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476
General Software Discussion / Re: Is XP really that good?
« Last post by Lashiec on November 30, 2008, 11:24 AM »
Honestly, I can't think of one piece of XP-originating software where I could say the user interface has been really beautifully and consistently designed (functionally and/or aesthetically)[2].

FeedDemon or Paint.NET look damn fine to me :)
477
General Software Discussion / Re: WINDOWS 7 THREAD (ongoing)
« Last post by Lashiec on November 30, 2008, 10:54 AM »
The possibility of retrieving (and I hope uploading) data from the cloud is absolutely cool. I hope it's flexible enough for most companies to jump in, and we can retire superfluous apps for specific services.
478
Find And Run Robot / Re: Unicode??
« Last post by Lashiec on November 26, 2008, 09:18 AM »
This is something I don't quite get. Assuming FARR is used in its basic function of looking up files, do you need Unicode to enter the name of any file in your filesystem? I can't quite imagine having files named using Chinese characters on a Central European version of Windows, for example. How is this useful (or even possible) in practice?

Even for those not using Unicode characters, it makes sense. For example, I have several songs named with their Japanese name (those clever guys at MusicBrainz...), and when searching for the name of the artists (which use ASCII characters), I'll get these funny squares instead of the actual titles.
479
General Software Discussion / Re: How to make a local copy of an ancient Web forum?
« Last post by Lashiec on November 26, 2008, 09:04 AM »
Compared to some behemoths, DonationCoder is almost like a grain in the sand. Just for reference, the IGN boards have exactly 189,401,031 messages in this exact moment. And they have a couple of users with more than 100,000 posts, so...
480
Living Room / Re: Microsoft drop OneCare subscription product
« Last post by Lashiec on November 26, 2008, 08:55 AM »
What flaws? Letting users run programs and click on URLs? :P

The reason was simply that OneCare sucked a lot compared to competing products, although it brought its own share of features that would make up for this (backups and the like).

Personally, the only reason I see Microsoft releasing Morro (heh) is to let the guys they employed for the various security companies they bought a while ago work on something. In any case, I think that with the UAC and some improvements in Windows Defender (like extending the number of locations it monitors) it should be more than enough for protection.
481
Living Room / Re: A fork in the road - dangers of web services
« Last post by Lashiec on November 26, 2008, 07:08 AM »
As users will become wiser of web services and more of these will be bought up / close down - will this ultimately undermine confidence in web services? What guarantees should be in place? Should the webservice become open source or an read only archive be created when it will no longer be supported? It shows that the webservice industry is still growing up in my opinion.

Simple solution: Provide the means to actually backup all the data you have into the service, or design the frontend for the data in such way you can backup the data manually (that is, using the tools most browsers have at hand).

What is funny is that this is the first time I hear about these services, just now they're closing ;D. And by looking at what they offer, it's no wonder they're saying bye-bye: I Want Sandy looks it does the same service as Remember the Milk, and Stikkit performs tasks that can be achieved with Remember the Milk as well :P

I wonder why Twitter bought the company though, perhaps they want to use microblogging as a mean to manage tasks?
482
mouser, we know you're a GTA nut :)
483
Living Room / Re: Gmail launches themes
« Last post by Lashiec on November 21, 2008, 04:38 PM »
It's nice to have more options without using external scripts, after all Hotmail and Yahoo! also have themes (the latter in a very limited way, though). The most complex ones look a bit flashy to me, but the just-different-colours ones are OK, so I'm giving them a whirl.

You've got to give props to Google for rolling them faster than usual, and worldwide as well. And by supporting them in all major browsers, about time GMail treated everyone as a first-class citizen :)
484
One question out of topic : Which OS is going to be included for MS Surface Computing Project? Vista or Win7?

The operative machines use Vista, as expected. Surely Microsoft will transition the product line to Windows 7 when it's ready, for obvious reasons.
485
Developer's Corner / Re: DC loads fast. What is the secret.
« Last post by Lashiec on November 20, 2008, 05:10 PM »
God, I swear I read "as a religious leader of DC forums" both in alivingspirit and f0dder's posts ;D

Why do we fail to attract nasty trolls and stupid idiots?

True. And this is an unacceptable situation. An Internet forum is not a true forum unless it has its share of trolls. Perhaps we should hire someone as the friendly resident troll? :P
486
General Software Discussion / Opera - An exercise on frustration
« Last post by Lashiec on November 17, 2008, 03:12 PM »
Yes, you're reading it right. No, nobody took over my account. I'm here, complaining about the Opera browser, and specially about the latest version with which Opera Software has achieved the impossible: Having an Internet-compatible browser (mostly) after years of trying and web creators constantly giving them cold shoulders. Yet, they also done another incredible thing: to completely undermine all this effort due to a half-assed new feature introduced in Opera 9.5 named content indexing.

