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9176
Living Room / Re: Sexual harassment taken too far...
« Last post by 40hz on May 20, 2010, 05:36 AM »
^Agree.

Unfortunately (in the USA at least) the 'facts' as presented in this story are often deemed sufficient enough 'proof' to hang someone out to dry.

Even sadder is how often it happens.

It's such a common story that I doubt it would have even made the news if it weren't for the part about the fruit bats.
 :-\  
9177
Living Room / Re: Sexual harassment taken too far...
« Last post by 40hz on May 19, 2010, 05:49 PM »
I agree completely that sexual harassment is a minefield that's too easily abused. And of course without more details it'd be impossible to ever know the truth, but something about the circumstances as they're being reported has me leaning towards him being a slime-ball rather than her crying wolf.

All the statements about previous behaviors come from the same person making the original complaint.

Not to dismiss the fact harassment occurs in the workplace, but Dr. Kennedy (as victim) can't also act as her own supporting witness. Assertions don't equal facts. And feelings don't constitute proofs. And that remains true no matter what anybody's 'gut feeling' may be telling them.  

 Unless it's in that special court where Judge Kangaroo bangs the gavel.  ;)
9178
Living Room / Re: What annoys you to no end?
« Last post by 40hz on May 18, 2010, 05:27 PM »
My pet annoyance: People who jump to a conclusion about why someone or something is the way they/it are, and then they proceed to go and judge or get annoyed over that reasoning even though it never existed outside of their own minds.

[edit] And my pet annoyance 2: Everyone suffering from Morton’s Demon.



Just give them a copy of this article and call them in the morning:

Cognitive Biases - A Visual Study Guide by the Royal Society of Account Planning

Link: http://www.scribd.co...of-Account-Planning#


With thanks to Lifehacker.com for the find.

Link: http://lifehacker.co...skyline=true&s=i

You make decisions every day based on false assumptions about other people, immediate pay-offs, your memory versus imagination, and familiarity versus fondness, just to name a few. Want to learn more about your mind's crazy decision engine? This illustrated guide can help.

This multi-page illustrated treatise on cognitive biases, hosted at Scribd and embedded below, does a fantastic job of translating the stuff of college textbooks and all-too-brief Wikipedia explanations into lunch break reading. Digging through it might make you afraid of how your mind works, or send you on a journey to think a bit more about how you arrive at what you decide.

 :Thmbsup:
9179
Living Room / Re: How to build website for article repository?
« Last post by 40hz on May 18, 2010, 01:41 PM »
Semi-OT (Feel free to ignore.)

Spoiler
Each one is a recap of a Laker game.

Be interesting to see if the Lakers management decides to go after it for publishing their "copyrighted" content.

If they do, just let them know it's a "BS threat" - and furthermore you know that it is.


Interesting article over at TechDirt about this issue:

Link: http://www.techdirt....904/0304256103.shtml

MLB Refuses To Give Permission To Guy To Describe Game To A Friend
from the expressed-written-permission dept

A couple years ago, law professor Wendy Seltzer used the NFL as an example of sports leagues performing copyfraud, by claiming copyright control beyond what is allowed by law. Specifically, she was talking about the warning mentioned at some point during every game. For the NFL it was: "This telecast is copyrighted by the NFL for the private use of our audience. Any other use of this telecast or of any pictures, descriptions, or accounts of the game without the NFL's consent, is prohibited." In Seltzer's case, amazingly, the NFL sent a DMCA takedown of her posting that clip to YouTube -- giving her another "teachable moment" on copyright abuse.

And yet, sports leagues still continue the copyfraud. One of the fine folks over at Consumerist, Phil Villarreal, found the wording of Major League Baseball's warning quite questionable:

    "Any rebroadcast, retransmission, or account of this game, without the express written consent of Major League Baseball, is prohibited,"

Unlike the NFL one, at least it didn't say "descriptions," but "account" is pretty close. So, Villarreal contacted MLB to request "express written consent" to provide an "account" of the game he had watched to a friend. To its credit, MLB responded and asked him to call someone in its business development department... who (perhaps reasonably) thought it was a joke and did not provide the written consent (and stopped responding to calls and emails).

