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6026
Living Room / Re: Products designed to fail, a documentary
« Last post by IainB on November 02, 2011, 06:16 AM »
My take on it is this... No. Not appropriate. Skip it.

Suffice it to say that I find it fraudulent, deceitful, malicious, and lower than drug dealers. At least with drug dealers, they are honest in their business. PO is far from that.

Absolutely.
It gets me hopping mad whenever I feel that I have been ripped off.
So, to have to live in what is arguably a broken version of what could be an ideal (if we changed it) system, so that we are currently obliged to let Corporations legally rip us off whenever they want (i.e., all the time) - well, it makes me unspeakably annoyed too.

Yes:
"...fraudulent, deceitful, malicious, and lower than drug dealers. At least with drug dealers, they are honest in their business. PO is far from that."

And WE created this monster! (Ain't democracy grand?!)

Do you see anyone working to change it?
...No, I thought not.
That's because IT controls us, its creators.
6027
Clipboard Help+Spell / Re: Main window font size
« Last post by IainB on November 02, 2011, 05:14 AM »
Just as a follow-on from how the brain can interpolate meaning and gain more rapid comprehension when serifed fonts are are used, someone sent me this in an email today. I reckon that it's an example of how remarkable our brains can be at using all manner of data to gather meaning from something:

Spoiler
Can you read this?

7H15 M3554G3 53RV35 7O PR0V3 H0W 0UR M1ND5 C4N D0 4M4Z1NG 7H1NG5! 1MPR3551V3 7H1NG5! 1N 7H3 B3G1NN1NG 17 WA5 H4RD BU7 N0W, 0N 7H15 LIN3 Y0UR M1ND 1S R34D1NG 17 4U70M471C4LLY W17H 0U7 3V3N 7H1NK1NG 4B0U7 17, B3 PROUD! 0NLY C3R741N P30PL3 C4N R3AD 7H15.  PL3453 F0RW4RD 1F U C4N R34D 7H15.

6028
Living Room / Re: Hard drive shortage
« Last post by IainB on November 02, 2011, 04:50 AM »
If you absolutely have to buy a drive right now, then when it comes to looking at what drive you need to buy for yourself in the current artificial (because of stockpiling) shortage, you might be well-advised to consider:
  • Disk speed - 5400rpm or 7200rpm.
  • Whether you need it as a main drive for your PC or as a backup drive.
  • If you need it as a main drive for your PC, then what chip technology and OS you have.

For example, over the last 11 months I have been obliged to buy two new laptops to replace failed, old units.
(I was fortunate enough to get the new ones at highly reduced - 50% - prices.)
One was an HP ENVY 14, Intel i7, with a ½Gb 7400rpm drive and Windows 7/64-bit (Windows Experience Index 5.9).
One was a Dell Inspiron, AMD Triple-Core M501R (refurbished model), with a ½Gb 7400rpm drive and Windows 7/64-bit (Windows Experience Index 4.4).

The Windows Experience Index is based on the lowest subscore.
In the case of the HP ENVY, the disk transfer rate was the lowest subscore at 5.9, and the processor was the highest subscore at 7.0

In the case of the DELL Inspiron, the disk transfer rate  subscore was 5.9 also, but the lowest subscore was the graphics at 4.4, and the processor was the highest subscore at 7.0 (same as the HP ENVY).
 
So, if I had of got these laptops with 5400rpm drives instead of the 7200rpm drives, then:
  • in the case of the HP ENVY that would certainly have brought the lowest subscore lower - so the overall performance would have been further strangulated by the necessarily lower disc I/O performance - maybe to less than 4(?).
  • in the case of the DELL Inspiron that may have brought the lowest subscore even lower - so the overall performance might have been further strangulated by the necessarily lower disc I/O performance - maybe to less than 4(?).

Car analogy: This could be compared to buying a 7litre V8 and fitting it with a small twin-choke carburettor. I could have probably bought a  smaller 6-cylinder model for much less $$ and still got the same/similar performance.

