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Recent Posts

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5301
General Software Discussion / Re: Firefox 15 less of a memory hog
« Last post by 40hz on September 06, 2012, 09:42 AM »
[quo
I don't really add or remove addons that frequently. I have a list that I've pretty much standardised on for all my FF installs unless one of them becomes incompatible with whatever version of FF I'm running.
Go add Ghostery to that list right away! :)

Oh that is nice! Just added to my list.
Thx for the heads-up. I keep hearing about Ghostery. If it has your blessing, I'm good with it. :Thmbsup:
5302
DC Gamer Club / Re: Black Mesa: Half-Life remake coming on Sept 14, 2012!
« Last post by 40hz on September 06, 2012, 09:36 AM »
Awesome! This news can only mean good things to come. :up:
5303
General Software Discussion / Re: Firefox 15 less of a memory hog
« Last post by 40hz on September 06, 2012, 08:00 AM »
If you've been using the same firefox profile for a while (especially installing/uninstalling addons?), perhaps it's worth trying starting with a clean firefox profile and re-adding the addons you use... if that solves issues, import the necessary settings from your old profile (no idea how to do that, but I'm sure there's an application for it).

@f- Thx for the input. Much appreciated. :)

I don't really add or remove addons that frequently. I have a list that I've pretty much standardised on for all my FF installs unless one of them becomes incompatible with whatever version of FF I'm running.

List is:

  • AdBlock+
  • BetterPrivacy
  • Download Helper
  • Download Statusbar
  • DownThemAll!
  • FlashGot
  • NoScript
  • Scrapbook
  • User Agent Switcher
  • WebOfTrust (installed but usually left disabled)

(All are whatever the most current versions are.)

Also, VACUUM the various sqlite databases FF uses, then defrag the database files. That has helped me in the past to alleviate some of the occasional stutters.

Tried that already.  Even ran BleachBit to remove anything that may have been lurking in cookies or whatever. Still happening.

Here's the interesting thing: the problem usually occurs after FF has been open for a while. The thing that tells me it's starting is when I either enter something into the search bar - or when I tell a link to open in a new tab - and the new tab goes into limbo. From what I can see there's a problem when that new tab gets opened. That's when the "connecting" spinner just keeps looping. Once that happens, it's a turkey shoot. Doing a restart clears it. But if I don't restart, sometimes the problem will also clear itself enough (after a minute or two) that I can close the tab and try again. But not always. And once I get that connection timeout FF becomes less and less stable. However, it is not a problem if I manually open a new tab and enter a URL there.

I think it may have something to do with the "open new windows in new tab instead" setting. Because that seems to be where the problem is occurring.

-----

Anyway...I'm going to try a full uninstall followed by a clean install with a fresh profile and NO addons to see if the problem goes away. I'm also setting up a new Nix machine today, so I'll check it out there as well, just to eliminate any chance of a Linux snafu being the cause.

Onward! 8)
5304
Living Room / Re: It's about ... oldish films
« Last post by 40hz on September 05, 2012, 10:08 PM »
I'm more a fan of b&w sci-fi, but I don't recall a Jimmy Stewart film I ever disliked.  And I don't recall anything in the last two (2) decades that approaches Harvey for quality  :P.

+1 on Jimmy Stewart and the film Harvey. I still think it's his best. Even better than It's a Wonderful Life and easily as good as Vertigo.

For sci-fi there were some true B&W oldie classics. I was very partial to The Thing from Another World (1951) based on John Campbell's story Who Goes There. And let's not forget King Kong and all those wonderful truly awful Japanese "radiation monster" gems such as Godzilla, Rodan, Mothra, etc. etc. etc.

There were also some really good horror flicks. :tellme: The 1962 original Carnival of Souls is surprisingly scary for such a low budget film. Much scarier than most horror flicks that came before or after. You can watch or download it from the Internet Archive website. Link here. If you haven't seen it yet be sure to give it a go. It's usually good for some weird dreams the night you watch it for the first time. :up:
5305
Living Room / Re: Kiss Your Keyboard and Mouse Goodbye With The Leap
« Last post by 40hz on September 05, 2012, 05:29 PM »
I'm personally holding out for something like SixthSense myself. Look here.
 8)
5306
Living Room / Re: Bitcoin theft causes Bitfloor exchange to go offline
« Last post by 40hz on September 05, 2012, 12:55 PM »
^Very true. Almost everybody I know who is involved with bitcoins is busy mining them. But I don't know anybody who is spending them. And everybody seems intent on figuring out ways to game the system.

