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451
General Software Discussion / Re: RAMdisk on XP 32bit - brainstorming!
« Last post by Steven Avery on April 13, 2012, 09:26 AM »
Hi,

I notice that the SoftPerfect RAM disk is coming up at BdJ tomorrow ($9)
This is up on Bits again today.  Any comparisions from our techies ?

Steven
452
Thanks.
I lost interest in this when I realized I would be working with a skeleton Visual Studio.

If I am going to learn this Ruby and rails stuff, I might as well learn it more native.

Steven
453
Hi,

Anybody able to share on this special ?

Ruby In Steel 2
Professional Ruby Development for Visual Studio
http://www.bitsdujou...are/ruby-in-steel-2/

Note the discussion about using the Visual Studio Express edition combined with this and Rails.

Steven
454
General Software Discussion / Re: yet another file manager thread...
« Last post by Steven Avery on April 09, 2012, 09:54 AM »
Hi,

I accidentally had to restore from the recycle bin the other day.  Xyplorer was great, they had a built-in proper renaming.  Total Commander was giving me "dd21" file names (although they may have a utility or some special item for this.)  

For registered products I am used to Total Commander, but I would like to be comfy with Xyplorer and xplorer2.  e.g. The search function on Total Commander is not as well integrated as one or both of those. I find no problem with mouse and TC.  Sometimes I find that another one deletes files that TC balks at.  There are tons of little usability areas where each one shines. 

All three are real fine.  Free Commander is the other one I like, fully free (but not quite on the same overall level) and Q-Dir also looks free interesting.  Right now I am working with what I consider the big three, TC xpl, xyp. (Opus is of course up there as well, except for the $ problem.)

Steven
455
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: Chameleon Startup Manager 50% off
« Last post by Steven Avery on April 08, 2012, 09:40 AM »
Hi,

Chameleon Startup is back today at Bits !

You can see my comments there, but I suggested watching here as well.
http://www.bitsdujou...leon-startup-manager

The more I look at Chameleon Startup, the more impressed I am.  I used to grumble a bit because it does not integrate a Task Manager (separate program, which I do not use) .. however I have totally gone past that grumble-bumble.  The program is really top-notch.  

====================

I suggest we use this thread for any thoughts and comments for Evgeni !  

====================

Steven
456
Hi,

Chameleon is back today at Bits !
Oh, wait that is startup manager .. I will have to find that thread, and let this one fall down.

You can see my comments there, but I suggested watching here as well.
http://www.bitsdujou...leon-startup-manager

The more I look at Chameleon Startup, the more impressed I am.  I used to grumble a bit because it does not integrate a Task Manager (separate program, which I do not use) .. however I have totally gone past that grumble-bumble.  The program is really top-notch.  

====================

Note: I may have been confusing Malwarebytes with Mamutu.  At the moment I have neither in realtime.

Steven
457
Living Room / Re: the home PC network enigma
« Last post by Steven Avery on April 07, 2012, 09:40 PM »
Hi,

So what is the recommended de minimis method, with mixed Windows puters (Linux / Samba later) of reliably mapping drives:

a) behind a router
b) one extra PC away at work

Steven
458
Living Room / Re: the home PC network enigma
« Last post by Steven Avery on April 07, 2012, 04:16 PM »
Hi,

I was reading up on the VPN (virtual private network) situation as an alternative, or supplementary. There are a few things that confuse the semi-novice.  Especially, VPN is used for two entirely different things, proxy and network, and the reviews don't always make the distinction clear.  

And when used as a network, I wonder if there is a distinction between "all behind the same router" and "general".  And I gather there are hardware-based router things like QuickVPN.

On the network level, LogMeIn's Hamichi seems to be the ease-of-use favorite.  Comodo's Unite may be interesting, along with Gbridge (google), although I tend to avoid those companies on some things. OpenVPN and Remobo are two more that look interesting, and there are a few more goodies.

And what is the relationship between VNC and VPN. I remember once I connected to a mini-computer through a router using a special protocol program and, I think, both of the above.  However, VNC may not apply to my discussion here.