Now, obviously, this is a bit of a joke (and a funny one), but it does highlight a rather serious problem. Copyright holders are pretty regularly claiming significantly more rights than they actually hold over content, and many people simply assume that they can do this. This leads to them to think that they don't have basic rights concerning not just "fair use" but stuff that is obviously not covered by copyright, such as an "account of this game." There really should be sanctions against such copyfraud.

Now the $100,000 question becomes whether or not the hosting ISP knows this should someone come knocking with a DMCA take-down notice.

Note: The only reason I mention this is because I know somebody whose website had this very problem with a certain sports association following a series of highly critical articles about some of the refereeing during games leading up to the finals. Because these articles coincided with the games during the actual finals, this sports association argued they constituted a form of "play-by-play" reporting which is specifically prohibited by their rules for internet blogging and news reporting.

She successfully called the association's bluff, - but - not before her ISP shut her down for a week because they received a bogus take-down notice from them.

 :tellme:


9180
Living Room / Re: What annoys you to no end?
« Last post by 40hz on May 18, 2010, 12:46 PM »
On a related note - software products that provide the option to download the installer as either an EXE or a ZIP file - but where the ZIP file contains nothing but the same EXE file.

Umm...there's a thing called broadband, guys! Shaving 48K off a 3MB EXE file by zipping it is hardly worth the effort anymore.

 :P

9181
Living Room / Re: It's official: Steam is coming to Linux
« Last post by 40hz on May 15, 2010, 12:54 PM »
I think the bigger consequence will be all the Linux-savvy Windows users itching to jump ship...

Just out of curiosity - do you see many such people where you are?

I'm a big FOSS advocate and long time Linux user. But even so, I'm not so anxious to jump ship as I am about knowing there will be a place to jump to if it ever comes to that. And most of the savvy-NIXers I know are in the same boat. Our attitude is: Why pick when you can mix & match the best from both?

I'm running about 50% open and 50% Windows right now. (I was closer to 80% Linux prior to Win7.) So I see the future of Linux more in terms of being "co-adopted" rather than becoming a replacement for Windows. And I believe that will be the case as long as copies of Windows remain available.

Your thoughts? :)

9182
Living Room / Re: Identity Theft OFFLINE - Get ready to be VERY scared
« Last post by 40hz on May 15, 2010, 12:38 PM »
Thanks for enlightening me.  That does make perfect sense.   A ' delete ' button that would allow IT or management an easy way to clear the cache would be appropriate.

Yes it would.  :Thmbsup:

But it would probably cost them sixty lines of ROM code - and an extra $1 for the button to do it...

So they don't.  :-\

9183
Living Room / Re: Identity Theft OFFLINE - Get ready to be VERY scared
« Last post by 40hz on May 15, 2010, 12:33 PM »
These 'deleted' books, however, would remain on the shelves until somebody needed the space and got around to actually tossing them.
So much for those dewey-eyed librarians!
-cranioscopical (May 15, 2010, 12:27 PM)

Still...rumor has it they do it by the book. And in several different languages!!! :Thmbsup:
9184
Living Room / Re: Identity Theft OFFLINE - Get ready to be VERY scared
« Last post by 40hz on May 15, 2010, 12:08 PM »
^It's just caching the print jobs for network and print queue efficiency. Biggest advantage is that it eases network congestion because multi-copy print jobs get sent once rather than as many times as you need copies. It also frees up the sending PC by not making it's print manager keep polling the network to see if the office printer is ready to accept the job. In a small office, onboard RAM is usually sufficient to handle this function. But for large document or 'high traffic' situations, hard drives are (currently) a much less expensive and more efficient way to build a print queue.

Caching allows you to prioritize or delay print jobs. You can set your print job to run at a lower priority or after regular office hours if you want to. That way, the office football pool sheets don't get delayed because some dork in accounting is frantically rushing to get 5000 pages worth of subpoenaed financial data over to the SEC by close of business!

Caching also comes in handy when you have a paper jam. Most good printers (and copiers) have the ability to recover exactly where they left off. Nice for when you jam up on page 275 of a 280-page job and you don't want to resend and reprint the whole schmeer.

Another big advantage is it separates the print job queue from the actual print function. Network data flows at megabytes per second. Paper prints in pages per minute. Caching lets people pile jobs on the printer's drive, after which the print engine does its best to get it all done. (Often by working through lunch break and staying late.) It's an obvious idea when you think about it... Bosses have been doing the same thing to their employees since the dawn of bureaucracy.