Unfortunately, most economic and monetary theory still applies whether it's dollars, francs, pounds, kuggerrands, or bitcoins.

That's where governments have the advantage. They can force legislate the use of their currency. And they can also kick the asses of any people who try to play unsanctioned games with their monetary systems.
5307
Living Room / Re: Bitcoin theft causes Bitfloor exchange to go offline
« Last post by 40hz on September 05, 2012, 10:45 AM »
I think what BBC was implying was that there was no governmental backing behind bitcoins.

Forget gold or silver. Most currencies are backed by little other than a promise by a government to tax its people unto the umpteenth generation to make good on the obligation incurred.

Bitcoin, lacking a government, police force, and military cannot make that pledge.
5308
General Software Discussion / Re: What went wrong with Linux on the Desktop
« Last post by 40hz on September 05, 2012, 08:21 AM »
Ok. I'm out.  :)
5309
General Software Discussion / Re: What went wrong with Linux on the Desktop
« Last post by 40hz on September 05, 2012, 07:48 AM »
@m2k: <consider it deleted>   8)
5310
General Software Discussion / Re: What went wrong with Linux on the Desktop
« Last post by 40hz on September 05, 2012, 07:46 AM »
FWIW I've had very high reliability with Windows, Linux and BSD in the server environment. When problems occurred they were caused by server applications (webs, email, etc.) running on them.

Truth is, doing a server as a simple server (other than OpenBSD  ::)) is really no big deal. The underlying core code for a server is usually rock solid. But the minute you go beyond basic authentication, and file/print sharing functions, it can get complicated and bothersome.

I've had Windows 200x servers running for years with no downtime other than for routine hardware or software maintenance. Supposedly that can't happen according to some. But I've seen it in dozens of places I've done work for - and in every place where I did the server setup.:mrgreen: Same goes for Linux and BSD. I've done both many times and I've seen enough to say there isn't one flavor of server thats superior to all the others for every possible installation. Just some that are better than others for specific requirements or environments. (And I will confess a minor and wholly personal preference for BSD. Probably more because it was the first server I ever learned than anything else.)

On the desktop it's been a mixed bag. Windows has relatively few problems that are often difficult or impossible to fix on a timely basis. Linux breaks slightly more often, but it's easier to diagnose and (mostly) faster to fix. I don't know anybody who is running BSD as their primary desktop. I have Dragonfly running on one of my PCs. It's very nice - and frankly a little boring. Most of the 'fun' stuff (unless you're a physicist researching subatomic particles or involved in astronomy/cosmology) is happening over on the Linux or Windows desktop.

IMO, where Linux falls down for the desktop is in its lack of standardization.

End users, as a whole, demand something be predictable and standardized. It doesn't need to be a great standard - or even a very good one. Good enough will do for daily use. (Especially since social site crawling, media downloading, email, and porn-surfing make up about 75% of all desktop activity. Wordprocessing and spreadsheeting make up about 5%. And the remaining 20% is used playing games - either games like WoW - or the more serious games hosted by E*Trade and it's ilk.)

Where Microsoft was smart was in providing that standard, along with just enough 'fun' and silliness to make it compelling.

And that's something that generally enrages people who code or otherwise get involved with something like Linux. Unfortunately, that created an early elitist culture. And once it became glaringly obvious (since these people were no dummies) that Linux was not innately superior to much anything else, the elitism morphed into a new attitude of "Who cares." whenever anybody raised the basic question "Why Linux? I just don't get it."

It's really not so much a technical issue as it is a people issue. And when dealing with people, perception is everything. And perception is not something smart people, for all their cleverness, tend to be very good at managing.

I think the takeaway is that Linux and its developers tend to be a little too smart and 'right' (i.e. technically correct) for their own good - if the goal is to promote Linux for the desktop.

But if that is the case, the only way it will change (short of Microsoft sinking into the Pacific Ocean after The Big One) is if they lose the "Who cares." and fuggetaboutit attitude and stop ignoring the fact that being 'more correct' is not always the optimal solution.

5311
General Software Discussion / Re: What went wrong with Linux on the Desktop
« Last post by 40hz on September 05, 2012, 06:22 AM »
Actually, as a moderator, you get me wrong....Just sayin...

