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476
General Software Discussion / Re: Fixing an XP Laptop, when to give up?
« Last post by Ralf Maximus on November 19, 2007, 07:48 AM »
best to cover you own back and know how things are for sure i'd say - wipe it and reinstall.

Yep.  Nuke the site from orbit; it's the only way to be sure.
477
Also, let's revisit some of the cool software provided by DonationCoder.com — hell, it's everywhere!

But rather than just revisit it, request "success stories" from folks who use DC software, and how it's made their lives more productive and/or complete.  Nothing makes me feel fuzzier or warmier than reading a list of testamonials from satisfied users.

Like this one.

Obviously, these should not come from the core DC community -- that's too much like plugging your own stuff.  So, an open invitation to de-lurk and talk, maybe?  Or perhaps a special no-login-required "send us your success story" page that doesn't require membership?
478
General Software Discussion / Re: Maybe Vista doesn't suck?
« Last post by Ralf Maximus on November 19, 2007, 07:36 AM »
I think it was a stupid move of MS to do a 32-bit version of Vista. Almost as bad a move as releasing WinMe instead of focusing exclusively on Win2k/NT5 - makes adaption take longer, spending more time on drivers, testing, etc.

Yes!  They might have been able to shave years off the release date had they not done this.  On the other hand...

The strategy has always been to drive corporate customers to early adoption first, then worry about the rest of the world.  Consumer money's nice, but what they really want is the millions of dollars in upgrade fees from Fortune 500 organizations.

Had they dropped 32-bit support many corporate IT departments would've taken a pass.  It's just that simple.  Ironic how low Vista's adoption number have been in corporate america, right?  As a strategy, it all looked so good on paper!  Classic example of battle-plans not surviving contact with the enemy.

What baffles me: what's in the Vista feature set targeted to business users?  Surely not Aero... so pretending that Vista is bug-free and wicked fast on old hardware for a moment, what on earth would compel a business XP user to crave Vista?  I think a few must-have features (WinFS?) dropped off the list as development progressed.

If they're smart, they'll drop 32-bit in Windows 7 and keep cranking out service packs for XP until the new Intel 1024-bit terrahertz processors make that impossible.
479
General Software Discussion / Re: Darik's Boot and Nuke
« Last post by Ralf Maximus on November 18, 2007, 10:53 PM »
How utterly and wonderously cool! 

Sure beats the hammer-and-hacksaw method I use now for decomissioning old drives.  I have an old USB key that I will use this for.  It will be CLEARLY LABELED: "DANGER, EBOLA".

"Honey, I borrowed your USB drive and now my computer won't boot."
480
General Software Discussion / Re: Maybe Vista doesn't suck?
« Last post by Ralf Maximus on November 18, 2007, 10:43 PM »
I'm no Apple fan by any measure, but I give them credit for fixing Time Machine quickly. Still, it's a shame that almost all new versions of major software are betas. Doesn't anyone test this crap before they release it anymore?!!

I hear you.  However, another perspective might be worthwhile...

Step back a moment and look at how freekin complex these new releases are.  Vista's in-memory footprint is, what?  512 MEGABYTES?  I guarantee you that's not all stack space.

We're reached the point where some of these megaprojects are more like encouraging growth in an organism than building anything.  Vista spanned seven(?) years of active development with zillions of developers cycling in and out at various times. 

I know QA testors, I've been a QA testor, and yet I cannot fathom what a Vista regression test plan must look like.  My sweaty imagination conjures up file cabinets of documentation just for stuff like COM.

Pile on all the rewritten and "optimized" stuff, backwards compatibility for 12+ years of Windows NT baggage, and some poor business decisions that generated terriffic pressure to ship the thing out the door!  Now!

Hell, I'm amazed there aren't more problems.
481
Living Room / Re: Help Name Our Cat!
« Last post by Ralf Maximus on November 18, 2007, 09:38 PM »
Cody likes "LOL" but is saying that the cat should be allowed to choose its own name.
http://wtfcody.com/?...age_id=5#comment-246

Okay, that makes it official: "LOLCat" and "Cody" make the list.

Amusing Audrey-shopping-for-cat story of the day...

Mrs.Maximus took Audrey to PetSmart to see the adoption kitties, but I had to stay home and work.

A coupla hours later I hear joyful footsteps and calls of "Daddy! Daddy!" to (presumably) come up and meet the newest member of our happy family.  I go upstairs from the basement, only to see Mrs.Maximus and a very upset Audrey sitting and staring at an empty cat carrier, its door ajar.

