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Recent Posts

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7326
Well, even with perfectly clean and non-scratched CD's without copy protection, and even with a decent drive, if you rip in "burst mode" you risk an imperfect copy. That's where AccurateRip helps, though, if others have ripped the disc - you can then verify whether the rip was good or bad.

(With dbPoweramp and a drive supporting C2 error reporting (most do, I think?), you already have a good indication whether ripping was successful or not).

And it might be paranoia, but when you rip to a lossless format, you're already nit-picky about quality. I don't want even an inaudible incorrectness :)
7327
Living Room / Re: Flow-inspired game: Bubble Tanks
« Last post by f0dder on April 11, 2007, 06:37 PM »
Ah, just what you need after a dull & repetitive day at work :)

Does it get any larger than this, though?
bubble.png
7328
It's faster eh?

As for accuracy, if AccurateRip says it's the same after using EAC, that's good enough for me.

Yeah, it's plenty faster... I use EAC in secure (though not paranoid) mode, which means I usually go around 4x rip speed, for a few CD's it's better, and for anything copy protected, it's less than 0.1x. Also, the way EAC does it's read-reread-reread-reread (etc.) means a lot of laser movement, which I suspect wears out your drive faster.

dbPoweramp (well, reference version) is much smarter - it does a full pass at decent speed (like 20x), noting c2 error pointers. If no c2 errors are found, you're done ripping that track - if errors are found, you can re-rip only the frames that contain errors, instead of ripping each sector multiple times (for better rip accuracy, I set it to lower speed and do multiple passes if c2 errors are found).

So... dbPoweramp is overall *a lot* faster for me than EAC, and in the case of copy protected CDs, it's does better (and faster) than EAC. And with those CDs, unfortunately accuraterip isn't all that helpful, since you're entirely at the mercy of your drive's error correction capabilities... different drives, or even different models from the same vendor, will likely generate different AR id's... so what you want is reproducible results for your drive, and not having to spend five hours ripping a CD :)
7329
ProcessTamer / Re: Process Tamer gets rave review
« Last post by f0dder on April 11, 2007, 09:01 AM »
The link works fine here.
7330
Well, compare speeds of dbPoweramp and EAC... not to mention accuracy, if your drive has the necessary features. It's worth the cash, imho. Too bad it doesn't support ripping to .cue/.wav, otherwise I'd have already registered.
7331
General Software Discussion / Re: Don't be fooled, Vista wants new hardware
« Last post by f0dder on April 11, 2007, 08:50 AM »
Using 3D tech for a 2D interface has been a good idea for a long time, Yoshi's Island anyone?
-Hirudin
The hardware has probably been doing that internally for quite some years already, mind you. I still haven't seen any advantage of the Vista UI, but I guess it's really meant for the eye-candy suckers anyway. There's one test I need to do, though: playing back a 720p h.264 movie split across two monitors. Maybe that'll finally be properly accelerated, instead of going to 80% CPU usage.

Who cares about boot speed? I mean, sure if you restart 5 times or more in an hour it might be annoying, but I can't imagine many of us do that very often. I think people bitch about the boot time because it's so quantitative, anyone can use a stopwatch and see that one takes longer to boot than the other, but I doubt many people can explain why it matters so much to them that one is a whopping 10 seconds slower.
-Hirudin
I don't care that much about boot speed, since I tend to boot my system when I get up, and shut it down when I go to bed, sometimes with a reboot or two inbetween for whatever reason. But Vista was touted as booting faster than XP - it certainly doesn't do so here.

Programs are starting more slow than XP? Wha? How is this possible? We can all be sure that if this is an actual problem it'll be resolved soon. I mean, it's mostly a function of how quickly the data can be read from the HDD and put on the RAM isn't it? Vista isn't making our HDDs slower is it?
-Hirudin
Ever so slightly, yes. Things like opening the control panel etc., mind you, not 3rd party apps. Imho just another sign that things have been bloated up for no good reason.

