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526
Interesting how similar all these systems are. But like you said, it's often some tiny detail or trick that makes it work for you. In my case, it's the funky column labels that do it for me. Makes it feel less like nagging and more friendly in tone.  

Well again, to play devil's advocate, and sort of to re-attempt to prove that I understand SuperFocus - the two systems aren't the same at all.

SuperFocus is well...as it says - a focus system. If this were designed as a software it would be something like CCleaner.

The other, despite it being two column with one column beingd details, is an overview system. If it was designed as a software, it would be closer to a PC Auditor like Belarc Adviser or even just the property windows of an application.

The intention is different too. Properties are more like View -> Edit and the more detail that's in there, the better as it's chopping down the left list (assuming the left area is a list and not a category like several projects)

If something like that is done with SuperFocus, it breaks down. The left list can't be static or chopped down or a master list. It has to be cleaned in sequence or moved below. Basically the same as AutoFocus. Can't do the next item? Skip it and put it last or somewhere else depending on the version. The right side is not a prioritizer despite the category. It's sort of like a motivator and a reminder.

You do AutoFocus but the right side keeps you aware of whether you are doing important tasks (not necessarily should/need). AutoFocus and SuperFocus is all about Do or Skip. What that means is that you can get lost in the flow of striking tasks out without finding out most of what you did are things that aren't important to you.

It's also important that there's no or little "page". The system is not really the template or the words on one page. The page instead is used as a task limiter to bypass the ordering or categorization of the tasks. Kind of like moving your files to a partition first and then deleting the items in the clogged partition one by one and anything that can't be deleted or you're unsure - you instantly move to the next page as if it was another partition. You're not allowed to treat a page as if it was a window to a list. I know it sounds oxymoronic considering it's a to-do list but that's what the system is hinged on. Right column: windshield mirror. Not the radio, not the fuel meter, not the clock, not the folders besides the car seat. It's quick glance then bam! bam! bam! bam! bam! no? bam! move...bam! bam! bam! quick glance...bam!

527
Personally I'd rather do something like Avira does with ads. Savvy users can just disable it while it allows un-savvy users to get an initial license key or try to crack it somehow. Doesn't really matter as long as they are hooked on the software it's just to get those initial donators who are on the fence.

It's really the subsequent marketplace that I think will hook in new donators. Kind of like apps for the Iphone except instead of buying apps - donators are buying their suggestions to be prioritized.

The marketplace working in 3 layers. 1st sequence of donations get priority from programmers first unless they choose something else (which they are free to do). Second sequence of donations means some percentage goes back to a DC core. The catch is that if the main developer prioritizes some other feature, a DC regular will step in within a time frame to either fork or implement that feature into the program. 3rd and final is when the money surpasses a certain level of expectations and in this case, DC is obliged to actively seek out and pay people to make a feature or program happen sort of like middle men.
528
Question bastardized from one of app's blog post.

What Exactly is a System?

The short and simple answer is that a system is a recipe.

Just like a recipe for anything else, it's a list of ingredients and detailed step by step instructions on how to go from ingredients to final results.

If it were a recipe for lasagna, it would be a list of everything that goes into the lasagna (noodles, cheese, sauce, etc.) and step by step instructions on how to turn those ingredients into lasagna. It doesn't leave anything out or leave you guessing about what or how much you need. It's well planned out. You'll know what you need to acquire before you start, what equipment is necessary, and a general idea of how long it will take and how much it will make. If you follow it to the letter, you will make a lasagna.

In the case of a system, it's all those things you need and how to combine them into the result, which is productivity.

529
Oh sorry, I thought it was pretty clear because you did only reply to one sentence I wrote.

I disagree with this:

That's actually a very big difference Paul !

and the rest of the paragraph was indeed what you were asking of. The why.

Until this part:

I'm not trying to dampen your enthusiasm though and this is really just me uhh..."trying" to clarify concepts from my perspective and not so much directly criticizing Forster. (Plus I've said much harsher words elsewhere in the forum about AutoFocus so hopefully even if we disagree, you won't think I'm being insincere or trying to hijack the heart of the topic.)

which I said basically to prevent any sort of implication of this:

if you think it's rubbish, that's fine, that's good even!

Personally I had hoped that the length of time of my posting here is enough proof that if I think a system is rubbish, it's rubbish to me and I don't hold back on my explanation.

Unfortunately my previous explanation isn't good enough to prove that I understand not only the system but where you are coming from which I was hoping it would.

But I honestly dont understand the content of either of your posts.

The "intent" of my post was to highlight a weakness of a system (from my perspective) by providing the reasons why.