Note: I am not concerned about remote access and remote control, TeamViewer and many others do that fine, the interest is network (back-door minicomputer).  Such as using one master file as the direct source for bookmark and notes programs without going to Dropbox, etc.  

Teamviewer does have a VPN option, which I have not researched, and since their program is very, very good, that should be in the mix.  In that case you are using the same setup for both.

Here is the big question:

functionally and set-up-wise and stability and response and all .. how does your VPN compare to your local Windows network peer-to-peer attempt. Are they generally complementary or exclusive attempts ? And do people like having their work computer on VPN.  Watching out, of course, for the security issues.  (e.g. on how many password requests does Teamviewer time out ?  Why isn't that easy to find.).

And 1 major big issue is whether you succeed in getting full, fairly easy, direct mapping of drives.  With any alternative.

Steven
459
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: PerfectDisk Free Edition
« Last post by Steven Avery on April 05, 2012, 12:24 PM »
Hi,

Perfect Disk does give you a view of the Pagefile, MetaData and MFT in analysis mode.  Thus you can determine if there is any real consequence to the boot time defrag. Both tools are excellent, but I do see myself taking advantage of this freebie and moving towards Perfect Disk.

All the defrags use the internal MS routine for the actual defrag so you don't have much concern that either one is structurally much different (except maybe unless you are doing virtualization, shadow boxing and all that stuff).

Steven
460
Hi,

You really have to decide whether any relations are needed.  ListPro is possible, flat-file, it has a limit of about 30 fields to a file.  

For heftier stuff, maybe there are discounts on older Filemakers but it might be hard to justify for a limited app.

============================

I don't think it is that MYSQL etc are complicated per se, it is that:

1) they think in terms of server-client, which is unnecessary. Technically an app could probably do that transparently using local host giving a sort of equivalent to the .dbf .fp7 etc files.  (experts, your comments ?)

I am curious if there is any real, innate difference.  When a program like Alpha 5 runs on an MYSQL file instead of DBF or something else .. what is the actual difference in your puters functioning ?  MYSQL is able to have relations and structures built-in, but it could also simply be used as flat file(s) with optionally simple index relationships, afaik (which presumably are some type of join). And does your program have to actually work through a server traffic cop ?  Does anything prevent it from being simply accessed directly.

2) they have not built much in terms of Listpro and Filemaker type ease-of-use products, being more involved in small programs like Navicat "administration", thinking that you are concerned about a web-site in far-off cloud land.  And trying to integrate with PHP and other web languages in fair to middling development tools that have no relevance to a local database.

What I may be saying is that the problem is more historical than structural.  And programs like Filemaker and Alpha will possibly work directly on MYSQL (and maybe other similar databases).

Just throwing out some thoughts.  This has puzzled me for awhile, since I have not done much in that SQL database realm.

Steven
461
Living Room / Re: the home PC network enigma
« Last post by Steven Avery on April 03, 2012, 10:33 PM »
Hi,

4wd, I had run into some of the points you are making (e.g. the naming, the encryption) in this article.

Solution For LAN Connection Between Windows XP And Windows 7
http://hackspc.com/s...ws-xp-and-windows-7/

And I didn't realize, but I may have more of the network up than I thought, after following that.  I see my Windows 7 is showing one other computer in the network and sharing center.  A big plus.

More laters.  Keep sharing.  (I may have a couple of other article tidbits, and I'll give a progress report of how it is going on my basic 3 attempt).

Steven
462
Living Room / the home PC network enigma
« Last post by Steven Avery on April 03, 2012, 06:08 PM »
Hi,

Supposedly, Windows theoretically, possibly, maybe is all set up for networking out of the box.  The prenamed MSHOME in an XP network section, the Homegroup function ... if you have all Window 7, the "Workgroup" name given to the Windows 7 network that can be the name you apply to all the puters, as suggested by one article.   Yada and a yada and a yada.

However, in my experience, it never works well. Things don't want to connect, or they don't want to stay connected.

=============

Everything here is behind a router.

The goal in my system is 3 PC's , 1 on Windows 7, 2 on XP.  One of those I plan to dual boot Linux (really, this time). Also maybe a laptop occasionally saying hi by cable or wireless.