---

Most copiers and printers don't maintain archives of files unless they're set up to do some sort of low-end "print on demand" function. Some offices will do that so they can generate paper forms and handout sheets as they need them. Much easier than having to hunt down a form somebody desperately needs when the office manager is out for the afternoon. Again!

So the fact these gadgets don't completely erase* old print jobs is a side effect rather than a feature - or a conspiracy. Think of it more like forgetting to shred paper documents before you put them in the dumpster.

 8)

-----

*Note: it's a pretty well known fact that most computer systems don't actually erase files when you tell them to. What they do is mark the disk sectors as being available for reuse by new saved files. If it were a library, that would be the equivalent of cleaning out old books by simply tossing the catalog card and telling everyone they were gone. These 'deleted' books, however, would remain on the shelves until somebody needed the space and got around to actually tossing them.

9185
^Definitely going to have to give ModX a try then.

Thanks for the heads-up.  :)
9186
Living Room / Re: Suggestions for a docking station?
« Last post by 40hz on May 14, 2010, 10:31 PM »
FWIW I really don't have much faith in any 3rd party docking station. I've had several clients who have tried Kensington and various other brands. In almost every case there were problems. The most common was that the laptop sporadically stopped responding to the mouse and/or keyboard and required a full reboot to get it back. Also several cases of unreliable network connections when using the RJ45 jack on the dock as opposed to the laptop itself.   

I've always had the best luck with the ones specifically made for the laptop by the original manufacturer. And it's usually a good idea to get the docking station when you get the laptop. That's because there's this bad habit some manufacturers have of discontinuing the docking station before they sell off all the laptops it's meant for. So if you wait too long, you're sometimes left S.O.L. Especially if you decide to get one 12 months after the fact.

Just my 2 cents.  :)
9187
General Software Discussion / Re: HowTo repair/replace tcpip.sys ?
« Last post by 40hz on May 14, 2010, 07:29 PM »
+1 w/ StoicJoker

I'm 99% positive it's a device driver causing the problem. If your NIC and modem drivers are up to date then also check your devices and see if there's an address or interrupt conflict.

From my experience, that error usually gets caused (in order of likelyhood) by:

Faulty or damaged drivers (90% of the time - and not just the ones you'd suspect. Loopy video drivers can also cause system wide oddball problems that go beyond video issues. The fact you got and improvement by cutting back on screen candy makes me wonder if this might be happening with your machine.)
 
Faulty hardware (usually intermittent)

Security software compatibility issues (varies by type and brand)
Faulty RAM module (very rare)

Luck! :Thmbsup:

 
9188
Living Room / Re: It's official: Steam is coming to Linux
« Last post by 40hz on May 14, 2010, 07:07 PM »
Nice to see Steam is looking farther down the road than some.

I'm not superhyped about the games per se. But what I am hoping for is better manufacturer sound and video card driver support since those guys usually go where the gamers are found. An unintended consequence perhaps if it comes to pass. But in this world, sometimes it's better to just take what you can get regardless of how it came.

Fingers crossed  :Thmbsup:

 
9189
^Absolutely! :Thmbsup:

The only thing that keeps half of us in this field is the fact it really is fun. It's even fun in those situations where it isn't.

How many things can you say that about? ;D

 
9190
What's the average type and size file that makes up your collection?

I'm guessing it's tons of relatively small files?
9191
Living Room / Re: The Psychology of the Sale
« Last post by 40hz on May 14, 2010, 05:16 PM »
The biggest problem I have with the concept of a "sale" is that it is a sale tactic that often gets elevated to the status of a strategy by businesses that have no sales strategy.

It's also been so overused that I think most people are wary of things that are flagged with the word "sale" unless they were already in  the market for the product in question.

So from a psychological perspective, the more critical factor would be the inciting incidents and thoughts that brought the prospect "to market" in the first place. And I don't think a sale is all that effective in bringing that about any more. People have become too aware of marketing tactics.

------

The other problem is that sales are usually 'repeat-limited effectives' which, in most cases, exhibit diminished returns with each subsequent use.

The first sale (or two) may spur an increase in revenue. But after that it either doesn't (bad!) - or it becomes a given (really bad!) that will stop people from shopping until they see it. Look at all the people that wait for the seasonal 'sales days' before they'll start shopping for something.