Edit: Actually this was more the intent of my 2nd post. My first post, I felt that if I did this it would only come off as an attack so I weighed in the value of sharing a software that could easily be Superfocus but for a computer and at the same time I felt by explaining why, I could also imply what the system's weaknesses are. Of course, worst case scenario, I was hoping that even if someone disagreed at least they may get a software referral out of it but I really under-estimated my explanation. I thought I didn't need to expand or if I did, it wouldn't be from the perspective of someone who doesn't understand the system as, again, I thought I added enough of an explanation.

Because just as much as a productivity system that works for someone can stand on it's own, a productivity system that is lacking or could be improved or is flawed - could hurt someone. That's why I try to present a perspective that may not have a high percentage of being presented in case there are readers that might not have considered that factor.

In reality though, it's not that grand of an intent. We do this all the time with software. If a certain software is lacking, do we not provide an alternative software link to the best of our knowledge. Similarly if a software has a feature that did it first, and that feature while novel is not as effective, do we not save people the trouble of trying out a software first by warning them of things so that they can put it into context.

Again though, all this hinges on the idea that my previous reply is evidence that I understand and am expanding. If I am unable to deliver that (which right now I'm not able to) then there's really no way for me deliver this intent.

Edit:

this is nothing todo with values, this is a system

Oh right, when I meant values here, I don't mean something explicitly concrete. I just mean perspectives.

If you perceive a name change as something helpful for example then that name change is major where as I'm coming from a perspective of it being a wording and a wording from my perspective is not that different of a system from say something like what app did for her software.

It's kind of like some people seeing colors in their folders as something that helps in their productivity and is a system in itself while other people may see the color of a folder as merely aesthetic.
530
I disagree but I'd just like to emphasize that I know where you are coming from.

We just have different values. To me saying that a 2nd column where the only difference is the wording is like saying I have a better system than Forster tailor made for you because I'm using a more than 2 column system. Even better it's a more than two column set of applications that can just as easily be replicated on paper.

But the reality is: mindmaps, grids, tables - they are already more than 2 columns and you can also have them simply as two columns. I even have a notebook where the back pages are stripes less disposable paper that has already an easy to tear line so the front serves as a bookmark/notebook and the back serves as a reminder/micro notes that can be teared off. Doesn't mean the notebook makes me any more or less productive than just using two pages of a normal notebook.

I'm not trying to dampen your enthusiasm though and this is really just me uhh..."trying" to clarify concepts from my perspective and not so much directly criticizing Forster. (Plus I've said much harsher words elsewhere in the forum about AutoFocus so hopefully even if we disagree, you won't think I'm being insincere or trying to hijack the heart of the topic.)
531
Post New Requests Here / Re: IDEA: Internet Explorer Address Bar Search Utility
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 22, 2011, 03:45 AM »
You may have to wait for IE7Pro to support IE 9.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IE7Pro

532
Living Room / Re: Strange subtleties of the Placebo Effect
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 22, 2011, 03:25 AM »
Yeah, that's why I wrote this in the beginning:

Sorry if this is a joke and I just didn't get it.

I just didn't understand your post. Thanks for clarifying.
533
Living Room / Re: Strange subtleties of the Placebo Effect
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 22, 2011, 02:11 AM »
Skeptics generally jump on top of stuff like "The Secret" and lambaste it, but don't have a problem with placebos, which is pretty bad logic. What skeptics should be doing is... well... that's a bit long... Suffice it to say that most "skeptics" are most certainly NOT skeptics.

Not really. People have problems with propaganda. They don't have problems with contextual ads/funny biased political TV or the ever so charismatic message of "Hope and Change" during election years.

I'd like to see information that follows the implications for the placebo effect with respect to "self-help", religion, and spirituality. That would be interesting.

The information is all found in marketing or the oft famous "snake oil salesmen". I don't have any authoritative research articles but the general implication is that people tune out.

People get into religion - people find that religion is wrong - people find another form of belief - people become agnostic but fearful of being punished by God - people become spiritual - people find out that being spiritual is either un-rewarding or overrated - people become atheistic but they sought something to explain miracles - people look for the next modern day authority be that medicine, science or technology

Of course this is over-stereotypical but it's this same stereotype that makes placebos work better or work worse. It's not just belief. It's the source and revelation of certain beliefs combined with the knowledge and the feeling of assurance from having that knowledge.

At the simplest and most broad level, there is observer bias - the fact that you think something will or should happen will make you more likely to either see that thing, or to think something you did see *is* that thing (e.g. UFOs). This is what many skeptics hinge their arguments on and it's very valid in many cases when considering externally observable, real-world phenomena.

Personally I feel word of mouth and argument from authority works better than observer bias.

If you hear about it before you see it - once you see it, you have a lower skeptical barometer unless it's dead/inactive/just a piece of photo.

