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4601
Regarding filter, can you try using the field "Description" instead of Notes.. I named it Description in the database for some unknown reason.
Thanks. That works!
I only just noticed the error message (buried right at the bottom of the screen) when I used the "wrong" SQL filter:    :-[
Error X19: DBISAM Engine Error # 10051 Filter error for the table 'ClipTable' - Expected column name but instead found Notes in filter expression at line 1, column 34 [Hint check virtual group sql]

...CHS does not take over normal Ctrl+V pasting.. it's only going to do this if you paste using the CHS paste function.  Note that you can however set a custom hotkey that will paste the last clip using the template.
Thanks for this tip.

see if you can find any clue to why this happens.. it's possible it has to do with CHS not giving the application (onenote) time to refocus.. i could try adding a tweak option to give this more time to try to see if this is indeed the cause..
OK, shall report back after I have done some more investigating.
4602
@40z: Yes, OneNote has a lot of useful stuff that I had not realised was there.
I still find use for ABBYY Screenshot Reader though, so I would recommend that you get the free Christmas version per post copied below - if it is newer than your existing copy.
I think the ABBYY Screenshot Reader will only run if its licence Service is running too, so it will be one less overhead if you uninstall the one you no longer require, or disable the Service for it at any rate. I am not sure, but I think that otherwise you will find duplicated Services.

I just checked and you can apparently still get the FREE ABBY Screenshot Reader "RETAIL" (2011 Christmas giveaway) software - download from http://fr7.abbyy.com...enshotReader_ESD.exe

The "newer" version I have (dated 2009-11-20) seems to work just the same as the giveaway version (apparently dated 2009-01), so I don't know what the difference is - if any.

If you are starting to use OneNote more, then there are other, potentially useful references in DCF that you might not have seen.
For example:
4603
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: Listary Pro for only $9.95 on Friday 19 October
« Last post by IainB on October 18, 2012, 04:43 PM »
...Listary Pro's Configuration -> Compatibility tab says it will work with xplorer², but I don't have xplorer² so don't quite know what that means...

...Total Commander integration is wonderful.
Yes. I would presume that if Listary Pro integrates with (or "supports") Windows Explorer, then it should be able to integrate with any Explorer replacement tool - e.g., such as Total Commander or xplorer².

As I said above, the features that I would have found useful in Listary Pro are already incorporated into xplorer², so, in my case, using Listary Pro would be adding unnecessary/redundant functionality.
If I didn't already have xplorer², I would probably have bought Listary Pro some time ago.
4604
Found Deals and Discounts / Re: Listary Pro for only $9.95 on Friday 19 October
« Last post by IainB on October 18, 2012, 04:16 PM »
I don't use Listary - though I have trialled it - because I use xplorer² from http://zabkat.com, and that already has the features found in Listary Pro that I would probably find most useful.

Listary Pro seems to be pretty nifty tool though, and this is a good offer at $9.95.
4605
Living Room / Re: Do Not Track
« Last post by IainB on October 18, 2012, 02:28 PM »
^ +1 for what @cyberdiva wrote.
4606
@mouser: This is looking very useful. It is a feature that I have wanted for some time for all my applications. It is already there in OneNote - original Copy of text from the Clipboard always pastes into OneNote with the source URL anyway.

I have "EVERY" paste selected, and the CHS paste template as:
%clip%
--------------------
Captured %CreationDateTime% from %Application%:
%Notes.withprefix%
--------------------

The behaviour I am getting on Paste is:
  • If Paste is of the original Copy - i.e., immediately after Copy has been made, then the CHS template does not function. I think this may be because my AHK script forces the Paste to be made from the Clipboard buffer, with all formatting intact, so it bypasses the CHS processing.

  • If Paste is of a prior Copy in the CHS stack, then the template functions fine.    :Thmbsup:
    However, there is also some sporadic (doesn't happen every time) creation of new "canvas" rectangles on pasting into OneNote, rather than the Paste content staying within the canvas I had left the cursor in prior to making the paste - i.e., the pasted text does not always go where I wanted it to go. I have not figured out the conditions necessary to make this consistently repeatable yet.

