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4401
Living Room / Re: ....and NZBMatrix closes........who's next?
« Last post by 40hz on December 10, 2012, 08:08 AM »
I can hardly blame them. In our current business/legal/political climate they'd end up getting dragged into a battle they couldn't possibly win. Especially now that the US government and media industry have adopted what appears to be a 'scorched earth' policy. The Megaupoload case was the warning shot. Seems those in similarly vulnerable positions have heard and begun to heed the warnings. Especially now that it's been made obvious several governments have no intention of confining themselves to purely legal actions to protect corporate interests.

To borrow from Firefly/Serenity: When your enemy goes to ground, leave them no ground to go to.
4402
Living Room / Re: Be Careful What You Download - Or Go To Jail...
« Last post by 40hz on December 10, 2012, 07:36 AM »
Ah yes, I remember now.  Anyone ordering/reading this book would be put on the FBI watch-list.  This happened sometime in the 90's I do believe.

Supposedly. Word was somebody claimed to have seen a list obtained from FBI files released under FOIA that listed people who were ordering the book - mostly from Loompanics Unlimited. Several people also claimed to have been targeted by the FBI for nothing other than ordering books from the same source.

I don't know if it was ever actually proven. It may well be an urban legend. Besides, the FBI had files on everybody back then. Often for the stupidest of reasons. Probably still do since "keep busy" is the watchword of most federal agencies who are looking to justify and increase their operating budgets.


Yep, it was quite a controversy, and still should be as far as I'm concerned.  But, like most bad things in the U.S., they just quietly go away as the sheeple don't seem to care....

It's too late anyway. More than enough time has passed that any relevent docs and data have been destroyed/deleted as part of a "routine" file cleanup, simply gone missing, or have been lost due to an "archive misfiling."

It happens all the time when you deal with law enforcement's record keepers. :-\
4403
General Software Discussion / Re: Is new Ubuntu 12.10 spyware?
« Last post by 40hz on December 10, 2012, 07:11 AM »
It's a bad trend to be sure. And the only way to stop it will be if people seriously push back.

Do we see well known Windows practices now slop over to Linux as well? Welcome to the wonderful modern times. :(

Not really.  ;D Ubuntu isn't Linux anymore. They now refer to themselves as The Ubuntu Operating System. And they play fast and loose with open software principles when it suits them to do so.

This is from their website:

ubu.png

Better yet - here's how they speak about open source. Plenty of big players are mentioned up front. But not the Free Software Foundation or the Linux Foundation. Nor do you see any reference to GPL or GNU Project. If you didn't know better you might almost think Canonical (Ubu's parent company) was running the whole show and paying for most of it! See below:

ubu2.png

Here's an 'extra credit' activity: Go to www.ubuntu.com. See how long it takes you to find the word Linux anywhere on their website. :huh:
4404
General Software Discussion / Re: FLV downloader needed
« Last post by 40hz on December 09, 2012, 03:17 PM »
The Hongkiat website recently published an article discussing 16 alternative ways to download web videos. Read all about it here.
 8)
4405
Living Room / Re: Be Careful What You Download - Or Go To Jail...
« Last post by 40hz on December 08, 2012, 11:20 PM »
Hehehe! I have that same attraction there.

I'm still looking for the Necronomicon - giant, evil Gods...who wouldn't want to see that?

 :P

You just lost 6 sanity points for even mentioning that book~! :P

I'm holding out for an unexpurgated edition of Friedrich Wilhelm Von Juntz's Unaussprechlichen Kulten myself. It supposedly has the correct version of the Dho formula. The one on  the Necronomicon has errors. I know because I kept saying the Dho formula last night, and I think I saw the inner city at the two magnetic poles. I shall go to those poles when the earth is cleared off, if I can't break through with the Dho-Hna formula when I commit it.;)
4406
Living Room / Re: Be Careful What You Download - Or Go To Jail...
« Last post by 40hz on December 08, 2012, 08:22 PM »
Ah yes, I remember now.  Anyone ordering/reading this book would be put on the FBI watch-list.  This happened sometime in the 90's I do believe.