Contrast this to seeing it before you hear about it - then you're just wondering if your eyes are playing tricks on you until you start believing it.

I think this is an important distinction because without the mystique behind medicine, a medicinal placebo would mostly work less effectively than a magic spell.

Another "placebo effect" is the physician sticking a stethoscope on you can tapping around like it means something. In that vein I guess I'd agree with the video that the placebo is more effective if the gadget is bigger(e.g. MRI machine.)

I think another important distinction that should be made is that not everything can be placebos.

I could be wrong but I certainly haven't heard anything about a miracle stethoscope incident. Same thing with the gadgets. How exactly does one go about inducing a placebo in an MRI machine which is not a masses understood technique compared to a pill or an injection?

I'm a firm believer in the placebo effect and the power of thought. I attended a boarding school situated in a mountainous region. It took seven hours to get to the city by road, three of them through winding mountain roads. The first time I took the trip I was badly carsick. At that age the journey seemed torturous and never ending. I've gotten over the motion sickness but that trip still rates as one of the most agonizing experiences of my life. On subsequent trips, I would start feeling ill the night before the journey. By morning I would be pretty f*****, and that's before the buses had even entered the school premises!

Sorry if this is a joke and I just didn't get it.

That actually sounds more like Anchoring. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anchoring

Placebos don't work that way but again I don't even know the barest of placebos.

Anyways I think Placebos aren't that mysterious. They are an interesting research topic but almost all placebos seem to just need the participants to lower their defense mechanism. (but not be lied to)

From Wikipedia:

Level 1 - Pathological   

Delusional projection · Denial · Distortion · Extreme projection · Splitting

^ When lowered increases courage and confidence, reduces stress, unlocks self-help "Secrets"

Level 2 - Immature   

Acting out · Fantasy · Idealization · Passive aggression · Projection · Projective identification · Somatization


^When lowered means healing, pain reduction, peace of mind.

Note that before you get to level 2, you would have an increased rather than a decrease of these mechanisms so you have to re-lower them.

Note also that reduced fantasy doesn't mean increased reality but can just as mean reduced degree of separation. I.E. going berzerk in real life versus playing as a berserker in an rpg while staying in-character

Level 3 - Neurotic   

Displacement · Dissociation · Hypochondriasis · Isolation · Intellectualization · Rationalization (making excuses) · Reaction formation · Regression · Repression · Undoing

Decrease in this means that the person would be willing to keep repeating the induction of the placebo with lesser doubts and thus retaining the effects of the placebo despite prolonged usage. (Also means what it means by opium of the masses - false sanity thanks to group insanity working in a social structure)

Level 4 - Mature   

Altruism · Anticipation · Humour · Identification · Introjection · Sublimation · Thought suppression

Decrease in this might not increase "medicinal" placebos but certainly increases sociopathic placebo the likes which allow a normal man to become socio-superior in many cases.

Others   
Compartmentalization · Exaggeration · Minimisation · Postponement of affect

Decrease of this means better conformity. The placebo of camaraderie if you may:

Foes working together in a sports team in the name of a metal trophy.

Friends seducing their friends to more brain draining games on Facebook thinking they are not harming them.

Married women thinking they love or should love their husbands and thus becoming a loyal wife through wanting to live a stable life as a mother or a caretaker.

What's especially unique about this other category is that this is the exact opposite of the 1st stage so in many ways this is the skeptics' placebo.

A global clear cut example of this is how the smartest atheists can write about a scientific book debunking religion but they are only up in arms against religion if it's invading their perceived field and they do not respect certain things to "have an effect" despite it being clearly shown that it has.

In technology, this can also be attributed to the large disparity between Apple haters and Apple supporters. Not because there's a placebo happening to the supporters as much as there's a placebo happening to the dissenters in that they often write as if "they don't just get it" why people would want something like an IPad when it has barely little or worse effect on them. After that of course it's fill in the blanks but in that middle stage it's very impenetrable. You could predict it correctly and these people would just re-rationalize it as luck and their confirmation bias would just further fill in the blanks of why they are not wrong or why this is a limited incident or why they only switched because the item improved rather than say peer pressure or initial placebo rejection against those tactics until it wore down on them.