So:
  • If you are buying a new PC/laptop, then ensure you get a main hard drive of 7200rpm, otherwise you are potentially throwing performance away, and you may be throwing your money away too.
  • If you are buying a new main drive for an existing PC/laptop, then ensure you get a main hard drive of 7200rpm, otherwise you are potentially throwing performance away.
  • If you are buying a drive to be used as a backup device, then, unless you have humungous data volumes to back up where optimum performance could make a significant and worthwhile difference to backup durations, it may be cheaper to buy a slower 5400rpm drive.

I have recently read that one of the disc drive manufactures will cease making 5400rpm drives, and one of the laptop manufacturers (I think it might have been HP) has said they will only be putting 7200rpm drives at least, into laptops from here on.
The other laptop manufacturers are probably already doing this, as you can see their late-model laptops - e.g., with Intel i7 CPUs) but fitted with 5400rpm drives - being released to the market at seriously good discount prices - e.g., 50%.

Four weeks ago I bought a 1Gb 5400rpm hard drive as a backup device, at a really low price of NZ$129 (figuring it wouldn't be likely to get much lower). I am using it to replace the ½Gb 5400rpm hard drive that I had been using as a backup device and bought about year ago for a very reasonable NZ$86.

I would guess that those speculators who are stockpiling 5400rpm hard drives for the anticipated shortage may find that they are holding stock which is rapidly becoming obsolete/depreciated, and which may not be saleable before too long. Who knows but that, if you can afford to sit tight for a while, then you might find that those drives are coming onto the market at record low fire-sale prices?
6029
Living Room / Re: Hard drive shortage
« Last post by IainB on November 02, 2011, 02:04 AM »
The prices will probably soar only until people stop buying them.
Exactly.
Elementary economic theory would support the probable truth of that statement (per the classic demand and supply diagram).
6030
Living Room / Re: Products designed to fail, a documentary
« Last post by IainB on November 02, 2011, 01:36 AM »
I think that's just being dramatic...

No, honestly, I only intended to be scathing about the video.
Sorry, my point was probably not clear: The subject was so well-known as being a "natural bodily function" within the Capitalist system that I was astonished that anyone could refer to it as:
...the secret mechanism at the heart of our consumer society
- which seems to me to be a laughable statement.

"Secret"?! How the heck could that be a "secret"?
It seems to me that it could no more be a secret than that the characteristic of water running downhill is a secret or a "new discovery".

The film-makers would surely have known this, but were presumably deliberately fostering alarmism, to get publicity for their documentary. (I think it seemed quite well-made, by the way.)

...the fact that it goes on is utterly beyond comprehension.
Well, I'm not so sure that you could substantiate that statement at all.
For example, I find it easy to comprehend, and it is arguable that probably most people would if they had a passing sense of history for the theory and practice of the development of capitalism in western economies - especially those of us who have been alive and awake and living in those economies for most of our lives.

Failing that, would it not be easily comprehended if you had read Vince Packard's book, and especially if you had watched and understood The Corporation?
6031
Living Room / Re: Products designed to fail, a documentary
« Last post by IainB on November 02, 2011, 01:21 AM »
@doctorfrog: Spot-on.
I have worked for different computer manufacturers and been well-trained in their product marketing strategies and their software marketing strategies.
This training so far covers Control Data, IBM, ICL, DEC, digital, HP. (I think that's all.)

There are two absolute basic marketing objectives which are almost always applied:
1. Lock-in (that doesn't necessarily mean "forever", just "as long as possible").
2. Built-in obsolescence.

Because neither objective in practice is illegal - in fact, they are arguably both "rights of self-survival" for any Corporation -  they are exercised to the Nth degree.
You provided some perfect examples of both.

Whilst it is illegal for Corporations to form syndicates to do something such as, for example, establishing non-competitive agreements, or establishing retail price maintenance agreements(*1), it is not illegal for them to collaborate to sustain the two objectives above for each other, for mutual and non-competitive benefit in new and potential aftermarket sales. Laptops and their batteries are a classic example, and there is an interesting and relatively new twist in the branding of some HP laptops with the "DR Beats" logo and even for the DR Beats headphones sometimes being a compulsory and extra-cost component in the laptop package deal.