Only two systems are really fundamental a Windows 7 and my super-clean reinstall XP.  The laptop and an old XP are sort of auxiliary.  I am working with a KVM switch attempt as well. (Which has its own tricky aspects, whether hardware or software.)

Here is the rub.  I either am quite bumbling, or the Windows network is a bubblegum and scotch tape method. 

===================

Remember "Lantastic" ?  Well, what do we do today ?  Set up a VPN ?  Set up a real network with a server or with "Active Directory" to pretend to be skilled in that realm ?  (oops, might cost $$).  I would not mind dedicating a PC largely to traffic cop and working with Spiceworks, but that would be more play than need.  And it still does not tell me HOW to go.

What are my major options ? What do you suggest ?  Am I really supposed to use MS ? My gut says there is some other way that is simply better, but I want to hear from the experts.

Since I prefer XP to Windows 7, I want to keep my mixed Windows hybrid group for now.

Steven
463
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: TaskCatcher, $1.99, today only
« Last post by Steven Avery on April 03, 2012, 05:37 PM »
Hi,

Wish I had seen this earlier.  Looks like a neat program, but $12.95 per computer is a bit much for such a niche to me unfortunately.
Suggestion: send a note to BillP .. point him to this thread.  You never know.

Steven
464
Hi,

It looks like Jiri is trying to limit the damage:

"Jiri Novotny:
The Ultimate edition includes mainly "premium" features compared to Professional. You don't need them: 100 extra tree icons, spellchecker, two-line displaying of tasks, etc. Even in the future, the Ultimate-only features will be mainly features like this, eye-candy, etc. Everything truly important is in Professional - and always will."

However, I'm pretty sure that earlier (not running back to check) he said that new development, new features, would be mostly Premium.  

Giving him the benefit of the doubt, we can say that he realizes that some of his user base is not happy with the way the 3-tier is implemented, and is awkwardly trying to limit the damage.

The irony here is that Dextronet could easily raise revenue by normal "new releases", since they are not in a "lifetime" type of model.  And satisfied users would gladly pay, I believe, a $25 upgrade fee if there was real new value, every 12-24 months.  So he did not have to try for the gold with the premium, which only works to demean a moderately pricey pro license.

On top of that Jiri is planning some type of sync-server thing which is supposed to be subscription.  So the whole thing was quite unnecessary.  Any ultimate edition (as Tomos points out) should have involved network, server, enterprise and/or sync, encryption, maybe fancy import-export, not basic functions (spell-check, calendar) or eye-candy.

Steven
465
Mini-Reviews by Members / Re: Bookmark Docs - MiniReview
« Last post by Steven Avery on April 02, 2012, 10:28 PM »
Hi Folks,

Just keep in mind that books at google and archive.org have directly page urls so for those Linkman (my bookmark program of choice in the post-Powermarks era) works fine.  

Similarly large web pages often have multiple urls for sections. Generally it is not too hard to find your spot, although it might be quite helpful in shared links.  This will take some testing to see if the extra pointing functionality is important, and how smooth it is, and whether it justifies augmenting Linkman.  Or if there is something here that should be suggested to Outertech for the long term :) .

For me, the big functionality improvement would be PDFs, which are notoriously resistant to good bookmarking and are often fairly long.

Have to find a few minutes to really try it out.

Steven
466
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: TaskCatcher, $1.99, today only
« Last post by Steven Avery on April 02, 2012, 10:10 PM »
Hi,

Picked up 3 so far.  3 for the price of 1/2.   Good way to support BillP (an integrity software guy with fine stuff) and help your system at the same time.  

Less than an hour on the sale.  I suggest at least pick up one so you can play with it indefinitely on one system. Good example of the ease of Paypal, 1-2-3.
Note, though, that with the NY sales tax, it is way over $2.  ($2.15) :)

Steven
467
Living Room / Re: Best USB/Bootable recovery and "utility" tools
« Last post by Steven Avery on April 02, 2012, 01:07 PM »
Hi,

Ended up doing an early image restore.  Went fine.  Used Macrium, even though I had divided it into two partitions (which is hard for Macrium, it put Humpty back together and then I divided it up later).  Other image software can reinstall to a smaller spot, but Macrium is so good, I wanted to give them a chance.  Remember, it is an early image, so only about 5 Gigabytes .. oh, those poor pagefiles, always trying to force a couple more gigs of junk.

