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9126
Post New Requests Here / Re: IDEA: Backup and open file
« Last post by Renegade on November 20, 2010, 10:56 PM »
Just peeking in here...

Not sure if this is the kind of thing you'd need but here goes...

A program that takes the Excel file association, backs up the file when passed to it, then passes the original Excel file on to Excel. Basically, just intercepting the file.
9128
Living Room / Re: Advice on portable dedicated GPS devices?
« Last post by Renegade on November 20, 2010, 10:42 PM »
I hope this is helpful for you... I've written a bit about some of my own experiences.

TomTom XXL 540S Review

Garmin nĂ¼vi

I am currently using the Garmin 3790T. I like it. But, it plots some stupid routes sometimes.

Now, I must say that in retrospect, I was harsh on the TomTom.

The TomTom actually outperforms the Garmin in several areas. Generally, it plots better routes than the Garmin.

Still, the slowness of the TomTom and it's inability to plot some routes and it's confusing interface make it unsuitable for use by itself for me. I find it dangerous in some situations.

Now that I have several months of usage with both the TomTom XXL 540S and the Garmin 3790T, I can say that I think one of the problems is the actual map data. It seems like it's just far inferior to the map data you get in North America. This kind of makes sense as Australia is a smaller market, so I can see less effort being put in there. I would then forgive the TomTom and the Garmin for some of their idiocy in route planning.

In North America, I used 2 GPS devices: an SUV built in model, and a Garmin. Both were spot on in all navigation with good route planning.

I've used a Garmin in Malaysia with free map data. It was difficult to get used to and difficult to use because the map itself and the layout of Kuala Lumpur are simply complete disasters. If you've ever driven in KL, it's a big spaghetti disaster on the highways and freeways. You end up with 5 turn-offs on the left all within 100 m or so (literally), and can't react in time to read the map properly and look where you are going -- you miss your turn and take the wrong one. I don't really blame the Garmin unit for that.

The 3790T is beautiful. You don't even need to look at it. Its voice instructions are solid and you can navigate by them alone pretty much. With the TomTom XXL 540S if you try that, you'll instantaneously get lost. I mean that literally. You'll get lost immediately. If you listen to it, you'll end up turning all the time far before you need to. It instructs you to turn when the turn is 2 km ahead or 1.2 km ahead (depending on your speed).

I'd say go for the 3790T as it's the best unit available right now, and you're unlikely to find anything that performs better. I would however worry about the ads. You may be able to purchase the service to avoid ads. Not sure. (I was SHOCKED to hear that. It's bloody dangerous!)

Anyways, I hope that helps.

I should stop screwing around now and get back to work! :)
9129
Living Room / Re: The conflict of interest that is Google
« Last post by Renegade on November 20, 2010, 10:24 PM »
Oshyan makes a good point about Google ads not be intrusive. (And a lot more as well, though I'm pressed for time at the moment.)

I think the problem, as far as I can see it is that you get ads in email or in places where they are looking at your content that they maybe shouldn't be. e.g. You get a confidential email with sensitive material and get an ad about it, like "Need to bury a body? Visit www.buryabody.com today!" :) Well, that's a stretch, but you get the idea. Google then knows that you need to bury a body, which is something that you'd probably rather them not know. Or any for that matter. :D

But I certainly agree that Google is one of the best behaved large corporations around.

Monsanto is nothing short of pure, unmitigated evil. They have senators and high-ranking government officials in their pockets to help them do their bidding (former Monsanto employees/directors/executive/etc.).

Google is NOTHING like them in the least. Google promotes freedom in so many ways. Android is an excellent example of how they are promoting open systems. Gotta give credit where it is due.

Still, I share mouser's reservations over a company dedicated to organizing all the world's information. It just seems dangerous to me.

Dynamite is safe to handle if you're careful, but there's always a risk. Seems like that to me.
9130
Living Room / Re: Are "you" "your friend"?
« Last post by Renegade on November 20, 2010, 09:58 PM »
My English teacher always subtracted one full point out of a maximum of 10 (A+) for every (grammatical) mistake in each of his tests. Against that I learned the language, so I feel that I have put in a lot more effort to learn than a lot of native speakers. A waste if you ask me, but hey...get of my lawn!   

