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Recent Posts

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676
Having experienced this myself on the client side I can say with fair certainty it's not likely to be antivirus-related on the client end (but maybe server side AV?). The reason I say this is that I've had it happen across a range of different AV software and configuration options, including situations where the scanning of web downloads is not automatically enabled in the AV but is instead called by the browser once the download is finished (suggesting again that the browser is prematurely concluding the file is complete).

- Oshyan
677
Living Room / Re: Recommend some music videos to me!
« Last post by JavaJones on April 12, 2011, 03:04 AM »
Hehe, I always love OK Go vids. They've totally helped their popularity as a band by doing them too. Good business model I guess. ;)

- Oshyan
678
Living Room / Re: 5 Reasons to Hate Google - Interesting Article
« Last post by JavaJones on April 12, 2011, 03:00 AM »
Yeah, his points are just not that will demonstrated or backed up with actual evidence.

Free products and his Docs example: evidently he's never heard of Zoho. More capable than Google Docs, a much more comprehensive feature set, and hey it's also free. In fact lots of other competitors do similar stuff *for free*. One could argue they only do free because Google does, but I think it's hard to make the case that Google is forcing free on the market when so much of the web is driven by it, from Twitter and Facebook to Zoho to Remember The Milk, on and on.

Regarding the "big spender" issue: I worked at a company that spent between $1000 and $2000 a month on Google Ads and we had several free one-on-one consults with them where they analyzed our campaigns. There are also tons of other resources. Do they provide a dedicated account rep, etc, etc? No. Does he have any idea how much SEM consultants cost? Evidently not. Minimum $1000/mo, bare minimum, for someone with low experience, and that's *before* you spend money on the Google Ads they're advising you on. Meanwhile the free info Google provides (in tutorials, FAQs, etc.) actually compares fairly well to the paid services in many respects. The main value of a paid consultant is they're specific to your campaign(s), and in some cases (if you pay enough) they'll do the work for you.

Hiring practices: I will grant that support from Google for *other* products can be very bad though, and frustratingly so. Adwords may be one of those, as in the case he describes, and I *do* think Google could improve there. My experience of problems that needed support that wasn't there is mainly with Google Apps for Domains (free/educational/non-profit version). But hey, it's free, you get what you pay for.

I'm not sure how much evidence he has to base his assertion that a low GPA = instant disqualification, that may be so and that would be stupid, but I have no way of knowing. What I can say is that to go from that and conclude that the people they hire are "all thinkers and no feelers" is doing exactly what he's complaining about *them* doing. In his own words: " For years, I too used my intellect to separate myself from others, without considering them as whole people." Still doing it apparently, just the other way now?

He also complains about Google being a "one trick pony" in terms of revenue, but he completely misses on the reality of his assertion. Yes, Google *is* a one trick pony, just like radio, newspapers, and cable TV, all of which have been around decades, if not centuries, supported primarily - if not exclusively - by *advertising*. Google's current most successful product is Search, yes. But they provide *advertising* and that's where they make their money. Yes advertising on their search engine accounts for some of that, perhaps a lot. But they also get lots of money from displaying ads on *other* people's sites, something that has little or nothing to do with search in itself ('relevance', yes, but they don't have to be king of search to provide that). So even if someone does come along and kill their search business, they're still a powerhouse of advertising brokering. They've bought several companies that did *only* that and which sold their services to other companies with public-facing content and services to monetize. If a new search engine eats Google's lunch on search quality and relevance, they're going to need ads or something else to support them. Who says they won't go to Google as an ad partner? It's an obvious choice, and there aren't many others with the reach and level of service they can provide.

What's funniest about it is this quote at the end of that bit: "And a vulnerable Google puts us all at risk." Huh? At risk of what exactly? At risk of having better services when another company comes in with a superior product? I think what he means is his marketing consulting business is at risk because it's built-up around Google-specific practices and information. Tough lucky buddy, learn the new system or go out of business, but that's no reason to resent Google if they go belly up.