IE sucks anyway. I've heard that Firefox used to cause BSODs, but you can be sure that'll end soon (if it hasn't already). Explorer has always sucked, I actually think it looks better now (but I'll be putting Directory Opus on there anyway).
-Hirudin
Firefox causing BSODs on Vista? My oh my, what a joke... while FF is a bad-mannered pig, it's still pretty simple user-mode code, and if user-mode code can cause BSODs, well... I'll write this off as a smear campaign by super-anti-ms people until I hear about it from a reliable source. Surely Vista can't be THAT bad :)

How come "DRM" and "drivers" are always brought up together regarding Vista? Don't tell me there are driverz (like "warez") out there... Really, is there DRM with anything except entertainment media? Why are you buying music or videos.
-Hirudin
Drivers, because Vista makes it harder for me to write my own drivers. I'm not talking about hardware drivers, though, but drivers for the purpose of running kernel-mode code. This can be useful for advanced debugging, code profiling, and reverse engineering.

IMHO MS have not made it harder to protect the customer, but as part of an agreement with Verisign (or whoever grants signing licensing now). And it's not cheap. It's still possible to run unsigned drivers on 32bit Vista, but afaik not on 64bit. So, native EXT2 filesystem access from Windows? Nope, not unless somebody coughs up and buys a signing license - with all the restrictions and caveats this brings.

DRM is an issue as well, if you look at how some code paths have been designing in Vista. "Tilt bits", encryption of kernel/user communication; INCLUDING RSA public-key handshake... as if user<->kernel transitions weren't already expensive enough. Etc.

Why are you consorting with people who buy music or videos? If you can't watch Lost because you can't get a copy without DRM that's a problem with you, not the OS...
-Hirudin
If Microsoft and The MediaTM had their way, there would be NO content that wasn't DRM'ed. Not speaking up against it and following the lemmings will bring us there. I very much like being able to rip my audio CDs (especially once I get hold of a SqueezeBox), and copying movies to a harddrive and streaming across the network is nice as well - why change dvd when doing a simpsons or futurama marathon with your friends, when you can just press 'next'?

Since when is searching on your own computer so important?
-Hirudin
I do it all the time - I'm not even close to having decent organization of my files :-[. Good thing there's locate32. And no, while conceptually smart, I've never gotten to like any of those desktop searches with their meta info.

It sure is lame they removed the cool new FAT/NTFS/whatever thing they hyped the shit out of at the beginning! Of course, Linux is barely catching up with NTFS, I guess Linux users should be rejoicing...
-Hirudin
I'm glad they removed the database filesystem thing... not needed for most people, very expensive to have running, and replaced by the desktop searched anyway.

Btw, while it's a big old lie that you never need to defrag linux filesystems, there's a couple of okay ones there. Conservative but safe ext3 (which can journal not only fs metadata like ntfs, but also file data!), promising XFS, and in-it's-infancy-but-ungodly-cool ZFS (originating from Solaris).

Is the stream of consciousness thing working for anyone else? No? I'll shut up now.
-Hirudin
Works fine for me, just hope people don't mind the evolution(?) of the thread :)
7332
Living Room / Re: Microsoft is Dead
« Last post by f0dder on April 11, 2007, 04:10 AM »
Heh, that "linuxisbetter" page is pretty retarded. It has some decent points, but there's just sooo much wrong with it. But that's a topic of it's own.
7333
Living Room / Re: Microsoft is Dead
« Last post by f0dder on April 11, 2007, 03:39 AM »
Better start distributing the SSRIs. :)

I think this a lot of people would get a hefty serotonin boost if Microsoft went bust, so wouldn't it be irresponsible to also feed them with re-uptake inhibitors? You might as well throw in some MAO blockers while you're at it, then :P
7334
General Software Discussion / Re: Quizo QTTabbar
« Last post by f0dder on April 11, 2007, 03:34 AM »
I guess there aren't any comments since most of us that would use this kind of extended functionality have already moved to an explorer replacement... after having used xplorer^2 for a while, old explorer.exe just seems so slow and clumsy :)
7335
Aero is completely HW accelerated and uses your GPU for all the effects.
-MrCrispy
Funny thing is that it feels no faster than the XP gui... but people tend to forget that GDI has been hardware accelerated for ages, even if not using superfancy 3d.

As for services, I use dto do that with XP, but in the end its just not worth it, IMO. Anything which is not getting used is simply going to be paged out, and will not affect the system.
-MrCrispy
It's better not to load in the first place, than having to page out. Paging out = writing to disk = slow. Also, reducing unnecessary services can mean a faster system boot (even with all the fancy features for faster booting added in vista).