Supposedly. Word was somebody claimed to have seen a list obtained from FBI files released under FOIA that listed people who were ordering the book - mostly from Loompanics Unlimited. Several people also claimed to have been targeted by the FBI for nothing other than ordering books from the same source.

I don't know if it was ever actually proven. It may well be an urban legend. Besides, the FBI had files on everybody back then. Often for the stupidest of reasons. Probably still do since "keep busy" is the watchword of most federal agencies who are looking to justify and increase their operating budgets.
4407
Living Room / Re: Be Careful What You Download - Or Go To Jail...
« Last post by 40hz on December 08, 2012, 08:17 PM »
I've always wanted a copy of the Anarchist Cookbook just for curiosity, but from what I understand the U.S. outlawed it years ago.

AFAIK it was never outlawed. I don't think the US government has tried to do something like that since the unsuccessful attempt to ban Henry Miller's Tropic of Cancer. They blocked its import in the 30s when it first came out. But a US edition published in the 60s by Grove Press resulted in a Supreme Court decision that effectively made book banning virtually impossible in the USA. The Anarchist Cookbook however was officially frowned upon. Enough so that most of the major bookstores declined to carry or order it after a while. But they also voluntarily declined to carry many other books (mostly on sexual subjects) for similar reasons.

I bought my copy in Paperback Booksmith (a major NE chain - now sadly defunct) back in the early 80s - so I guess most people had stopped worrying about it by then. And, as Renegade pointed out, it was a pretty lame book science-wise. You definitely ran the chance of hurting yourself more that somebody else playing with some of the "suggestions" in that book.

It's much more interesting as a historical artifact than a how-to book. I bought my copy because I have a semi-hobby collecting so-called "banned books" when I run across them. (And FWIW, I've discovered most of them aren't very good or interesting reading.)
 8)
4408
Living Room / Re: 2500 Year Old Computer Rebuilt with LEGO!!!
« Last post by 40hz on December 08, 2012, 12:00 PM »
Interesting disclaimer calling it a "functional replica" since it uses twice as many gears as the original device.

Why didn't they just make an exact duplicate?

Not to take away from what they did (and I love it!) but I always get a little wary of people who make claims for how advanced something was when they don't duplicate it exactly. It feels a little like fudging the numbers to me since technology is so often completely dependent on knowing one tiny factor or nonintuitive detail to make it work. If you decide to overlook that you can show a good deal of modern technology should have been known to the ancients even though there is little or no evidence to support such technologies ever had existed based purely on extant contemporary accounts of daily life. These people kept records, wrote about themselves, and can seem fairly boastful by todays standards since civic pride occupied a large part of their identity and cultural framework. When they had something - they bragged about it.

No too say it isn't a correct conclusion. But I'd still be careful about accepting the sweeping conclusions some people are making about the device.
 8)
4409
Living Room / Re: A laptop for $600-$700
« Last post by 40hz on December 08, 2012, 11:31 AM »
I would definitely stick with Windows 7 for the time being unless you're buying a touch enabled machine specifically intended to run Windows 8. MSoft still has work to do making Win 8 more comfortable for its non-touch users.

re: Dell Warranty

AFAIK, Dell machines purchased in the US or Canada come with the North American limited warranty. So the terms and conditions are only those that would be binding in the US or Canada. I don't know if the warranty would remain valid for a machine purchased for immediate transport and permanent residence outside the US/Canada. Your best bet would be to call and ask them.

Note: US warranties are not particularly strong warranties. You may have more rights and coverage with a non-US warranty since you folks seem to have stronger consumer protection laws than we have.
4410
Living Room / Re: Be Careful What You Download - Or Go To Jail...
« Last post by 40hz on December 08, 2012, 07:10 AM »
In some respects we're moving towards a future very much like the one depicted in the cyberpunk TV series Max Headroom. Fun universe Max lives in: Media networks have become what passes for government. Heavily armed and anonymized network-owned police units operate with impunity, and are feared for their brutality and free use of deadly force. Court trials take the form of televised game shows. All TV sets are (by law) kept permanently on. All personal computing and communication is done through closely monitored info-appliances. All financial transactions and purchases and done using "credit sticks" which guarantees any person can be easily tracked at any time. Those persons who go out of their way to appear in no database (called "Blanks" in the series) are a marginalized and persecuted minority.