It sometimes seems like you have to think like a good corporate psychopath to be able to dream up some of these ideas. HP and their inkjet printer ink cartridge design - and cost - are a classic example of this - very clever/devious marketing. HP invented the idea of locking you into their expensive ink brand by embedding part of their proprietary inkjet printer technology in the ink cartridge. And it's quite legal.     ;)
Ink cartridge sales form a huge and profitable revenue for the HP consumable products division. That's why they almost give the printers away to the consumer market (and don't forget Objective #2 either). The principle of consumable-driven product marketing like this was, I think, originally dreamed up or developed by Gillette. It was the case study we were taught about in Marketing 101 at any rate. With razor blades, the obsolescence is managed through blades getting bunt and needing to be replaced, and by increasing the number of blades in a razor head every so often. I think we are up to 5 now, and that would seem to be near any practical limit.

Footnote *1: These things have always seemed to be made illegal by statute (e.g., antitrust legislation) after the event of several cases where large Corporations had done exactly these things in order to exploit the market and/or the consumer from the vantage of an unfair oligopoly or monopoly market position.
6032
Living Room / Re: Products designed to fail, a documentary
« Last post by IainB on November 02, 2011, 12:13 AM »
In case you need yet another thing to piss you off in this world,
I forgot to thank you for reminding me how utterly pissed-off it makes me every time something I buy suffers from PO (Planned Obsolescence).    :mad:

A bit of a rant:
Start of rant.
In the UK in the '70s, the Consumer's Association drew public attention to the PO of the common incandescent electric lightbulb. Most lightbulbs employed a single tungsten filament strung in a small array inside the bulb. After not more than a few hundred on-and-offs, the filament could take the repeated expansion and contraction no more, and snapped, melting at the point of fracture - as it arced and overheated whilst the filament was parting. This made it "flash" as it failed. The bulb had "blown" - on the same principle as a common electric fuse.

For years, the lightbulb manufacturers had planned for this in their production schedules.
After the Consumer's Association had drawn public attention to the PO, some manufacturers belatedly started to produce coiled filaments and then coiled coil filaments, using already well-known technology, which used a coiled tungsten filament instead of a single straight filament. They could have started manufacturing these years before, but they did not until the Consumer's Association drew public attention to the PO.
The life of these bulbs was much longer due to the coil taking up the expansion/contraction as a whole, rather than it straining a single straight filament.

The UK government had pretty good consumer protection laws - e.g., to protect consumers from unscrupulous product/service suppliers. I think they eventually introduced a ban on the single filament lightbulbs as they were clearly a ripoff and wastefull, and the manufacturers were clearly not going to stop pushing the lightbulbs into the market unless they were prohibited from doing so. Why should they? The single filament bulbs were highly profitable.

The Consumer's Association in the UK was very effective in publicising this and similar cases of consumer ripoffs, and corresponding change was brought about as a direct result.

When I went to New Zealand in the '80s, it was like going back in time to the "dark ages" of consumerism in the UK. I was surprised to note that the NZ Consumer's Association seemed apathetic, utterly weak and ineffective - a complete waste of time.
A few years later, whilst on a management training course at NZ's Massey University, we were given a talk by the then CEO of the NZ Consumer's Association. In the Q&A time after his talk, I asked him why the NZ version of the Consumer's Association was not so proactive, agitative and forcing of change in consumer rights protection and regulations. I gave examples.
His reply staggered me: "Well, the NZ Consumer's Association reflects its members' needs. The character of NZ people is a lot more laid back than the British people, so we don't like to get too pushy." (OWTTE)
This explained a lot to me - it made sense - for example, the NZ Automobile Association seems to be equally apathetic and useless when compared to its UK counterpart.
In any event, the next day I cancelled my subscription to the NZ Consumer's Association and I have not renewed it since.

I have kept my eye on their magazine though, but sadly I think the NZ Consumer's Association still seems to be apathetic and a complete waste of time, and the NZ consumer protection laws (e.g., consumer advertising standards) are virtually non-existant, and what little they have lacks teeth or is otherwise ineffective - especially where the NZ Consumer's Association might have been able to claim that they had been involved.