Even on my XP box, I've set the VMWare and PerfectDisk services to manual load, since I don't run these programs very often... shaves some time off booting, and saves about 30 megs of physical memory (not a lot compared to the 2gig I got in my system, perhaps, but it's still 30 megs that can be used for other stuff).
7336
General Software Discussion / Re: Don't be fooled, Vista wants new hardware
« Last post by f0dder on April 10, 2007, 12:59 AM »
btw, Vista uses a lot of RAM due to SuperFetch. You don't want memory lying unused anyway. Most of the slowdown comes from the indexing as well as the constant drm and integrity checks that Vista keeps running.
-MrCrispy
Unused RAM is wasted RAM, sure thing, that's what the BSD folks have been going by for ages. I'm not sure SuperFetch is the only reason why Vista swallows a lot of RAM, though... the point is that you should adapt to the amount of available RAM - even XP runs pretty well with 512meg.

I don't think the Linux or OS X revolution is going to happen anytime soon, so sooner or later I'll probably be forced to go the Vista route. With blackbox, explorer^2 and some manual tweaking, it might just be bearable. I'm going to hate the crappy new save-as dialogs and whatnot, though >_<.

Again, it's pretty sad they messed all the gui parts up so much, added all the drm crap, and made the system so hardware greedy for no reason at all - a lot of aspects about the kernel changes sound pretty nice.

zridling: try having a look at SlickEdit for linux, it's appearantly the bee's knee's. I find the UI pretty ugly though, enough that I'm never going to appreciate it's power. Or whatever.
7337
Ah, my bad... I can't think of a place where actual flipping would be useful, so I thought you meant rotate. For some reason I overlooked the "sometimes through a mirror" part :-[

The hardware is certainly capable of doing it, but I haven't seen any driver support for it, sorry.
7338
Mini-Reviews by Members / Re: Mini-Review of Print2Flash (Virtual Printer)
« Last post by f0dder on April 09, 2007, 08:57 AM »
It might be an idea to move the "What is Print2Flash?" section to the very top of the review... other than that, great work :)
7339
Living Room / Re: Infected file in system32 folder?
« Last post by f0dder on April 08, 2007, 04:28 PM »
Iirc, you can usually rename (but not delete!) in-use files. Try rebooting your machine and see whether server.exe is re-created or not, or whether you get any weird error messages...
7340
Living Room / Re: Infected file in system32 folder?
« Last post by f0dder on April 08, 2007, 03:34 PM »
Not present on my XP SP2...

Which windows version are you running, and how is it connected to the internet? (Most important: are you behind a NAT'ing router that does not forward all traffic by default to your box?)
7341
General Software Discussion / Re: Don't be fooled, Vista wants new hardware
« Last post by f0dder on April 08, 2007, 10:36 AM »
Windows classic is available, yeah, but MS (and all the fanboys) were promoting Aero as super slick and super fast.

I'm not crying about lack of drivers etc., if I had been doing that I would have mentioned how games seem to drop 10-15fps in performance as compared to XP... I certainly do hope that's just a driver issue.

32-bit x86 isn't really limited to 4GB of ram, but it requires special OS (and application) support to utilize more in 32bit mode, and you still only have a 32bit address space, where you must map "windows" (hah!) of memory.

I'll certainly stick to XP as long as I can, might give Vista another go once they get SP1 or SP2 out. I just hope games won't be going DX10-only for a while.

Tweaking Vista is, at the moment, way more bother than it'll be worth, especially until drivers mature, and somebody finds a way to disable all the DRM and additional driver signing crap. There's some good work in progress, but it's not all the way there yet.

7342
Developer's Corner / Re: Wanted: Best Practices for changelogs/version history
« Last post by f0dder on April 08, 2007, 07:10 AM »
I still haven't found "The Proper WayTM", so I'd certainly also like to hear what other people do :)

But what I try to do is...

- commit relatively often to subversion, at least when you've implemented a new feature or fixed a bug. I don't like committing non-working builds, but I do it if I need to go somewhere where I might work on the code.
- come up with a safely grep-able style for your commit messages, so version history can be extracted. Haven't settled on anything, but you'll probably want a way to identify at least bugfix and added feature. Helps if you use one line per item, and depend on wordwrap (ie, don't split manually).
- document every relevant change in your commit messages. "Fixed whitespace" isn't relevant, "factored foo() into bar() and baz()" could be.