One of the more interesting ideas presented in the series was how criminal prosecution worked. Criminal profiling had become so widely accepted and unquestioned that anyone matching the profile of a given crime could be punished for it - regardless of whether or not they had actually done it.

Seems a lot less farfetched today than it did back in 1987 huh? :huh:

4411
General Software Discussion / Re: FLV downloader needed
« Last post by 40hz on December 08, 2012, 06:34 AM »
And this Firefox plugin:

https://addons.mozil...ideo-downloadhelper/

I use the first 99% of the time, and it's great.

+1. I use the same. It will download most videos 99% of the time. For the times it doesn't DownThemAll usually does the trick. DTA is also better for getting large full-length videos.

4412
General Software Discussion / Re: wifi or wifi sw router
« Last post by 40hz on December 07, 2012, 10:48 AM »
I use VirtualRouter when I need to do that under Windows. It works well for its intended purpose. And very easy to set up.  :)
4413
Living Room / Re: Be Careful What You Download - Or Go To Jail...
« Last post by 40hz on December 07, 2012, 10:40 AM »
I like the mad libs idea.  ;D
4414
Living Room / Re: Be Careful What You Download - Or Go To Jail...
« Last post by 40hz on December 07, 2012, 08:58 AM »
I own a copy of the Anarchist Cookbook, and have for around 20 years or so. It's a fun read. Does that make me a criminal?

Not only does it make you a criminal, it establishes premeditation, and a life-long commitment to advocating and possibly committing terrorist acts! ;D

As some found out who innocently ordered books from (now defunct) Loompanics Unlimited.

Joking aside, having the TSA spot "objectionable materials" (i.e."books we don't like") in your luggage can be enough enough to now get you detained for 48 hours, indefinitely barred from boarding an airline flight, and listed forever as a potential security threat.

Gee...doesn't cluelessness and "profiling" make for an unbeatable combination? :tellme:

I feel safer already. 8)
4415
General Software Discussion / Text based alternative to PowerPoint
« Last post by 40hz on December 07, 2012, 08:29 AM »
I am not a huge fan of slide shows and presentation graphics. PowerPoint presentations tend to put me to sleep faster than a big meal and few good drinks will. But there are times, when you're making a presentation, that some well chosen words on some well-designed slides are real a plus. So what to do?

Rather than fire up PowerPoint, there's now another option: Reveal.js.

So what exactly is Reveal? It's a framework for creating presentations using HTML/CSS which can then be played back on anything that will run a browser. And it's very straightforward way to create a presentation.

It's creator describes it as follows:

A framework for easily creating beautiful presentations using HTML.

reveal.js comes with a broad range of features including nested slides, markdown contents, PDF export, speaker notes and a JavaScript API. It's best viewed in a browser with support for CSS 3D transforms but fallbacks are available to make sure your presentation can still be viewed elsewhere.

John Buys on the OStatic blog had this to say: (link to full article here)

Say Goodbye to Presentation Software With Reveal.js
by Jon Buys - Dec. 06, 2012

I make no secret about my dislike of bloated, slow, and conceptually wrong software. Office bundles are no exception, and honestly make for an easy target. Advances in browser technology and javascript provide lightweight means of creating documents and presenting ideas. Reveal.js is an excellent, and elegant, example of rethinking the software we use to create slide decks.

First, a brief side note about presentations. Most people do them wrong. I can’t count how many times I’ve sat through a talk where the presenter wrote down everything he or she was going to say on the slides in bullet points, and then read the slides to us. If you are doing this, please stop. Presentation slides should be used as a visual enhancement, an additional tool to further explain whatever you are talking about. Use slides to show pictures or broadcast topics and main ideas, I have even seen blank slides used to draw the audience’s attention to the speaker and away from the screen. Presentations are important, but use with care.

