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7276
Living Room / Re: 14 Surefire Ways to Annoy Users
« Last post by f0dder on April 18, 2007, 06:13 AM »
  • Make changes to our file associations in the registry that don't revert when we un-install.

And take over filetype associations that are already set... Visual Studio, this means you!

Here's mine:
  • Add a lot of copy-protection that only gets in the legitimate end-users way, while quickly being defeated by pirates.
  • Treat legitimate customers as if they were pirates.
7277
General Software Discussion / Re: Must-have apps in the System tray?
« Last post by f0dder on April 18, 2007, 06:08 AM »
Anyway, here's a process working set size trimmer I wrote.

It's a command-line tool supporting wildcards, so you can do "trimws *" to trim all processes, or "trimws fir*" to trim (among others) firefox. Not that in the "*" case it'll mention a lot of errors, that's because system services are protected (and I'm not doing anything to circumvent that :) ).

I wrote this while looking into trillians "low memory usage", and just upgraded it to have wildcard support.

I still don't think using a tool like this blindly is a good idea, but at least this one is free, comes with source code, is tiny, and is a one-shot thing rather than a stupid bloated keep-running app.

EDIT: attachment removed, see later post for updated version.
7278
General Software Discussion / Re: Don't call it "the tray"!
« Last post by f0dder on April 18, 2007, 04:39 AM »
Ah, the pure humor, Darwin! ;)
7279
Mini-Reviews by Members / Re: Archivarius
« Last post by f0dder on April 17, 2007, 05:45 PM »
Hm, I guess I might give it a spin... not too keen on the desktop search things, but I guess that's because the first I ever looked as was google, with it's horrible run-in-webbrowser strategy, and the almost viral way it pops up on people's machines >_<

EDIT: I think I need to tweak the settings of which file to index a bit... or perhaps index only part of my data. Estimate: 690'152 documents, 396.89 GB, 146.8GB index size. That's a task for tomorrow :)
7280
General Software Discussion / Re: RANT: High Software Prices!
« Last post by f0dder on April 17, 2007, 05:40 PM »
Yup, agree with pro3carp3 and Curt but I *think* that we're straying into the philosophical realm here in that I don't think that people who use cracks, hacks and serialz are necessarily career criminals but rather people who... ah fuck it. They're thieves and there is no justification for it.
-Darwin
There's plenty of people that actually do have legitimately purchased software but still use the cracked version since it's goddamn more convenient - dongles, phone-home, cd protections, you name it. I certainly know I do, when a game doesn't need data from the frigging DVD, I'm not going to bother inserting it. And in my younger days when I went to LAN parties, why should I bring along my original game CDs/DVDs and risk them getting stolen/broken/whatever?

Nowadays it makes even more sense, when protections like StarForce can mean major slowdowns, and installs crappy drivers on your system, and when you have to be really careful if you reinstall windows - not only is there the risk of getting in windows activation trouble, but what about all the other activation-requiring applications? Or the "hardware locked" licenses? Ooop, burnt motherboard, too bad, can't use the app, YOU EVIL PIRATE. Copy protections have taken overhand.

And windows licensing is sucky as well. You can't imagine the hoops you have to jump through to get a volume license key for a small company - I ended giving up. So instead of being able to use one slipstreamed CD with unattended setup, I have to carry a list of 10+ cdkeys when I need to do reinstalls.

I don't mind paying for stuff, but I do mind paying overprice and getting crippled software that treats me like I was a thief.

Carol Haynes: anything under £1/litre is cheap in .dk at the moment.
7281
Living Room / Re: Why Linux is better
« Last post by f0dder on April 17, 2007, 05:22 PM »
Edvard: NT4 is certainly a pretty decent platform (when you don't need gaming and the latest whizz-bang features) - and that's quite a powerhouse of a machine you're running it on! I remember comfortably running it on a pmmx/200 with 64megs of ram. Granted, office2k was a bit long in the tooth when the automatic spell-checking was enabled, but it wasn't uncomfortable to use.

Armando: yeah, you need to choose some parameters when doing comparisons. It's not necessarily a bad idea including both power-users, end-users, workstation and server comparisons in one review, but when you compare server-use of one OS with workstation-use of the other... well yeah. A lot of times I've seen linux people comparing it to win9x, even after win2k had been with us for years... and even if win2k hadn't been there, the comparison point should've been NT4.

