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Recent Posts

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501
Post New Requests Here / Re: IDEA: Grid-based-layout Information Manager
« Last post by JavaJones on July 18, 2011, 07:01 PM »
We're a very specific software house with an existing product that takes all our time. ;)
http://www.planetside.co.uk
Maybe mouser is available for hire?

- Oshyan
502
Post New Requests Here / Re: IDEA: Grid-based-layout Information Manager
« Last post by JavaJones on July 18, 2011, 05:55 PM »
Well, let me stress again that that is *my* perspective, and I'm not actually a dev, though I do run a software development company and am heavily involved in the bug management process. Ideally users would actually submit bugs/feature requests straight into an issue tracker, but that's not usually possible. Barring that, for my preference, individual emails, not too frequent, with 1 or at most 2 issues/feature requests with good descriptions, would be ideal. Again 1 huge email with lots of requests and issue reports would put me off.

- Oshyan
503
Post New Requests Here / Re: IDEA: Grid-based-layout Information Manager
« Last post by JavaJones on July 18, 2011, 05:32 PM »
Speaking as someone who helps run a software development business, I prefer to see feature requests come in as they're thought of (although yes it's good to have them fleshed out). This may be a particular quirk of my own personality, but having someone send in an email that's 5 pages long with 20 features/ideas is overwhelming and I don't even really want to respond. With a single request at a time I can evaluate and respond reasonably to that single request, usually with either "great idea but not something we can do any time soon" or "yeah we can do this, I think maybe in the next version", etc.

I have a tendency to want to be "complete" in everything I do, in my communications, so if I have potentially lots of feedback I too want to sort of assemble it into a more cohesive document or something. But considering it from the other end, for me at least, that's not what I want to be getting from users. It's sort of like "Hey great product, but I think you need to do all this to make it better".

Just something to think about. As a bonus, if you sent in exactly what you said above, with the mock-up (perfectly serviceable), the dev might understand it quickly and get to work on it (if they agree it's a good idea) and you could have the feature quicker.

- Oshyan
504
Post New Requests Here / Re: IDEA: Grid-based-layout Information Manager
« Last post by JavaJones on July 18, 2011, 03:47 PM »
Have you suggested any of this to the TreeSheets dev? Seems like it could be a natural evolution or optional mode, considering most of the rest of the functionality is there. Whereas building a new app from scratch to do this seems laborious and unnecessary. In other words if TreeSheets already does 90% of what you want but without quite as much flexibility as you want, then that's where it makes sense to start.

- Oshyan
505
Usually if you just wait a few days or a week before installing new updates, the Interwebs will tell you if there are any major problems with it. Personally I think it's ok to wait a few days/week on updates, despite them fixing security vulnerabilities. And it can save you from trouble like this.

- Oshyan
506
General Software Discussion / Re: Google+
« Last post by JavaJones on July 16, 2011, 12:00 PM »
40hz, I agree that the handling of "not-really-friends" in G+ is way better. For me this was clear from the get-go in using the service but maybe I didn't articulate it well originally. So likewise I see this as being a potentially big win over Facebook. Being able to follow people without them following you (and vice verse), or putting people in circles that you don't really use or care about but acknowledges their existence and relationship to you (regardless of whether you care about said relationship), solves a fundamental problem of Facebook for pretty much everyone. The reason why so many people have 100s of "friends" when scientific research has shown that actually relating regularly to more than 100 people is pretty much impossible for most people to manage is because there's no way to distinguish between a "friend", an "acquaintance", and whatever else. This is why the Circles foundation of G+ is brilliant. Simple, yes, but why couldn't FB make this work before? I guess they just didn't care to. That's why competition is a great thing. :D

- Oshyan
507
Living Room / Re: Am I alone in not using or wanting to use the "Cloud" ...
« Last post by JavaJones on July 16, 2011, 11:53 AM »
I use cloud services where they make sense for my needs. I'm judicious about them and tend to choose locally installed solutions whenever possible, but there are some things that "cloud" (I still hate the term) services enable that are too useful for me to pass up. Things like off-site backup, access-anywhere-email with a good web-based UI, persistent calendar, social networking, etc. There are locally-based options for all of these things, but they're less convenient or ubiquitous, generally speaking.

I think the important point for me is that I use but don't inherently *trust* the "cloud". I backup all my cloud data in various ways (it's surprisingly easy to do in most cases). For cloud backup, it's not my only backup source, just the one I use for off-site redundancy. My local backup is still "primary". Many people in this thread seem to be calling out these services for their lack of accountability, being dangerous to rely on, etc. That's true of most solutions though, even the ones you setup yourself. You're "accountable" to yourself, but it's not going to help you in the case of a massive backup/data failure.