"We lost her," Mrs.Maximus tells me, terror stricken.

"What?!"

"The cat's loose in the house.  We don't know where."

Emergency Pet Recovery Action Plan #22B unfurls in my mind, and I immediately run and secure the main floor so the escapee can't make it to the helipad and the other animals can't intrude on the crime scene. 

I'm cranked up to max adrenaline, looking for a flashlight to shine under beds and whatnot when Audrey starts laughing demonically.  "Daddy!  It was a joke."

Uh huh.  Turns out they couldn't find a kitty they liked after all.

Rest assured, there will be retribution.  These things tend to escalate around Fortress Maximus.
482
General Software Discussion / Re: Top 3 programs you use
« Last post by Ralf Maximus on November 18, 2007, 09:27 PM »
Going out on a limb here, but I'd guess:

1. NTLDR
2. explorer.exe
3. winlogon.exe
483
Strong versus Weak type
Makes some programmers crazy
But the code won't care
484
Weak variable
Sometimes a string, sometimes int
make up your damn mind
485
Typed variable
Then I typed it in again
Allocated twice
486
General Software Discussion / Re: Blog steals Zaine's Great Software List
« Last post by Ralf Maximus on November 18, 2007, 09:05 PM »
Now would be the time to re-digg the list with helpful comments like, "this has been totally plagarized; to see the source material it was stolen from go to..."

Before it builds up another zillion positive diggs.
487
Living Room / Re: Why is the 'N' key always the first to go?
« Last post by Ralf Maximus on November 18, 2007, 08:51 PM »
Best keyboard ever made — Northgate back in the late 80s, early 90s. Damn thing was built like a tank, weighed half as much as your CRT monitor, and was made of metal!

Reminds me of my keyboard.

pckeyboards_1973_66935.gif

An honest-to-god buckling-spring full-stroke metal keyboard.  Available from PCKeyboard.com.  I used to wear out a plastic keyboard about once a year; this one has lasted three years and is still like new.  About $69.
488
From http://en.wikipedia....w...he_United_States, in 2006, the median annual household income according to the US Census Bureau was determined to be $48,201.  That being so, we're probably still talking today of $6,000 as being greater than 10% of median U.S. household income.

True enough, but I don't think anyone's looking at that number as their personal share of the total.  Spread out over 1000 contributors that's only six bucks.  But your point is well taken -- there's a definite psychology to dollar signs and income.  Otherwise, stuff wouldn't cost 99 cents; it's be $1.

Something I've found useful when confronted with a difficult problem: reduce it (as much as possible) to pros and cons.  If the pros outweigh the cons dramatically, the decision becomes obvious.  If not, it can still be a valuable exercise.  So to begin:

PRO/FOR THE THERMOMETER:

- Precedence.  Many sites operate fund-raisers and display a themometer.  Many also declare what the requested income will be spent on (new servers, bandwidth, etc.).  Knowing that the goal is "only" $6000 may quash fears that you're spending the loot on solid gold Cody statues or something.

- Transparency.  Showing the income might spur things on if donations lag behind expectations.  Also, it turns it into a bit of a good natured game.

- Weenie.  To borrow a phrase from the Disney playbook, the "weenie" is the focal point of any venture.  Having an icon you can point at and rally around can be good for the cause.

CON/AGAINST EVIL THERMOMETER THINGIE:

- Nagative Perception.  Risk that DC is perceived as "all about the money" rather than fun discussion about software & technology.

- Begathon.  Some people just hate the National Public Radio beg-a-thon mentality, and will rebel because this will push their buttons the wrong way.

- Risk of Complacency.  Folks may look at a 75% full thermometer and say to themselves, "shucks, these guys are doing fine.  I'll spend my $10 on beer instead."

These are just a few category starters I knocked out; any others? 
489
Mini-Reviews by Members / Re: XYplorer File Manager
« Last post by Ralf Maximus on November 18, 2007, 03:52 PM »
A dual pane layout is, in my eyes at least, not exactly a buzz feature. ...
Thanks for the hate review at snapfiles. It won't increase the chance for DP in XY, but you probably feel better now. ;)

(If you are not luc0815: ignore this post.)

Don, if you don't want to add the feature, then don't.  Say you have no plans to implement it then case closed.  You don't even need to justify yourself; it's your product and your vision.

