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Recent Posts

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9726
On a personal note, I have to question whether newspapers et al even serve us anymore, they give such a huge distorted image of the world are they doing more harm than good?

When I got to Australia, I just about died at how absolutely pathetic the news papers and TV news is here. It's a joke.

From every news channel I've seen, I'd have to say the 2 best are Al Jazeera and the Chinese CNTV news. The reporting is much more balanced than drivel like CNN. I was surprised, so I fully expect a few people here will be as well. But seriously, if you can get those channels, watch them. You will get a much better perspective on the world than the same 5 stories replayed for a week that you get on CNN. (They also beat the BBC by miles, and the BBC even makes CNN look like rotting vegetables.)
9727
Living Room / Re: [HELP REQUEST] Please quickly review my new Twitter client
« Last post by Renegade on June 09, 2010, 11:52 PM »
I was unable to resist fixing the problem. It's uploaded now. :)
9728
Living Room / Re: [HELP REQUEST] Please quickly review my new Twitter client
« Last post by Renegade on June 09, 2010, 10:30 PM »
@lanux128 - For the preference not being stored, I'll have to look into that. Unfortunately, I have about a weeks worth of work to do before I can get to that (because whenever I revisit a project, I end up doing 10x more than I set out to do). I'll see if I can "take a break" from my other software tasks and get it done earlier though.


Now if your client allows for Twitter users to filter and find posts and reply to them while maintaining the same level in everything else, it all fits.

When you remove a component of what makes Twitter function though, it's more like a Twitter broadcaster but it can only be considered a client in the barest sense of the word.

Exactly. It is only supposed to be the absolute barest minimum functionality for Twitter -- i.e. to tweet. Not more as that would increase the cost to use the program in terms of time and effort on the part of the user. You're exactly right in that it is supposed to be a Twitter broadcaster.

Now, if I were to add in any additional functionality from Twitter...

Without a way to at least discover @replies and respond to DMs, this program can't fully fulfill the qualities of a "client" and so as a reviewer, it's a hard line that needs to be drawn somewhere in order to at least be a review.

I see what you mean. My goal was to have the most basic and simplest core functionality of Twitter, i.e. tweeting, but the use of the term "client" implied more.

True but since you have a url shortener built in, you are kind of sending a message that a browser still has to be opened.

The point there is somewhat different from what you're thinking, I believe. The point of the program (and shortener) is to allow you to tweet from "inside" of the browser without leaving the page (the program is always on top and small enough so as to not obscure a web page). So, from the page that you're reading, you can copy a link, hit CTRL + ALT + S (or B) and tweet while still reading the page. You don't need to switch tabs.

I regularly have 30, 40, 50+ tabs open in my browser, so switching between tabs takes more than the time it takes to switch to the program and tweet, which is not productive.

So yes, you're still likely to be using a browser. The point of the program is to not get between you using the browser and tweeting -- it's supposed to be some grease to make tweeting from whatever you're doing smoother and easier.

Thank-you very much for the feedback there, Paul. I'll be re-thinking it later on and seeing if I can figure out a way to keep it extremely minimalistic and get some more functionality into it. (I've got a few tricks ready that I think may work well to make it even smaller.)


9729
Thanks for getting us back on track, Edvard (and sorry for hijacking your thread). I got so carried away about "the-headline-that-shall-go-unmentioned" that I didn't even read the original article to which you linke  :-[ I have done so now... totally agree with Renegade that this is the most worrisome implication of what the author is saying:

Most dangerous of all, the FTC considers a doctrine of "proprietary facts," as if anyone should gain the right to restrict the flow of information just as the information is opening it up. Copyright law protects the presentation of news but no one owns facts -- and if anyone did, you could be forbidden from sharing them. How does that serve free speech?

It's a slippery slope coming out of IP law. 100 years ago you still had copyright laws and patent laws, but if you talked about "owning" facts as in "Philip farted in the president's face but Terrence took the blame", you'd be laughed at for the sheer insanity of it.