Cloud services are just another piece of the puzzle for me and I think that's the only sensible way to treat them. Don't fear them, don't vilify them, use them sensibly and to your advantage. If you're concerned about privacy in general, or actually do have some genuinely sensitive info, then think twice before putting it up there, and if you do, encrypt it. But don't *not* use something that would be useful for you just because you have to encrypt data to do so. Encrypting your data, if you have real privacy/security concerns, is something you should probably be doing on your local machine anyway, and doing so to take advantage of cloud services is just as legitimate.

The bottom line for me is the utility provided by some of these services can be very high, and I'm comfortable using them knowing I don't solely rely on them and would not be screwed without them. I would be inconvenienced if, say, Gmail went away tomorrow, but I'd still have all my email and could easily move it to my ISP's IMAP service, or most any other system. I think this is a pretty healthy way to relate to any service, not just cloud services: use what works for you, keep your options open, don't compromise your requirements, but don't overlook a useful solution on principle either.

- Oshyan
508
General Software Discussion / Re: Google+
« Last post by JavaJones on July 15, 2011, 11:42 PM »
I've had similar issues Wraith. Fortunately pretty much all of them are invited by a DC person, so if you look at their "people in common with you" or "following", you'll usually see another DC-er. But I agree it's not the ideal way to be able to figure out how to categorize people.

- Oshyan
509
General Software Discussion / Re: Virtual cd/dvd drive software (2011)
« Last post by JavaJones on July 15, 2011, 07:36 PM »
Good lord, too many options. Hehe. I use Virtual CloneDrive personally, had no real problems with it. But I'd be curious to see some kind of review "shootout"/comparison of these. I doubt anyone has the time though...

- Oshyan
510
If you're going to replace the motherboard/CPU, might as well just get a new machine, hehe.

- Oshyan
511
It's not a Windows driver issue as problems also occur in Linux bootup environment. This indicates pretty strongly that it's a hardware problem of some kind.

- Oshyan
512
General Software Discussion / Re: Will facebook ever be the same?
« Last post by JavaJones on July 15, 2011, 03:51 PM »
When you add someone to a circle it notifies the person that you've done so, but does *not* tell them what circle you've put them in. This is key. You can put people into your "Annoying people who I don't like but occasionally want to share something with" circle and they'll have no clue, they only know they're in *some* circle. So no worries about starting to add people to whatever circles you want.

What Zuckerberg did with his G+ account is interesting. The headline implies he *removed* his account, but no, in this context "closes" means he closed it to public access. He's opting for privacy, basically, which of course is also possible on FB. Not surprising really, but an interesting move given he's testing the service and has a potential opportunity to be a voice for FB on there.

- Oshyan
513
General Software Discussion / Re: Will facebook ever be the same?
« Last post by JavaJones on July 13, 2011, 03:18 PM »
Looks like soon gender will also be optionally private:
http://latimesblogs....-sharing-gender.html

- Oshyan
514
General Software Discussion / Re: Will facebook ever be the same?
« Last post by JavaJones on July 12, 2011, 07:57 PM »
Google has done the "invite only" thing on multiple product launches now. It hasn't always (or even often) resulted in a long-term success, in some cases I would argue it even hurt adoption, but it's generally a good strategy I do agree.

I think if G+ were, say, like Buzz, or something else equally unimpressive and poorly executed, then it would not have the interest it does. It is exciting because it is truly and legitimately a better system, despite its faults and bugs (for being out less than a month, it has surprisingly few actually). Google has, in my opinion (and evidently in the opinion of a lot of the current users) "gotten it right". I can think of no better reason for a product/service to succeed than by just doing things better.

Sure, Google is leveraging existing systems and services (and their corresponding existing membership and content). So this is not necessarily something a random tech startup could do (at least not as well). Still, it's the underlying cleverness and usefulness of the ideas (Circles, especially) that are making the product shine right now. The UI is great too, but admittedly needs some bug fixes and polish. Rather than complain about it (or in addition to doing so), people should submit bug reports through the also well implemented bug report tool.

Google is iterating remarkably fast here. We'll see company/interest/etc. pages soon, apps also (hopefully with a better way to manage them than Facebook has), and likely every other important feature FB has. They're not hard to implement, and Google has already shown with what we have in G+ *today* that they can, in fact, implement a slick, intelligent system with a high level of features, and still maintain a fairly intuitive UI.

- Oshyan
515
Living Room / Re: Windows Live Skydrive: Tried Anyone?
« Last post by JavaJones on July 12, 2011, 07:49 PM »
Hmm, I have some thoughts/comments on backup and log review, but feel the thread might be getting too off-topic now. Shall we split?