My c:/ and d:/ (user data) had all been copied over to an external drive en masse before this was done, just to be safe. Using PMan from Parted Magic.  Also very simple. For the re-partition I used Mini-Tool Partition Wizard, a very highly regarded freeware program.  

Last time I had a similar problem, in 2009, I had to do a full OS restore.  And that is a hassle.  First you have to have the CDs, then you have to get the Internet up (I had a built-in driver problem.).  Or spend $90 to have the guy in the shop do it, presuming your system is all fine with MS with a serial#. Lots of annoying possible little uggies that you only want to experience once, or zero.

The early images I did on that last OS reinstall one were a huge help. For most daily usage I do not believe in images, because if your system is clogged or mal-ed, the image will be clogged.  You bomb out every couple of years, then do an OS reinstall at that point.  Start clean and lean.  

(I am not talking about the techie experimenters here, who have different needs, and for whom an image restore can be a daily need.)

However, for normal personal use:

** I strongly recommend redundant images (e.g. Macrium, DriveImageXL, Paragon, Easeus, two at least, the techie below Windows ones are fine also) after any OS reinstall and with any new system. ***

(Make the recovery CDs, too, since things change there and you know it should match).

The reason for the redundancy is that images are not fool-proof.

One image, or group, right after you have the internet up, drivers, etc.

And another one or two after you have your basic programs reinstalled.  
A day or two later, still with a very light system.

Then, you should back up your data, of course, but in anything other than a disk crash or BIOS destruction, you can get the totally current data, at the moment of crash, the way mentioned above.  Thus you do not have to "over-backup" anything but critical daily data. I will conjecture that 95% or so of crashes and lockups are OS corruption and/or malware, only a small percent are disk crashes (and for that monitoring, I like Hard Disk Sentinel from Bits, but .. you never know).

============

Oh, my system runs a ton better now. The 50-100 Firefox tabs barely make a dent. Exactly why ?  Good question.  Much less loading, services and programs. And yes, the registry is "clean". This is my recommended way of registry cleaning :) . Any other reasons ?  Not sure.  I do have the current versions now, like Firefox 11.

Steven
468
General Software Discussion / image from clipboard to online notes
« Last post by Steven Avery on April 02, 2012, 12:39 PM »
Hi,

My goal is to have online notes with a fair amount of simplicity.  Since it is largely a holding pattern for quick remembrance until the entry is brought over to RightNote, or MyBase, or another more permanent.  Or used in an email or forum, or printed, reviewed, etc.  Thus you should be able to get in and out fairly quickly.

The de minimus features include the ability to accept an image to clipboard ( using Abbyy Screenshot Reader or Screenshot Captor etc to make the image). RTF (rich text format) is more or less required.  

Here are some of the interesting online note programs, more or less.

Backpack, Springpad, Springnote, Notepub, Threetags, Webnote, Ubernote, Tiddlywiki, minutes.io, jjot, Evernote
Webasyst, Zoho

I looked at Zoho, and they wanted a file upload or a pointer url.  Possibly acceptable, but another step, cumbersome.  Granted I could use a picture upload thing that immediately gives me an online url, but that would only be a plan B.

======================

Similar questions can be asked about regular notes, where this would be a more-or-less standard feature of the better programs. Maybe.

And also Sticky notes, where Zhorn's Sticky Notes and Globonotes (open source) I think have the feature of taking the image from the clipboard. And NoteZilla and others could be compared.  

However, my main question is online notes, which I would like to add to my repertoire in a limited way.
Who is good, who is limited.

Oh, it would be a nice feature for this forum, too. :) .

======================

Steven
469
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: TaskCatcher, $1.99, today only
« Last post by Steven Avery on April 02, 2012, 09:29 AM »
Hi,

Yep, downloading it now, will probably buy for a few puters.  However, "For under 2 bucks you can't go wrong." is not the standard straight arrow BillP.  $1.99 ... "under 2 bucks" :) .