In the end a sale may even have the effect of turning a 'year round' business into a seasonal one, with the 'season' determined by when the "big annual sale" takes place.

The automotive market learned that lesson the hard way. Look how many potential Toyota customers will sit and wait nine or more months for the annual Toyotathon to take place before they even think about getting a car. There's Kabuki Theater at it's finest!

An even worse thing happened to Circuit City. They stocked up on large screen TVs, and then watched them sit in stock while potential customers played wait & see for the BIG SALE that didn't materialize until it was too late for Circuit City. CC overestimated customer interest and demand - and (more critically) the customers overestimated CC's ability to reduce it's prices.

In the end it turned into a game of who would blink first. A game which continued even into the final days of CC's store liquidation sales.

-------

In the end, "sales" are a tactic at best. And like all tactics, they're intrinsically manipulative - even if benignly so. They all depend on some level of surprise or customer innocence to be really effective. And that level of customer naivete is getting harder and harder to find.  Like the old western movie outlaw said: An ambush ain't no ambush if you know where the posse's waiting fer ya, Marshal. All ya gotta do is ride around em...

If businesses genuinely want to stop having to play head games and perform Kabiki dances* for their customers, all they have to do is stop playing those games in the first place.


Just my 2¢ (provided it's on sale!)  ;)
----

*`@mouser -  Loved the Kabuki metaphor. :greenclp: Was that yours?

9192
General Software Discussion / Re: Help me with MS Word styles
« Last post by 40hz on May 14, 2010, 03:10 PM »
Usually, Microsoft topics quickly deteriorate into a MS bashfest, or an open Office vs. MS thing, even if that has nothing to do with the subject.

That might be partly because Apple and "Darth Jobs" have finally come out of the closet as the new Evil Empire. They've demonized Microsoft (and everybody else) for so long they've become completely blind to the fact they're now more insular and arrogant than Microsoft ever dreamed of being.

"Battle not with monsters, lest ye become a monster, and if you gaze into the abyss, the abyss gazes also into you." -Friedrich Neitzsche

It's become so obvious that even Apple's biggest fanboys are having trouble keeping up the pretense it isn't true.

Suddenly Mr. Bill and 'Monkeyboy' Steve Balmer don't seem quite so bad in comparison. ;D

9193
Microsoft will give you a free 25GB Skydrive account. All you need is a free hotmail/live account to get it. If you need more space you can always just open a second account.

No raw FTP I'm afraid...but it's extremely reliable; has some nice file management and sharing features; and integrates very well with MS Office.

Price is right - and Microsoft won't be disappearing anytime soon.

Luck! :Thmbsup:  
9194
(i usually stop at "horror, what is that for a templating system" when i look at any cms)

+1 :Thmbsup:

Despite my fascination with CMS systems in general, I still pretty much "hand code" all my web pages and style sheets. Maybe it's because I don't do "news" type sites that are changing on an hourly basis - so I have the luxury of not having to rush to get my content up on the web.

I will, however, 'snap in' a blog or forum package if the site calls for one. (I'm not a complete masochist.  :mrgreen:) But for the landing and static pages, I still can't find anything that does exactly what I want enough of the time to lock into a full CMS solution.

Thankfully, I've done this long enough that I have pretty much perfected a workflow, file naming, and directory convention that works for me and my personal projects.

In a way, I'm very glad I did my first websites long before Dreamweaver and FrontPage were released. Learned an awful lot doing it by hand.

Fortunately, for those folks who do update early and often, there's always the CMS option.

 8)

---

Also +1 on WebSiteBaker. That's the one that seems to offer the most flexibility.


9195
General Software Discussion / Re: Help me with MS Word styles
« Last post by 40hz on May 14, 2010, 04:31 AM »
I'm pretty well respected at work...

And here. (I'd hire you.)  :)

9196
Living Room / Re: Drunk History Videos
« Last post by 40hz on May 13, 2010, 07:08 PM »
Zooey Deschanel is in on it? Now that I have to check out.  ;D
9197
General Software Discussion / Re: Help me with MS Word styles
« Last post by 40hz on May 13, 2010, 06:55 PM »
I don't mean to be rude, but...

Instead of telling me HOW to do this stuff or where to find information about it, could someone please instead just give me some templates that already have a bunch of styles for headings, numbering, bullets, etc. already customized nicely?