Heh! I had teachers like that! :) They really do their students a good service by cracking the whip.

This is something that's rather sad - that so many people never learn to speak their own language properly. :(
9131
Living Room / Re: The conflict of interest that is Google
« Last post by Renegade on November 20, 2010, 07:29 AM »
I really don't understand why there can't be a neutral position. That's what I'm trying to take here. Trying to be objective and stick to facts, evidence, and reason. Like I said, I like what Google provides me, but I'm not blind to its issues nor the simple reality that it is a large corporation and, existing in the US capitalist system, it will naturally tend toward certain negative behaviors.

At the same time I don't want to take the position that big automatically equals bad, or that anyone (or anything) who is successful must be regulated, reduced, resisted, removed for fear of abuse. Excellence should be rewarded, and that's certainly how Google started out. If that's no longer the case, then things should change over time, but I still find Google's search and other services to be pretty much top of the heap. If nobody has solved the spam problem yet, it's hard to be mad at Google alone for that.

- Oshyan

I think you're referring to CodeTRUCKER's comment there.

If you accept the historical premises there, then you are forced to take a position. If you reject it, then you aren't. The historical perspective pretty much mandates a heavy dose of skepticism as an agent rises to power.

The two perspectives/actions (from the historical perspective above) are to "open your eyes" or "bury your head in the sand".

If you reject that historical perspective, it just doesn't matter. Those two perspectives/actions are then irrelevant.

In a purely logical world (well, in a certain logical system -- the scientific method that is to be exact), future events are stochastic, and as such, rejection of the historical perspective is rational.

However, remember that the scientific method is exactly that: a method. It is not a prescription for reality or belief. Those underlying fundamentals, or metaphysics, come prior to the scientific method. Some metaphysics preclude the scientific method, where most people's metaphysical beliefs include the scientific method as part.

This is commonly seen in those astrophysicists and cosmologists that you hear about on the cutting edge of science when they have a strong belief in god/God.

However, you cannot get from the scientific method to the historical perspective as outlined above because it precludes the possibility of repeatability. Instead, you are left with philosophical thought experiments. Don't discount philosophy there. Some of the most important concepts in science come from thought experiments. Perhaps one of the most famous of those being Schrodinger's cat.

Grrr... Getting me all worked up again in logic~! :P


It is very hard to have things clear cut though.

Even if you accept some perspectives, you can assign a weighting to them for how they affect your belief system, and if other perspectives are prioritized higher or lower.

Imagine you're a Catholic, vegetarian (for ethical reasons), historian planning to invest in a company for your retirement fund. You're unlikely to invest in Monsanto because of your vegetarian ethical stance. Your background in history may have some influence there, while you being Catholic is likely to be irrelevant to the decision.

Outlining these kinds of belief systems is very important for deeper debate into some issues.

Again, imagine you are a devout, strict Buddhist. That alone would likely prevent you from investing in Monsanto.

If you're more moderate, you're less likely to care and more prone to invest in Monsanto.

We find ourselves along sliding scales in belief systems that contribute to our decisions and other beliefs. Sometimes we are forced to abandon beliefs. Sometimes we develop new ones.



And I managed to entirely avoid politics there, though I did manage to sneak in some religion~! :P (Just messing around~!)
9132
Developer's Corner / Re: Best way to get user count?
« Last post by Renegade on November 20, 2010, 05:52 AM »
I hate to be pessimistic, but to be honest, I think that leaving it as OPT OUT is actually the better way. I don't believe that privacy concerns are really all that important. While we'd like to think that, the truth is that privacy is basically gone now, and clinging to principles is idealistic and naive.

I'm not saying that I'm not idealistic and naive. I have a hard time with the issue myself.

What does also work is to simply use an autoupdater that includes a unique ID. Many many methods to do it.