With this as a background to ignorance, the typical NZ consumer is relatively undiscerning and remains a sucker waiting to be taken advantage of, and "Caveat emptor" is certainly still the best advice for consumer protection.
The manufacturers, producers and retailers are seemingly well aware of this, and the products in the marketplace, TV advertising, and selling methods all reflect this situation. The corporation is king and has control over production and the consumer. What few consumer protection laws exist also reflect this - even extending to statutes limiting people's employment contract rights. (Employed people are the best consumers as they have a personal disposable income and thus the propensity to consume.)

So, do not be surprised if you find, if/when you visit NZ, that the single tungsten filament bulb still dominates, and most NZ consumers wouldn't have the foggiest idea of what a"coiled coil" tungsten filament was. Only relatively recently have the low-wattage fluorescent bulbs been pushed into ("flooded" might be a better term) the marketplace - apparently at the manufacturers' behest. These bulbs are unnecessarily expensive, and - from my experience - typically have a limited life, starting to go dimmer and dimmer, so you have to replace them before they actually fail. Vance Packard was spot-on.

This sort of thing in a modern Western-type society would usually reflect the power of manufacturing lobbies in government, rather than anything accidental, and it probably could not have got that way without corruption and/or coercion being involved.
End of rant.
6033
Living Room / Re: Products designed to fail, a documentary
« Last post by IainB on November 01, 2011, 10:24 PM »
I only watched the start of this doco up to the point when the soft voice of the women speaking over it said, as though announcing something incredible and new:
"Planned obsolescence - the secret mechanism at the heart of our consumer society."

The opening credits didn't say when the film was made, but it would presumably be within the last few years if it is now on YouTube.
I have to say that I am surprised at such apparent naiveté in a film-maker and it makes me suspect a potentially deliberate attempt to mislead on their part.

Recommended reading for me in my studies in the early '70s was an excellent book: Vance Packard's book The Waste Makers

Description of the book on Amazon for Vance Packard's book The Waste Makers

An exposé of "the systematic attempt of business to make us wasteful, debt-ridden, permanently discontented individuals," The Waste Makers is Vance Packard's pioneering 1960 work on how the rapid growth of disposable consumer goods was degrading the environmental, financial, and spiritual character of American society.

The Waste Makers was the first book to probe the increasing commercialization of American life—the development of consumption for consumption's sake. Packard outlines the ways manufacturers and advertisers persuade consumers to buy things they don't need and didn't know they wanted, including the two-of-a-kind of everything syndrome—"two refrigerators in every home"—and appeals to purchase something because it is more expensive, or because it is painted in a new color. The book also brought attention to the concept of planned obsolescence, in which a "death date" is built into products so that they wear out quickly and need to be replaced. By manipulating the public into mindless consumerism, Packard believed that business was making us "more wasteful, imprudent, and carefree in our consuming habits," which was using up our natural resources at an alarming rate.

A prescient book that predicted the rise of American consumer culture, this all new edition of The Waste Makers features an introduction by best-selling author Bill McKibben.

Vance Packard (1914-1996) was an American journalist, social critic, and best-selling author. Among his other books were The Hidden Persuaders, about how advertisers use psychological methods to get people to buy the products they sell; The Status Seekers, which describes American social stratification and behavior; and The Naked Society, about the threats to privacy posed by new technologies.

What Packard described was and apparently still is an accepted result of Western civilisation creating the concept of a Corporation to produce goods for consumers to consume. If you search the DC Forum for references to the film The Corporation, and the terms "psychopath" and "legal person", then you should be able to find more material about this and it will save me the trouble of duplicating it in this comment.

I should add that most Corporations seem to try to operate within the law most of the time, and that includes some degree of consumer protection within the duration of a product's consumer warranty/guarantee. These warranties are usually something to the effect that the product is guaranteed to be free of defect and, if it fails, then it will be replaced/repaired at no cost for a period of 12 months from date of purchase.

From experience, built-in product obsolescence tends to kick in within 18 months to 3 years for most computer-related products, and often is cunningly designed into a slow electro-chemical breakdown within the capacitors in the circuitry. When they fail, there can "unfortunately" be resulting damage to other associated components. I read somewhere that a firm in Singapore (I forget it's name) was reputedly highly proficient in supplying capacitors that fail like clockwork in a planned/timed obsolescence, and they supply the major computer hardware manufacturers.

