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5526
This won't be a matter of fixing url's...that isn't the way aol likes to break things.

They may make you rewrite code and find new methods of blocking.

This could be an interesting 'fun' game of cat & mouse coding  ;D
5527
If skrommel's TicTockTitle and jgpaiva's KeyInfo do not play well together, you can use my DClock with the KeyInfo.

The biggest difference between my DClock and TicTockTitle is that mine is a small stay on top window that you can customize and stick anywhere on your screen. I like to keep it at the top of mine.

You can change the size & colors, and it will give you the date as a tooltip when you hover your mouse over it.

Comes with some other nifty tools you can access from either right clicking the clock itself or the tray icon.

More info about features are on the DClock 2 page.

screenshots of DClock with some of its tools (I need to update these to XP ones):





below are screenshots of Firefox on 9x and opera on XP with my clock at the top

5528
I am sure he will get this working. All we need to do is find a copy of aol 8.0 which is nearly impossible to find :-/

AOL versions 4.0 - 9.0SE will all connect and are all in use by people.

You can get up to 5.0* at oldversion.com.

I don't know if you can access these files outside of aol, but here is the rest of the setup files not listed there:

America Online 6.0* for Win 95/98/ME

America Online 7.0

America Online 8.0 (I am not sure if this is the regular 8.0 that I run or the 8.0 'optimized')


America Online 9.0SE downloader (you have to run this to download the actual setup files)

Installing one of these in vmware and setting up a trial account with AOL will buy you about 45 days to play around with it for free. One account will work for all versions, and you can have multiple versions installed on the same machine. If you need any help setting it up not as a dialup software let me know. It can be set up to connect over tcp/ip too, for use with broadband or another ISP's connection. Provided you are connecting over tcp/ip, you can have up to 7 copies of aol connected at the same time...one for each screen name on the account.

*a note about versions prior to 7.0:
If you are running 2k or xp you can't use a version earlier than 7.0. There was a 6.0 that worked with win2k but it was a beta and was never released to the public. (my dad might have a copy still, as he was a beta tester for AOL back then)

Keep this in mind too: AOL will update their software in an attempt to defeat other people's attempts to mess with their software...older versions are not immune to this updating...they still support 4.0 onward. TPA has been dueling with AOL over fading text in chatrooms for years. They keep fixing it and AOL issues a patch to break it again. So just because you can block AOL ads today doesn't mean they will be blocked tomorrow. It could turn into a vicious cycle.
5529
Living Room / Re: Sending my girlfriend some intresting links
« Last post by app103 on July 14, 2006, 08:48 PM »
5530
Living Room / Re: AOL 1.0 Disk sells for $9K on ebay
« Last post by app103 on July 14, 2006, 08:44 PM »
This has to be on a floppy...and it has to be for Mac.

The first version of AOL for PC was AOL 1.3 for DOS. Before that it was only available for Mac (yes, that's why AOL is so easy to use...it was made with Mac users in mind  ;D)

AOL didn't start producing CD's till v2.5, I think. (I recently threw away one of those :P)

There are so many varieties of AOL CD's that I can understand how someone can get caught up in collecting them like baseball cards....not that I would. I only keep one disk of every version since 4.0, in case I am required to install it on someone's PC...a total of 8 disks.

I know a person that collects AOL cd's for an odd purpose...he's building a table from them, gluing them all together. His point is that they can be useful for something. If he ever finishes the table I'll be sure to take pics and share them.  :D
5531
May I ask what version of ad muncher is installed and running? Also, what is the process name of the aol executable? I am sure that this either A. Is blocked in the newer builds of ad muncher, or B. Can easily be blocked by adding the process's name to the filter targets tab under options.

These are not normal ad banners...they are some proprietary type of content produced with Rainman. Blocking these ads is very different than blocking a normal ad.

I didn't expect Ad Muncher to block them, as most developers don't know about these ads or what makes them tick.

The reason why TPA Ad Buster works is because the developer is a long time AOL user and creator of some of the best AOL plugins available.