The diversity of linux is one of it's achilles heels, imho. I'm not saying it should be a 100% rigid and conforming platform, but without a "standard base", writing software for it is annoying. Yeah, "./configure" helps, but imho it's a kludgy hack instead of fixing broken platforms, and it's not of much help if you're doing closed-source software. Oh, the nightmares of supporting multiple distros, or even multiple versions of one distro.

Gothic: wxWindows seems decent and I've been meaning to look into it, but haven't had the time and energy. Also, if I remember correctly, the runtime library it has imposes an even bigger hit than the already bloated BCB/Delphi VCL >_<. Not that big a problem for a big app which will probably have a dataset that's plenty larger than the executable, but imho a no-go for smaller utilities.
7282
I tried Sumatra for about 30 seconds and deleted it. It failed to render the first PDF that I opened. I doubt I'll ever try it again. Anyway, I hate PDF and wish it would just die. Nothing there that couldn't be done in an archive using HTML (afaik).
Unfortunately, lot of people use it, so we're stuck with it.

PDF is good for one thing (and imho not much more than that): getting print output that looks correct (and even that doesn't always work, some linux-produced PDFs look absolutely horrible on windows, for instance). For computer use, .chm is the best format I've come across yet.
7283
General Software Discussion / Re: Don't call it "the tray"!
« Last post by f0dder on April 17, 2007, 03:28 AM »
Raymond Chen has the right to be anal, though...
7284
It's worth to keep in mind that, unless my memory is more flawed than usual, Reader does pre-rendering of succeeding pages, and iirc caching of previously rendered pages... that might explain some of the additional memory usage. (I think foxit pre-renders a bit as well, but not as many pages forward?)
7285
General Software Discussion / Re: Must-have apps in the System tray?
« Last post by f0dder on April 16, 2007, 05:42 PM »
It's more likely that your performance boost has been because of the phase of the moon, really.

FreeRAM XP PRO still uses the crappy old technique of alloc-a-big-block-and-release, which is utterly stupid. It's "global memory compression" (which has nothing to do with compression and should be renamed "global working-set trim") is slightly more intelligent, based on Process Explorer I'd say that it iterates the processes in the system and does SetProcessWorkingSetSize(process, -1, -1)... which is basically what windows does in a low-memory situation.

The only situation where this kind of application could be helpful is if you're launching another application that allocated memory depending on how much memory is free... but that's not an all-too common practice, and for the applications that do it, you'll be better off shutting down some applications (you don't want too much stuff running on a low-end system if you're going to play intensive games, for instance).
7286
Developer's Corner / Re: The Best Introductory Language
« Last post by f0dder on April 16, 2007, 05:14 PM »
A good advantage is not having C's 'Segmentation Faults', which are traumatizing in the first times for most people.
-jgpaiva
If you teach people a mix of C/C++, as I mentioned above, you highly reduce the risk of segfaults and the like... but of course you're still without a highly standardized GUI toolkit.
7287
General Software Discussion / Re: Must-have apps in the System tray?
« Last post by f0dder on April 16, 2007, 05:02 PM »
Curt: it's snake-oil... all that those "memory optimizers" do is to allocate a truckload of memory, forcing windows to page out other applications to disk. You might as well NOT run crap like that, and have windows automatically do the paging as necessary. Using them is detrimental to performance, as they tend to force more stuff out of memory than is necessary.
7288
Official Announcements / Re: Remember: DonationCredits are for Giving
« Last post by f0dder on April 16, 2007, 05:00 PM »
I realized I had bunch lying around... almost feel guilty about cashing out some for myself :-[, but going to Copenhagen and back to see Nine Inch Nails drained my account this month :(

I still have $20 donationcredits left though, and I think this could be a decent case...

7289
I made it to page 14 so far (had to go eat with the gf), and now the site is timing out - sigh. Pretty interesting while it lasted, although some of the license/patent stuff is a bit dull.
7290
Developer's Corner / Re: The Best Introductory Language
« Last post by f0dder on April 16, 2007, 06:15 AM »
C is a bad place to jump in, but C++ might actually not be too bad - you could start doing procedural programming and move on from there, but still utilize the safer-and-easier parts of C++ (string, vector, iostreams). I still have a feeling there might be a better place to start, though.