The exception to this obsolescence is typically when the manufacturer has - presumably by mistake - produced something that is effectively "built like a truck" and likely to have a useful working life of 100+ years - like my trusty HP ScanJet 3400C scanner, for example.
In the latter example, HP deliberately and without warning forced the product's progressive obsolescence.
They did this by removing support for the drivers in XP (where Microsoft instead provided a basic driver) and in Windows 7 (where Microsoft had presumably been asked by HP not to provide a basic driver, so there was nothing). Of course,  when I bought the scanner, HP omitted to tell me that they were going to use this ploy. If they had, I might have bought something else.
The scanner worked fine - or could have done - except that it just didn't have any software that could drive it was all. (I posted about this in the DC Forum a while back.)
6034
Living Room / Re: Amazon Signs Up Authors, Writing Publishers Out of Deal
« Last post by IainB on November 01, 2011, 02:05 AM »
Looks like the niche must be pretty big, so Amazon could have some competition on their hands:
6035
General Software Discussion / Re: Software recommendations for writers
« Last post by IainB on October 31, 2011, 05:07 PM »
@Curt: Thanks for the link to Dolphin Text Editor Menu.
Not sure whether I could make good use of it, but rather a nifty tool nevertheless.
6036
... Techrepublic.com: You think you use SharePoint but you really don't
This post (above) by Scott Robinson seems to be pretty much spot-on in terms of it holding true to my experience of good and bad collaboration tool deployments/implementations.

And the above responses in this thread are quite informative:

User experience, buy-in and productivity:
  • Adoption of the tool or getting people to use the system was the major problem. (@Renegade)
  • Lack of training in the use of the collaboration tool causes user frustration and low productivity. (@Renegade)
  • Enforcing the use of a collaboration tool as the mandatory central filing system is effective in getting people to use the tool. (40hz)
  • There are likely to be few technical problems to uptake. (@40hz: In the end, *every* technical problem comes down to a 'people problem.' And if it doesn't - check again. Gerry Weinberg.)

Effectiveness:
  • Use of old/"wrong" technology as tool(s) for collaboration does not work well. (@Renegade - they used MS Outlook/Exchange as the de facto collaboration tool).
  • The effectiveness of such tools is directly dependent on the extent to which people consistently use them. (Superboy via @40hz)

Good tools to use:
  • Google apps. can provide "a fantastic solution". (@urlwolf)

Use of old/"wrong" technology as tools for collaboration:
  • Continued use of old/"wrong" technology as tools for collaboration, despite having one or more "proper" collaboration tools implemented. (@capitalH - they used shared network folders and Outlook, though GroupWise and SharePoint were already deployed).

So far, not only has my experience matched what Scott Robinson commented, but also the comments by DC forum members above.
And the quote from Gerry Weinberg is entirely in line with process management theory/practice per WE Deming. (There's even a diagram that can be used to explain why it is true.)

It looks as though, despite collaboration tools being fairly common, the state or success of the various implementations/deployments might leave a lot to be desired.

If there was some kind of common factor that worked to make it difficult for us to properly implement/deploy these systems, my guess (from experience) is that it would probably be a lack of focus on the definition of the process which the collaboration tool was supporting, brought about by too much focus on the tool/technology itself.
For example, suppose you bought a rechargeable powered hand-drill for each employee in the organisation, to be used in their work, but did not actually define the circumstances (who, what, when, how, which and why) under which it was to be used. That should screw things up pretty well.
6037
General Software Discussion / Does your workplace group collaboration tool "suck"?
« Last post by IainB on October 31, 2011, 08:04 AM »
I was prompted by this post in Techrepublic.com: You think you use SharePoint but you really don't
...to enquire of DC Forum members what experience they had of using SharePoint to its fullest extent, or whether their use was of a "SharePoint that sucks" - or some other group collaboration and/or document management system that "sucked" - that was constrained by poor deployment (implementation and configuration).