Luckily, reveal.js makes it easy to create aesthetically pleasing presentations with most commonly used features. The project is described in their demo...



All the most common and useful presentation stuff is there (transition effects, etc.) along with a few surprises such as: an export to PDF feature, speaker notes, and a very nice presentation overview mode.

There's a demo of it on action here.

The coding required to create a presentation is very simple and should pose little challenge to people familiar with basic HTML. But for those who prefer to work in the more traditional WYSIWYG slide composer they also provide a web-based tool available at www.rvi.io (note: OpenID required for access) that lets you do things graphically.

Here's the design screen

Create.png

Here's the slide that it produced:

slide.png

As you can see, it doesn't get much more WYSIWYG than that.

And here's the code it generated - which also shows just how simple it would be to do by hand.

Code: Text [Select]
  1. <div class="slides">
  2.     <section>
  3.         <h2>
  4.             <font face="trebuchet ms">
  5.                 <b>test for doco</b>
  6.             </font>
  7.         </h2>
  8.         <p>This is just a basic example of the default slide.</p>
  9.         <ul>
  10.             <li>There is just no way to avoid <font color="#FFFF00">bullet</font> points</li>
  11.             <li>You hate them for sure</li>
  12.             <li>But it wouldn't be a slide without them<br>
  13.             </li>
  14.         </ul>
  15.     </section>
  16. </div>

All in all, an interesting and efficient way to do a nice looking presentation - without the bloat. Check it out! :Thmbsup:

-------------------------------
Links:

OStatic article
Reveal live demo
Reveal.js on GitHub
Reveal online slide editor
4416
Living Room / Re: It's about ... why is the left seat the command seat?
« Last post by 40hz on December 07, 2012, 06:01 AM »
I was always under the impression it was to allow the dominant hand of the majority easier access to the main area of the cockpit and allow more space for miscellaneous tasks such as making notations on a map or logbook, or holding a thermos cup of coffee.

Too bad Henry Ford isn't still around to ask why he decided to put the steering wheel on the left. He usually had solid reasons for why he did most things, even if his real reasons weren't what most people thought.
4417
Living Room / Re: Where Is Windows 8.1?
« Last post by 40hz on December 06, 2012, 03:18 PM »
For a laptop, I'll forgive it a lot for that boot speed...

When I saw it boot on one of the newer laptops (with hibernation enabled in Win8) it seemed very fast indeed. :Thmbsup:

On the older laptop (Dell Inspiron 1525 - Core-2 Duo @ 2.0Ghz/4Gb RAM) I tested it on, it only booted 5 seconds faster than a tricked out installation of Linux Mint (Maya 64-bit using the 3.2.0-23-generic kernal) did using an identical hard drive that dual boots with Windows 7. If it wasn't set up for dual booting - and the installation was only the distro's default - you could probably shave a few seconds off the boot time for Linux.

Be interesting to see how fast Linux would start on a brand new Windows 8 laptop.

Oh wait...there's that little SecureBoot headache that needs to be dealt with first isn't there? That might affect the boot times a bit for Linux going forward. ;D
4418
Living Room / Re: Where Is Windows 8.1?
« Last post by 40hz on December 06, 2012, 02:12 PM »
And I'm still unimpressed with the new interface and general changes in how to do things. It seems very unnecessary to me.

Kind of like not wanting to deal with all the hassles involved in cranking-up a horseless carriage, when the horse was (always on and ready to go) so much simpler/easier/faster...  :D

To say nothing of an experienced horse (who usually knows the precise way back to his stable) being a safe ride home in the event you had too much to drink at the pub. Time was, you could just climb back in your surrey and say "Go home boy!" Then you were safe to pass out until the horse woke you up when you got back. (They're good at doing that too btw.)