As for i dont want to spend time to learn unnecessary languages that i would not use after learning C++., there's plenty of languages besides C++ that's worth to learn and use in the future... perl, python, lua, anyone?
7291
Sounds like it might be an interesting read, so I guess I might as well brew some coffee.
7292
Living Room / Re: Anyone here with experience returning Seagate drivers?
« Last post by f0dder on April 16, 2007, 01:25 AM »
Seagate was bought by Maxtor, right? And maxtor drives have a history of running pretty damn hot.

The most extreme case I've had in a while was designing a fileserver for the museum. I chose a wrong and way too cramped casing; like, the PSU located right about the CPU HSF, with max 1cm of air inbetween... ambient temperature of ~50C in the case. After less than a month, one of the drives died. Replaced with a decent case and some case fans, and now there's a 170-day uptime.

Yes, heat is an issue in my opinion. For the last several years, I've made sure to have a 80mm intake fan in front of my disks, it made a difference of ~20C on the maxtor drives, a bit less on the drives I have now since they don't run as hot. Haven't had a disk failure since then.
7293
Living Room / Re: Why Linux is better
« Last post by f0dder on April 16, 2007, 01:19 AM »
Okay, I promised it, so here it is.

Imho the author of Why Linux is better (from hereon WLIB) doesn't really distinguis between Server vs. workstation, user vs. power user, and so on, which is a shame. Also, I don't like how he says "Pirates" instead of "malware writers".

Anyway, here goes - I've tried commenting on each of his categories. Haven't proofread or even splelchcked.

Forget about viruses
Windows is easier to target than linux, since linux is by no means a homogenous platform (with all the grief that causes developers and supporters), that's true. And it's true that windows is the most targetted platform because it's the most widespread platform.

"you can go inside the system folder and delete whatever you want: Windows won't complain" is plain wrong, though - on windows, even running as an administrator, you can't delete in-use files, so this will fail. On linux, running as root, try doing "rm -fr /" - this will succeed.

Also while, sadly, the default setup for XP is to have the user run admin, any corporate computer will be set up with limited accounts, which means you can't do much harm. When I set up a computer for possibly irresponsible users, I make sure to make limited accounts.

"More eyes make fewer security flaws." is a pretty theoretical argument. Most of the userbase won't scrutinize your source, they won't even see it because they'll be installing a binary package. And even if you're a programmer, for larger projects, it'll take too long "diving into" the project for this to be of use. This isn't meant to say that opensource is useless, just that it's less of an advantage than it's being touted as, especially in the context of regular users.

Is your system unstable?
This part is pretty FUDy.

First, for the last many years (basically since moving to win2k, and then to XP) I haven't seen a BSOD that wasn't caused by bad hardware or a bad driver (and that being 3rd-party non-Microsoft code). This includes my own box, my mothers laptop, my brothers two PCs, and the 10+ machines at the museum I admin.

The only instance of "error messages telling you that the computer needs to be shut down for obscure reasons?" I've seen is pre-SP2 XP machines getting hit with the RPC exploit.

Next, this item seems to confuse workstation and server use, they're quite different (and if anybody tells you differently, be sure to fire them if they're your server admin). I've seen win2k servers, running IIS, with more than a year uptime. The trick is common sense - don't use the machine as a workstation, don't install superfluous shit on it, and keep it firewalled. The same goes no matter which OS you run, by the way. And on a workstation, multiple years of uptime is irrelevant. I've had 20+ days on my XP anyway, and I could have had more if there had been a reason to keep it on.

Linux protects your computer
First, I'm pretty sure the claim that even an XP+SP2 will get infected automatically. Sure, vanilla XP or XP+SP1 connected to the net without NAT'ing. And yes, that is bad, and it's a problem. But I'm pretty sure that a vanilla XP+SP2 slipstream (without any of the update packs) with the default windows firewall enabled won't get drive-by infected.

Once you apply latest updates (or your OEM or power-user has done it for you), things aren't too bad unless you engange in moronic practices. I ran IE6 safely for years, including visits to the "bad parts" of the web. But yes, internet explorer does have a fair share of vulnerabilities, and even clean sites have banner ads that can be exploited (which is how I eventually got an infection).

While IE is the default browser, though, both FireFox and Opera are pretty safe, and of course available for free.

"It is really a matter of how fast a security flaw can be solved once it has been discovered." - I'd rewrite this to "how fast the flaw is auto-patched on all systems". It doesn't really matter how fast it's discovered or patched if the patch isn't installed.