Data collection: Zaine covers this one pretty well. Google does now offer lots of settings for controlling data collection. Not only that but, despite Schmidt's quote being creepy, he's *right* to a large degree (IMO). People entering search terms for stuff like "how to kill someone without leaving evidence" or "how to cheat without getting caught" are retarded. First off, why would you share such information/questions with a large, anonymous corporation of any kind, regardless of their data collection practices? Second, what about someone actually looking at your computer and finding out? The truth is most people just have no idea how this stuff works and probably don't want to, they'd prefer to be ignorant. The people who know better are the same people who know how to effectively "opt out". Google provides some options, but you can go even further if you want, using Tor or other anonymizing systems, or just using something like Chrome's own "Incognito", as Zaine also points out.

Charitable adwords issue: Funny enough this is the one that bothers me the most and I was not previously aware of it. It seems to me this may be a "bug" in the system. I'm sure if they're explicitly aware of it (which they must be, but one hand may not be talking to the other) that they're enjoying the results, as he states, but I don't think it's fair for others to have to bid against those charitable grants. Instead I think they should just give them a percentage display rate, without affecting the cost of other people's ads. This seems truly shady to me. Surprising that this is the one thing he doesn't actually hate them for!

- Oshyan
679
Living Room / Re: Recommend some music videos to me!
« Last post by JavaJones on April 12, 2011, 02:24 AM »
More kitten awesome

Yes, I had to stay within the bounds of the trend I set with my previous video recommendation... yet I gave it a totally different sort of spin this time around. ;D

Lol, it just keeps going, eh?

Here's an awesome vid a friend just sent me. Shredding on the keyboard! :D



- Oshyan
680
Living Room / Re: The Evil Side of Nature
« Last post by JavaJones on April 11, 2011, 05:14 PM »
Yes, it's quite normal, mealworms are regular food for such animals. I'm extremely surprised to hear that they survived the eating and digestion process. In fact unless their identity (on the way out) as mealworms was verified, I might be more inclined to suspect some other parasitic worm got involved. Either way it's creepy though. :P

- Oshyan
681
I kind of don't think such an unusual situation as worstje describes is at play. I say that mostly because I've seen similar issues many times from other servers. I personally think it's a failure of the browser's caching mechanisms or something user-side, not server-side (not certain though). Granted it doesn't happen for all downloads, which might suggest it is a server-specific thing, but when it does happen it does seem to (usually) help to clear the browser's cache and download history, so that says something to me...

- Oshyan
682
Living Room / Re: Recommend some music videos to me!
« Last post by JavaJones on April 11, 2011, 01:52 PM »
Wow, awesome stuff from Mr. Konstantinovic. As I said above I used to "play" guitar similarly to this (much the same way people, including myself, randomly fiddle around on pianos and other instruments), but I had no idea it was considered a legitimate technique and could be taken to such an amazing level. Just goes to show there's no "wrong" way to play anything, as long as it sounds good!

- Oshyan
683
Living Room / Re: The Evil Side of Nature
« Last post by JavaJones on April 11, 2011, 01:45 PM »
That's just your mammalian chauvinism.  ;)
Of course!
Have you ever read "Pilgrim at Tinker Creek"?

Nope.

- Oshyan
684
Living Room / Re: The Evil Side of Nature
« Last post by JavaJones on April 11, 2011, 01:14 AM »
But I'm glad I *didn't* see mice crawling in and out of the innards of a still-living animal at the same time. :P

I saw something like that in person when I was a young child. My older brother had a small pet lizard of some sort and fed it mealwormsw. Well, apparently the lizard ate them whole, without chewing or otherwise killing them. They ate their way out from the inside of the lizard.

 :o That is just wrong, dammit. Of course I've heard of such things before, mostly with wasps laying eggs in say a spider and then them eating their way out when they hatch. But somehow when it's not insects/arachnids, it's more creepy...

- Oshyan
685
Post New Requests Here / Re: IDEA: TELL me how many objects I am deleting!
« Last post by JavaJones on April 10, 2011, 11:30 PM »
Ooo, nice tool Miles!