Also, what kind of changelog you want to build obviously depends on the target audience. An end-user won't care if there's been some code interface changes, but a (programmer) user of a component surely will.
7343
General Software Discussion / Re: Don't be fooled, Vista wants new hardware
« Last post by f0dder on April 08, 2007, 07:05 AM »
Heh, "completely impartial" should probably be "fascistly biased" instead. But at least I did run it on real hardware and spent a few hours with it. Also keep in mind that other people have far higher sluggishness threshold than I do, and thus might be able to accept Vista.
7344
Hm, nvidia really ought to be able to flip... "inverted landscape (180 degree rotation)". Seems to work just fine on my GF7600, and it worked fine on my GF6600 as well. Same with my old radeon9600.

Just beware, when doing rotation on nVidia hardware, operations on the rotated monitor feel a lot slower than when not rotated. Not like hardware acceleration if fully turned off, but definitely laggy. On ATi, operations still feel snappy.
7345
General Software Discussion / Re: Don't be fooled, Vista wants new hardware
« Last post by f0dder on April 08, 2007, 06:50 AM »
I installed Vista on my AMD64x2 4400+, 2gig ram, GeForce 7600GT system... on a 2x160 GB raid-stripe that's "plenty fast". Following Microsoft's WOW!!!!1111 campaign, here goes:

1) WOW, it still has to reboot multiple times during installation.
2) WOW, screen flickers and displays weird characters, then goes blank for extended periods during installation, but unlike 2k and xp installs, there's no warning about this.
3) WOW, it boots almost as fast as XP after installation.
4) WOW, in spite of the hardware-accelerated GUI, it feels no faster/smoother than XP (and some system apps are even slower, because of the way their UI is done).
5) WOW, applications start up slower than on XP (might improve after running it for X days because of prefetching and whatnot, but still lame that initial speed is bad).
6) WOW, IE7 and the new explorer in Vista are slow compared to IE6 and old explorer.
7) WOW, the Aero interface and flip 3d are useless.
8) WOW, it took five minutes from inserting an usb flash drive until Vista would let me access it.
9) WOW, the UAC is annoying.
10) WOW, it's even more hype and less value than I imagined.

Too bad, really. There's supposedly some pretty decent changes in the kernel (like I/O priorities), but everything gets bogged down by the most heavy and useless GUI that Microsoft has come up with to date. Yay. When the base OS doesn't fly on the hardware mentioned above, something went really, really, really sour.
7346
Hm, I thought that standard version of dbPoweramp was free? (Although the mp3 encoder might not be free - heh). The Reference version is what you'll want, though - combining C2 error pointer, FUA support, and AccurateRip means you can rip at darn high speeds and still be confident about the results.
7347
Living Room / Re: nintendo wii
« Last post by f0dder on April 08, 2007, 06:38 AM »
I unfortunately don't have a Wii myself, but I was visiting my younger brothers, who bought one. Unfortunately they haven't bought any games yet (cheapskates!), but it ships with "Wii sports" which is pretty funny.

Dunno if the browser is Opera, I wouldn't be very surprised if it is - but didn't look closer. Works sorta okay, although it doesn't support everything IE and FF does. You can watch youtube and play a few flash things though, so that's cool enough.

I don't know the specs of the console, but it's a good deal lower than PS3 and XBOX360 from what I gather. That doesn't really matter though, as long as it gets all the really cool and interesting niche games, that don't sell only on graphics :)
7348
Living Room / Re: Drawing with 2 mice
« Last post by f0dder on April 08, 2007, 06:34 AM »
Well, it wouldn't be too hard hacking in support for "fancy touchytouchy screens" in separate apps, but this would be without the device showing up a as a regular "pointing device" in Windows... that would take quite some redesign.

It would be nifty to be able to resize windows by "dragging two corners" at the same time and such :)
7349
Living Room / nintendo wii
« Last post by f0dder on April 05, 2007, 07:48 PM »
just a little note to say dc.com works fine from the wii browser... but damn tedious without a keyboard ;-)
7350
General Software Discussion / Re: Virtual Drive Pro
« Last post by f0dder on April 05, 2007, 10:38 AM »
You really shouldn't install those toolbars and whatnot that comes "optional" with a lot of applications these days... adware, bloatware, useless, etc.
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