So why pursue this in a public forum?  What are you hoping to accomplish?
490
fSekrit / Re: fSekrit 1.3 shrinkwrapped!
« Last post by Ralf Maximus on November 18, 2007, 12:47 PM »
Wow, what an interesting concept and execution.  Very elegant.

From a technical perspective, where are you storing the actual note text?  The original thread says it's merged into the .exe itself, but how are you doing that?  Appending it to the end of the file, writing an alternate data stream, or what?  Just curious.
491
Living Room / Re: Help Name Our Cat!
« Last post by Ralf Maximus on November 18, 2007, 12:41 PM »
Hey, aren't there some pet-naming generators on the web?

Yup, and baby name generators, and Tokien name generators, and porn-film actor name generators...

But I wanted the feedback of folks I trust, and I know there are a lot of animal lovers here.  The auto-generator route would be a fallback position.

BTW, some DC account names are going on the list.  So far we have Darwin (if it's a boy cat), Renegade, and Mouser.  Any other candidates?
492
Living Room / Re: Laptop or Desktop — which are you?
« Last post by Ralf Maximus on November 18, 2007, 10:46 AM »
You can get roll up full size keyboards (and they are waterproof too) here's just one example: http://www.keyboardc...ails.asp?PRODUCT=284

Have you actually used one of these?  I have.  In a word: ugh.  It's like typing on a bunch of semi-inflated jelly-fish.  It's okay for emergencies, or in our application, ruggedized gear intended for construction sites.  But using one for any length of time will make you long for the clean usability of a Blackberry.

Now how about a roll up monitor - that would be nice, and if it were touch sensivitive!

Believe it or not, these are coming!  The new generation of "electronic paper" is a 3mm thick LCD panel that's flexible enough to roll up like a projector screen.  There's no back light, so you have to supply your own -- maybe the perfect outdoor solution at last.

I'm holding out for the freestanding 3D holo-projector display that springs from my laptop.  Guaranteed to be totally annoying on airplanes.
493
Living Room / Re: Help Name Our Cat!
« Last post by Ralf Maximus on November 18, 2007, 10:40 AM »
This is easy, I got the answer.
Bob.
Short, sweet, easy to spell and nongender specific. Who could go wrong with Bob?

I'm definitely suggesting this one, especially if it's a manx.  :-)

Thanks, CPilot!

Tell your daughter not to pick a name that she would be embarrassed to be calling while walking up & down the street, just in case the cat gets out of the house and lost.

The neighbors will hear you calling it, and if you pick the wrong name, they will think you are nuts. (that's how neighborhood rumors get started)

Excellent advice, and something I can easily convey.  She's at the age now where she's afraid of looking silly in public.  (I hope it's a passing phase...)

On the subtopic of how NOT to name an animal, I had some friends years ago who named their cat "ShitHead" and their dog "FreckleButt".  Both are lively and descriptive, yet fails the "calling for your pet in public" test. 

Needless to say, I will inform these folks of our new family member long after the name has been assigned.
494
Living Room / Re: Laptop or Desktop — which are you?
« Last post by Ralf Maximus on November 17, 2007, 09:37 PM »
No, but plenty of positive reviews (search for Asus EEE to catch them all!)

Hey!  I was wrong; there appear to be sellers in the United States after all.  And the price is unbelievable: $399 USD.  That gets you:

- 900 MHz Intel Mobile Celeron
- 512MB RAM
- 4GB solid-state disk
- 800x480 LED-backlit display
- Integrated Wi-Fi
- Choice of Linux or WinXP

...more than enough for mobile play.  I used to own a Fujitsu lifebook P1, which was roughly the same form factor so I understand about small/crappy keyboards.  But for pecking away at a Starbucks or watching a movie on an airplane, it's ideal.

Thanks for the pointer!

UPDATE: Added some graphical bling to entice Mrs.Maximus to see things my way.  Look, honey!  It even comes with cheesecake.
495
Living Room / Re: Help Name Our Cat!
« Last post by Ralf Maximus on November 17, 2007, 09:21 PM »
Thinking about it, I think probably most of the caution against "pets as presents" is probably directed at people who are giving like a surprise present of a pet and then *assuming* that the recipient will want and care for it.

Your concern is warranted, and I would express my worries to anybody who was considering a pet-as-present.  However, in this case, we've been pretty careful.