Try getting that level of functionality and service from an automobile - even if it does go faster most times. 8)

Hey Renegade! Are you reading this??? :P ;D

Whenever I think of all the user experience, muscle memory, and subconscious work patterns that went out the door with Metro (like they did with that effing 'ribbon' in Office) I just want to scream. I now have to look at the screen in order to do anything with Win8.
 :tellme:
4419
General Software Discussion / Re: Circumventing UEFI/SecureBoot on a new PC
« Last post by 40hz on December 06, 2012, 02:07 PM »
So until MS gets over stalling for time until it can get Win8 into some semblance of market saturation (or at least that's my take on the situation), we soldier on...

That does seem to be the informed consensus as to what the real problem is.

And Microsoft doesn't seem to be going out of its way to dispel that conclusion either. Unless you consider their near silence on the topic plus continued stonewalling a reply. Very "Steve Jobs" that bit, don't you think?

Microsoft seems to be getting more and more like Apple with each passing day. :-\
4420
Living Room / Re: Where Is Windows 8.1?
« Last post by 40hz on December 06, 2012, 01:58 PM »

I had much the same experience using the pre-rtm release in a virtual machine.
However, old wine, regardless the container, can be pretty damned good  :P.
So I've ordered a Lenovo Yoga, so as to get the touch experience, see whether arthritic hands and an old brain can handle the new processes and concepts  :-\ :P.

I'm guessing a few of us are in mostly the same boat. So keep us posted please? :)

4421
Living Room / Re: Where Is Windows 8.1?
« Last post by 40hz on December 06, 2012, 12:18 PM »
re: FUD - I did try it. Loaded it on a non-touch PC and had at it for the better part of a week. And I'm still unimpressed with the new interface and general changes in how to do things. It seems very unnecessary to me. Old wine in a new bottle. Different mostly to be different.

Which is a shame because the improvements under the hood seem pretty solid.

But I guess if you pulled the touch nonsense and Metro out of the equation they'd be stuck calling it Windows 7 - Service Pack 2 wouldn't they?

And where's the money and buzz in that? :P
4422
^Oh man! The Phoenix is on a roll! That's twice he's made me give my age away saying "right on!!!" to something he's posted this week.  :Thmbsup: ;D
4423
General Software Discussion / Circumventing UEFI/SecureBoot on a new PC
« Last post by 40hz on December 06, 2012, 10:46 AM »
It's here. It's drear. Get over it.  :-\

UEFI enabled PCs are now shipping.

Fine if you're a Win 8 fan. But if you want to boot anything else off them you're SOL unless you take additional steps.

Fortunately OSNews is on it with a short note and two links for how to work around UEFI if you want to use Lunux or another OS. (It's a little trickier than it looks.) Article here.

Yankee Rose! :Thmbsup:
4424
Living Room / Re: silly humor - post 'em here! [warning some NSFW and adult content]
« Last post by 40hz on December 06, 2012, 09:32 AM »
I do kind of like the humour, but... man... they just seem a bit dangerous to me.

Renny's right about the danger...

Please note my introductory comment where I said: When it comes to practical jokes, this one is just bloody evil!

That was not intended to be a taken as a compliment.  ;)

(It's also too long. It stopped being even moderately interesting to me, even from a shock perspective, after the second or third iteration. But when I was shown it, everybody around me was laughing hysterically and going nuts over it. So I figured I'd share it just in case I was missing something. I often do "not get" much of what passes for "humor" these days.)
4425
..."House approves resolution to keep Internet control out of UN hands" ... by ... wait for it ... 397-0...
Hard to believe, but true, by all reports.

"We need to send a strong message, blah blah blah. Now if you'll excuse us, we'll go back holding our country hostage before you rudely interrupted us."   :o  



Considering how feckless and ineffective (by design) the UN has been for most of it's existence, it's probably just as well.

You can't have an effective world governing body when a tiny group of players (all armed to the teeth with nuclear weapons) individually hold absolute and unchallengeable veto power over anything and everything the UN "resolves."

But then again, the UN was never set up with the intent to be a governing body. It's never been more than a public forum and debating society at the best of times. Much like the Student Councils and Student Senates in most high schools and universities. It has all the trappings of a government body - but none of the real authority.
 :-\
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