I have sent an email to Jeff explaining the problem in as much detail as possible and offered to help him in any way I can. I would really like to see some other program pick up where TPA left off.
5532
Living Room / New Baby at Google Labs
« Last post by app103 on July 14, 2006, 05:14 AM »
Are you expecting? Let Google handle your birth with Glife!

http://blaugh.com/20...baby-at-google-labs/

(I would be afraid my baby would be born covered in 'relevent ads'  :D)

5533
I agree with the 10 lines of understandable code is better than 1 line nobody can understand, approach.

Squishing everything into 1 line is a crazy thing to teach to a beginner and makes it very difficult to understand things. Also not good if someone else is going to end up having to maintain that code.

Understanding that a program's source is very much like a recipe for cookies, you wouldn't want to make the recipe unclear, now would you? You could end up with some nasty cookies when it comes time for someone else to do the baking or add to that recipe.

This has been my biggest problem with learning. Too much being packed into code and being unable to pick it apart to understand the small pieces of it and how it works. Makes it very hard to see & understand the big picture. Yet too many languages & tutorials do that and assume you are some sort of genius that can decipher it all.

This is most evident in languages & tutorials created for people that are already competent programmers. But you can't get to that level unless you start at the beginning and too many beginners tutorials are written very badly too...because they are written by more advanced programmers that forgot what it's like to know nothing at all. They start off good and then lose you at about chapter 3 with crazy stuff a beginner can't make sense of.

Or worse...

They give you a project to make, meant to teach you...get halfway through the project and stop explaining and then tell you to 'copy & paste this and don't worry about what it all means & does'. How are you supposed to learn anything like that?

I don't want to be a C&P programmer...there are too many of those in the world already, copying someone else's buggy code and never fully understanding how it works. And that is one of the sources of bad software.

Keep things simple and maybe there will be better software and more competent programmers.
5534
Ad Muncher does not block AOL's Rainman based ads. Nothing I have found can block these ads...except TPA Ad Buster.

Now this is only for AOL users that use the normal AOL software. Not for anybody else.

This removes the ads you see in chatrooms, on your mailbox, and on the file transfers window, by default. All the rest you just right click the ad and you'll never see an ad in that spot on that window again.

TPA has removed all links to this from their site, but the page to get it is still there. (they had a dispute with AOL over this)

Best of all...it's free!

You can use this alongside Ad Muncher, and never see another ad again,anywhere, if you are an AOL user.

I am not sure if this works for AOL versions 9.0 or 9.0SE, but an older version from 5.0 seemed to work with my 8.0, so you never know. Give it a try.

This is no longer being developed and who knows how much longer the webpage will be there, so if you want it, get it now...and let your AOL using friends know about it, too.

Before TPA Ad Buster:
http://img103.imageshack.us/img103/7355/emailad4bw.jpg


After TPA Ad Buster:
http://img103.imageshack.us/img103/1746/adgone5lv.jpg


The only ad it doesn't seem to be able to get rid of is that stupid extra tab that shows up every once in awhile on the mailbox. But I guess I can live with that.
5535
Living Room / Re: Microsoft: End of support for Windows 98 and Windows Me
« Last post by app103 on July 13, 2006, 06:19 AM »
Anyone got a copy of the Creative PCI Audio drivers for VMWare + Windows 98 ? the one on Creative's website is an upgrade installer (ie. it is incomplete). It does install the drivers to make the sound card work but doesn't include the MIDI stuff. I don't need the MIDI stuff but every time Win98 loads it tries to find the MIDI stuff and complains. I know there was a Creative Driver which was compatible with VMWare a while ago but it doesn't seem to be there any more.
-Carol Haynes (July 12, 2006, 04:49 PM)


Try here:

http://easymamecab.m...et/html/snddosdr.htm

I found that link here: 

http://www.vmware.co...spa?messageID=376401
5536
General Software Discussion / Re: cambrainhouse.com - crowd-sourced software
« Last post by app103 on July 13, 2006, 05:34 AM »
someone probably saw the coding snacks forum here  :P
5537
Living Room / Re: Microsoft: End of support for Windows 98 and Windows Me
« Last post by app103 on July 13, 2006, 04:53 AM »
Oh please! I would have committed suicide if I was stuck with Win98 on that P1...WinME saved my sanity and possibly my marriage!