Keep in mind that Task Catcher has to be running to tell you that others are not running. so its resistance to mal-difficulties should be remembered.  Anyway, it supplies a nice central repository where you make sure your full group of security programs ("layered" is my fav way) are running.  I often look in system trays to check stuff like this, and I can ferget what I have on one computer or another.

Steven
470
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: PerfectDisk Free Edition
« Last post by Steven Avery on April 01, 2012, 01:49 AM »
Hi,

My XP SP3 Dell Precision got :

"This installation package is not supported by this processor type" 

It looks like the FTP is the 64 bit installer.

Steven
471
Living Room / Re: Best USB/Bootable recovery and "utility" tools
« Last post by Steven Avery on March 31, 2012, 10:19 AM »
Hi,

Can the regular Ultimate Boot help ?  However, I do not see a direct System Restore reference so far.

Ultimate Boot CD
http://www.ultimatebootcd.com/

I see they added Parted Magic.

"The Linux-based distro Parted Magic is now included with UBCD V5.0. This should be the method of choice when you need to resize/rescue partitions, access NTFS filesystems or work with USB storage devices."

You could ask on the forums about the tool you mentioned, as it may be standalone as well as in UBCD4Win. Often, these disks usually have ways to add a specific tool, if it is nowhere else and there is no equivalent.

Oh, I think your concern is that the tool won't work on Windows 7 anyway.  Then you have to ask the uber-techies.

=================

My backup went fine, checked it on another puter. 
Now trying the Windows reinstall repair utility.

Steven
472
Living Room / Re: Best USB/Bootable recovery and "utility" tools
« Last post by Steven Avery on March 31, 2012, 03:13 AM »
Hi,

For the sometimes critical issue of easy backup from defunct Windows to USB, Parted Magic is very strong (in addition to being graphical pleasant).  The file manager is PCMan (which is is not available on many rescue CDs and is now being developed as SpaceFM). Not officially dual pane, but you simply open a window (also has tabs), and there is drag-and-drop capability for copying.  Also very strong on recognizing the disks and drives and externals and describing them sensibly (not just in Linux-geek-speak).  I have a big backup going on now on an XP puter not booting. (Then, after the backup, I will try a non-destructive OS reinstall, and if that does not work, a full reinstall.)

Many of these tools have Midnight Commander, quite cryptic. There was another one in UBCD, Volkov, that was also cryptic.

SystemRescueCD seems to specialize in network backup with tools like RSync, network stuff, SFTP.  Nice to know, but I would always want to try a local USB external if possible especially if large amounts of data is involved. SystemRescue also has Midnight Commander, although you could probably add PCMan if you are geeking the install.

Once, years ago, one of these Rescue CDs had Free Commander, I remember because I used it.  Dunno how that was done.  MuCommander and Double Commander (multi-platform) might be strong like PCMan, if they are on any rescue CDs. BootMed is a rescue disk that looks, by pics, to have a decent file manager, but I did not catch any name.

For the ISO burning, I found ImgBurn to be very nice, again. InfraRecorder was more finicky, and I switched back to ImgBurn, my main old-tyme fav.

Parted Magic is also a strong contender in below Windows partition stuff, of course (its mainstay). Interesting to compare with the Terabyte products for happy partitioning.  Terabyte is not free, but you have strong support, maybe some niceties.  It is also nice to see Firefox usable in the midst of the rescue and partition stuff.

I looked at the BartPE and tried to do it, since I had the Windows XP install CDs (copied to a directory and pointed Bart to the directory.) Bart had 2 errors and some warnings and the errors stopped the CD from burning. As a test I will try it out natively on an XP puter later (the attempt was done on a Windows 7). However, I am skeptical now that it is really worth the special attempt.

Steven
473
Hi,

It's extremely expensive, and now those who shelled out for the Pro version are left hanging, as new features will go into the Ultimate version mostly. In a three-tier scheme like this, the top version is usually geared toward enterprise environments (multi-user database, security, advanced connectivity or various data exchange options, etc). But to add a spell-checker module (most likely just a third-party component) and some icons and call it "ultimate" is quite... wrong IMO.