However, consider that you can basically take a mathematical theorem, attach named significance to the variables in the equations for it, and get a patent on that... Now... You've just "patented" a well known mathematical formula.

It isn't a stretch any longer to "patent" or "copyright" or "own" facts.

I want to own 1+1=2, a^2+b^2=c^2, 1=1, (a+b) + c = a+b+c, modus ponens, modus tollens, you use your lungs to breathe air, you poop through your bum,  Europe is a continent, politicians are wankers, and a few other handy little "facts".

From there I will build my empire upon the work of others and enslave all of humanity. Because I AM Techo Destructo and I'm from beyond Venus, beyond Jupiter, and that's way past Uranus, buddy... :P
9730
Living Room / Re: Reasons to be Afraid of Driving in China
« Last post by Renegade on June 08, 2010, 09:28 PM »
Walkman (by Sony) ... because sometimes your dumbass need to be run over.

Come on, the guy just standing in the middle of the street was asking for it. :)

Do you mean the guy where the car very very slowly creeps up to him before it hits him? That one I thought was hilarious.
9731
Living Room / Re: [HELP REQUEST] Please quickly review my new Twitter client
« Last post by Renegade on June 08, 2010, 09:26 PM »
i have another feature request for T4: auto-insert clipboard contents when launching for the 1st time or toggling into view after being hidden.

I'm not sure that will really have much additional value. There's hotkey for Paste (CTRL + ALT + V), so if you're using the keyboard to control it, the extra step isn't much. I'd have to add in another menu item there, which I'm reluctant to do right now. Do you really think it would be that useful?

Ok, first off, my apologies if this is coming off very harsh.

This is less about insulting the quality of the program and more about in comparison to the expectations set forth by other clients prior to Triple T.

:) I've got thick skin. :)

I understand that the client is trying to go the opposite direction of more complicated clients but the problem is that the other clients weren't really complicated programs.

The problem I found was that they take up too much screen real estate and weren't "Always on top". I wanted something that I could tweet quickly and just leave there without any real effort.

Second, the infrastructure of the whole program go against the claim of simplicity.

I'm not sure what you mean here. .NET? Something else? It's meant to simply sit there unobtrusively and let you tweet quickly and easily. Not more. Not less. I don't know how it's not a simple infrastructure.

I personally hate the text size and icon size of the Adobe Air programs and the way they need to be configured out of a certain background but the advantage coming from those programs are that they often make the application cross-platform and that they are "discovery" clients which helps give a different feel to actually visiting Twitter.

I don't really know what you mean. I made the font slightly larger (although it is configurable) in order to give it visibility and readability on larger screen resolutions. It's 12pt Segoe UI.

I don't know if this falls under .Net hate and frankly I was never concerned much about that requirement to begin with but a simple program like this begs the question whether the .Net requirement is really necessary or even if it's detrimental to the image of simplicity this program claims to be.

After all, it's an extra step to a very under-powered client.

.NET 4.0 was unnecessary. I could have easily done it in .NET 2.0, but I wanted to just play around with .NET 4.0 and have a quick look at it. If I were to take the program very seriously, I would have done it in .NET 2.0, and that would be invisible to virtually everyone as .NET penetration there is extremely high.

Basically, it was me just killing 2 birds with 1 stone to save time.

It's also very easy nowadays to right click on Google Chrome and create an application shortcut to send you right into a Twitter page and sure you may lose the power of url shorteners but it's not like the program auto-converts the url for you and some of us don't use Bit.Ly when there are even shorter url shorteners out there.

Browsers are cumbersome and take up screen real estate. I wanted to avoid a browser at all costs as they are just slow. Using a mouse is also very slow, and using TAB to get into the right input field in a browser is extremely time consuming.

But it does convert URLs if you want it to. I thought it would be presumptuous to have it do it automatically. (CTRL + ALT + U)

At the end of the day though, the program fails because it doesn't simplify the process for Twitter users.