I have had experience of client organisations where there were:
  • "Collaboration tools that suck" like this, and also the odd "superb collaboration tool integration".
  • SharePoint/Groupwise/Lotus Notes  implementations where you could be forgiven for thinking that a specific implementation had been so bad, it couldn't have been made worse even if the IT people had tried to make it worse.

The most egregious examples I have come across have probably been poorly-implemented integrations of Microsoft SharePoint + Microsoft Office + Internet Explorer. This sort of thing generally costs the organisation a lot in terms of productivity losses, dysfunction and wasted time/money - costs that are potentially avoidable.

I am curious: What has been your experience of this, and with which systems? What do you see as the likely causes of a good or bad implementation?
6038
Living Room / Re: Steve Jobs is dead.
« Last post by IainB on October 30, 2011, 10:08 PM »
Why did he get the cancer in the first place if he was trying to eat healthy ? Difficult question. 

The Q is maybe not so difficult to answer - maybe SJ created the cancer in himself.
Deepak Chopra postulated this years ago in his book Quantum Healing.

This was what I was alluding to:
I was also surprised to read in some of the market hype that has been released/leaked preceding the publication of his biography that his biographer claimed that SJ was quite happy to rip people (customers) off from a monopoly position, and hated Android/Google and said he "would fight Android with his last dying breath" - OWTTE.
If that was all true, then it sounds like the poor guy was not in a happy place in his head. I can only try to imagine what it must feel like to have that sort of greed, aggression, hate and anger boiling up inside me. Not healthy at any rate. Probably all useful characteristics in a businessman though, I suppose.
6039
Living Room / Re: Magic thinking in Europe - Solving the EU debt problem.
« Last post by IainB on October 30, 2011, 06:19 PM »
Since the whole system is based on some form of magic (dividends, futures, forecasts) why would this be any different?
+1 from me.    :Thmbsup:     ;D
6040
Living Room / Re: Magic thinking in Europe - Solving the EU debt problem.
« Last post by IainB on October 30, 2011, 04:50 PM »
Everyone, understandably, ignores me and continues drinking their beer.

Yum. Beer.
6041
Living Room / Magic thinking in Europe - Solving the EU debt problem.
« Last post by IainB on October 30, 2011, 11:42 AM »
THE EUROPEAN BAILOUT EXPLAINED
Brilliant, concise, spot-on commentary.
6042
Living Room / Re: Beyond Gamification. Designing up Maslow’s Pyramid.
« Last post by IainB on October 30, 2011, 10:48 AM »
...as stuff like social media sharing buttons spread around the concept is what then boosted the motivation to develop such concepts as social curation and cross-sharing further than what designers and coders would have intended. (My emphasis.)
I thought this Dilbert cartoon made a good comment on this...speaks for itself really.
6043
Living Room / Re: Automated site capture
« Last post by IainB on October 30, 2011, 10:05 AM »
...this might be the shortest thread ever on DC
Don't speak too soon. A lot of websites nowadays seem to have coded-in detection of crawlers and downloaders that behave badly - e.g., start firing off hundred of queries a second, which overloads the server. To protect the server, if a norty crawler  is detected, then that crawler/downloader is blocked.
This has the potential effect of making some site-scraping software obsolete.
6044
Living Room / Re: Apple Patents Unlocking Touchscreen
« Last post by IainB on October 30, 2011, 09:56 AM »
I think we all know that I can be much harsher than just that.
Welll,  I followed your link and read your comment with interest. I think I had read it before and perceived it as quite a good rant.
I also thought that you were just blasting off about the symptoms of Apple being YAP (Yet Another Psychopath).
I think most people would probably tend to admit that they (Apple) ARE (or seem to be) very good in that role.
6045
I should have mentioned above that, though I had "Download Statusbar", I don't have any dependence on it.