@T-Man: Perhaps several of us do?

Maybe you could work on your presentation skills a bit so we don't come away with the wrong impression; and we can work on our interpretive skills a bit so we don't get the wrong impression?

This is DoCo. We're all in this together. And none of us really have to be here.

Just sayin'... ;) :)
5312
Living Room / Re: Apple Patents Shutting Down Phones and Functions
« Last post by 40hz on September 05, 2012, 06:07 AM »
When did that law insanity get passed rammed down the people's throats?

It was part of the Leahy-Smith America Invents Act (AIA) of 2011.

The "first to file" rule will become effective in the USA on March 13, 2013.

Interestingly, the Unites States is the only country that had not adopted a "first to file" rule for patents up until the passage of the AIA. So when it comes to legal douchebaggery (love that expression  >:D), it would seem the USA was behind the curve. For once.

Oh well...fixed now! ;D
5313
General Software Discussion / Re: What went wrong with Linux on the Desktop
« Last post by 40hz on September 05, 2012, 05:42 AM »
duty_calls.png
5314
Living Room / Re: Did Obama’s iPad Just Get Hacked?
« Last post by 40hz on September 04, 2012, 10:12 PM »
^Oh I'm pretty sure the FBI bit is really just a red herring AntiSec is tossing out for giggles.

Which still begs the question as to where they really got their UDID list from.
5315
General Software Discussion / Re: Firefox 15 less of a memory hog
« Last post by 40hz on September 04, 2012, 09:56 PM »
So if you like FF conceptually but have these "mystery issues" (see my sig, that's where it came from, on a different app), try a FF derivative just for giggles and report in.

I'm willing to try anything to get a handle on what's happening here. I'm familiar w/PaleMoon and have used it before. I'll give that a try first.

Thx for the suggestion. :Thmbsup:

UPDATE: Oops. Nope. Those are Windows only and I'm running on Linux. Oh well. <**sigh*> :)
5316
General Software Discussion / Re: Firefox 15 less of a memory hog
« Last post by 40hz on September 04, 2012, 06:06 PM »
Otherwise, they're probably better off to run some Linux version.

I'm actually running it under Linux, which is why it's so frustrating for me.  ;D I can usually nail an issue on that platform pretty quickly because I can see into the innards of the system as deeply as I need to go. So far, whatever is going on seems to be confined to something happening within FF. I was watching it earlier and the RAM usages was fluctuating up and down over a broad range (low around 205-210 and high just short of 390) with one tab open to DoCo's forum homepage and me doing nothing at all on FF.

Truly weird...I'll probably have to disable all extensions and then add them back one by one to see if there's a smoking gun in there somewhere. Hopefully it will be that simple and not some complex interaction between two or more.

I still have Opera on board which i find most akin to Firefox but i keep running back to the former.

Yeah. Me too. If I could get the Sage RSS reader add-in on some other browser (or even an exact work-alike) I wouldn't be that bothered. But I've had a good workflow in place for several years now, and since FF is dead center of most of it I'm semi-stuck with it. Old habits and keyboard reflexes die hard I guess. ;D

5317
General Software Discussion / Re: instant linux on winxp
« Last post by 40hz on September 04, 2012, 05:50 PM »
UPDATE: unfortunately this requires me to boot from USB stick
isnt there a way to have it in a usb stick and run it from there while I am on winxp?

AFAIK...no

Sorry. :(

re: System Requirements for Xubuntu

Minimum system requirements

To install or try Xubuntu within the Desktop/Live CD, you need 256 MB of memory. Installing with the Alternative CD requires only 64 MB. Once installed, it is strongly recommended to have at least 512 MB of memory, but you can run with 256 MB too.

When you install Xubuntu from the Desktop CD, you need 4.4 GB of free space on your hard disk. The Alternate Install CD only requires you to have 2 GB of free space on your hard disk.
5318
Not a mug or a T-shirt. Just the rough back image for a set of CodyCards:

CodyCard.png

 ;D

5319
Living Room / Re: Did Obama’s iPad Just Get Hacked?
« Last post by 40hz on September 04, 2012, 05:19 PM »
LastPass has a tool to check, but it's being made out to be a bigger deal than it apparently is.