A "Tip of the Day" screen can pull in an updated version.
A news feed can pull in RSS/XML and update a ticker in the UI.
An info ticker can do the same.
Offering dynamic discounts through a get/post to your site works well to boost sales AND accomplishes the same thing. Tagging the discount with a custom purchase code lets you do complete tracking with many more benefits.

etc. etc. etc.

9133
Living Room / Re: Getting an HTC Desire HD -- Android Phone
« Last post by Renegade on November 20, 2010, 04:09 AM »
Yeah, you've got a point. The current state of battery technology is pretty pathetic considering the advances everywhere else.
9134
Living Room / Re: Desktop Linux: The dream is dead
« Last post by Renegade on November 20, 2010, 03:50 AM »
Tell me where you think I am wrong.  This is fun looking into the future where we can come back in 5 years and see how close we were in guessing the tides. :D

No argument here. :)

It will be interesting to see how fast it happens.
9135
Living Room / Re: Getting an HTC Desire HD -- Android Phone
« Last post by Renegade on November 20, 2010, 01:01 AM »
Heh, heh, Renegade. You get more phone calls (and make more) thank I do!

Yowsers! You really don't use it much at all then! Why would you even get a phone at that rate~? :P :D
9136
Living Room / Re: The conflict of interest that is Google
« Last post by Renegade on November 20, 2010, 12:57 AM »
remember our no-politics policy.. let's not let this thread get too far down the politics hole.

Sorry. It wasn't my intention to make things political. I wanted to outline the background that underlies the topic.
9137
Living Room / Re: The conflict of interest that is Google
« Last post by Renegade on November 20, 2010, 12:34 AM »
Unfortunately, this debate can only have two perspectives.  There can be no neutral position, so take your pick...

   or   

[Edit - Nice post, Renegade.  I really hope history does not repeat itself.  :( ]

Thanks. :)

One of the frustrating things for me is it all just seems trivially obvious.

Another source of frustration for me is Americans that don't understand what the right to bear arms is about. It's not about protecting yourself from some burglar... It's about protecting yourself from an oppressive state. It's really not that hard to understand. States throughout history have banned weapons for that reason and that reason alone -- they didn't want uprisings.

While I'm not American (though I am North American :) ), I appreciate and admire the US constitution and how the country was formed. It's an amazing story. It's sad to see it being flushed down the toilet though. Too many people just don't know their history lessons. :(

Sigh... No hope... ;(
9138
Living Room / Re: The conflict of interest that is Google
« Last post by Renegade on November 19, 2010, 11:51 PM »
First, let me preface this post by saying that I am reluctant to make this comparison, but it simply is the best one because so many people are familiar with it in-depth. Yes... I'm going into Godwin territory... (This will only be political, and not address the holocaust.)


I also want to make it clear that I am using these examples to set the stage as they form background information for the topic at hand.



The rise of the Nazi party is well documented. Hitler's seizure of power follows small steps that progress towards his ultimate take over of the Reichstag and his ascension to power as dictator.

If you watch the first 3 episodes of Star Wars (I, II, III), Palpatine follows the same basic steps in his rise to Emperor. i.e. This is a familiar theme that is repeated in story telling.

So we fully understand the path where a perceived crisis leads to a solution that erodes some kind of freedom.

Thomas Hobbes wrote the definitive work on this with The Leviathan. He outlines exactly how crises in nature lead us to surrender freedoms to a "sovereign".

This theme is echoed by John Locke as well in his "social contract".

There are many, many, many more works in non-fiction and in history about this exact procession.



I'm not stating anything that isn't well documented.



DIGRESSION TO CURRENT STATE OF AFFAIRS IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

Now, when you look at the state of affairs in the USA over the past 40 years or so, you see a clear trend where the "terrorism" theme is introduced in the 1970's, expanded in the 1980's, ingrained in the consciousness of the public in the 1990's and beginning there, used to slowly erode freedoms until 2001 when "911" is used to polarize the public and introduce legislation that effectively gives the government carte blanche to do whatever they want.

The most recent developments are the TSA conducting "enhanced body searches" which really equate to sexual assault. Please search on this topic for further information. There's lots out there along with a massive public backlash over it.