With the millions of Word users, there have to be some good templates out there.  But I can't find any on Google.  People have written long instructions and articles about how to do it, and how to understand it correctly.  But can you just provide the end result please??  I really don't care if I understand it or not, I just want something that works and that someone has already put in the time to create.

I can't tell if the templates aren't available because people don't want to share their work, or if nobody has actually done it, yet they just like to explain how it can be done.  The latter is a common thing i run into in work situations where you are trying to get something done.  People talk and talk, yap yap yap, forever like they know everything about everything.  But when it comes to actually DOING something, they seem to have a hard time with it.

No offense to anyone here, I love all the advice and help I receive here at DC, so this doesn't really apply here:

I've recently felt compelled to rant against certain forum habits.  There are a lot of forums out there, lots of questions being asked, lots of answers being given.  But occasionally, we're not necessarily looking for an explanation or an answer, we just want someone to give us the shortcut or the link to the place where the work is already done by someone else and we can just copy it or use it.  I know it sounds lazy, but it's really not.  It IS the answer.

I absolutely hate when the advice given is..."Just google it".  Or even more snarky is when people actually post the google link (with the search words already entered).  To me, that's being an a-hole.  Fortunately, this doesn't happen here, but everyone knows what I'm talking about!

Actually, this topic came up in a different thread where some people were complaining about the level of chattiness up on the forum.

Although most were careful to qualify their complaints in various ways, what it all came down to was this:

When they asked about something, they didn't want to get into a discussion - they just wanted an answer.

Countering this desire was another group of people that somebody characterized as having a more "academic" approach. For these people, the process and insights gained by mutually arriving at an answer were, in many cases, more valuable than the answer itself.

It was a classic example of goal oriented thinking locking horns with process oriented thinking.

There was some back and forth on the subject, but no easy resolution seemed to be forthcoming. Here's the link if anybody's interested: https://www.donation...ex.php?topic=22523.0

It's an important topic. So if anybody has any insights about this that they'd care to share, please bop on over and add your comments to the mix.

I think I may actually have a idea that could work for both the process and goal oriented constituencies. But I'm still in the process of figuring out how to best present it. (Anybody care to guess which group I'm usually in? :mrgreen:)

Anyway, I apologize for going semi-off topic.  But now that Aram has a ton of template info and examples to chew on, I figured he wouldn't mind.

Or at least not too much.  ;)

 :)

----------------------

P.S.  @kfitting - The Creating a Template article by John McGhie was absolutely superb. He's following the same design approach a savvy Quark or InDesign user would use. I was amazed. I had no idea how extensively Word's formatting capabilities had evolved and improved over the years. One of the best articles I ever read about Word.

Great find!!! :Thmbsup:
9198
Living Room / Re: Identity Theft OFFLINE - Get ready to be VERY scared
« Last post by 40hz on May 13, 2010, 05:26 PM »
^all you'd need is something that could run Darik's Boot & Nuke in autonuke mode. DBAN is tiny. It fits on a bootable floppy. So a small bit of ROM and a CPU would be all that's needed for the smarts.
 
 8)
9199
Apparently, this fixes my problem 9and it did!):
http://www.dougknox....esc/fix_xp_logon.htm

Ooooo....lucky man!

I'm guessing the driver that got installed for the fingerprint reader (IBM or Lenovo laptop by chance?) didn't include a necessary hook for the OEM modification (or replacement) of the standard MsGina.dll. Possibly even keyed to the specific type of reader hardware to help prevent you from doing exactly what you did.

But who really cares why? You got it working again - and all on your own. Good Man! :Thmbsup:

One day, I'm going to get myself in deep doo doo.

Probably. 

 ...unless you have a friend in IT that can re-ghost a machine AND keep his or her mouth shut about it afterwards.

No worries there, right? You seem like the sort of guy who makes friends pretty easily. ;D

9200
Living Room / Re: Identity Theft OFFLINE - Get ready to be VERY scared
« Last post by 40hz on May 13, 2010, 03:40 PM »
...and yes we wipe all our drives.
-Stoic Joker (May 13, 2010, 02:26 PM)

We're network integrators.

And we're very careful to wipe sensitive data off all our customer's drives too.

Sometimes even intentionally!  :Thmbsup:

Kidding...just kidding...  ;D
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