ALSO: When I try to filter the Notes field for "http" in them, in a virtual folder, the filter does not seem to work (see image below). It may be that I am doing something wrong, or that you have not enabled Notes as a filtering field.

CHS - Notes filter not work 01.png
4607
Finished Programs / Re: SOLVED: In Windows Explorer, Select Files By File Extension
« Last post by IainB on October 18, 2012, 02:23 AM »
-- Use Windows SEARCH, and put the wildcards, extension in there.
Yes. Search on "*.exe" or whatever extension you are wanting to filter for.
Doing the same in Locate32 could probably give you a flexible selection approach as well.
4608
Living Room / Re: Dumbing-down of the educational system?
« Last post by IainB on October 18, 2012, 01:57 AM »
(Satire)
Iain is an egg-head, and egg-heads control the Illuminati. They monitor your communications, and if they don't like something they will beat down your door and arrest you. Don't believe me? Look at the **AA monitoring of torrents! You know that they do. After all, the poor artists will starve if you copy stuff, right? Everybody knows that! So remember, that if you copy a song you're a blood-siphoning little mosquito feeding off the poor artists. But you know those pictures everyone reposts? No one cares as much about pictures, because songs are more important. So that's how Facebook came about - everyone likes sharing pictures. Mark Zuckerberg made a lot of money by sharing pictures.
(/Satire)
Did I break your record?  ;D

...Yes I did put a little work into it, but I wasn't far off. Those kind of ultra-left arguments come very close to my satirical example and regularly bust out 4+ fallacies at a time, and so with a little hinting you'd get a grand slam. That was what I was hoping to convey.
Oh yes, absolutely. You most certainly did convey that. It was a superb string of irrationality which could probably be in line for a well-deserved Nobel Peace Prize - after the example set by the Gore/IPCC, Obama and EU awards of same, that is, being Society's apparently modern-day version of a satirical Kiss of Death.
Who knows but that the members of the Royal Society may even now be gathering for a meeting to determine whether to invite you to give them a lecture?

Stranger things have happened at sea!    ;)
4609
Living Room / Re: Dumbing-down of the educational system?
« Last post by IainB on October 17, 2012, 10:01 PM »
...Way to go France! Show everyone that you're in the race to be the world's top Idiocracy! :P
Yes.
It is "The rape of Reason" indeed, but not in India.
And it is presumably evidence of "intelligence", but not necessarily as we know it.
However, I have ceased to be surprised at such craziness coming from Europe - especially from the French. Together with the Germans, they seem to have been carefully piloting the already-sinking ship of the EU onto the historical rocks of full-bore socialism/communism for some time now.

...Shades of Kurt Vonnegut's story Harrison Bergeron!!! ...
What a coincidence! That is exactly what this all made me think about too! Or maybe not such a coincidence. If you have read that story, then it is likely to spring to mind whenever you see officialdom committing some idiocy or other, so the memory is probably continually being refreshed over the course of each passing year...
Another related SF story could be The Marching Morons (1950s) by Frederick Pohl and C.M. Kornbluth.

@IainB - did you ever think of maybe putting your critical thinking course up on a website? Or as a wiki? That would be a valuable resource IMHO. :Thmbsup:
I could do, I suppose. Though I have seen some already good resources in that regard, one more mightn't hurt.

...Did I break your record?  ;D
Well yes, but your attempt was deliberate, so as an example it does not go into my record book. The ones that I spot - and which cause me so much amazement - are accidental, being spontaneous working examples of how apparently otherwise intelligent people actually fail to use reasoning on a day-to-day basis when presenting an argument for something. The one about a logical fallacy being a matter of "opinion" was in my record book for the simple reason that it was an amusing "own goal" - i.e., not only did the speaker use a logical fallacy in making a statement/argument, but they apparently did not comprehend what a logical fallacy was and therefore could not see that they had used one (or two) even when it was pointed out to them - thinking it was a matter of "opinion" (not of fact!), thus demonstrating that very likely they had never been given any training in (or had not learned) the skill of rational thinking or reasoning.
The article "The rape of Reason" discusses a superb and eponymous example.