However, history shows us that backlashes like that against the TSA are short lived by the public in many cases. They have only to keep it up until people tire of fighting against it. China is a good example of the same basic process where dissidents are marginalized and suppressed until the public at large surrenders.

Another example of the erosion of basic freedoms in in how current legislation is on the table to make it illegal for US residents to grow food or use seeds that their gardens produce.

You pretty much need to be brain-dead to not understand that making it illegal for people to grow food is bad. But that is what is happening right now...


WHAT DOES THIS HAVE TO DO WITH GOOGLE?

The analogy here is that governments are merely "agents" in the philosophical sense of the word, and that companies are also "agents". "Agents" normally includes humans as agents as well, but for the purposes here we only look at organizational agents. Note that a king, queen or emperor would also be an agent in the same sense in that they are institutions in and of themselves even though they are confined to a single individual. (Incidentally, this concept of agency is well presented in the TV series "Merlin" when you look at Arthur's father and his attitudes towards the monarchy/throne.)

However, you need to look at more recent history to see the same themes played out. The British East India Company. Exxon Mobile. AT&T. Standard Oil. Microsoft (<2003~5). Monsanto. The list goes on and on and on. The problem there is that these stories are not rally ingrained in the popular consciousness the way in which the Nazi example is. Still, they bear all the same signs of the rise to power.



ABOUT US HERE AT DONATIONCODER

Now, we focus on Google and technology topics here, but the same issues exist elsewhere and they do not differ significantly other than in the names of the companies and the names of the individuals involved. That is, they are all playing out the "Star Wars" theme of the rise to power (the same theme discussed by Thomas Hobbes, Niccolo Machiavelli, John Locke, and countless others).

If we were all farmers instead of techies, we would be having the exact same discussion, but instead of Google, we would be discussing Monsanto. (However, Monsanto truly is much more evil than Google because they are further under the radar than Google is.)


WHAT CODETRUCKER IS POINTING OUT...

CodeTRUCKER has neatly pointed out that we have sufficient historical precedent to genuinely have concerns over what is happening in Mountain View (and Dublin as that's where they funnel their money through).



CodeTRUCKER, you are 100% right on the money.
9139
Living Room / Re: The conflict of interest that is Google
« Last post by Renegade on November 19, 2010, 11:16 PM »
My apologies for double posting, but I did not want this to get lost.

Historical precedent demands that any discussion of information aggrandizement and control by an entity as large as Google must encompass the lessons of history.  I am not prophesying this will occur within any specific time frame, but please consider the ramifications of the inevitable "what if" when the vast power and resources are usurped by a future non-benevolent government?  This is the real "inconvenient truth."

+1

While it may sound like a conspiracy as CodeTRUCKER has mentioned, I went on briefly about this in another post.

You do NOT need to believe in conspiracies and you do not need to be paranoid to follow the logic that there are patterns in history and that they are repeated. All that says is that humans behave in ways that are somewhat predictable.

South Park went on about this in their episode parodying Tiger Woods and his affairs. Give a man huge amounts of success and money, and he'll start cavorting around with as many women as he can. It's not rocket science. It happens. It's pretty predictable in a probabilistic way.

We only need to look at those "super-powers" like Google, Apple, Microsoft, and the like (which would include oil companies, pharmaceutical companies, agri-business companies like Monsanto) and then look back in history and find analogs to them. There are far too many analogies in history to ignore.

We can say look at this, this, this, this, this, this, and THIS example in history and how they are all very similar to the present.

Machiavelli wrote about this in detail. Guess what? He was right. He described how things really work.






(Continued in another post because I don't want to pollute this one with what I'm about to write...)
9140
Living Room / Re: Getting an HTC Desire HD -- Android Phone
« Last post by Renegade on November 19, 2010, 10:59 PM »
My battery life is entirely dependent on how much I use the display. Nothing is even close to it for how much power it uses.