P.S. I'm on vacation so it's a bit more effort to post, hence not just going ahead with my comments in a new thread. ;)

- Oshyan
516
Wow, that looks *really* interesting and promising. Have to check-in a month or two down the road and see if it ended up as good as it looks/sounds (or has it already been a while since this was built? the article is July 9th, haven't read fully yet, heh).

- Oshyan
517
General Software Discussion / Re: Google+
« Last post by JavaJones on July 10, 2011, 11:07 AM »
Invites are now available officially (I sent out about 10 in the last 24 hours). So if anyone still needs one, PM me your email address.

- Oshyan
518
Living Room / Re: Monitor Choices -- Go For Touch Screen?
« Last post by JavaJones on July 10, 2011, 10:43 AM »
I fail to see much actual, comfortable, real-world use for touch screens in every day desktop computing. If it's just something you want to "play with" then go for it I guess, but the display quality will be inferior for the same price non-touch screen monitor, so if its use as an actual display device is of greatest importance, I'd think twice about how important the play time is.

- Oshyan
519
Site/Forum Features / Re: DC Forum Mods Thread
« Last post by JavaJones on July 06, 2011, 05:21 PM »
Yeah, I agree with the warning, just some forums have a "don't post in old threads, ever!" kind of thing going on. Hehe. I know that's not true here though, I see "necro thread revival" all the time. ;)

- Oshyan
520
General Software Discussion / Re: Google+
« Last post by JavaJones on July 06, 2011, 02:12 PM »
I'm hopeful that when Games and other crap come to G+, Google will have nice ways of saying "I don't want any app invites from my friends. Ever. No, seriously. None."...

- Oshyan
521
Site/Forum Features / Re: DC Forum Mods Thread
« Last post by JavaJones on July 06, 2011, 02:09 PM »
I've never understood what's wrong with reviving old threads. If your post is appropriate to the thread subject and the older discussion is useful context, then it makes more sense to post to an existing thread than make a new one in my view...

- Oshyan
522
General Software Discussion / Re: Sticking to TODO software
« Last post by JavaJones on July 05, 2011, 08:49 PM »
No To Do system can make up for a lack of self-discipline and/or ability to set/alter routine. If you make an agreement with yourself to use any To Do software daily for a week or two, you should be able to install a habit if it proves its value to you. If not, maybe a To Do is not what you need?

I say all this as someone who struggles with the same stuff! I have yet to settle on a To Do system for myself, but I am hopeful to do it in the near future as well. What I *have* been successful in doing however is instilling habits through personal commitment and repetition. Sticking to something for a couple weeks can really work. But again it is generally dependent on being able to see the value of the habit. If it's not actually beneficial to you, or its benefit is not evident, it's harder to justify to yourself. The point of the 1-2 week "personal commitment" is to give it a chance to prove itself to you, but if it doesn't do that, even if you perhaps know it is valuable still, it's hard (at least for me) to keep going.

Anyway, I will be looking at MyLifeOrganized due to the new Android app and liking the way it approaches things. Unfortunately like so many things, properly getting an organized approach to life working in your own life takes *time* that most of us don't have. I will be trying to take a few *days* to get my life into MLO and then see if it can successfully keep me on track for a couple weeks thereafter. I'll try to report on my experience.

- Oshyan
523
Defrag on SSDs is not recommended because, yes, it's unnecessary (no rotating platters, data continuity is less important), but also perhaps more importantly because it puts unnecessary read/write cycles onto the drive thus shortening its lifespan.

Regarding figuring out the actual root of the hardware issue, etc, etc. I think the important question is this: given the hardware that is of concern, would replacing it at some unknown point in the future at *your* expense be acceptable to you, or would you *rather* have the hardware repaired/replaced under warranty? If you prefer the warranty option, it behooves you to do as much diagnoses up-front as possible, to hopefully figure out if there really is a problem in any component and get it fixed on their dime. But if the cots of the hardware is not significant enough to overcome your inertia for testing and dealing with warranty support, then it's a perfectly valid choice to simply go with what works now, keep good backups, and deal with whatever problems arise later. Frankly I think that's what I'd do.

- Oshyan
524
General Software Discussion / Re: Automatic document creation. How?
« Last post by JavaJones on July 05, 2011, 08:26 PM »
You're welcome. I immediately thought of your needs when I saw that. Check out their other plugins (EMSoft) as well as the others on that Adobe plugin page too. There are some other promising-sounding ones too. None of them cheap, but if they allow you to have a great workflow, then I'm sure it's worth it.

- Oshyan
525
May be useful for those still using DropBox and wanting improved security:
http://www.betanews....ecretSync/1309789852
(sorry for the link to Betanews  :-[ )
For free 2GB DropBox accounts both apps are free. If you're going to pay for encryption on DropBox though (for accounts larger than 2GB), might as well just use SpiderOak.

- Oshyan
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