If it sounds confusing (and really I'm not referring to any research I've read but just conjuring my own opinion), those falling into the reduction of these other categories basically have rebellion placebos. Like single issue voters can be smart except for one issue. People would rebel if their internet was taken away from them but would be able to just tune out every other greater crimes. One could even dub it as the soldier placebo. You are able to reject corruption, to have a moral fiber, to have a long tolerance for being lead by a politician but as soon as you are able to outline your thoughts - exaggerate and see the vast implications of your actions - maximize the outcome and feel there's a deadline to the future - your shield placebo breaks down and you become either more human (in the empathic sense) or more animal (in the fight or flight sense)
534
The Getting Organized Experiment of 2009 / (Nothing New) Bittersweet Irony...
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 21, 2011, 10:06 PM »
Note: Didn't verify or sign up for this service but I just find it bitter sweet that this isn't being sold as a productivity system but as a marketing guide and it is able to fill out the complete concept of why a working productivity system should not need all of these in order to be a working productivity system but here we still are murking in the depths of these concepts where even free software rarely have the total package of what this writes in 3 paragraphs: http://www.boostyourfamefactor.com/

Quote:

There Are 3 Magic Ingredients to Make any Marketing Strategy Work

Every time you hear about a new way to publicize your business, I bet your heart starts racing…your adrenaline pumps….you are about to burst with excitement that you’ve FINALLY found something that might work.

Not so fast….

The reality is that pretty much EVERY marketing strategy can work for your business. That is, if you’re willing to whip up our three magic ingredients….

#1 – SET GOALS

How many times have you heard this…right? Well we promise not to bore you with the typical goal setting nonsense.

But you do have to know WHERE you’re going in order to get there. And you want to create tangible, easy to manage goals.

So, for the sake of this article, let’s say your goal is to get your product or service (or yourself) some coverage in a national magazine.

#2 – CREATE AN ACTION PLAN

Now, this elusive national magazine placement isn’t going to magically appear. Chances are, your favorite magazine isn’t going to call you out of the blue and beg to cover your business.

So, you need to create an action plan to make this happen.

As our gift to you, we wanted to share our personal action plan document along with instructions on putting it together.
CLICK HERE to download the BFF Action Plan.

You may need one action plan, or multiple action plans, to achieve one goal. But they are well worth the time and effort.

#3 – FIND AN ACCOUNTABILITY PARTNER

It’s easy to ignore those action plans (and sometimes even your goals) when you have no one holding you accountable. Find an accountability partner – a coach, a mentor, or just a trusted friend – and send them your action plans each month. They’ll make sure you are getting the tasks done on time and keep you motivated to reach that goal.

So, how do we know this works?

We know it works because…well…we use it ourselves. This course would have never been completed without having a goal, several action plans, and each other as accountability partners.

And, if you want more killer tips like this, you’ll definitely want to check out our upcoming Boost Your Fame Factor program. We’re bursting with super juicy information to skyrocket your business and would love to share it with you. We’ll be opening the doors to this joint soon – so stay tuned.


Plus...

http://www.openforum...bout-it-ivana-taylor

If you already suspect that you’re not doing enough marketing, then chances are you’re right.
 
Doing the right of marketing should feel like you’re doing too much.  It’s a lot like applying make-up when you’re about to appear on television.  When you look at yourself in real life, it looks over-exaggerated.  But when you appear on TV – you look natural.  Your marketing strategy runs the same way.

Worst part of it all? Marketing is perceived as one of the laziest jobs even by creativity standards. Productivity is supposed to be the opposite. A system or software that pushes us to infinity and beyond.
535
Post New Requests Here / Re: IDEA: Internet Explorer Address Bar Search Utility
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 21, 2011, 09:50 PM »
I didn't search for this at all but maybe you can get a better answer from Maxthon users.

http://www.maxthon.com/

http://forums.mozill...t=439757&start=0

I'm also not sure if Maxthon is stable under Windows 7.
536
Living Room / The Plot Thickens...
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 21, 2011, 09:15 PM »
The Male Guide on how to Subtract a Woman's Math Skills

Researchers at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln and Pennsylvania State University at University Park asked 150 undergraduates at a large university in the Midwest — 67 women and 83 men — to participate in what they were told was a study of how people work together in teams. Instead, says Sarah J. Gervais, the lead author, the study examined how being visually “checked out” by a member of the opposite sex affected each student’s performance on math problems.

“This is ironic because those people that are causing them to underperform, they’re also wanting to interact with them more in the future.”

The men appeared to be unfazed when their female interviewers stared at the men’s chests before and after asking the first, third, and fifth interview questions, Ms. Gervais says.

“This is a subtle gaze,” she explains. “It’s not that they’re looking there for 10 seconds. They’re briefly gazing before and after asking those questions.”

I would like to read this study, but if the control condition was women staring at men’s chests, then that is just plain stupid. A better scenario would have been to have the women exhibit subtle flirting behavior (good eye contact, brushing aside the hair, occasional touches). I think this might be a female behavior that is more equivalent to the I-think-you’re-hot objectifying gaze of a male.

Reading is so difficult. The experiment did not sample a population, much less randomly. The number of subjects was determined by calculating statistical power and was not large. The men in the study who gazed at women did not excel in math. They were stooges. However, you are right on one point. The study you describe is absurd.