“Since AntiSec removed all the personal data from the data they released, this hack doesn’t present much risk to end users,” said Andrew Storms, director of security operations for nCircle, a compliance auditing firm that works with companies such as Facebook and Mastercard. “UDIDs in isolation aren’t a big deal. In fact, Apple used to permit apps to spew UDIDs all over the place, so there’s a lot of UDID data already in the public domain. For awhile, there were a lot of apps using UDID and personal data to track users activity and selling it to advertisers.”

The larger question is why did the FBI have all of those UDIDs?

Let me guess. Investigating IMs and tweets again?

5320
Living Room / Re: Apple Patents Shutting Down Phones and Functions
« Last post by 40hz on September 04, 2012, 05:04 PM »
^ It is funny! But too bad it's now the first to file instead of the first to invent under the new US Patent law.
5321
General Software Discussion / Re: instant linux on winxp
« Last post by 40hz on September 04, 2012, 05:00 PM »
^Virtually all the major distros can now be launched from a USB key. But you'll still need to boot into it. No way around that without running some sort of VM. The rule is: one operating system per machine. The machine can be real or virtual. But there's nothing that runs two operating systems on a single machine simultaneously. Which makes sense, because if you think about it, an instance of an OS is the machine. The computer isn't the hardware. That's just a technical detail. The computer is the software that's running.

Fortunately, Linux generally boots up much faster than Windows does. So unless you're hopping back and forth every 20 minutes it shouldn't be that big a deal.

Here's how to do put it on a key to run Xubuntu 12.04

It's very easy and no optical drive is needed. Download the iso and the Universal USB Installer app. Just follow  the directions in the how-to link above.  8) :Thmbsup:
5322
General Software Discussion / Re: Firefox 15 less of a memory hog
« Last post by 40hz on September 04, 2012, 03:21 PM »
Ok...I think I'm going to rescind my apology to the FF dev team. For two days now I'm getting pages refusing to load due to server timeouts on sites I can reach on my POS iPhone browser with no problem. And that's going through the same router at the same time - so it's not likely a router or DNS issue. If I restart FF, the problem goes away for a few hours, but then starts up again. I thought disabling WOT and all the blocker add-ons might help the situation, but it didn't.

Anybody else seeing this? My CPU is only running at about 9% average on either core, and I'm using only 700Mb of 3.9Gb physical memory. (FF is using 205 of the 700Mb with maybe two or three tabs max opened on static webpages.). No activity on swap either.

And...I just now noticed that although I'm doing nothing but typing this post, FF is suddenly using 255Mb and climbing up slowly. And...it just dropped back to 205. Guess that could be called a spike?

5323
Living Room / Re: Apple Patents Shutting Down Phones and Functions
« Last post by 40hz on September 04, 2012, 02:59 PM »
Hmm...now that "smartphones have replaced rifles" I guess they need to ensure we won't ever have a Russian or Arab Spring here, huh?  :P

Reminds me --- I saw something that made me laugh pretty hard:

George Washington didn't use his first amendment rights to defeat the British. He shot them.

;D


Well...Uncle Sam says "That works for me too!" as he puts a call in to mobilize the police and military. "Damn these dissidents! We're way too soft on people who buck the system." ;D
5324
Living Room / Re: SEC uses JOBS Act to set up new roadblocks to crowdfunding
« Last post by 40hz on September 04, 2012, 02:53 PM »
No matter how big a scam crowdsourcing will ever pull off, it will never come close to Enron, the S&Ls, or any of a dozen other 'bailout with little or no prosecution' scams pulled by supposedly heavily regulated and monitored industries and financial institutions.

About the only time regulators ever display "excessive zeal" and preemptive actions is when they worry about some little guy doing something. When they worry about something big, they conduct "frank and earnest confidential discussions" and hold heavily choreographed hearings.

No different in a town next to mine. Get pulled over in a E-class Mercedes or a high end BMW (no matter what) and the police are as smooth as silk. You'll almost always get off with nothing other than a verbal warning. Get pulled in some low end Dodge or Ford and the ticket book comes out as they're walking toward your car. Their 'bedside manner' is completely different too.

Like I said: Maintain the status quo. :-\
5325
Living Room / Re: Apple Patents Shutting Down Phones and Functions
« Last post by 40hz on September 04, 2012, 12:17 PM »
Hmm...now that "smartphones have replaced rifles" I guess they need to ensure we won't ever have a Russian or Arab Spring here, huh?  :P
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