- Oshyan
686
Post New Requests Here / Re: IDEA: TELL me how many objects I am deleting!
« Last post by JavaJones on April 10, 2011, 08:28 PM »
Why use Shift-delete at all in that case? I used to actually turn off the recycle bin altogether so everything just got deleted, but I lost one too many things that way (although there are tools that can help with deleted files of course, they're still a pain). Now I just use the recycle bin 99% of the time and it works just fine. Not sure what I was thinking previously. ;)

- Oshyan
687
Living Room / Re: The Evil Side of Nature
« Last post by JavaJones on April 10, 2011, 08:25 PM »
That's insane!  I didn't look at the video.  I just couldn't...  :'(

You mean the video of the mice and the albatross? It wasn't disturbing at all. It just showed about 4 mice (at a time) crowding around a specific area of the bird, with the bird mostly ignoring them. I was expecting something truly repulsive like the mice crawling in and out of the bird's innards. But the video was really tame. The bird could have been sitting on an egg-shaped cheeseball for all you could tell in the video.

My thoughts as well. But I'm glad I *didn't* see mice crawling in and out of the innards of a still-living animal at the same time. :P

- Oshyan
688
Living Room / Re: The Evil Side of Nature
« Last post by JavaJones on April 09, 2011, 02:46 PM »
Woah, now that's just creepy.

- Oshyan
689
Living Room / Re: Hats off to USPS for innovative tracking scheme...
« Last post by JavaJones on April 08, 2011, 07:04 PM »
Oh yeah, love USPS tracking. It's brilliant. :D

- Oshyan
690
It would be interesting doing the same thing but for windows applications. If the application is slow and bloated, users should know before buying.

I'd like to see that sort of thing as a regular part of software reviews. An additional metric. It would be particularly useful/interesting in comparison/"shootout" type reviews comparing multiple similar products. SoftMaker Office starts faster than MS Office 2010 and has more features and is cheaper? Then why bother with MS Office? etc.

But, as Wladimir's tests in the link above show, if you do tests it's important to be comprehensive and to be crystal clear about your test environment and process.

- Oshyan
691
Living Room / Re: Recommend some music videos to me!
« Last post by JavaJones on April 07, 2011, 02:46 PM »
Awesome stuff everyone. I love how this thread has gone through so many variations. I'm digging this latest string instrument kick, especially the creative/unusual tack. Particularly enjoying the CBG stuff and Ewan Dobson.

Tapatar is cool, similar to what I used to do (as a total non-guitarist) to "play" a guitar and have fun. But it seems a bit too random-ish and frenetic in some instances (hit as many complementary notes as fast as you can!). There's clearly lots of talent there though.

- Oshyan
692
Living Room / Re: Recommend some music videos to me!
« Last post by JavaJones on April 07, 2011, 12:54 AM »
Hehe, yeah I love the Parry Gripp videos. I heard a few of them separately but didn't really grok that they were all from the same person/people. Creative and fun(ny). :)

- Oshyan
693
General Software Discussion / Re: What the hell is OpenCandy?
« Last post by JavaJones on April 05, 2011, 03:13 PM »
I'm with 40hz: I think the OC logo and text, referring to the EULA, addresses the problem as best you can given current limitations. It also avoids the "problem" of increased attrition from an opt-in. ;)

Edit: I for one don't have a problem with the DLL being put on my computer (e.g. in temp) for it to be loaded in the installer. If upon immediately being loaded it's already *doing* stuff then I do take issue with that, but I would guess it won't *do* anything until actually asked to. In that case I personally am ok with it as long as I am asked if I want OC to *do* anything *before* it does it. Obviously this requires a bit of trust already, but that's fine by me. Ideally both the website/download location *and* installer would specify OC is used, that way if I'm concerned about even the DLL being loaded, I know I shouldn't bother with even downloading it.