"Microsoft doesn't have that much manpower" - rewrite this as "The Open Source community doesn't run a shitload of compatibility testing to see if their patches break anything". Not that Microsoft hasn't ended up breaking stuff even after those tests, though :)

Don't pay $300 for your operating system
"The price for a Windows license amounts to an average of one fourth of each new computer's price." - say... what? Perhaps if you're buying very low-end hardware and/or don't buy a screen, mouse and keyboard with it. And are counting retail rather than OEM license, or are picking Vista Ultimate just to skew the statistics, when the user probably only needs XP Home.

"Where do you think Microsoft gets its money from?" from the Office suite :)

But yeah, windows does cost, and it doesn't even entitle you to support.

Freedom!
There's decent points in this one. Relatively irrelevant for an end-user, but that doesn't void the points. If Microsoft goes bust in 5 years, ReactOS might have reached a usable state, though :p

And bugs can be fixed without having source code avaiable. It's tedious, but don't underestimate how dedicated people can be if needed.

When the system has installed[...]
This is a case of confusing power users and regular users, and not considering who's doing the installation.

A power user doesn't want a lot of cruft installed automatically that they'll have to remove before they start adding the software they need.

An end-user is not installing the operating system himself, but will get an OEM from Dell or whatever. This tends to include a bunch of bundled software that's quite sufficient for most people.

And by the way, you can view .doc files without installing Office, it's called Wordpad and is installed by default on windows - including .doc file association.

Update all your software with a single click.
...if somebody has bothered to make a package for it. Doesn't always happen with some of the smaller apps. But okay, focusing on end-users as we should, it works fine most of the time. And this is a decent feature - especially considering that unfinished state a lot of open-source software is being shipped in :)

Why copy software illegally if you can get it for free?
This section assumes that people are pirates, and that everybody needs a boatload of software.

As the page already shows, lots of the opensource software he picked is already available for windows, and for the ones that aren't you can probably find either another opensource app, a freeware app, or a cheap(er) shareware app.

Need new software? Don't bother searching the web, Linux gets it for you.
Useful feature for end-users. Limits the results you get somewhat, but steers you clear of malware sites etc.

Jump into the next generation of desktops.
Pretty cute if you're into eye-candy, but goddamn Beryl is unstable; I played with it a a girl_friend's computer yesterday, was setup by her brother who's decent with linux. Something as simple as resizing the window ended up causing veeeery weird effects that I'll have a hard time describing.

On the plus side, it ran pretty well before it messed up, considering the lowly GeForce 4200 Ti card in the machine.

Does your digital life seem fragmented ?
And here's where things go really wrong :)

Every standard filesystem fragments. Period. Windows zealot fanboys also claimed that NTFS doesn't fragment, but of course it does. So does EXT2/3, ReiserFS, XFS, etc. - problem is that there doesn't seem to be any decent defragmenters around for linux, so you're told one of:
  • Linux doesn't fragment
  • Every moron knows that you should always keep 20% space free on your volume
  • Copy to a new location, rm -fr the old, and mv back in place

The last one is the only useful solution, but won't work if the filesystem is heavily fragmented.

As for the guy's claim and filing cabinet analogy, well, that only happens when you know in advance how much data you're going to write, which isn't always the case. Furthermore, you need to utilize that information, which isn't always done either. And last, windows supports this as well - for a new file, seek to the expected filesize, set end-of-file-pointer, and seek back to beginning of file and do your data writing. Presto, file allocated using as few fragments as possible.

Choose what your desktop looks like.
Totally ignores the fact that there's a lot of replacement desktops available for windows.

Why does your Windows get slower day after day?
This is folklore myth. Yes, it does get slower if you're hammered with malware, and it can get slower if you install useless crap all the time.

I've had more than one install of windows that spanned a year or more, with no slowdown. Eventually did a reinstall because of new hardware or because I simply wanted to play with slipstreaming and tweaking.

Now, to quote a friend:
My XP has not been reinstalled since 2002. Still runs like a charm. I don't see any weird processes in my task manager... I don't see excessive memory usage... I don't see any diminished results in benchmarks etc.

...and he's mad enough that he didn't do a reinstall when going AMD->Intel - I'm quite surprised that actually worked, but with a little driver un+reinstall, well - it's doable.

Enjoy free and unlimited support
Try saying that again if a lot of regular users start using linux and start asking stupid questions ;)

My own personal & biased experience with linux "support" has usually been pretty bad. Any "trivial" question has usually been asked with a RTFM, or deafening silence. More tricky stuff the same, and if you point out that you've RTFM'ed and even skimmed some of the source code, more than once I've had a kickban from efnet #linux , #linuxhelp or whatever for "being smart".