Blue used to be my favorite color...then I got Win98.

After installing WinME I will honestly tell you that the BSOD's I have seen can be counted on 1 hand. And this has been since the year 2002.

And Win2k wasn't an option back then and it's still not an option now. If you can get everything to work with Win2k on that PC...come on over! I'll let you try...and fail...and I will be nice enough not to say "I told you so" when you give up.

WinME is very stable on some PC's and the driver support can't be beaten. (that is the problem with my old pc...no drivers except for 9x for most of the hardware)

And on the problem PC's....

I have set up PC's with WinME for people that had trouble with it and they are all very happy with it now. It can be kind of tricky, but if you know what you are doing with that OS it will run fantastic.

I consider people with WinME to be the 'elite 6%' of Windows users. The ones that had no idea what they were doing were weeded out long ago by them either going back to Win98 or moving on to 2k or XP if they could. Those that stuck with it and learned what made it tick are all the people left using it. We are a rare breed....and just as 'elite' as any linux user....maybe even more-so.  :P

And here is something else to think about...

Businesses that run 9x should upgrade...invest some of their profits into their business and get some new equipment & software.

But for the home user, those that are still running 9x are older people and the handicapped on fixed incomes...families that would have to make a choice between paying the rent or getting a new cheap garbage pc with XP that will die shortly after the 90 day warranty runs out...and kids that received it as a hand-me-down.  I don't see upgrading as an option for them.

I have been in the shoes of at least one of those groups (maybe 2?) and had I not received my new kick-ass PC as a gift last Christmas, I would still be relying on that WinME P1 for everything.

This is why I still have a soft spot in my heart for the 9x home user. So just because Microsoft dropped support for 9x doesn't mean I will.
5538
Image Manager Shootout / Re: keywords and image management thoughts
« Last post by app103 on July 13, 2006, 04:16 AM »
Extensis Portfolio isn't a desktop search program. It's a cataloging program.

But if you catalog all your personal files, it might be able to be used as one.
5539
Living Room / Re: My girlfriend says I am just being paranoid
« Last post by app103 on July 13, 2006, 03:32 AM »
I thought going through your stuff without a warrant was considered against the Constitution ...you know, illegal search & seizure?

And that they aren't supposed to get a warrant unless they can prove probable cause to a judge.

There is a reason why we have these rights. It goes back to the days of the American Revolution when the British were searching homes at random looking for 'traitors'...much like our current government is doing looking for 'terrorists'.

Before you know it, the government will want to have video cameras installed in our bedrooms & bathrooms. Enough is enough!

You are NOT paranoid...not by far...and even if you were, a little paranoia can be good for you, sometimes.

5540
Living Room / Do Diet Drinks Get You Drunker?
« Last post by app103 on July 13, 2006, 02:28 AM »
This article may explain why some women seem to get way too drunk, way too fast.

http://diets.aol.com...ndtrends/diet-drinks
5541
General Software Discussion / Re: GreatNews RSS Reader
« Last post by app103 on July 12, 2006, 11:43 PM »
As far as readers that integrate into your browser, I would have to say the Sage extension for Firefox is about the best.