It's a good program, I have the professional from a previous Bits, but this setup is tacky.  

Remember ,we are not talking a massive system, it is just a ToDo list.

Ultimate ????

I think I will place a post about this on Bits.

Steven
474
Hi Folks,

Questions from Partition 101:

===========================

Does partition software generally make 100% sure it is only partitioning away free space ?

Does the software move files away from the end of one partition to create the next partition before
doing anything else ?

Should you defragment before partitioning ? (presumably it is a smart idea). In any special way ?

Does this question vary a lot between software products ?

Do you find any great functional fundamental distinction between the Windows products (Paragon, Easeus, Aomei, etc.)
and the more tech partition stuff like Terabyte (Bootit) that works outside Windows ?  

In the old days it made a difference where you started partitioning (e.g. in XP or underneath). Is that a factor today ?

===========================

I always hesitate a bit before partitioning a system, presumably I have a good OS resinstall handy and all
the important data backed up as well, preferably including early images after the OS install and maybe the
final, current image. More important than images, the data should be backed up in individual files. (I do not
trust images completely, although some image software includes file-by-file as an alternative.)

Granted there are functional differences in products, (e.g. a Pro product compared to Lite or Free will show you
some differences, as will reviews) and there are differences in support and cost.  It seems like the software has
generally become fairly good.  One feature I noticed is that some software may be stronger than others in simply
moving x gigabytes of space from one partition to another.

===========================

Your thoughts ?

===================================

My short-term attempt is to take my lightly used Windows 7 64-bit puter and add a d: and some drives for
a linux install.  And I may do similar on a spare older XP system.

===================================

Here are some notes about free space.

"Partition Manager 11 Free Edition For personal use only The safest tool for hard drive partitioning! Partitioning is not for amateurs. That is why millions of people have trusted our safe, stable technology and professional software solutions for over 15 years. Our latest 11 version easily organizes your hard drive and redistributes free space to enhance system performance."

"Aomei Partition Assistant ...Allocate Free Space - Allocate free space from one partition to another for making the best use of disk space."

===================================

Aomei is the new kid on the partition block. The reviews have been pretty good, the company is friendly in correspondence.  

They do not at this time have forums like Paragon and Easeus.  I may ask them their plans in this regard.  Forums on a product like this means that the company is willing to face the public, and can have lots of helpful info.  Dunno if any other windows  products have forums, but Terabyte definitely does. 

Along with the three mentioned as the main Windows-based programs, (Paragon, Easeus, Aomei, all active in promotions) Partition Wizard (positive from freewaregenius) also looks like it is quite interesting, so maybe that is a big 4. Partition Commander is from Avanquest, Partition Genius from Spotmau (not sure if active development-update).  These programs should all have a CD-type alternative as part of their system. Any others of real note ?

While Parted Magic (GParted and Parted) and then also Partition Logic and Ranish are examples of below Windows tools. Terabyte seems to lead that section, as a commercial product with a fine reputation.  You could probably add a gazillion Linux-style tools.

===================================

I noticed a complaint with one about losing a Symantec serial #. So probably some programs look at free space through the Windows file system, and some programs do security in a hidden manner.  And you could be forced to try to re-enter the numbers (be sure you keep them). I doubt that it would be easy for a partition software to do anything, since the software product will be pointing to that spot made defunct.

Steven
 
475
General Software Discussion / Re: Whats your preferred web browser?
« Last post by Steven Avery on March 25, 2012, 04:54 PM »
Hi,

The Tab Mix Plus extension in Firefox is very good, and very basic to knowing and placing what you have open, if you tell me Opera or Chrome can do similar, I will use them more.  Four or five rows of tabs, flexible size to print, deciding whether to give focus or not on various types of opening.

Firefox slows my system down after 40 or 80 windows are open. Lack of CPU control against some type of script, I think. I crash it and start over, or I reboot the whole system sometimes.  I don't think Process Tamer or Lasso will solve that problem, since it slows down my use of Firefox the most.

Steven
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