My downloads are handled variously:
  • I only occasionally download using the FF downloader.
  • I use FlashGot in FF, and that hands download control across to GetRight (downloader), which is can be very fast when files are segmented and the different segments are downloaded in parallel.
  • I use DownloadHelper for YouTube downloads, which also hands downloads across to GetRight.
6046
General Software Discussion / Re: automated back up software
« Last post by IainB on October 29, 2011, 10:03 AM »
You might be interested in this: FreeFileSync
It does all of what you say you need, and it can do more than I need right now. It is absolutely fantastic.    :Thmbsup:
I have been trialling three alternative backup proggies for a few weeks now, and I have already chosen FFS and retired my previous backup software.
I particularly like its real-time monitoring capability and maintenance of versions in the backups.

I need a program that will monitor specific files...
.... and copy them to a specific folder in order to have copies of them...
... it should constantly monitor for changes and update/synchronize them
... [needs to be] reliable...
...should save many previous versions of each monitored file, because if the monitored file is unwantedly overwritten or get emptied of data, then I would want to find the just previous version of it

Key Features: (copied from Help file)
1.   Compare files (bytewise or by date) and synchronize them.
2.   No limitations: An arbitrary number of files can be synchronized.
3.   Unicode support.
4.   Network support.
5.   Transactional file copy
6.   Built-in support for very long filenames (more than MAX_PATH = 260 characters).
7.   Synchronization database for propagation of deleted files and conflict detection
8.   Copy NTFS alternate data streams, compressed and encrypted file attributes
9.   Support for multiple folder pairs with distinct configuration
10.   Full support for Windows/Linux Symbolic Links and Windows Junction Points.
11.   Lean & easily accessible UI: Highly optimized for speed and huge sets of data.
12.   Algorithms coded in C++ completely.
13.   All progress indicators optimized for maximum performance!
14.   Create Batch Jobs for automated synchronization with or without GUI.
15.   Focus on usability:
   a.   Only necessary functionality on UI: no overloaded menus or icon jungle.
   b.   Select all folders via drag & drop.
   c.   Last used configuration and screen settings are saved automatically.
   d.   Maintain and load different configurations by drag & drop, load-button or commandline.
   e.   Double-click to start external application (e.g. show file in Windows Explorer)
   f.   Copy & paste all grid data as text
   g.   Delete superfluous/temporary files directly on main grid.
   h.   Right-click context menu.
   i.   Comprehensive status information and error reporting
   j.   Sort file-lists by name, size or date.
14.   Support for filesizes larger than 4 GB.
15.   Option to move files to Recycle Bin instead of deleting/overwriting them.
16.   Ignore directories "\RECYCLER" and "\System Volume Information" with default filter. (Windows only)
17.   Localized versions are available for many languages.
18.   Delete before copy: Avoid disc space shortages for large sync-jobs.
19.   Filter functionality to include/exclude files from synchronization (without requiring a re-compare!).
20.   Include/exclude specific files from synchronization temporarily.
21.   Automatically handle daylight saving time changes on FAT/FAT32 volumes.
22.   Portable version available (selectable via installer).
23.   Native 64-Bit version.
24.   Check for updates from within FreeFileSync automatically.
25.   Copy locked files using Windows Volume Shadow Copy Service. (Windows only)
26.   Create regular backups with macros %time%, %date% within directory names
27.   Copy file create/modification times when synchronizing.
28.   Advanced locking strategy to allow multiple synchronization processes (e.g. multiple writers, same network share).
29.   Case-sensitive synchronization of file, directory and symlink names
6047
Living Room / Re: Apple Patents Unlocking Touchscreen
« Last post by IainB on October 29, 2011, 01:58 AM »
...it's a Nuremberg-type defense when it comes to their guilt.

Wow, that's a bit harsh isn't it?
I mean, the Nazis were tried at Nuremberg for war crimes committed against humanity. The crimes they committed were variously - for example - in the shape of mass executions, genocide, and eugenics. I'm not sure how many Nazis were tried in each category - I think quite a few of them escaped trial by fleeing to Argentina, and going incognito elsewhere. Mind you, of the latter, at least one of them brazened it out in public office - that was Kurt Waldheim as the fourth Secretary-General of the United Nations from 1972 to 1981, and the ninth President of Austria, from 1986 to 1992. This speaks volumes about the Austrians.