So if I'm playing games or whatever, it only lasts a few hours. However, if I'm not really using it, it's got lots enough power for a full day. I've not really paid too much attention there though and can't say exactly how much standby power it has. I don't really use my phone all that much. If I have 10 phone calls in a month, that's a lot. I use Skype more to talk as I don't really talk to anyone in Australia at all. My last several voice calls have been to a friend in Korea (several), my sister in Qatar (once), my wife in Vietnam (several), and to tech support and sales for my servers (several). None were on my phone. I use an Internet phone as well for talking to people in Korea as it costs me almost nothing.

I'm kind of not really the best person to talk to for a lot of information on battery life. I only really know that games and whatever uses the display takes a lot of power. Standby seems ok for me, but no detailed opinion there.
9141
Living Room / Re: The conflict of interest that is Google
« Last post by Renegade on November 19, 2010, 09:39 PM »
Part of the outrage against Google is that many years ago, when the Internet was yet young, a rebel group defied the "man" by declaring that they would serve up search results that were based on relevance, and not self-interest. Moreover, they declared that they would "do no evil" as their competitors did... We bought that. We supported them. We believed.

Now, years later, our belief and trust has been betrayed.
9142
Living Room / Re: Getting an HTC Desire HD -- Android Phone
« Last post by Renegade on November 19, 2010, 11:04 AM »
I have noticed that my HTC Desire HD battery does drain quickly. Well, it's better than other phones I've had anyways.

For the metal detector in iOS, I was going on what the developer of the metal detector that I have was saying. I've not looked for a metal detector for the iPhone. I just trusted that he knew what he was talking about. (Could be dated before iOS 4 too. Dunno.)

9143
Living Room / Re: Fake Coffee Shop in China (NSFW) (Can you guess?)
« Last post by Renegade on November 19, 2010, 09:51 AM »
I guess it it a nice joke, but likely fake.  Why would anybody in China add "p@@n queen" to the mermaid?

Meh... Fake or not, it's funny~!

And fake would only be wonderfully ironic~! :P
9144
Living Room / Re: GPS Unit Recommendations?
« Last post by Renegade on November 19, 2010, 07:59 AM »
There's also OpenStreetMap with software for various platforms.

Wow. Impressive.

Check these:

http://www.openstree...zoom=15&layers=M
http://maps.google.c...79,0.014548&z=16

Which has more detail? Surprising...

Well, Google outlines buildings, but that's not really important anyways.
9145
Living Room / Re: GPS Unit Recommendations?
« Last post by Renegade on November 19, 2010, 07:51 AM »
@y0himba

WOW. Just WOW. That's reason enough to buy one of their products.

When I find a vendor/dealer/retailer/whatever that treats me well, I go back, and usually rave about them to a few people. :)

It's good to hear stories like that.
9146
Living Room / Re: Still holding out, won't join Facebook
« Last post by Renegade on November 19, 2010, 05:02 AM »
I only add people that I know, or family friends that know me, or something like that. :)

I don't have a huge list of friends.

The biggest danger for me is that someone would be offended by one of my off the wall posts, and unfriend me. :)
9147
General Software Discussion / Re: Why the aversion to .NET Frameworks?
« Last post by Renegade on November 19, 2010, 02:51 AM »
Meh... Dunno. I suppose it's a matter of opinion. You can use an IDE to drag and drop for web development with PHP as well.

I think the web in general offers a lower barrier to entry than other kinds of development. I think that lowers the barrier for PHP as well.

Like here's an HTML page:

Code: HTML [Select]
  1.  

Just save that with an HTML extension and you have the first step to hello world. And here's hello world in HTML:

Code: HTML [Select]
  1. Hello world!

And the super-complex version of hello world:

Code: HTML [Select]
  1. <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
  2.  <head>
  3.   <title> Hello world! </title>
  4.  </head>
  5.  
  6.  <body>
  7.   <p>Hello world!</p>
  8.  </body>
  9. </html>

HTML is basically the lowest barrier to entry. The next logical step from it is CSS, JavaScript, and then a scripting language or server side processing technology like PHP. :)

Now, I think ASP offers a lower barrier than PHP because it's easier, but not really anymore as it's obsolete. The real option is PHP.