In my opinion, this study needs to be taken in the context of other studies done on similar issues. Of which I’m no expert, but for the sake of positive feedback to the writer on this interesting topic, I do remember some studies done with students at single-sex schools vs those at co-ed schools, which indicated better academic performance at the single sex schools. Perhaps not rocket science, however I think it’s okay to be aware of this kind of socially interacting environment and it’s impact.
The other direction where this study could go, is with the recent studies that have indicated that women have a different psychological ‘hierarchy’ – and one in which relationships rate highly. Perhaps deep in the psyche of a woman, who is being admired – she is analyzing whether this person is a possible marriage candidate? and therefore a more important analysis is taking place than the current (superficial) maths problem…

Oh and it's safe to say DC remains to be one of the few sites that doesn't need this posted on their front lawn:

By the way, what’s happened to civil academic discourse? There’s hardly a hint of reasoned empirically-based critique in all this commentary. Instead we have bald assertions and name-calling (“just plain stupid”, “bad research”, and “pseudo-academic crap”) unsupported by any argument or scientific fact. Similarly unburdened by data are those who firmly believe in the results of the study (“So what else is new?” and “Did we really need a study for this? Sounds like natural reactions.”) and their polar opposites who don’t believe in them at all (“If I actually believed this nonsense…” and “such a poorly defined and executed study it makes me laugh…”). Instead, if you find an experiment from a respectable journal out of your field interesting or puzzling, why not just ask how the data fit (or not) with other known facts and share your knowledge with us?

Source: http://www.circvsmax...owthread.php?t=81087

That is hilarious. All my male students need to do to lower the class average relative to their own scores to check out some boobs.

I don't see the problem. It's not like women need those math skills in the kitchen.

Seriously though, couldn't that simply being attributed to being in an uncomfortable situation?

So if their reaction to being uncomfortable is to start more interaction with them...
Unless the interaction was slapping the guy in the face, I think that's not fitting.

I guess that means I should stare more obvious at women's breasts...

It means the study is overlooking something simple - The women found those men attractive to start with. When the men stared at their chests it sigbaled to the women "this guy wants what I want", thus the lowering of logical processes and the sluttification desire to be with them.


I'm geussing the study didn't use catpissmen or nerds.

How not to sexually harass:
Be Handsome
Be Attractive
Don't be Unattractive

4. Look gay enough that she mistakes your interest for looking like you want to ask her where she got those shoes
537
Courage Wolf (Link NSFW) - Self-esteem booster/less intelligence leading to less trivial answers

http://www.askcouragewolf.com/

Google's Fashion Engine based on Like.com: image comparison engine

http://www.luxist.co...gles-fashion-engine/

What kind of a Teacher are you? (Needs Facebook to test) - Results don't just show results but link directly to advises.

http://www.facebook....p?id=154514724570539

Slot Machine Personality Quiz - Uses bias bypassing concepts like cards rather than quizzes to obscure cheating.

http://game.personal...erbook.com/poker.php

Many of these might seem like a stretch but believe me they are a whole lot farther in gamifying anything than the ones currently being introduced as game-based marketing. The core flaw of course is that quizzes are in themselves seemingly closer to games and they are used to induce and not grab hold unto a user's addictive personality.
538
Anyone got any good suggestions re a better word processor?

I'm sure you're aware of Open Office so....

I've being using Jarte (http://www.jarte.com/) a lot lately just because it's minimalist and that appeals to me. It's actually built off of WordPad. It's a weird interface and probably won't appeal to everyone, but for text editing it works fine.

AbiWord (http://www.abisource.com/) is probably the most popular of the "alt.word" programs besides OO.o

Google Docs (http://docs.google.com/?pli=1), ZoHo (http://www.zoho.com/), ThinkFree (http://www.thinkfree.com/), AjaxWrite (http://www.ajaxlaunch.com/ajaxwrite/), gOffice (http://goffice.com/) & BuzzWord (https://buzzword.acrobat.com/) are all online word procs that you can access from anywhere (but can't run offline...well Think Free has an offline version but it costs).

If you really want to go minimalist you can try Dark Room (http://they.misled.us/dark-room) which is text and nothing but text (full screen), there is also JDarkRoom (http://www.codealchemists.com/jdarkroom/) which is similar but java based.

Rough Draft (http://www.salsbury.....com/rd_overview.htm) has features targetted specifically at "writers" (novelists, screenplayers etc).

Another super light option is Atlantis Nova (http://www.download....2079_4-10634944.html) which is a free version of the shareware Atlantis Word Processor (http://www.atlantiswordprocessor.com/en/)

qjot (http://www.xtort.net...xtort-software/qjot/) & UltraPad (http://www.download....2079_4-10741809.html) are beefed up versions of WordPad.