But the lawyers never did anything like that! Some people might say that lawyers have effectively aided/abetted legalised theft, but that would arguably be the worst they have done in the course of "doing their duty". The Nazis theft was much worse, via State-authorised theft of property (e.g., appropriating the artworks, gold, diamonds and anything else of value from the Jews) - and they stole from the corpses (e.g., the gold fillings from the corpses of people massacred in the death camps). Then they transferred a great deal - if not the bulk - of that stolen wealth to anonymous Swiss bank accounts, and the Swiss bankers never let on until it was leaked in the '80s (I think it was then), and they still keep that wealth locked up in their coffers - probably because they have to as it is the foundation of their economy. That all speaks volumes about the Swiss - and bankers in general.

Equating the lawyers with Nazis? Meh. Even in jest that is not only grossly unfair to lawyers, but also it ameliorates the perceived heinousness of the Nazi's crimes against humanity - which latter should never be forgotten, otherwise we will forget the lessons of history.

This kind of Nazi comparison was the sort of thing that sparked off "Godwin's Law":
"As an online discussion grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Nazis or Hitler approaches 1."
Godwins law - cat (Nazis always show up sooner or later).png
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General Software Discussion / Re: Product Key Finder (Excellent & Free)
« Last post by IainB on October 28, 2011, 05:59 PM »
...I usually try to avoid anything that requires an install because by the time I get called in the machine in question is usually barely stable enough to run in safe mode.
Well, you could be proactive about it and periodically run Belarc Advisor on each asset (deskop/laptop) that you have to support - or, if not periodically, then initially at least.
That would give you a lot of the As-built(*1) documentation (the Belarc Advisor report with the various software reg. keys in it).

You would then have the relevant configuration item information to be able to rebuild that asset - without needing to wait to get that info till it fails.

Note: *1 - The 3 config. items in the CMDB per ITIL - hardware spec., software backup/copies, as-built documentation).
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Living Room / Re: Apple Patents Unlocking Touchscreen
« Last post by IainB on October 28, 2011, 04:56 PM »
10,000 more patents before he died, among them "air," and "finger."
ROTFL. This exactly expresses my own sentiments on the matter.   ;D
Thankyou for putting it so well.   :up:
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Living Room / Re: Apple Patents Unlocking Touchscreen
« Last post by IainB on October 28, 2011, 04:49 PM »
I'm on board there with much of the general sentiment, but I wouldn't let lawyers off the hook so easily. They're the front-line troops that have enabled the entire mess. They're the backbone of the broken system.

What I wrote:
The lawyers didn't create this situation, they are just feeding off of it - that's their role and legal duty.

It may be true that "They're the backbone of the broken system., but they didn't make it broken - the lawmakers did that.

If you have watched the film The Corporation - and I agree, I think it's a great documentary too - then you can probably appreciate the distinction between the lawmakers and the lawyers:

The lawmakers (e.g., such as the senate members in the US, or members of parliament in the UK) would have been the ones who enacted the laws/statutes that enable a corporation to exist as a legal psychopathic person and with more rights than an individual person. They may have done this as a result of lobbying by lawyers and others representing corporations.

The lawyers are independent agents and will accept the role of representative in a court of law for whoever wishes to pay them for the representation (i.e., the client). The role of lawyer must be focussed on what is best for the legal person (client) being represented, regardless of how preposterous or hopeless or hostile to another (e.g., as in divorce or patent infringement claims) the client's position may seem at first sight. It has to be the adoption of a highly subjective/biased position in favour of the client. For this, good lawyers can often command what are arguably well-deserved and high fees.

Mind you, I'm not sure how it works in the US, but, in the UK where the lawyers are involved in (say) a dispute over a contract, then the practice of Case Law mandates that the court (and the judge) considers previous cases of a same/similar type, to see what precedent (ruling) was set, and follow the precedent in that case. If the precedent does not suit his client's case (i.e., he would lose the case), then a good lawyer will seek to differentiate the precedent case from his client's case. If this ploy is successful, then a new ruling will be made, and this becomes part of Case Law. I think this is the limited extent to which a lawyer might be directly involved in the actual creation of a new law.

Having said this, I should add that what I sometimes personally think of lawyers is probably unprintable.    ;)
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