Major Features:
* Reads RSS (2.0, 1.0, 0.9x) and Atom feeds
* Feed Discovery
* Integrates with Firefox's bookmark storage and Live Bookmarks
* Imports and exports OPML feed lists
* Newspaper feed rendering customizable via style sheets
* Technorati and RSS search engine integration
* Catalan, Chinese, Dutch, French, German, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Russian, Spanish and Swedish locale support
* Simple, one step install / uninstall

After installation, there are four ways to access Sage in Firefox:
* Menu selection, Tools -> Sage
* Menu selection, View -> Sidebar -> Sage
* Keyboard shortcut, Alt-S
* Toolbar button, View -> Toolbars -> Customize, drag the Sage icon to the toolbar
5542
General Review Discussion / Re: Opinions on remote PC control software
« Last post by app103 on July 12, 2006, 11:27 PM »
God bless McAffee. Can someone remind me why they're still in business? :D


Because they have a contract with AOL and AOL gives away their firewall and antivirus to all their customers?
5543
Welcome, marcus!

I Like Pizza

I think it's a standard requirement that geeks like pizza.

I even married the pizza man. I get all the free pizza I can handle.  :P
5544

My request made The Best Of Blog but the image there doesn't look anything like me!


It wasn't supposed to be you...lol  ;D
Just a fun image to make the page look a bit more interesting.
5545
Unfinished Requests / Re: IDEA: OCR & paste
« Last post by app103 on July 12, 2006, 11:12 PM »
Maybe some day if mouser is feeling adventurous, he might add something like this to Screenshot Captor?

Take a screenshot and then use OCR to scrape text from that screenshot, and save the text, rather than the image.
5546
General Review Discussion / Re: Opinions on remote PC control software
« Last post by app103 on July 12, 2006, 10:53 PM »
TightVNC is the only one I have tried, and it works on 9x.

The client machine doesn't even have to have anything installed, as you can access the host machine with just about any web browser.

My testing of TightVNC was done on a slow 9x PC on 33.6k dialup. It probably would have worked better with more RAM and a faster connection.

One thing I noticed is how various antivirus products react to it. Some not too well. McAfee would cause the PC to lock up just for a shortcut to TightVNC appearing on the taskbar. (it tends to do that with any software that has some sort of server capabilities in it). This caused startup times to increase to 20 min on that machine.

AVG seems to get along well with it though...no locking up.
5547
Living Room / Re: Microsoft: End of support for Windows 98 and Windows Me
« Last post by app103 on July 12, 2006, 07:59 AM »
Now would be a good time to go download all the update files manually for these OS's and put them away some place safe, if you are a user of any of these.

Eventually Microsoft will pull those files offline and not make them available any more and Windows Update will not exist for those versions.

Right now you can still use Windows Update for these OS's, but there will be no new files created by Microsoft there...only the ones created before July 11,2006.
So if you have to reinstall for any reason, you won't have to panic...yet.

There is an unofficial service pack for WinME in the works over at MSFN and there is one completed for 98SE already, as far as I know.

the_guy, MDGx, and the rest of the crew are hard at work making Win98 and WinME even better than Microsoft ever did with the official fixes/patches. They are testing, testing, testing like crazy and in many cases using files that were included in patches for Win2k & XP....and some unofficial patches that were much more stable than the ones Microsoft released.

If you take the time to follow the entire thread on that forum, it will become obvious that this is no small undertaking. It might even change your mind a little about the 9x Windows line. It's not as bad as some think and it still has a lot of life left in it.

As far as dropping support for older versions of Windows. Ok, Microsoft has the right to do that. But is it a good thing for the owners of older pc's that can't run a newer OS that soon you won't even be able to get the older patches from them any more? And even all the old Knowledge Base articles will disappear in time. Upgrading is not an option for some people.

Maybe Ford isn't going to recall a 78 Mustang, but I bet somewhere you can still get parts to repair one when you need to, and there are even other companies making those parts still, in order to service the classic car market. You can still take it somewhere for an oil change. I bet you can even get brakes & tires for it fairly easily too.

I hope there are enough knowledgeable classic Windows OS enthusiasts out there to help keep my old P1 secure and stable. That old computer is like a member of my family and I am not going to put it to sleep any more than I would my own father. Old is not useless...it's just old.

And as long as it still runs I will still use it....Just like I still use my Atari 7800, Sega Genesis, my microwave oven from the 80's, and my Kenmore sewing machine from the 70's (which you can still get parts from Sears for it).