Going the other way IBM Lotus Symphony (http://symphony.lotu...s/symphony/home.jspa) is a full blown suite.

You can download a free version of Star Office 8 (http://googlesystem....adds-staroffice.html) via Google Pack and there are still some downloads of Star Office 5.2 (http://mirror.aarnet...taroffice/5.2/win32/) floating around the net. Star Office is where Open Office got it's code base.

EasyOffice (http://easyoffice-fr...are.en.softonic.com/) got really good reviews from Maximum magazine and has a crap load of additional features.

Edit: It appears that EasyOffice has been replaced by "The ONE suite" and is no longer free.

A Chinese company has an MS Office competitor called Kingsoft Office (http://phanmem.dec.v...ls.aspx?ProductID=23)

Last but not least don't forget Tiny USB Office (http://tiny-usb-office.en.softonic.com/) (there is also a portable version of Open Office).

Source: http://www.circvsmax...owthread.php?t=43727
539
Thanks tomos but it seems app has beaten Forster to the concept this time:

http://appsapps.info...enshots/ToDoList.jpg

The only thing lacking in her software is that the right column is a done column rather than a ready to do plus she didn't implement pages to limit the list.

Oh and a crossed out line.
540
Living Room / Re: The XKCD solution to Distraction Affliction
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 21, 2011, 12:20 PM »
Well I didn't skim the entire article but this doesn't sound like it's any different from blocking your browser from accessing a website or a program.

In that sense - don't you really and absolutely must be news reading to make it work? An early commentor brought up file downloading but to me I also have to worry about tab organization and session saving. Can't really get in the flow of organizing my tabs if I keep getting interrupted. Hence it's not just news reading, it has to be "light" news reading like the main reddit rather than following a breaking news sub-reddit or reading crap sites like CNN and not monitoring Twitter trends and then ultimately having a job or an interest where you are confident you know everything and all these news are basically just a way to "keep up to date" rather than discover important news.

I don't know if I'm just not the norm but I found that if I close Firefox, I end up opening Opera or playing a full-screen application (often a game). Most of what helps me from not being distracted is having applications opened since the seamlessness of opened apps allow me to copy paste a bookmark, annotate or snip something long, check up much quicker on my social networks knowing I really can't deal with lots of additional tabs right now and makes me become less active on distracting sites. Like I'm starting to lean off on my tabitis a bit and I end up returning less to DC and often closing this after I made a reply where as the more overloaded I become the less I'm on DC but the more distracted I become everywhere else - even going to a point where if I shut down my PC, I end up walking and talking to myself based on a forum or article that I probably don't plan to post anyway only to sit down, re-open Firefox and get back to Distraction Affliction.

Of course the downside of being more productive is that I seem to care less about edit mode and just type. Need something? Type and post it somewhere including typing it on DC. (like Stoic called me up on another thread about my usage of "the fact" as not being the whole story) Want something? Come back to DC, type, pop-out again. This isn't just for forums mind you but it can get kind of scary not contemplating about what you're trying to say and just tapping away at the keyboard.
541
That probably has something to do with it (I don't know that part of the news) but I doubt it's the prime factor.

If you just look at the total feature demand that the other major browsers have adopted, it's not just one aspect. It's just the most visual.

Opera for example right now has extensions. Do you really think that's just an element of real estate screen shortage?

It's a whole bunch of features basically all majorly coming post-Chrome and saying it's all the same obvious solution is also a lie.

Opera's "one icon" is much more inferior than Chrome's and from what I've seen of the beta Firefox, it's not like suddenly they are going all about screen estate. (I don't have a wide screen and I didn't realize it was becoming mandatory) It's Prism. It's attempt at making the browser more lightweight. it's extension stores.

There's just too many coincidences to say the interface was just a "fix" when there's other non-relevant things happening all at the same sequence. It's like giving credit to Opera for dropping the adware model for their free desktop browser and not say Firefox's success wasn't the prime factor. I doubt any of the developers would admit to this but really it doesn't take a 24/7 magnifying glass of techie knowledge to see all the evidence littered about.
542
Yeah, it is a horrible idea but it is a horrible idea that has allowed Chrome to get all the attention and force Opera to adopt this into a horrible red O icon at the top left or forced Firefox to finally take their memory hogging issues much much more seriously so I don't blame them and in fact applaud them for taking that risk.

After all if everyone were say using Anuran and then PopUp Wisdom arrived, you could easily say the same thing of:

Seems like a horrible idea to me -- just like this move to get rid of AnuVu, etc. all seem like bad ideas to me.  Just give me a standard notepad interface and stop all this obsession with hiding everything in text files.

