topbanner_forum
  *

avatar image

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
  • Tuesday November 11, 2025, 7:29 pm
  • Proudly celebrating 15+ years online.
  • Donate now to become a lifetime supporting member of the site and get a non-expiring license key for all of our programs.
  • donate

Recent Posts

Pages: prev1 ... 224 225 226 227 228 [229] 230 231 232 233 234 ... 261next
5701
Living Room / Re: Cached pages in IE - help please!
« Last post by Darwin on May 11, 2007, 11:43 PM »
Web Cache Illuminator looks like the business to me!
5702
Living Room / Re: Cached pages in IE - help please!
« Last post by Darwin on May 11, 2007, 11:33 PM »
Hi Calvin,

You should be able to view cached files by navigating to C:\documents and settings\<user>\local settings\temporary internet files\Content.ie5 and then looking around until you find what you are looking for. However, IE saves these file literally all over the place, no matter what you've defined in your preferences, so also check C:\windows\temp and anywhere else you can think of. Of course, you could also check your index.dat file, but I've never done this (evidently, it keeps weeks even months worth of data about what you've been looking at!). First hit googling for a dat file viewer is donation ware: Index Dat Spy.

EDIT: just looked more closely at Index Dat Spy - I don't think it's going to do you much good as, AFAICT, it won't show you content of websites, just a list of sites that you have visited.
5703
Well... I was bored this evening and re-installing AccelMan seemed preferable to doodling absently on my stomach with a Sharpie, so that's what I did. On balance, while it's no DOpus or XYplorer, it's an interesting file manager. I've spent some time not reacting to it but rather trying to figure out how to configure it and I've now got a workable setup. There are some idiosyncrasies to work around/become accustomed to, but I am starting to see how everything fits together. Also, there are a lot of powerful features that are hidden until you go looking for them. This is how I found the folder view - there is an icon beneath each pane that you click to reveal a number of options that allow you to configure the current pane's view in a number of ways. I imagine the rationale is to keep the GUI clean. I'll play around some more before making a decision about whether or not I like it. I'm going to take a running leap at the player next to see if I can make sense of it (see earlier posting). I doubt that I'm going to fall in love with this, but it's good fun tinkering and maybe I'll get a mini-review out of it!

Ah, Friday night... It's 8:20 PM and still quite light out. It's been a glorious, sunny day and I've been outside with the boys. Doesn't get much better than that!
5704
Love it - please come build some for me when you're done! Anyway, I love the look - I'd varithane the trim so that you'd have natural pine colour trim and the rest in a creamy white... Just my two-bits.
5705
Curt wrote:
Glad you like the sig' - it is brand new, though it has been for a long time in my Profile, under "Biography of this user". But I finally realized that hardly no-one would ever see it there... Did YOU (: anyone) ever check this feature on DC?

I quite often check people's profiles... Even if they don't have a bio. Always nice to know a bit about the people that comprise the community - where they come from, if they have a webpage, etc.!
5706
Living Room / Re: SuperboyAC's DC blog #3 (My Unique Data Backup Solution)
« Last post by Darwin on May 11, 2007, 11:56 AM »
Thanks for posting that, John. Definitely food for thought. Being of Yorkshire/Scottish descent I want to make use of all of my old 2.5" harddrives, so opt for the USB enclosure route. However, buying a 500+GB 3.5" drive and networking it would be a good investment for me (once I've recovered from the shock of buying not one but two 100+ GB notebook harddrives  :o) because I can set my wife's notebook to back up to the network drive automatically. It would also provide a third level of safety...
5707
I just checked and the actual figure was $25.90 (yes, I know, $4.10 whoop-de-doo) for the maintenance on Diskeeper 2007. This is about half the cost of the upgrade ($49.95, I think) and given that they upgrade every 12-15 months, about the same cost as skipping every other upgrade. Note that maintenance on either the standard or the Professional (non Premier) editions is cheaper. This is why I highlighted the fact that with PD you get all the functionality at a lower price. I don't dispute that 8-9-10 many not have been significant upgrades but 9-11 (2007) was well worth it my opinion. 2007 is good enough that I have considered replacing PD 8 on my notebook with it. That I haven't is testament to the fact that both are excellent products. Diskeeper is good for my wife's computer because she doesn't know anything about computers and with Diskeeper she doesn't need to (and I don't have to worry about it). PD is good for me because I like/don't mind messing around with settings.