And keep this in mind too: Just because a person has an old computer that runs an old OS, their money isn't worth any less than anybody else's, they aren't any less human, and they are not in any less need of quality software.

If you write software and can somehow keep supporting 9x, and not get an insulting attitude towards the people that still use 9x, that money will be in your pocket. Adding a few extra lines of code to disable a few features that won't work on 9x isn't a big deal and the rewards to your pocket will be greater than the time spent writing those few lines. And there are a lot of people out there running 9x that will love you for it and consider you a hero.  :-*
5548
Image Manager Shootout / Re: keywords and image management thoughts
« Last post by app103 on July 12, 2006, 06:18 AM »
Extensis Portfolio is the grand-daddy of all DAM software.

Not free...not cheap by far ($199)...but it is the most powerful I know of.

It even has features for exporting a collection, with it's database, for burning to a CD, with a browsing application that is a scaled down read only version of itself.

And images isn't the only thing it can handle...it can handle sound files too...and video and all kinds of other document types. It can catalog anything you have on your hard drive.


Features:
Fast Cataloging: Fast cataloging quickly adds files to your Portfolio catalog in the background, allowing you to start working with them instantly.

Improved File Format Support for MS Office, DNG, RAW, Quark, Pro Video: Preview, index text and read metadata from the formats you use most, including: Microsoft Word and Excel files in Windows, full-screen previews from Adobe DNG RAW files, added support for current RAW files, and thumbnails and full-screen previews of Quark XPress documents (Mac).

Full Custom Sort: Drag and drop, reorder or sort items in galleries, SmartGalleries and disk folders. This information is retained separately for each user in a workgroup environment.

Scratchpad Galleries: Scratchpad galleries are temporary baskets used for sorting, editing and merging files from multiple galleries or searches into a single gallery. These can be used for printing, collecting or publishing.

Digital Camera Auto-Rotation: Portfolio now automatically rotates thumbnails and previews from digital cameras that record the camera’s orientation, streamlining photographers’ post-shoot workflow.

HTML Help, Video Tutorials, Sample Catalogs: The answers are at your fingertips with Portfolio’s new searchable HTML-based help system. We even include new sample catalogs with pre-mapped custom fields and SmartGalleries for specific workflows — making it easier to customize Portfolio to your needs.

Enhanced Item Properties: The properties dialog is now the one-stop location to find and edit any metadata. The most common information needed (such as file type, resolution and file size) has been consolidated to the first tab for faster viewing.

Leverage Previews: Portfolio’s ability to use Screen Previews rather than the original files makes the process of finding and sharing your files — even those that are offline — much faster.

Movie Metadata: Portfolio can now read common metadata such as frame rate, duration and audio tracks from video files.

Custom XMP Read and CS File-Info Panels: Take advantage of the IPTC4XMP standard known as IPTC Core, used by Adobe Creative Suite 2 applications. This effectively extends Portfolio’s custom fields into the most popular creative applications, allowing a two-way exchange of information.

And that's just the tip of the iceberg of what this program is and does. This does things the smaller programs can only dream of.

This is a program that if I could afford it, I would buy it in a heartbeat.

I have a collection of images I purchased that came on a CD with a copy of the free file browser. It's darn old (v4 from 1999) but I love using it.

Since it's just for browsing a database, you can't edit it or add any new images to it.

The full version of this and enough time and I would have everything on my hard drive cataloged.

So if you are looking for something a lot more serious, or for professional/corporate/commercial use, this program would be the one.
5549
That search page, when a page won't load or can't be found, is the most annoying feature (and probably the only annoying feature I have found so far) in the AOL Explorer browser.

5550
Developer's Corner / Re: how broken is your firefox today?
« Last post by app103 on July 11, 2006, 11:39 AM »
It's my own little monster  :D

http://www.appsapps.info/die.php

Just a little something I whipped up for my other pc.
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