If Google screws up, good. Sure is a hell of a lot better than Opera screwing their users by not changing things to their user demands until the competition wisens up. Same thing with Netscape. Screwed up? Thank god cause we ended up having Firebird.
543
Screen real estate isn't that poor.

I disagree. Chrome wants to brand themselves as the lightest browser right now because it's their strengths. That's how they got majority of their userbase despite constant early comments about Chrome not being anything special.

Removing the bar would still be suicide if the replacement fails. (as you said, you will leave for example)

But if they succeed - not only will you not leave, you'll complain how every other browser isn't as good as Chrome.

Let us not forget the fact that Chrome forced every major browser to have an overhaul in their interface in the attempt of mimicking Chrome's slightly more screen real estate and you could argue that even back then - screen real estate wasn't that poor either. Still caused Chrome to be a major influencer. (including most techies who hate Chrome but would now use something like Chromium over Firefox)
544
Thanks for this IainB. What's scary about this is this is like a carbon copy of "the" business plan that I know of.

Like literally the shape or the cycle or the sizzle may switch around a bit but point for point it's scarily: business planning/strategic goals and then immediately ongoing feedback and appraisal or staff training and there's really no "cheat" route of sorts on how to bypass a bad appraiser.

If there's one thing that is at least more honest in your model is that at least reward and recognition is a dead end zone.
545
Just posting this in case tim might not have heard about the competition:

https://chrome.googl...jpekdajanfgchlgacdea

The concept is nothing new but the fact that it's an extension in Chrome with a simple and clear GUI might get some people's interest away from Focuth.
546
Living Room / Brave New Taxi can't be called a Taxi
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 21, 2011, 01:28 AM »
Source: http://thenextweb.co...is-coming-to-europe/

The concept behind Uber is both simple and intuitive. You can request for a car service using the iPhone or the Android app by setting your pick-up location. Nearby drivers who use the service will be alerted and once they accept your request, you will be able to set your end location. Paying for the ride is convenient as it automatically gets charged to your account. Once the transaction is over, both the driver and the passenger will be able to rate each other to ensure that the service is not being abused.

UberCab actually made some controversial news late last year when the company was asked to cease and desist because it was marketing itself much like a cab company without a taxi license. It is stipulated in US law that only licensed taxis can pick someone up right away, which is UberCab is not. Due to this incident, UberCab dropped Cab from its official name and is now called Uber.

Personally I'd rather they categorize SUVs and Hummers as tanks before they get all worked up about a cab.

With that said, I don't know the security implications for this though but with the speed of uploading pictures from phone to web these days - maybe it would also make kidnappers fearful of impersonating as a taxi driver.
547
Seriously.  Who has ever looked at the address bar and thought "man, I wish this were not here."  Whoever it is, it's like .01% of the users.

In fairness though, the same was said for MDI windows before Firefox popularized tabs.

The same was argued for a lite interface for Opera before Chrome happened.

You also have to factor in the number of people who don't know that their browsers can go fullscreen. Back then, if memory serves me right, I'd go full screen in Opera to get a "lite" version of the toolbars.

I also use F2 alot and the only reason few people rarely do that is because they don't use Opera or don't know it exists.

Opera also thought nobody cared for the start bar but when they removed it - massive uproar.

Even today there are still some Opera features that you think nobody (especially casuals) would use but it's only because techies tend to give little respect to GUI interface. Example - YeahWrite was there in all it's glory but it takes how many years before OneNote releases that interface and guess what? Took the end-user community by storm.

I'm not saying Google would be right by just removing the address bar but Google wouldn't be wrong either especially from a usability standpoint. Less bar means more space for buttons/extensions as well as extra line to read text. Equally F2 = less time than dragging a mouse to the address bar. Address bars also don't show a lot of information compared to sidebars and full-on pages. They also contain a lot less visuals for beginning browser users compared to something like search options. Also despite the innovations made to overcome this, casual users may often not get why there's a www. in front of a bar and I've said this before, Chrome does not aim to be a browser first and foremost but a windows to the internet like the original IE.

I think the most irritating "removal" in Chrome is how if I stop moving my mouse, it hides my cursor. I have not yet figured out how to disable it from doing that.

Man...I never noticed this. Thanks for the mention.
548
http://uvoutliner.wo...liner-new-release-2/

Not much in the way for formulas but some of you who want a simple minimalist outliner and feel TreeSheets is too complicated or OneNote makes it too easy to add columns may like to take a look at this application.



Hoist is the closest thing this has to TreeSheets' capability of zooming in and out.

When your outline becomes big enough, it is very convenient to work with just some part of the document.