As De Bono points out (cf. Teaching Thinking), we are irrational by nature, and thinking is a learned skill, just like riding a bike or typing. You get two-fingered typing, and you get two-fingered thinking. This is not referring to the person doing the typing/thinking here, but just the activity of typing/thinking.

If you can prevent people from thinking clearly - for example (say), by not teaching them thinking skills, or by keeping their attention diverted from thinking by means of a government-issue radio earpiece (iPod's anyone?) - then you potentially have them more under control.
You can thus give them lots of "education" or indoctrination - e.g., learning just the stuff you want them to learn for productive purposes, by rote - but without giving them the tools and encouraging them to develop their thinking skills you will have effectively stifled their potential to be able to think things through rationally and in rigorous fashion. Thus, you might be able to create @app103's "obedient drones". Whether these drones are smart (intelligent) is probably irrelevant to that status quo, as @app103 seems to suggest. You teach people what to think, not how to think. It's like a religio-political ideology.
Then you let them loose to work, pay taxes, consume, get driving licences and vote for a select few officials to "lead" them who keep repeating some mantra that sounds great but means nothing - e.g., (say) "Hope n'Change!".
4610
Post New Requests Here / Re: Screen Mask
« Last post by IainB on October 17, 2012, 06:41 PM »
Thanks for the tip on f.lux! It might fix a problem I wasn't aware I had until I read your post.
Yes, it is easy to overlook that we creatures seem to be all one with and inseparable from our environment, and that sunlight is a part of the environment and can affect us multifariously via the skin and the eyes.
4611
Living Room / Re: Dumbing-down of the educational system?
« Last post by IainB on October 16, 2012, 09:01 PM »
CORRECTION:
Oops. More haste less speed required on my part. Looks like my speed-reading might have crashed into a full stop and killed Comprehension in the process. Sorry.
In the post linked above (see Opening Post), the author doesn't state that he has proven that dumbing down has occurred, but that he has "dumbed down". I missed that bit - all I saw was the headline that he had provided "a proof".
He has corrected me in his blog: The great dumbing down debate
4612
I'm not sure if this PayPal contract to force you to agree to foregoing your rights to all legal remedies is a restriction of Internet freedoms per se, but it sure looks like it to me.
I thought this kind of thing was made illegal in the UK, Australia and NZ, but it is presumably legal in the US(?).
PayPal Wants to Limit Your Legal Rights Against Them, Here’s a Way Around That
This is another cunning pincer move. There's a lesson for the wary here, but you have to write your formal letter to opt-out before December 1st, 2012. After that, it's no longer an option.
I think this stinks.
4613
Living Room / Re: Dumbing-down of the educational system?
« Last post by IainB on October 16, 2012, 05:14 PM »
In The Hindu there is an interesting and well-written article (copied below) which probably provides a very good example of the sort of loopy thinking that can go on and may even be acceptable when a culture, for whatever reason, might prevent a sizeable proportion of its population from having access to a decent education and which is thus left lacking in training in the development of critical thinking skills.
To put it in context, this is in what is arguably a third-world country, a non-secular class-structured society, where universal suffrage is not necessarily a given, and where democratic freedoms may thus be seriously limited - so it is probably not something to be too surprised about.
The example shows that, in this context, not only can you find irrational proposals being seriously put forward by a former Chief Minister without apparent concern for being challenged/ridiculed, but also that those proposals may even be met with some mute acceptance and treated as being serious/valid, though they bear little relevance to the facts/truth. To that extent it seems to share similarities with the hypothesis of Anthropogenic Global Warming being foisted on the planet from those in the Western world, though it is on a completely different subject - effectively, the legitimisation of rape.

