need for security? Or some anti-nasty's scare tactics get the message through their heads before a disaster happens?

To anyone here that has a life insurance policy...did you buy it because you think you are going to die tomorrow? or because you think it is possible that you might? If you were to die, when the insurance company hands your family the check, is it going to matter to them which one you thought? or will they just be glad you had the sense to buy some insurance and that they can afford to put you in the ground?

Security software is an insurance policy, and the tactics used to sell it is much the same as selling life insurance. You will never hear a sales pitch from an insurance company that says 'Humans die, would you like some life insurance?'

They will more likely try to scare you by telling you how great the possibility is that you will die long before you get old, and it will happen when you least expect it, and if you don't prepare now, your poor family will suffer when you are gone.
4186
General Software Discussion / Re: Going back to XP
« Last post by app103 on November 25, 2007, 12:40 AM »
+1 for check the hardware & drivers.

Windows is very stable, and almost every single problem like that (BSOD) can be directly traced back to buggy drivers.

That was even true for WinME.  ;)
4187
Living Room / Re: Seriously, wtf is going on with Apple's Mac vs. Pc ads?
« Last post by app103 on November 24, 2007, 11:29 PM »
There is another ad in their "Give Up on Vista" campaign...

First take a look at the ad that is appearing on web pages all over the place...

Then take a look at the same ad on a Mac.  ;D

Notice that on the Mac, the ad appeared on a page selling Vista.

I think Apple makes some good products, and I think some of their approach to and focus on usability is very helpful.  Their approach with OS X seems particularly smart.

FisherPrice has a long history of making good products too, but I am not about to go walking around in public with their almost indestructible umbrella over my head, even if it was the safest, highest quality umbrella ever made, in the history of umbrellas. (but my daughter carried the same one for 5 years, till it became embarrassing to be seen with it)

Who the target consumer is, makes a big difference sometimes.
4188
Living Room / Re: Seriously, wtf is going on with Apple's Mac vs. Pc ads?
« Last post by app103 on November 24, 2007, 10:33 PM »
Whenever I see any Mac ad, no matter what its content & message, I can't help but see this support page in my mind, and this little box on the sidebar:

mac.png

It really does keep it all in proper perspective.

The people these ads are meant to appeal to are the same ones that will need a page like that, once they buy a Mac. This is Apple's target consumer. They want the frustrated people that can't seem to be able to get any version of Windows to work right. They want the people that blame their computer, Windows, etc...anything but their own inexperience and mistakes, for things not working right.

If Apple made lamps instead of computers, the ads would be making fun of the chandelier with tons of bulbs, crystals, and the dimmer with the timer...telling people that they need a disposable one with a single lightbulb and a simple push button on/off switch, blaming the chandelier for being crappy because the user didn't read the instructions and can't figure out how to set the timer, clean the crystals, change the bulbs, etc.

Apple's business model is based on this:

"We will convince the ignorant user they are already smart don't need to learn anything, and that the product they have been using is stupid, then take their money and treat them like children."
4189
Developer's Corner / Ideas vs. Inventions
« Last post by app103 on November 24, 2007, 09:16 AM »
I was recently contacted by someone and asked how to patent an idea. He was quite upset when I told him that you can't, that you can only patent an implementation of an idea...an invention. He didn't want to believe me, saying lots of companies do it every day and get rich off of those ideas. (he wants to get rich too)

He has a lot to learn, beginning with what the difference is between an idea and an implementation of an idea.

He, just like many, also has everything backwards in his head, thinking you come up with a great idea, rush to make something, then go get it patented before someone steals your idea. That's not how it works, not at all.

That would be like rushing to create a solution to a problem without knowing what the problem really is, then go look for a problem your solution works for to try to sell your invention, rather than coming up a great way to solve a known existing problem...the best way possible to solve that problem, taking your time to do it well, revising it and making it better till it is the best it can be, then patent it, market it, and sell that solution to people that already want it. (kind of how the coding snacks here work)

There are a gazillion inventions every year and the patent office is overloaded with some of the worst stuff you have ever seen...silly stuff...poorly designed stuff, all in the hopes of getting rich. Most inventions never make a dime and have cost their inventors a fortune by the time they have finished and given up.