Twitter users especially the busy ones are primarily discussion seekers. They are not as much bothered by how to broadcast a tweet as much as they fear missing out on a participating in a popular discussion or finding an interesting link and commenting on it while it's hot.

This isn't to say they want an all-in-one complex as molasses product but it is like designing a program around the mindset of Facebook users but doing it for Twitter instead when most of the needs of those using Twitter are different.

I think you have different expectations than what the program sets out to do.

The program is not supposed to be for "Twitter users" at all. It's for "people that want to tweet", but couldn't be bothered to put in any effort.

It's a subtle difference, but an important one. Twitter users will tweet anyways. This isn't for them. This is for the guy that would like to tweet, but just can't be bothered to fart around with a browser and clicking and signing in and tabbing, and clicking in input fields and clicking a Submit button. This is for the guy that wants to type and tweet, and not anything more than that.

Again, I hope this isn't interpreted as an attack and I'm not saying no one will find this useful at all. I'm just mostly sharing this as a "quick review" and I have no personal agenda against a Twitter client but even more so, I'm actually very interested in another free competing Twitter client since I'm not totally satisfied by Seesmic/Tweetdeck/Twitwhirl or whatever new leader in Twitter clients I haven't heard of that mostly copies the feature of the previous programs.

That said, I don't think the program as is is a lost cause.

Not at all. :)

If I'm guessing right, I think that what you were sort of expecting would be best done as a browser plug-in.

I think there are many people out there who is precisely looking for a program like this only for Gmail. (Post notes - sent to GMAIL) and even though this isn't what Plurk users fully want, the lack of Twitter like ui for Plurk and Plurk clients may make a similar program for Plurk appealing.

Does Plurk have many users? This is the first I've heard of it.

As for Gmail, it would be drop dead simple to do, but I don't really see a point to it as it's using Gmail for what amounts to a highly-specialized, odd use for it. There are better ways to store notes.

Finally a seemingly shallow quirk but I think an equally important one: The name needs to be simpler. It's going to be very hard to search for that Twitter client at the tip of your tongue if you're thinking and getting Alice in Wonderland results from Google.

The name is meant to be long and humorous as a contrast to the shortness and ease of the program itself.

At the end of the day, it's a very small program, with a specialized purpose, and not a major product. I don't plan on putting any real marketing effort into it. It will never be massively popular, and will never make me rich or famous.

To frame the program in a different perspective, it solves a specific "pain-point". Take for example my DNN Keep Alive program; it solves a very specific problem on a small scale.

In planning software, my approach is to find a pain-point, then solve it. Very little of what I actually write ever gets released (most of my pain-points are extremely esoteric and have no broad consumer/corporate appeal). The pain-point that T3 solves is specific, and obviously not for everyone. I decided to make it available as I figured that there would be enough people like me with that specific concern to make it worthwhile.

To be honest, I simply wouldn't tweet at all without it. Other clients were simply too large or complicated, and I refuse to use a browser for it. (I find browsers are rather clunky things -- they try to be everything to everyone and fall short quite often.)

Anyways, I hope that puts some perspective on what the program is supposed to do.
9732
Over the top is a nice way to understate things... 260,000 documents? YIKES! And he was bragging about it!
9733
Living Room / Reasons to be Afraid of Driving in China
« Last post by Renegade on June 08, 2010, 07:34 PM »
This was sent to me by a friend and is hilarious in a twisted sort of way:

WARNING - This involves traffic accidents, and while it is not "graphic", portions may be upsetting to some as there are bicyclists, motorcyclists, and pedestrians involved.