Interestingly, it seems that it is left up to a journalist to rationally analyse the proposals, and to spell out the idiocy therein. There may arguably be something there that journalists in the Western media (MSM) might be able to take a lesson from...    ;)

There are some interesting comments from readers, but remember that this readership population would probably generally be characterised as a select minority - i.e., literate middle-class people who can read/write in English and who have ready access to the Internet, the leisure time to read the article online in the first place and the leisure time to make a comment online in the second. One suspects that probably not many (if any) of them would be of (say) the Dalit (untouchable) caste, for example.
The rape of reason
October 15, 2012

It is not unusual to hear people talk of fighting fire with fire, but is it appropriate to recommend fighting crime with crime? Former Haryana Chief Minister Om Prakash Chautala apparently thinks it is. Endorsing the regressive views of some khap panchayat leaders in his State, Mr. Chautala suggested that the growing incidence of rape be addressed by relaxing the laws relating to child marriage (an offence under Prohibition of Child Marriage Act, 2006). This is a rape of reason, based on a dangerous and completely false idea that masks the distinction between sexual desire and rape. While the first is a natural human desire, the second is a violent act borne principally out of an aggressive urge to dominate the victim; power and humiliation are integral to this act of violence rather than sexual fulfilment. The belief that there will be a radical reduction in rape incidents if men and women were allowed to marry before they turn 18 is easily disproved by some basic facts about this and other forms of sexual assault. It is stupid to assume that only single men are perpetrators of this crime; married men are rapists as well. Similarly, married women are frequent victims of rape. Finally, the idea that rape will be dissolved by marriage ignores the fact that it can — and does — take place within marriages as well.

There has been a spate of rape incidents in Haryana recently — as many as 17 in a month — in which a number of victims have been Dalit women. Already under pressure, the Haryana government and the Congress party at the State and the Centre must also contend with the ridiculous statement of a State minister explaining away most rapes as the outcome of consensual sex. Apart from taking action against the minister for making light of a serious problem, Congress president Sonia Gandhi, who visited Haryana, ought to have led from the front in condemning the child marriage ‘remedy’ for rape. It is hugely ironic that this argument is raised in a country where child marriages frequently take place. Recently, four U.N. agencies estimated that more than 40 per cent of the world’s child marriages take place in India; also that in eight States of the country, over 50 per cent of young girls are married before they reach the age of 18. Mercifully, the Jat Mahapanchayat, which comprises khap panchayat leaders from across Haryana, has distanced itself from the demand of some members that the marriage age for girls be brought down to 16. Child marriages are a violation of fundamental rights and a major impediment to the empowerment of women and the establishment of gender equality.
4614
Post New Requests Here / Re: Screen Mask
« Last post by IainB on October 16, 2012, 08:24 AM »
@Clive: You might find f.lux of use, from http://stereopsis.com/flux/
It apparently effects a change in certain brain chemicals that affect sleep patterns, so it could make a difference to migraine sufferers. Suck it and see.

Notes on sleep pattern research. here: http://stereopsis.com/flux/research.html

I'm finding it quite useful - less glary laptop screen. Too early to say yet whether it is affecting my sleep pattern.
4615
Heh Iain, don't you know by now? You aren't supposed to go to whatever site you want - your betters determine that for you, such as sponsored results!
Bugger, no, I didn't know that. I do now!
4616
This is just one "annoyance" aspect - there are others. There has been something really annoying about the Awesome bar's behaviour/functionality in FF v16 and now v17beta (I am on the ß update channel).
It persists in being too clever by half and jumping to conclusions about where you want to go, and it gets it wrong and seems to override what you typed into the A-bar anyway.
It is buggy and I assume it will all get fixed eventually.