- Oshyan
694
General Software Discussion / Re: What the hell is OpenCandy?
« Last post by JavaJones on April 05, 2011, 02:29 AM »
I'd be curious to know what other sites you're referring to, if you don't mind sharing. Especially with the sound of the standards for software listing. :)

- Oshyan
695
General Software Discussion / Re: What the hell is OpenCandy?
« Last post by JavaJones on April 05, 2011, 01:05 AM »
40hz, your version of the disclosure text is a lot better than mine. I believe you made the point about disclosure early on and I've been in support of it throughout this thread as really the only necessary remedy, assuming OC's tactics remain as benign as they are presently of course.

Renegade, I really want to acknowledge your willingness to consider these points and issues, and to actually make potential changes in your product install and business model as a result. That's really admirable and goes right along with the "open business" approach you've been talking about. Putting your money where your mouth is indeed! I for one do think the mockups you've put up in your last post would do the job at this point. I'd *like* to see something mandated by OC, and the ability for devs to optionally provide a route to still install the product without OC ever running (i.e. 1 installer, 2 install paths - with and without OC running - at the user's option). I grant that doing so would weaken OC's value proposition, but doing the right thing is seldom the most profitable route. In any case, short of OC themselves doing something about this (which I doubt), I want to applaud you for taking the initiative and doing so. Thanks for listening!

- Oshyan
696
Yeah, I'm using 2 backup sets already. I'm not sure that would make it less memory-intensive or perhaps *more*...

- Oshyan
697
Living Room / Re: Recommend some music videos to me!
« Last post by JavaJones on April 04, 2011, 03:48 AM »
Haha, that is some 1st rate Bob Dylan impressionizing. Both the intonation and the rythm/cadence. Niiice.

- Oshyan
698
General Software Discussion / Re: What the hell is OpenCandy?
« Last post by JavaJones on April 04, 2011, 03:45 AM »
Sure, even if it's just a "powered by" with a link for more info, that will give types like me, App (I think) and others with these kinds of concerns the chance to find out more before we go too much further with things. In this case, knowing what I know now, I'd probably go through with the install of an app using OC in its installer, assuming I was fairly interested in the app of course.

- Oshyan
699
Living Room / Re: Please kill me now - just bought an iPad off of eBay
« Last post by JavaJones on April 04, 2011, 02:29 AM »
In the meantime I'll just put the iPad in a brown paper bag when I'm using it so that no one sees me. If anyone asks what I'm doing I'll just say I'm stroking a deceased rat or something.

;D Priceless.

- Oshyan
700
General Software Discussion / Re: What the hell is OpenCandy?
« Last post by JavaJones on April 04, 2011, 02:20 AM »
I'm curious if anyone thinks my suggestion back a few pages actually has any merit:
Let's keep some perspective here though. This does not need to be stated in scary terms in order to avoid being seen in a bad light. I believe OC could require better communication of its activities through its partners and their installers while not necessarily reducing opt-in significantly. Here's an example:
"This installer is powered by OpenCandy! As part of a free service, OpenCandy will check your system for potential software upgrades to improve performance and capabilities. This check will collect basic non-personal information about your system and store it securely on our servers. If you'd like to decline this service, simply uncheck the box below." That's 30 seconds of thought put into the wording; a good marketer could do a lot better, keeping the important information will making it more appealing. That's what marketers do, and that's ok.

They could even make it a bit more controllable and potentially get more customers by doing something like this: "...This check will collect basic non-personal information about your system and store it securely on our servers. If you'd prefer not to have your information sent to our servers, we can still perform a local check and offer some recommendations if you select the "local check" radio button below. You can also choose to decline this service by selecting the "do not check my system" radio button." In a situation like that I might still opt-in to the local check.

Adding a sentence of info about OC's service helping to support developers might also be a good thing, depending.

In the end I think the problem 40hz has, and which I share, is that OC is not very open about what it's doing, and in some/many cases even seems to be completely unmentioned in the equation (e.g. the offer appears to be coming from Microsoft for installing IE9, with no mention of the fact that OC brokered the deal). Disclosure is a big deal to many people.

Also want to mention I like the way WinSCP handles this! http://winscp.net/eng/docs/opencandy

- Oshyan
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