Still, Diskeeper is very pricey (if you want a feature set comparable to PD) - no argument from me. I'll re-iterate my point from a previous post I REALLY, REALLY hope that Raxco isn't going to crank up their pricing on the full blown version of PerfectDisk when version 9 ships!
5708
Yes - no problems on my end (same setup as Carol - WinXP Sp-2, fully patched), either.
5709
ConceptDrawVI Standard is today's (May 11) Giveaway of the Day.

From the publisher's website:

ConceptDraw VI software is intended for professional flowcharting, diagramming and illustrating. Its flexible, handy tools help quickly document a variety of complex structures, systems and processes.

ConceptDraw VI charts can be shared as a large array of graphic files and CAD documents, presentations and web pages.

ConceptDraw VI is a Windows and Macintosh cross-platform application. All documents and libraries are 100% compatible. Thanks to its advanced libraries of pre-drawn shapes ConceptDraw VI provides the best assistance for most charting tasks and can be broadly applied within a small office or a larger enterprise.

In many cases a single picture speaks better than a thousand words. To document and explain complicated data, system or process, clear flowcharts or diagrams is one of the best ways to present them. Requiring little skills and efforts to create high-quality professional graphics ConceptDraw VI will become your efficient assistant.

5710
General Software Discussion / Re: Directory Opus 9
« Last post by Darwin on May 11, 2007, 08:21 AM »
Sad, but true, Leo. The good news is that DOpus support is so good! Thanks for the heads up about this one - I'm off to check it out!
5711
General Software Discussion / Re: Bowling Evolution
« Last post by Darwin on May 11, 2007, 08:16 AM »
Cool! That's one to keep an eye on. Thanks for the link lanux128  :Thmbsup:
5712
Thanks lanux - I'll edit the link above! I neglected to mention the lack of layers support in the free version of PhotoFiltre in my reply to tekzel - excellent point.
5713
Paint.net 3.x is a VERY nice app (when I last tried it, it was still at version 1.x). I love the interface. It's missing some of the tools that I'm looking for (as I highlighted in the review, I need to be able to "level" my pictures via the straighten or free rotate tool, for example). From looking at the plug-ins forum, there seem to be a number of nice add-ins that have been written for Paint.net. It woul be nice if this extended to support for Photoshop plug-ins. Looks very good - very polished and a very small download. Not quite as feature rich as far as I can see from a cursory look at it as PhotoFiltre (both the free version and Studio) but an excellent editor nonetheless.
5714
Living Room / Re: SuperboyAC's DC blog #3 (My Unique Data Backup Solution)
« Last post by Darwin on May 10, 2007, 09:02 PM »
I'm going to be doing this myself. I have an 80 GB HD that I am upgrading to 120 GB. I made the foolish mistake of first trying to upgrade to a 100GB 7200 rpm drive at a fantastic, open box price. Unfortunately, it's a SATA drive and my notebook is IDE :-[. Being open box, I can't return it! So, I now have a SATA enclosure and the 120GB drive on their way... I intend to turn my stupidity into a... what? Silver lining? Anyway, I'm going to place the 80 GB and the 120 GB drives in USB enclosures and use Acronis True Image to keep backups on a schedule like Superboyac's (ie regular backups to the 120 GB drive and less frequent ones to the 80 GB). I'm *tempted* to cover myself further by keeping the 80 GB drive *as is* and just update the My Documents folder occasionally. I've got two 40's, a 32 and a 20 in enclosures already that I can use to backup my Windows partition and use the bigger drives for uncompressed backup of My Documents... Decisions, decisions, decisions. Ain't life grand?!
5715
General Software Discussion / Re: DVDProfiler 3.0 is finally out !
« Last post by Darwin on May 10, 2007, 08:05 PM »
In addition to balancing your chequebook and making an appointment to have your poodle's hair done, IdeaMason will catalogue your materials - books, journal articles, doctoral dissertations, comic books, etc. This component is a bit more in line with bibliographic tools such as Endnote and RefViz, rather than cataloguing a book collection as Book Collector and LibraryThing do, but different horses for different courses (I use both Endnote and Book Collector myself)
5716
General Software Discussion / Re: DVDProfiler 3.0 is finally out !
« Last post by Darwin on May 10, 2007, 08:00 PM »
crono - LibraryThing looks really nice. Thanks for sharing that one...
5717
General Software Discussion / Re: DVDProfiler 3.0 is finally out !
« Last post by Darwin on May 10, 2007, 07:03 PM »
I *love* Book Collector, but haven't looked for alternatives. I *think* IdeaMason might do something similar, but am not sure...
5718
Hi Tekzel - I used Paint.net a couple of years ago and remember almost nothing about it. I'll have to take a look and let you know! In the interim, take a look at the free version of PhotoFiltre - you can't go wrong!
5719
General Software Discussion / Re: Document Assembly Question
« Last post by Darwin on May 10, 2007, 03:29 PM »
Can something like PaperPort do this? Or am I in la-la land?
5720
What's the Best? / Re: cd burning
« Last post by Darwin on May 10, 2007, 03:25 PM »
Oh, BTW, meant to mention to kurtzen WRT Ashampoo Burning Studio 6 - you should STILL be able to get version 6 cheap (as in the $9 price range. Someone here, forget who, got it for $7.99 a while ago...
5721
What's the Best? / Re: cd burning
« Last post by Darwin on May 10, 2007, 03:23 PM »
Dang! Thanks for the overview, Carol. I should learn to read more carefully. Absolutely SCANDALOUS that I am offered the upgrade for $19.99 and you lot in the UK are offered it at £19.99 - that's more than TWICE the price.