Here's hello world in PHP:

Code: HTML [Select]
  1. Hello world!

;)

And the complex versions:

Code: PHP [Select]
  1. <?php
  2. Print "Hello, World!";
  3. ?>


Code: PHP (brief) [Select]
  1. <?php
  2. Echo "Hello, World!";
  3. ?>



Code: PHP [Select]
  1. <?php
  2. $hello = "Hello";
  3. $world = "world!";
  4. print "$hello $world";
  5. ?>

Code: PHP [Select]
  1. <?php
  2. $hello = "Hello";
  3. $world = "world!";
  4. echo("$hello $world");
  5. ?>

And the super complex one! :)

Code: PHP [Select]
  1. <?php
  2. $hello = "Hello";
  3. $world = "world!";
  4. print $hello." ".$world;
  5. ?>

Echo. Print. Man... They just can't make up their minds, can they? :P

(Funny how you can't even get through hello world without issues.)

Mind you, hello world always looks trivial. :)

But, whatever. They're both pretty easy. (I find VB.NET syntax is actually easier than PHP though.)


9148
Living Room / Re: Desktop Linux: The dream is dead
« Last post by Renegade on November 19, 2010, 12:30 AM »
I probably exaggerated a bit... Or maybe a lot. :)

Mono has an entire framework along with it. So you don't have to mess around with finding parts here and there. It's also a large project with a community to back it up, and a massive larger C# community. You don't get that with RealBasic, although RealBasic still offers a viable cross-platform solution.

Java, well, it's probably much better than before, but it ended up being write once, break everywhere. I don't know if it's viable on the desktop. Someone that knows more would do better to comment on it. Just from what I've seen though, I can't see opting for Java. It just seems like all the Java stuff out there is server and enterprise stuff. Cross-platform isn't really so much of an issue in server environments because you need to commit to the server in a very deep way, unlike the way in which you commit to a desktop, which is rather shallow by comparison.

C/C++... Sigh... Well, it's a toolkit issue there. Qt might be ok. The last time I tried to work with it I just got frustrated and gave up. I just kept running into issues again and again.

I suppose that my main concern is getting things done fast and easy and keeping productivity high. C/C++ just doesn't do that for me. It just seems that everything takes so long to get done. The point of cross-platform is so that you reduce the amount of work that you have to do. I'm just not a big C fan.

I suppose it's the framework that comes with Mono that I find so attractive. It gives you so much for so little effort.


You've got a point there about IT people paying for software. We kind of cut our own throats in a lot of ways. Some things we'll pay for, and other things we simply won't spend a dime on. That makes some markets non-viable and others very profitable.

I buy components all the time. I don't buy a lot of other kinds of software. Quite often I end up programming my own software to get a job done. Those things I rarely ever release though. They sit and rot on a hard drive and I never look at them again, or rarely.
9149
Living Room / Fake Coffee Shop in China (NSFW) (Can you guess?)
« Last post by Renegade on November 19, 2010, 12:00 AM »
A Chinese friend of mine forwarded this to me:

StarFucks.jpg

LOL~!

I just couldn't help myself:

Trademark-infringement.jpg

:D

I had to pass it on~!
9150
Living Room / Re: GPS Unit Recommendations?
« Last post by Renegade on November 18, 2010, 09:05 PM »
Where did you read that?

Amazon

Be aware, he is in the US of A and as such the licensing arrangements may be more anal than Australia.
 (see attachment in previous post)
Also, you could just disable the Traffic Alerts or move to another country ;)

Well, given that if you want to travel by air in the US, you may very well end up being sexually assaulted:

http://www.google.co...t+down&tbs=nws:1
http://www.walb.com/...story.asp?S=13533166
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40193344

And very soon if you have a garden in the backyard, you could go to prison:

http://www.naturalne...ation_Act_seeds.html

And... Well... I think that's enough. Fly with vegetables that you grow and you'll be sexually assaulted then thrown in prison. :P

Maybe moving to another country isn't a bad idea~! :P
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