This includes issues with (and not limited to) proftpd, oidentd and samba. But okay, mailing lists or LUGs or freenode might have been better places to ask. I'm not overly confident, though, considering what I've looked at when googling and sifting through mailing list archives.

Fortunately, returning focus to the end-users, those people can probably get help for the trivial problems they'll face.

Use MSN, AIM, ICQ, Jabber, with a single program
GAIM is availble on Windows too, so this isn't really a pro-linux argument. There's miranda as well, which also consolidates multiple protocols... and they're not the only ones.

Save some energy : let your computer sleep or hibernate.
Windows does hibernate too, so this isn't really a pro-linux argument. <fud>And is linux hibernation even stable by now?</fud>

Too many windows? Use workspaces.
There's plenty of virtual desktop apps around for Windows, including a Virtual Desktop Manager powertoy from Microsoft.

Reporting bugs
Yup, it's pretty damn hard getting Microsoft to do something about a bug if you're reporting as an individual or a small corporation, and same for many of the big software vendors.

At least it tends to work better for opensource projects, unless you're simply told "source is there, fix it yourself".

Are your tired of restarting your computer all the time?
Yeah, you're often asked to restart your computer when installing stuff on windows. Most of the time it's not really necessary to do so, however, and is just part of a standard braindead installer.

For windows update, it's usually necessary as well, but at least that makes sense, when core components (whether that be drivers or usermode code) are replaced. You can easily continue using the machine without booting though, if the update doesn't sound important to you (but yeah, regular users won't know that, so they'll reboot).

Linux needs a reboot on kernel update too, though. And if any major piece of software or shared library is updated, you'll need to shut down and re-start applications affected... in the end, it's probably easier just rebooting the machine.

"And if you happen to be away from your computer and you didn't see the question, it will happily reboot automatically. Bye bye long download." - since when has windows update rebooted the system automatically? Fud, fud and fud.

"It is only necessary when a part from the heart of the system has been updated, and that only happens once every several weeks." - funny, that's about the same interval where I need a reboot because of windows update? :)

Again, the author starts mentioning servers and uptime, which isn't too relevant for the end-user. And again, it's perfectly possible to have several years of uptime on windows as well.

Let your old computer have a second life
Linux does have lower hardware requirements than recent windows versions, but if you're only going to "perform usual tasks (surfing the web, writing documents, etc.)", then either XP or Win2k will do just fine on most hardware as well. Really old hardware won't be running the latest-and-greatest games and whatever anyway, so there's no reason to stuff Vista on it (if there's ever going to be a reason for that ;)).

You do need to tweak especially XP a bit to run on slower hardware, but something as simple as changing to classic UI and disabling a few services works wonders.

Play hundreds of games for free
Lots of stuff available for free on windows as well, so again a pretty moot point. If targetting a gamer, rather than a standard end-user, they'll be disappointed with linux though. Of course there's cedega, but that's payware... and even worse, subscriptionware. Pretty cheap, sure, but still payware. And how well does it run the various copy-protections that's present on just about every game?

Help other countries, and your own
Ho humm, this becomes too political, so I'll not address it. (PS: KAPITALISM IS EVIL!)

Get a great music player
winamp, foobar, musikcube, iTunes (if you swing that way), MusicBrainz, ... - the choices are endless.

Keep and eye on the weather.
Vista has those (imho useless) widgets built-in, but there's several offerings for windows, including http://widgets.yahoo.com/ .

*phew*, that was quite a bit. I might not have been 100% objective and provided links for every claim etc. yadda yadda whatever, but neither did the WLIB author.
7294
Site/Forum Features / Re: should we get rid of the topic icons?
« Last post by f0dder on April 15, 2007, 11:25 PM »
If you're going to keep the icon but replace them all with a standard icon, my vote is to keep them... and include even more icons, all the suitable ones from the standard emoticons (including the ones visible after pressing the [more] button, the R.I.P icon could be cute when making threads about symantec-purchased software).

One of the main problems with the thread icons is that there's too few to choose from. Or perhaps that the ones present aren't always fitting. Perhaps coming up with a set of icons that would make sense for donationcoder.com could be an idea.