I went in search of some good reading material for this guy, since he wasn't going to take my word for it when I told him he was going about it all wrong, and found this fantastic article that will explain in greater detail what the invention process is really about. I figured I would share it and possibly save someone a lot of money & heartache in the process.

Just remember this: Real inventors create solutions to problems, they don't dream up crazy ideas. That's what dreamers do. Real inventors are thinkers, problem solvers...not dreamers.



4190
Living Room / Re: Interesting Signs
« Last post by app103 on November 24, 2007, 02:29 AM »
Fantastic site! Lots of great pages!

I had a lot of fun there and added another rss feed to my collection.

Unfortunately I have to reboot now, because I saved too many pics to my 'wtf' folder and now have no ability to right click any more.  :(
4191
Living Room / Re: NFW! Check Out THIS Music Distribution Policy!!!
« Last post by app103 on November 24, 2007, 02:23 AM »
I'll be buying the documentary DVD from the Bastard Fairies, very soon. (yeah, they don't just make music)
4192
Living Room / Re: Looking for Beta Testers for Satanic Music Detector :)
« Last post by app103 on November 23, 2007, 04:42 AM »
The Bastard Fairies - We're All Going to Hell (they used to let you download this song)

At the very end of the song where they say "he died of a stroke when he tried to eat the book...of kings, eat the book..of kings, eat the book...of kings"

that comes out backwards as "(garble) Look at me. (garble) Look at me. (garble) Look at me. Is that him lurchin'?"

 ;D

bug:
It did get stuck at one point and the app stopped responding when I was toggling the "switch playback direction" button.  :(
4193
Living Room / Re: How often do you reboot your primary workstation?
« Last post by app103 on November 23, 2007, 01:05 AM »
"Only as needed" is defined as once every 2-3 weeks when things start going wrong and I can't do what I want, such as getting Paintshop Pro to open.

I think I need to adjust this value a bit more.

I am running XP Home, this PC is heavily used for a gazillion things, running 24/7, running an average of about 90 processes at all times, and hosts a chatroom that usually averages about 14-16 people.

I don't mind rebooting, but my chatters mind when I do. I really do need another PC to use as a dedicated box for things like that chatroom.
4194
Living Room / Re: 'Smart Closet' Tells You What To Wear
« Last post by app103 on November 22, 2007, 11:39 PM »
makes me think the best smart closet would be a webcam connected to a woman's pc.
* app103 volunteers to have mouser's webcam connected to her pc  ;)
4195
Living Room / Re: The 20 Worst Venture Capital Investments of All Time
« Last post by app103 on November 22, 2007, 11:35 PM »
Thank god it was meant as a joke, otherwise www.PreshavedMonkeys.com might be on that list. 

4196
Living Room / Re: I Don't Remember Seeing This Before
« Last post by app103 on November 22, 2007, 09:21 PM »
Having an incredible memory is a blessing when you or others want you to remember things (examples: never having to study for a test, remembering where the car is parked, being able to 'taste' a cookie you last had when you were 12, that the original recipe is long lost and knowing what is missing from attempts to recreate it) and a curse when you or others would rather you forget (example: too much 'incriminating' detail of some event that took place when you were 3 years old).

Having an above average ability to remember certain types of things, myself, I know too well the disadvantages of it. (examples: arguments with my mom involving whether she ever had long black hair, whether my dad quit smoking before I was born or after and what brand he smoked, being able to still 'taste' my stepmother's horrible zucchini & tomato sauce she served when I was 9, being able to quote people on things they insist they never said, with details of where, when, and what they were wearing when they said it, etc)
4197
Living Room / Re: Free Rice: Increase your vocabulary while you feed the hungry
« Last post by app103 on November 22, 2007, 08:26 PM »
I seem to average between 37 & 40.