Charming.
5722
Thanks mouser - most appreciated!
5723
Yeah - I just found that  :-[. EDIT: This is my first review and I got a little nervous :redface:
5724
App NamePhotoFiltre Studio
App URLPhotoFiltre Studio
App Version Reviewed8.1.1
Test System SpecsCentrino Notebook - 1.4Ghz, 1024MB RAM, 64MB  Shared video
Supported OSesWindows 98/NT4/ME/2000/XP/2003/Vista
Support MethodsUser forum and developer e-mail
Upgrade PolicyLifetime upgrades with purchase of license
Trial Version Available?30-day trial period, no limitations
Pricing SchemeA lifetime license for Studio costs €25
Relationship btwn. Reviewer and Product I have no relationship to the developer beyond that of end-user.

Please note that I've restricted my review to a discussion, and screenshots, of the shareware (Studio) version of this application. There is a fully featured free version available. The free version lacks support for layers and Photoshop plug-ins.
   
[attachthumb=#7][/attachthumb]

Intro:

About two years ago I embarked upon a quest to find an alternative to Photoshop 6 that was affordable and would allow me to do more than just edit photographs. This led me to PaintShop Pro 9 which I quite liked but felt started up slowly. When PSP X came out about four months later, I upgraded because the upgrade pricing was very reasonable and it was touted as being both much quicker to startup and less resource intensive than PSP 9 (and I was an idiot and opened my wallet without even downloading the trial first!). In practice, its startup was significantly slower and resource usage more intensive... I stayed away from PSP XI, having learned my lesson with the upgrade to X and having noted the howls of protest from PSP sages that I encountered everywhere on the internet. Despite this, I was thrilled when I won a full version in an online contest! However, although my initial installation incorporated the first patch, rather than improving upon X in the startup and resource utilizaiton departments, it is easily the worst of the three, taking over a minute and half to load! PSP 9, at 32 seconds to load, is positively QUICK in comparison. Thus I found myself on another mission - to come up with a powerful alternative that wouldn’t cripple my aging notebook. Zaine’s excellent The Great Software List site led me to PhotoFiltre. It loads very quickly (13 seconds), has a simple, uncluttered GUI and does everything that I need it to do and then some. The http://photofiltre.free.fr/ (currently 6.27) is more than capable of replacing PaintShop Pro in my workflow, but I very quickly found myself springing for a license for the Studio version because I really wanted to support development.
A caveat: despite owning licenses for a variety of powerful graphics packages (Paint Shop Pro, Xara Xtreme Pro, PhotoFiltre, DrawPlus 8, ArtRage) I am far from a graphics guru, in fact, my usage is minimal - I edit scans (both images and text prior to creation of pdfs) and digital photographs and I noodle around with Xara Xtreme when I need maps and illustrations for my PhD project.