As you may know, the latest trend when it comes to web browsing history is to index not only the URLs you visit, but also the page title, and letting you search every single character in them directly from the URL bar. The boon to procrastination productivity is immense, yet Opera wished to go a step further: to index ALL text contained in every single page you visit. The idea is even more brilliant, and while it turned out it's not as useful as having URL searching, when you need it, it's a wonderful feature.

If it worked.

Let me explain. Turns out when they devised the frontend for it, either they smoked something or simply did not care. Instead of doing something so simple, like, well, list FIRST the results of the URL search, and later the results of content search, they mixed both, so you end up with tons of noise in the address bar and effectively killing much of its usefulness as you have to pay attention to the underlined results to actually found what you really want. An even better way to implement this frontend would be putting up the content search part under an alias (there's actually one), so the user could launch it on demand, and leave URL search alone in the address bar.

The problem gets worse when you see that, for no good reason, the program simply refuses to index certain pages titles, just the URL addresses. And that the number of results listed by the feature is fixed, and sometimes what you want does not appear in the results list, despite knowing it's there.

It should be said that those problems appear as time passes and Opera's history gets filled with items. Precisely this, coupled with my desire to have a page history as big as possible, gets me to the ultimate weak point of this feature: performance. You see, the search function is pretty snappy as long as the word actually exists in the history file. But sometimes it turns out it's not in there, and it's then when you witness the self-proclaimed "Fastest browser on Earth" bringing modern HDDs to their knees during sometimes as much as 20 seconds.

I constantly experiment this due to my appreciation for the possibility of searching things directly from the address bar, and it's something I use several times a day. But while a single programmer as mouser implemented an option to stop searches when the inputted string matches an alias, a company with more than 500 employees wasn't able to do the same, and so I'm forced to constantly witness how Opera freezes itself and the drive works like mad trying to find something a string like "g cheese" (which launches a search in Google for cheese). Of course, there's a way to fix this and it's typing the string and waiting until the drive stops thrashing around (hooray for HDD leds), and only then you press "Enter". With this trick, you can actually use the browser, but if you input the string and press Enter, prepare yourself to see how even the whole computer gets nearly unusable, and I'm running a dualcore machine. Should I get a RAID 0 array and a quadcore to "fix" Opera Software errors?

There's actually a way to end with all of this. But the problem is that you get reverted to pre-Opera 9.5 behaviour (save for the fact that you don't have to type "http://www." to find every address). And this is either deactivating content indexing, or going into opera:config and disabling content search from the address bar. Since both URL addresses and page titles are stored in the "opera.dir" file, I thought that I could replicate Firefox 3 behaviour while keeping Opera advantages and using them as needed. Turns out I was wrong.

You see, the only way to reach Codex Transportica, for example, is typing "codextransportica" or "codex", not "Codex Transportica", nor "Transportica", despite seeing the "Codex" part of the title bolded as you type it. A more complex page like the Recent Posts section of this very forum is unreachable by typing "Recent Posts Donation Coder", while in Firefox 3 is totally possible. So, you either bring back content indexing, or you get forced to remember entire addresses. Which, frankly, I prefer considering the number of I/O operations done by the browser to update indexes which I rarely use, and the aforementioned noise.

Screenshot - 17_11_2008 , 21_54_29.png
"Planet" will take me to all these sites, but "Planet WebKit" or "Planet Emulation" will take me nowhere.

This is perhaps the most glaring issue with Opera post-9.5. The other one that troubles me is the way memory gets released, which makes that after a while without touching a single page, switching the focus back to its tab shows you a little slide show as you see the browser repainting the entire page, and reloading the pictures, probably from the cache. And then, minor issues, like the overflowing loading bar when the page loaded has more than 100 elements, artifacts in the history panel, or dialogs that continue to be in English. Practically everything mentioned here has been reported on the official bugtracker by me, and there are several threads about them in the Opera forums. But they continue to be unfixed, and probably they won't be until Opera 10.