Anyway, if you're going to lose the icons, lose the column entirely, otherwise it's kinda pointless imho.
7295
Living Room / Re: Anyone here with experience returning Seagate drivers?
« Last post by f0dder on April 15, 2007, 11:18 PM »
I'm not ready for raid yet.  I have an old computer, and I just want to be able to back stuff up on it for now.
-superboyac
Even if your computer is old enough that there's not some onboard RAID solution, you can do software raid if you have the pro version of XP or 2k. Mirroring really is worth it, even if it's not 100% foolproof (drives of same make bought at the same time have a tendency to fail relatively short in-between, and if failure is because of eg. overheating, even moreso).
7296
Living Room / Re: Very cool Rube Goldberg Machine Video
« Last post by f0dder on April 15, 2007, 12:30 PM »
I still think it's funny that these machines are called Rube Goldberg machines, since the Danish Robert Storm Petersen designed that type of machines a lot earlier... but oh well, doesn't change the fact that they're fun to watch :)
7297
Living Room / Re: Intel Quad-Core Gaming Demo
« Last post by f0dder on April 15, 2007, 09:41 AM »
Looks cute, big part of that is the GPU though, not the CPU. And IMHO, even a quad-core processor won't be enough for doing nice physics (where objects really influence each other), you need a PhysX card for that...

I wonder how high their CPU utilization is, as it's a pretty complex task to do parallel programming - especially for games, which have a lot of interdependent systems. Ie., you can't fully do AI before you've done physics, and physics can't be fully parallelized either (although if you're clever, it can be done as an iterative process where you parallelize subtasks and re-do when there's object interactions), but imho physics should still be moved to a discrete component.

You might want to check these links:
http://www.anandtech.../showdoc.aspx?i=2868
http://arstechnica.c...valve-multicore.ars/
7298
Living Room / Re: Anyone here with experience returning Seagate drivers?
« Last post by f0dder on April 15, 2007, 09:17 AM »
When I've needed to return drives, I've simply shown up at the store where I bought the drive - they have their own RMA procedure. Sure beats having to ship to the hardware vendor.

Once, I did send a drive directly to maxtor, though. First, I made sure the drive really was dead (hook up to old PSU, short-circuit the PCB with a screwdriver). Then followed their RMA procedure, put the drive in an anti-static bag, wrapped some polyfoam/whatever around it, put it in a decent cardboard box, and added some balls of wrinkled up newspaper until the box was full.

Appearantly, that was good enough. Iirc maxtors european department is/was in .nl, and the package got there safely, and I got my replacement.

Thing is, and that's why I prefer buying from a decent store that'll swap a dead drive with no questions asked, is that maxtor sent me a damn refurbished drive back :mad:

Dunno about new warranty periods when getting RMA... I think with the "back to shop" strategy I now employ, I get a full new warranty... but only the 2-year .eu whatever warranty thingamajig.

As for drives... go raid-mirror for your important data. While it's not a replacement for backups, at least it reduces the risk of data loss. And do make sure the drives are being kept cool, having a silent 80mm intake fan in front of your drives does wonders for lifetime.
7299
Living Room / Re: Choosing a keyboard and a mouse
« Last post by f0dder on April 15, 2007, 09:08 AM »
Grmbl, I hate those keyboards with "fancy keys" overlaid on the Fx buttons, and defaulting to "fancy key" mode :(.

I'm sorta looking for a new keyboard myself, the IBM one I have is decent enough, but I'd like softer (and silent!, so I can code while the girlfriend is sleeping) keypresses. Dunno about ergonomic - I'd die if the keyboard at work wasn't ergo, but i'm afraid it wouldn't work that well when coding.

gjehle: en/us keyboard layout is definitely better when coding, Danish layout seems similar to german - pain in the buttocks. Good thing I used DOS so much, with games and some apps not respecting the keyboard mapping and reading they keyboard directly... gave me a good feel for the en/us layout :)

It's so nice that I can set keyboard locale per-app on windows, just alt+shift and notepad++ is en en/us mode, leaving the rest in Danish so I can type my æøåÆØÅ without any funkiness.
7300
General Software Discussion / Re: Seeking a FireFox plugin called "IDFCWOCBA"?
« Last post by f0dder on April 15, 2007, 08:58 AM »
I have it. I call it "my brain". It allows me to do amazing things with Firefox.
The BrainTM is pretty expensive in use, though, and you drain a lot of cycles filtering out useless stuff - those cycles could be better spent on other things, like procrastinating.
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