I think the repetition of words is a good thing, considering that would encourage you to remember them, and maybe even begin using them. That is part of it's educational vocabulary building value.
4198
General Software Discussion / Re: Idea request: "Site discovery tool"
« Last post by app103 on November 22, 2007, 08:20 PM »
You might want to give Copernic Agent a try. Professional edition uses multiple search engines to find results, specialized search engines based on the type of info you are looking for (you can even do patent and ftp searches with it), tracks results, etc. This was THE way of finding info back when there wasn't a Google to use.

You could combine it with something like Newzie, which has features for alerting for certain keywords in rss feeds, which it can do at every feed update. It can also act as a site watcher, notifying you of not only changes on a site, but I believe it can notify of changes that trigger the same keywords alerts you have set up for feeds. (Newzie is pretty powerful!)
4199
Seriously, though, whats your site running on? there's got to be a way to import the content!

New site is Wordpress.

Old site is a badly coded static HTML page that was originally a saved HTML copy of an email I sent someone with all the original links. It's just a list of book titles and URLs.

This whole site began by accident from a simple text file of titles & links I originally made for the benefit of visitors to my chatroom that were looking for stuff to learn from. I never intended to turn it into a website when I started the list. If I had, I would have done it properly, right from the beginning. The static HTML page was a rush job to put the links online for someone else I gave the list to. (the whole history of the site is here)

It has to be done manually because on the new site it's not just a list of book titles with links any more.

Each book needs a post with more info than the original site provided, title, author, file format of book, description, list of chapters, link to site, multiple relevant tags (on old site a book was listed in one section only, even if it could have fallen into multiple categories).

I don't know of any automated way to fetch all that data and create a post from it (properly formatted) that will work for every type of book format, especially ones that require reading a bit of the book first to get the info.

It's not a matter of importing the original data and it's done...if it were, it would be easy and I'd be finished with it already.

Being honest about it, this would be best done by a group of people that knew what they were looking at, and could handle writing good descriptions. I asked for volunteers to help, but everyone that offered quit on me, most after making their first post.

I have found myself pushing a number of books to the bottom of my todo list because they don't have descriptions that make any sense to a normal person and the subject matter is too over my head to be able to easily write one myself (books on Ada, for example).

On a good day, I can do about 2-3 books per hour.

Actually, donating $1 to someone on this site who deserves it is not enough of a punishment...

I could imagine that it's like "hmm, if i am lazy today then some worthy person gets a dollar" - maybe too easy to make procrastinating positive.

As far as the donating $1 being not enough of a punishment, the funds are limited, they will run out fast if I do too much procrastinating. (And there is the other part of the punishment, publicly showing off my laziness, added to it).

Psychologists will tell you that rewards work better than punishments. Every time you fail and have to pay a dollar you're reinforcing negative feelings. It would be better to put a dollar aside every time you post and spend the money on something nice when you've achieved a certain milestone.

There is also a positive reinforcement factor if I do make the posts...increase in the amount I get from Adsense, which will be more if I make the posts.

My goal is to have enough to get my first Adsense check before I have to pay for the hosting of the site. I am hoping to be able to pay for it without reaching into my pocket this year, using the ebooks site to cover the costs of the book site itself, my sites, and the free hosting I provide for a few worthwhile educational projects (all on a single account).

So I have plenty of positive incentives to do this, above & beyond the project itself being worthwhile. And so far the positive ones haven't worked as a good motivating factor to push me to really get going & finishing it.
4200
Living Room / Re: How good are you at spotting spyware, spam & phishing traps?
« Last post by app103 on November 22, 2007, 06:35 PM »
You are not 'supposed' to research. You are supposed to do what it is that you normally would do. Googling for info on a site and their spamming history, reading privacy policies, looking for specific types of ads, etc...if that is what you normally would do.
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