This can be done by using Hoist feature from View menu. When applied, current row of a document becomes the root row, and only sub-rows can be edited.

What this basically means is that this is the closest thing you can have to an outliner that feels like you are using a simplified Microsoft Word (look at the screenshot - that's not WordPad) and yet have a system that allows you to basically have sub-projects without it acting in a weird rectangular manner like how most TiddlyWiki outliners work.

There are two modes in outliner:

Text editing mode
Row selection mode
In text editing mode outliner works just the same as a usual text processor. In this mode you enter or edit text.

In row selection mode work is done with the whole row. For example, if you need to change font settings for entire row, you can switch to row selection mode and change font setting.

To enter text editing mode you can press F2 or click mouse button on the text.

To exit text editing mode and to enter row selection mode you can just press Esc.

It's also one of the few programs that still attempts to have an optional edit mode for precision formatting.

Finally it rivals NANY Tree List for having some of the most user friendly keyboard shortcuts for an outliner:

Keyboard shortcuts:

Move current row up   Ctrl + Arrow Up
Move current row down   Ctrl + Arrow Down
Increase indentation   Tab
Decrease indentation   Shift + Tab
Expand sub-tree   Ctrl + Plus on numeric key pad
Collapse sub-tree   Ctrl + Minus on numeric key pad

Really all this lacks is a search as you type textbox but most outliners don't have that either. It's not something I would use and in fact I didn't download this at all but it deserves it's own thread for being slightly one of a kind when you consider the total package it brings.

(All this lacks is a bit of an exaggeration. I can't figure out how to install .Net on a Virtualbox XP so all .net applications are out. Also it couldn't hurt for this app to have a search box, a vertical view like Outline 4d, cross marks like the Auto Focus software, etc. etc. but again as a total package, it's hard to find a program like this that is able to cross the middle line between simplistic beauty and sub-project/sub-task handling. Even mindmaps dare not to have a hoist feature except for expensive programs like PersonalBrain or Mixed Thumbnail viewers like the recent Evernote interface or In-program file managers like Compendium.)
549
I think they are doing this so that in the near future, they can have an excuse to add clutter to the browser and people will think - that's not clutter, they actually minimized the browser.

Some examples I can think of, Google SideWiki integration, Google Desktop integration, Google Social integration, Google Go integration, Gmail on the sidebar integration.

I feel the suggested interface changes are kind of dumb though. You want no url bar?

Turn it into a super button like the Search Center extension: https://chrome.googl...omnjiknbpejdceedhdmf

More over combine this with Search this Site: https://chrome.googl...jaegiboaoncicpekfbdo

Finally add saved searches.

...or if you're pandering to the casual crowd, take a page from how netbook interfaces look like. Add the address bar to the bookmarks bar and there. All you need to do is hide the bookmarks bar by default (chances are your users already know the hotkey anyway/or add a drop down arrow) and you now have a vertical netbook interface full of buttons.

Why mess with the tabs? You're just killing some of the functionalities of tab extensions that way. Like if you show a search underneath a tab, you can no longer scroll through tabs using the mouse scroll wheel or double click to close tabs like the options provided in Chrome Toolbox

Same thing with panels. It only hurt Opera's image as a simple fast lightweight browser. Instead add a bunch of start bars but for buttons or icons instead of the address bar. There! Instant space for tons more buttons.

Want a mini-download bar? Look at how SingleFile shows the progress meter and combine it with how you show a user added a bookmark in the bookmarks bar by blinking: https://chrome.googl...dhhofbcjdecpffjipkle

ehh...sorry this turned out into a rant instead but basically, yeah I agree with everything you said except for it fixing something that's not broken. Google would just love to add a sidebar to Chrome - it gives them an excuse to hoist an ad like in Evernote does. Same thing with search boxes under tabs. It would make it a lot harder to use alternative search engines if users are trained to think of a search box as a search box rather than a place where they can type in website names. Even advanced users would get lazier the more they use chrome. No one likes to type extra words in tiny boxes.
550
N.A.N.Y. 2011 / Re: NANY 2011 Release: Bard - Organise your audio library
« Last post by Paul Keith on February 20, 2011, 10:06 PM »
Is it just personal preference that this is just for music?

...or is there a popular file manager with the same interface such as this already.

Seems like you can quickly sort desktops/uninstall files/quickly create default directories in different operating systems with the interface.

P.S. I didn't download the program - just going by the screenshot. If I had a program with this interface but with the copy and paste function of TeraCopy and a search engine like Locate32, I'd have my entire HD organized in a day.

(This isn't to mean that there's no program that auto-creates and sends directories to certain locations automatically but just having a portable folder maker means you can set it and forget it as long as it allows for multiple profiles and multiple files.)
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