I'm used to navigate around software shortcomings, and bugs, but this is a joke. No wonder some Opera users complain as loud as they do, even if the company chooses to ignore them. I am starting to believe what I read here a while ago (I think Josh wrote it), that Opera do things as they want and they rarely finish the work. Perhaps if they packed less features in the program (let's be sincere, there are tons of features included in Opera just for the sake of being included or to please a really small group of users, scroll marker coming to mind, for example), and they focused on the really useful ones, perhaps they could have avoided the train wreck that Opera 9.5x was (Opera 9.6x, while not perfect, is much improved in all areas).
487
General Software Discussion / Lessons from 2 years without Windows
« Last post by Lashiec on November 12, 2008, 04:56 PM »
Derrick Sobodash, an American freelance journalist working in China who, in other life, was a well-known translator in the romhacking scene, writes an in depth article over the pleasures and (specially) the pains of running Linux full-time and trying to adapt the OS to fulfill his needs. Note that while the article reads like Derrick wants to escape from Linux at all costs due to the difficulties he encounters, he's still a committed Linux user.

Screenshot - 12_11_2008 , 23_36_22_thumb.png

Although I know it's beating a dead horse, most of the other articles of this kind I encountered usually stop at everyday computing instead of going to the core, which I think make this one specially worthwhile. Now, wouldn't it be nice to read a similar article mixing OSes other than Windows and Linux?

A bit offtopic, but this comment cracked me up:

Mac is the OS for rich, trendy kids from New York who like modern art, U2 and white ear buds.

Well, looks like I'm a bit closer of being the target user of a Mac :D

via Romhacking.net
488
Living Room / Re: Things your kids will never know - old school tech!
« Last post by Lashiec on November 09, 2008, 07:06 PM »
Does once having learned, but long since forgotten, how to extract square and cube roots without a calculator count? If so, I guess I'm old, too  :(

Yeah, it's one of the things kids should never be exposed to, brrrr! That, and how to check if the mathematical product of two numbers is correct. I remember doing it once when I was 10, and just because I finished the assigned work earlier than my classmates, so I was assigned something else. My god, it took me more than one hour!
489
Living Room / Re: Whats on your desktop?
« Last post by Lashiec on November 09, 2008, 07:02 PM »
W-O-W, where do we can get such gorgeous wallpaper? In the meantime, I'll clean my desktop, it's been more than a year since I posted a shot, so I got to be presentable at least :)
490
Is that through eduroam? I'm having some trouble with my univ's wireless too..

I don't really know, it's the first time I heard about eduroam :P. We are part of the program according to the site, so it's probable though. I have to take a look at her hardware to check for multiple adapters to be sure. Besides, I think she said Wi-Fi does not work under Linux as well, so it could be something different, maybe a problem with the Wi-Fi network in itself.
491
Plus there is a known bug in the networking in Vista which seems to affect laptops badly. Basically if you have more than one network adapter Vista can't decide which one you want to connect with - even if only one network is actually connected and consequently refuses to connect to anything. The only workaround is to disable unused adapters - hardly useful on a laptop where you may wish to choose wired or wireless depending on your location! As far as I know this has been a known issue since RC1 and still isn't fixed.

Hmmm, I wonder if this is the reason why a girlfriend of mine is having problems connecting to the college Wi-Fi...
492
Site/Forum Features / Re: RSS Feeds for DonationCoder.com and this Forum
« Last post by Lashiec on November 05, 2008, 11:59 AM »
Not to rain in the parade, but automatic translations have not got any better in 10 years :D
493
Living Room / Re: Why social networks are a threat to life as some know it
« Last post by Lashiec on November 02, 2008, 12:27 PM »
I would like ask one thing thou, how come a big player like Microsoft(I believe it was ms) offered some zillion dollars to FB? Obviously there needs to be some sort of financial return so that MS offered such giant number. Do you think  that MS offered such giant number so that they could operate a public chat room only? You people are naive in my book.

In the ads war, paying for the privilege of being the sole provider of ads for an audience of more than 100 million is expected :)

And you definitely won't see me using gmail (or any other free mail service, for that matter!) for anything personal/important.

Ooops! :-[
494
General Software Discussion / Re: BlueGriffon
« Last post by Lashiec on October 27, 2008, 04:01 PM »
Do you understand it? I don't get it at all. It looks like few guys want to repeat the same things all over again, and again, and again. Each time saying about ashes and need for something new.
-fenixproductions (October 27, 2008, 09:40 AM)

Somehow. Nvu never saw an update since it was released for God knows which reasons. KompoZer was just a mere fork to fix things, and it was never intended to replace Nvu as the primary development branch (lack of funding, developers, etc.).