Who is this app designed for:

Anyone who requires a powerful, efficient, and affordable alternative to the “bigger” apps in the raster graphics arena. Take a look at the version history and you’ll note that this is a mature application that is frequently updated. Further, the developer is very friendly and promptly responds to queries, suggestions, and bug reports.

The Good

Very quick startup and fully featured image editing. As far as I can tell, PhotoFiltre is fully capable of replacing PaintShop Pro on my system and is well on its way to doing just that. PhotoFiltre Studio features a context sensitive tool palette, making for an uncluttered desktop. The screenshot shows a few caps of the tool palette with various tools selected:

[attachthumb=#1][/attachthumb]


The Studio version can accept Photoshop plug-ins in addition to a wealth of free native plug-ins. I currently have a native plug-ins that takes on-screen measurements and one that corrects fisheye distortion  in addition to a number of Photoshop plug-ins loaded on my installation. They all work well. The first screenshot shows the onscreen measurement tool (note it even calculated angles) while the second shows PhotoFiltre's implementation of the magic wand tool:

[attachthumb=#3][/attachthumb]

[attachthumb=#2][/attachthumb]

Needs improvement

So far, my only major beef is with the rotate tool - it requires the user to enter degrees of rotation (see screenshot), which I find cumbersome. I have written to the author suggesting that this be changed to a system that requires the user either to draw a line along a referent on the image or to drag handles onto reference points on the image. I also suggested that a perspective correcting tool be added. I received a very prompt reply letting me know that these changes are planned for a future release of the Studio version, but not the free version.

[attachthumb=#4][/attachthumb]

A minor beef would be that I find the question mark in place of "Help" as the label for the help menu questionable  :D. It looks odd and isn’t intuitive.

[attachthumb=#5][/attachthumb]

However, it’s also an issue so far removed from the functionality of the programme that I hesitate to even mention it!

The other issue about the GUI is the placement of some tools. In order to get to the rotate tool shown above, one has to use the menu system. This screenshot shows the route required to get to the rotate tool:

[attachthumb=#6][/attachthumb]

This isn’t the end of the world, but it would be nice to have features such as this accessible from the main tools palette. I realise that this comes down to user preference. The strength of the implementation in PhotoFiltre is that one is not overwhelmed by tool buttons.

Why I think you should use this product

Considering the feature set, ease of use, ongoing development, lifetime licence and excellent support, this is a must have app for anyone wanting to manipulate digital photos without crippling their bank account. Further, the Studio version supports layers and Photoshop plug-ins which means that it is extendable. Finally, there are over 100 free plug-ins available from the author’s website.

How does it compare to similar apps

My experience is limited to Photoshop 6, PaintShop Pro 9-11, and daliances with both the Gimp and GimpShop (neither lasted very long and weren’t productive). PhotoFiltre is comparable to everything in terms of the basic editing tools available and is very expandable due to the plug-ins that it can accept. The Studio version takes this further because it supports layers and can accept plug-ins written for Photoshop.

Conclusions

I recommend that anyone needing to edit digital photographs and other raster graphics files check out PhotoFiltre. The path to achieving what you are after may not be as smooth as you might otherwise enjoy using one of the larger and more expensive applications but the price is right and the results the same. Further, using the developer’s forum you can help direct development of PhotoFiltre, so if you’d like something to be modified let the developer know and it may happen if others agree and it doesn’t require a major rewrite. Over time, you/we might just find the path tweaked to your/our liking. If you find PhotoFiltre useful, support development and upgrade to the Studio version. It’s a one time licence fee and helps to ensure that the app is developed further. Because the developmental focus is now on the Studio version, this also ensures that you have access to features that you’ve requested and which have been incorporated!

Another review of this application
Zaine reviews and highly recommends PhotoFiltre on his Great Software List:
http://www.anova.org...index04.htm#graphics

EDIT: sorted out the placement of the screenshots...
5725
General Software Discussion / Re: DVDProfiler 3.0 is finally out !
« Last post by Darwin on May 10, 2007, 01:55 PM »
Hi Ken! Nice to see you back. I don't really have enough of a DVD collection to warrant cataloquing it (lots of Dora and Blue's Clues mind you) but am sure that if I were to decide to catalogue what I've got in the future, MovieCollector would be awesome. I love collectorz.com's applications (I use Book, mp3, Music and Photo Collector) and their support is excellent.
Pages: prev1 ... 224 225 226 227 228 [229] 230 231 232 233 234 ... 261next