I have the browser.fixup.alternate.enabled setting to false, and use HTTP Everywhere.
4617
Sounds a bit risky if the permissions are left in the altered state. I usually use a Linux boot disk to peek inside if the need arises.

I agree, probably a good idea to lock the folder again once you have finished using it - i.e., remove the UserID, using the same batch file.
4618
I could be wrong, of course, but I thought Canada had long ago given away a lot of its civil liberties/freedoms, especially freedom of speech.
4619
Can you provide the original ttf? I would like to test it with other OCR. Thank you.
The .tiff file I copied the date column from is a copy of a client document, and I am not at liberty to publish it. Here is another .tif (not .tiff, but is the same thing, I think) in a .ZIP file. It is a scanned copy of a published hardcopy document about a now defunct corporation.

[attachmini=#][/attachmini]

You could also scan your own .tiff copy, or get a copy of a .tif(f) file from the internet - e.g., search in Google images.

The reason I picked .tiff is that it seems to be the lowest common denominator:
  • the format apparently holds more data to make for an error-free OCR result.
  • MSPVIEW can only scan/OCR .mdi, .tiff, and .tif files.
  • Google docs can (currently) only scan/OCR .tiff files.
  • Windows 7 Search can only scan/OCR and index the text in .tiff files.

MS OneNote and ABBYY Screenshot Reader don't seem to have the same constraints, and can scan/OCR text copied from any image so far, with varying degrees of accuracy - depending on the quality of the image.
4620
:)
Nice work indeed.
I have seen a new method of scan more powerful for documents or books of your own.

Scanner
Thankyou! Nice find.     :Thmbsup:
4621
Living Room / Re: Dumbing-down of the educational system?
« Last post by IainB on October 15, 2012, 08:24 PM »
I just came across this:
http://www.edu-lu-tion.com/
...They have a poster there, that I think you'll really enjoy, Iain:
 (see attachment in previous post)
I did anyways. :)
Yes, thanks. It's quite a good poster!    :Thmbsup:
Back in April 2012 I had found that website and copied the posters as a teaching aid:

Logical Fallacies - PDF infographic files in library.png

My favourites to watch out for are:
  • argumentum ad hominem (argument against the person)
  • argumentum ad baculum (appeal to fear).
  • argumentum ad ignorantiam (forwarding a proposition without any certain proof).
  • argumentum ad misericordiam (appeal to pity; to arouse pity for getting one's conclusion accepted).
  • argumentum ad populum (appeal to the people/consensus, popular sentiment - appeal to the majority; appeal to loyalty).
  • argumentum ad verecundiam (appeal to authority; conventional propriety).
  • ignoratio elenchi (a "red herring" or genetic fallacy) -  assuming a perceived defect in the origin of a claim discredits the claim itself.
  • non sequitur ("it does not follow"; orrelevant conclusion: diverts attention away from a fact in dispute rather than addressing it directly:
    Example:
                Argument: Billy believes that pigs can fly, therefore pigs can fly.
                Problem: Billy can be wrong. (In particular this is an appeal to authority.)

The record for me is when I once spotted someone to have made 6 (six!) logical fallacies in one go. At another time, I pointed out that someone had used a logical fallacy or two (and which), and was answered with "That is your opinon" (OWTTE). Go figure.
You probably don't need to dumb anyone down for them to demonstrate this really - just denying them a decent education could likely do it. Just don't train them to develop thinking skills (De Bono) and in particular critical thinking. CT was/is now an "O" Level in UK schools - not sure whether it is compulsory/optional. Apparently it developed "transferable skills" that enabled students to improve their performance in most other subjects studied. What a surprise (NOT).
Students ignorant of or without CT skills will probably be forever mentally crippled. It's avoidable. Why would you do that to children? I have met people - and some of them seemingly quite intelligent - who have come out of the education system apparently without the discipline/capability to be able think logically/rationally. Easily manipulated. Gullible. Unthinking, "obedient drones", as @app103 so depressingly puts it.
4622
Thought this might be useful/helpful.
I had been doing some problem analysis to resolve a strange problem in a laptop (so far, no joy) and wanted to see what was inside the normally locked and inaccessible "System Volume Information" folder on the root (C:\) drive.
(OS is Win7-64 Home Premium.)
For the first time in years of using X-Setup Pro (a very useful tool, by the way), I used it to make this folder accessible.
It did this by the simple expedient of creating a file called SysVolInfo.bat on the Desktop, which was to be run once and then deleted.
So, after checking what was inside the .bat file for anything suspicious (I'm paranoid), I did just that, and amazingly the "System Volume Information" folder on the root (C:\) drive became accessible.