I guess the fact that XUL advanced so much in the meantime made impossible to adapt Nvu to the new version and continue development from there, so that's why Daniel Glazman et al. decided to rewrite it from scratch, and also to take advantage from the new possibilities of Gecko. But this is just pure speculation on my part, as I ignore what stopped Nvu development nor the technical details behind the impossibility of adapting Nvu to work with the new tools.

Also, IIRC Glazman said that BlueGriffon (before it had a name at all) was intended to replace Composer in future releases of SeaMonkey, so perhaps it was less work to write the program from scratch and integrate it into SeaMonkey than trying to fit Nvu into SeaMonkey. I find funny that open source projects try to be transparent to the public, but in this case we don't really know anything about what happened.

I think that in 2009 they will start once again (maybe based on Opera ;)).

Yep, now that it seems Adobe dropped Presto in favour of WebKit, it could be a good choice :)
495
General Software Discussion / Re: BlueGriffon
« Last post by Lashiec on October 27, 2008, 08:05 AM »
It reminds me about Kompozer (ex. Nvu). Clone maybe?
I wonder does it produce similar messed code ;)
-fenixproductions (October 24, 2008, 06:36 PM)

It's its successor, programmed by the same guys.
496
Living Room / Re: Tech News Weekly: Edition 43
« Last post by Lashiec on October 27, 2008, 07:38 AM »
So, about keyboards, it seems it does not longer matter if they are wireless or not, huh?

About 5, yeah, the other browsers perform better, but since everyone and their dog ran such benchmarks a thousand times with the "alternative" browsers, and TraceMonkey has been known to perform better than V8 for a while (and it's improving), I found kind of interesting they ran the benchmark on IE, and that it showed such a leap in performance, which is all the better for the web.

About 2. Passports Will Be Needed to Buy Mobile Phones.. How is this possible?  :huh: It's not really original, books and movies have been predicting this day for a few decades. I just wasn't expecting it would ever come. :(

Yeah, we have this in Spain since the 11-M. If you want to buy a prepaid phone, you have to use your DNI and all the data goes into your phone provider databases. Since the terrorists used prepaid phones to communicate between them prior the massacre, that's why they can't be anonymously bought anymore. I don't think it's that much of an issue, as the Spanish government is generally trustable in privacy concerns, and the details of each phone number are only available per request of the authorities.

Another thing is demanding your encryption keys. That's unacceptable.
497
General Software Discussion / Re: which Linux version for my laptop
« Last post by Lashiec on October 27, 2008, 07:15 AM »
I need a MP3 editing program for Linux does anyone know of a good one?

Audacity or Ardour.
498
Developer's Corner / Re: Free, non-sucky UML software?
« Last post by Lashiec on October 27, 2008, 06:52 AM »
There are a bunch of UML tools, but I'm afraid most of them are not exactly up to the task. When I worked with VP, I checked up ArgoUML as my computer at the time could not cope with the tremendous load of Visual Paradigm. It did not last too long, as I was able to do some of the things the project I was into at the time required, so I discarded it. Perhaps it improved since then (2 years passed), but I would not count on it. Dia also supports UML, but never tested it, and supposedly there are a few plugins for Eclipse and probably other IDEs.

IIRC, there was a free version of Visual Paradigm that required registration. It was far less featured than the normal versions, but perhaps it would just suffice for your projects, considering the normal versions went for the kitchen-sink approach. They could be (hopefully) lighter and less buggy as well.
499
Look who is coming back into the web browser game. Proving that competition is the best recipe towards improving one's product, Microsoft has tweaked IE's JavaScript engine in unexpected ways, just like Derick Eisenhardt is showing in his blog with the famous SunSpider benchmark.

Screenshot - 24_10_2008 , 1_17_10.png

While it's still a bit far from the competition, at least IE developers are doing something to address all the criticism directed to the aging Trident engine. Of course, benchmarks are one thing, and real world usage is another, and frankly with today webpages and webapps IE7 does not feel as slow as the numbers might make it look, but it's better prepared for future JS-heavy developments.

via Asa Dotzler: Firefox and more
500
General Software Discussion / Critical vulnerability in Windows
« Last post by Lashiec on October 23, 2008, 05:38 PM »
It's rare that Microsoft decides to release a patch for Windows outside the monthly Patch Tuesday, but today they decided to do just that. The vulnerability is located in the Server service, and just like many others before allows remote code execution. It's rated as highly critical, and according to the details published in the Secunia advisory, it's a 0-day exploit, so it's better to patch sooner than later.

Screenshot - 24_10_2008 , 0_42_54.png

As a curiosity, it should be noted that even the private builds of Windows 7 are affected.

via Unhandled Perception
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