We've thought long and hard about this, and Audrey understands the animal will be part of our family, and her "ownership" extends only to selecting, naming, her say-so about whether kitty gets treats and when, any tricks she wants to teach her, etc.  There's already a precedent in place, in that Pixel is "my" cat and Storm belongs to Mrs. Maximus... like the animals know or care.  (Actually, the pack behavior of integrated dogs+cats is fascinating, and may be worth another post...)

And strictly speaking, the actual presents will be a cat carrier, new litterbox, some kitten food (if applicable), and a small supply of treats. 

Animals often seem to inspire kids to name them after they've been owned for a day.  Why not tell audrey to meet the cat first and then try to figure out the name that best suits it.

Excellent advice.  If nothing else, it buys us more time if she insists on "YouTube" or "Google".

Or she could observe the cat for a while then give it a name. If it's clumsy, then call it "Crash". If it's a good mouser (  ohmy ), call it "try-catch". If it eats a lot, call it "CPU Hog" or "Resource Hog". If it tends to pee where it's not supposed to, call it "Memory Leak".

Heh.  One of our cats is named Pixel (tiny, colorful, yet fleeting), and my first kitty was named Amiga (expensive and crashed a lot).  Tech names are indeed fun!

If Audrey were to choose from her known mythology, I worry the cat's name will come from a Disney princess or a character from Cartoon Network.  Be very afraid.
496
Living Room / Re: Laptop or Desktop — which are you?
« Last post by Ralf Maximus on November 17, 2007, 09:04 PM »
So, you want an Asus EEE, Ralf? :)

Holy shiat, it's beautiful.  Alas, not sold in the US, so I can't lay my paws on one for testing.  Any experience with the wee beastie?
497
General Software Discussion / Re: links collector
« Last post by Ralf Maximus on November 17, 2007, 08:48 PM »
Does it need to be real-time?

If you're using IE6 or 7, the browser's cache is just a collection of files that can be accessed via the file system.  I imagine any file-search utility that does regular expressions (FileLocator Pro?) could suss out the patterns you've described.  For a fact I know UltraEdit's file-search feature will do this.

This is not real-time scanning, but you could kick off such a search after your browsing session is complete.
498
Living Room / Help Name Our Cat!
« Last post by Ralf Maximus on November 17, 2007, 08:39 PM »
Ms. Audrey Maximus will be turning 8 years old on November 27th.  For her birthday, we have agreed to get her a cat, to be added to the pack of existing animals at House Maximus: two weiner dogs (Oscar & Bryndal) and two cats (Pixel & Storm).  She's a total animal person and takes care of the critters now, so this is a logical extension of her passion.

We've started the process of meeting the local cat rescue folks, and are planning a trip to the shelter.  The new kitty will be female, and will be out of kittenhood, but beyond that Ms. Audrey can select whatever she wants.  I just hope there's no escaped Pumas or anything at the shelter.

Here's our wee problem.  Ms. Audrey is bound and determined to name the new kitty (I kid you not) "www.smellsalot.com" ...oh, sweet jesus, this would be so cute in other circumstances, but I can't imagine saddling a noble creature like feline domesticus with a domain name.  A really bad domain name. 

And no, I ain't registering it.  Not gonna happen.

So, please post suggestions for an alternative name.  Please.
499
General Software Discussion / Re: Scott Finnie unimpressed by NOD32 ...
« Last post by Ralf Maximus on November 17, 2007, 08:27 PM »
I think the real reason they're dropping IMON is because they couldn't figure out how to make it work properly :)

I think you're right.  Plus, there's a number of competing products that do a better job.  If this means they are free to concentrate on their file-scanner, then even better.
500
Living Room / Re: Laptop or Desktop — which are you?
« Last post by Ralf Maximus on November 17, 2007, 08:15 PM »
Desktop, most definitely - but wouldn't mind having a decent portable laptop for when I'm on the road...

I've got a standard laptop for road-warrioring, and a tablet PC for play.  Both are too large to just tuck under my arm for a Starbucks break or for composing idle thoughts at a bistro.

I'd really like an ultra-portable, something in the 1.5 pound range, maybe somewhat larger than a big paperback book.  There used to be an array of such devices (Sony, Fujitsu) but now everyone's creaming about tablets, and so that's all there is.

Why'd the world go tablet-crazy anyhow?  I just don't see the attraction once you get past the "cool, I can sign my name" phase.
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