The file SysVolInfo.bat contents:
@echo off
SET FOLDER=C:\System Volume Information
SET USER=XXXXXXXX
cacls "%FOLDER%" /E /G "%USER%":F
SET RC=%ERRORLEVEL%
IF "%RC%"=="0" GOTO okay
 
:failed
echo.
echo The operation failed, sorry. Please check the error description.
echo Remember: If you are using Vista, you need to execute this
echo batch by right-clicking it and select "Run as administrator".
echo.
goto ende
 
:okay
echo.
echo Access rights set; you can now view the contents of
echo [%FOLDER%] using Explorer.
echo This batch file can be safely deleted now.
echo.
goto ende
 
 :ende
pause


Notes:
  • You need to put your UserID in place of the string"XXXXXXXX". If you are using X-Setup Pro to produce the file, it does that for you (gives you the choice as to which UserID you want to select).
  • I think the "System Volume Information" folder might be normally hidden from view, unless you have Windows Explorer | Tools | Folder Options | View default settings unticked such that Hidden and special System files are not hidden.
  • Once you can access that folder, if you explore within it you will find that you need to further unlock one of the sub-folders. This is easily done with the access authority you already have (press "Continue") and should need no extra tool for assistance. It will all stay unlocked after that.

If you want to find this feature in X-Setup Pro v9.2.100, then you will be able to find it under Common Annoyances | System Volume Information Access. If you select it, it will give you a warning, and then the details as to what this feature does:

X-Setup Pro - System Volume Information Access 01.png

X-Setup Pro - System Volume Information Access 02.png
4623
Living Room / Re: Remember to make full drive image backups
« Last post by IainB on October 15, 2012, 04:08 AM »
The big question is 'do you trust the software to produce faultless images'.
In the case of Acronis I no longer do - I have seen too many failed backups, too many images fail to validate.

Yes, very good point. After doing any kind of backup, it's a good idea to test it to see if it really works in the restore operation. It's a bit too late to leave that test till you have to carry out a real live restore...    :(

I hadn't heard about Acronis failing to do proper backup/restore. That's a bit scary isn't it? Though I've never used it myself, I had rather gained the impression that it was widely used and recognised as a Good Thing.
4624
@ewemoa: Thanks for that. I think I'll err on the side of caution.
Having gone through the exercise of cleaning up some seriously nasty Adware on other people's laptops, I don't want to push my luck.
4625
WARNING! WARNING!
Thought I should let you know that the Dark Screen setup file downloaded from fx-software and as provided by @Curt in the thread above both apparently contain a particularly nasty payload called Adware.Rabio:
Dark Screen setuo contains Adware-Rabio payload (Malwarebytes).png

I only found out when I tried to install the thing today. I let Malwarebytes quarantine it, which aborted the install.
__________________________________________
(I was OK with grey - my preferred background on my still sometimes rather too-bright laptop screen.)
You can try DarkScreen http://fx-software.b.../03/dark-screen.html
-they have a new address: http://www.fx-softwa....co.uk/assistive.htm but still a bizarre site design! You need to scroll and scroll, and then to scroll some more, to find the file. Or you can have it here:
 (see attachment in previous post)
They also have a version with colours. But then you will first need to click "Other software" and scroll some more, not knowing what you are looking for! Really a bizarre design!   :down:
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