The funny parts are when you see people slowly going along and they manage to get into an accident with a million miles of warning. Deer in headlights type stuff. Like, "Oh my god, that's the road... and that's NOT the road... Maybe I should drive there..."
9734
Living Room / Re: Is a college education worth the money?
« Last post by Renegade on June 07, 2010, 10:50 PM »
No, it's not worth it.  But, yes, you have to have it.  So in a roundabout way, I suppose it is worth it.  I've recently been very sensitive to how overeducated we are getting.  It's far too much money being spent for too little practical good coming out of it.  All the good reasons for getting advanced degrees have nothing to do with the actual education content.  And that is a problem.  You still have to do it if you want to be comfortable, but it's a problem.

Some people here have said to have a plan.  Yes, please!  hAVE A FREAKING PLAN!  The earlier you figure out a plan, the better. My most successful friends had a leg up because they were able to come up with very solid plans way back in high school.  And you know why?  Because they had parents who were CEO's and they fed them the cold hard truth.  I don't mean they forced them to do anything.  But they were able to help them understand things that most of us don't figure out until 20 years into a job.  That kind of wisdom.  That kind of generational knowledge is by far, by far, by far the most powerful factor in success.  That's why the rich get richer.

Now, if you know that stuff early on, you will be able to know exactly HOW to get the education.  It's a matter of How, not if. 

AMEN~!

Very well stated. (I wanted to emphasize just how much I agree with you, but thought 110pt fonts were maybe a bit overkill. :) )

That's probably some of the absolute most valuable information anyone can have early on. For those of us that are 20 years into careers, it's really less valuable as we've come to see that now, and there's nothing we can do about our childhood or upbringing. Hindsight... sigh...
9735
from the tinfoil hat department

This is the problem, it isn't tinfoil hat stuff. This is very, sickeningly, repulsively real!

Most dangerous of all, the FTC considers a doctrine of "proprietary facts," as if anyone should gain the right to restrict the flow of information just as the information is opening it up. Copyright law protects the presentation of news but no one owns facts -- and if anyone did, you could be forbidden from sharing them. How does that serve free speech?

Ummm... Please just shoot me now...
9736
My bad attitude towards Apple comes not from their products, and not from their "experience", but from their abusive business practices and malicious licensing agreements.
Well, yeah, of course.  In no way am I defending all things Apple.  I'm quietly asking other companies to start taking UI seriously so that I can have my cake and eat it to!

YUM YUM~! :P

When you start looking at things, the lack of attention to UI is simply astounding.

Take for example any ecommerce web site or site that you must provide personal details when you sign up. How many can actually process a phone number properly? Or a postal code? Like, if I enter "+61-123-456-789", and I get an error telling me that I can only use numbers, i.e. the expected input is "61123456789", just how pathetic is that?

The same goes for credit card numbers. If you input "4567 8901 2345 6789" and you get an error telling you spaces aren't allowed... Wow. To me that is just the height of incompetence. Why not just remove the spaces and make the user's life easy? Like, on the credit card, it has a space, right? So entering the space makes sense... or is at least plausible enough to warrant attention by the developer.

Lack of attention to UI is epidemic. On the web, that lack of attention (to my eye) is overwhelmingly in web developers not doing basic error checking in a sensible way.

I want Star Trek replicators (not Stargate replicators) and I want them now~! :D
9737
app103, I only understood 2 words in your post...

...iTunes... malware...

And I agree 110%~! :D
9738
...But if you go into an Apple store, you'll feel very comfy and excited.  Don't lie.  Even all you haters...I know you've walked into an Apple store and had fun trying out the gadgets.  Don't lie!!

Hahahaha~!

I was quite happy when I got my first iPod. Then I was a bit miffed when it wouldn't play WAV files properly. No matter. I chalked it up to typical CE laziness.

My bad attitude towards Apple comes not from their products, and not from their "experience", but from their abusive business practices and malicious licensing agreements.

If they ran their business in a fair and ethical manner, I would really have no objections to them. Of course I would still LOATHE the fanboys! :P

In all fairness, my perceptions of Apple products are coloured by my mostly irrational hatred of them.

But you're absolutely right about UIs and functionality.
9739
Living Room / Re: Saturn's moon Titan could host Aliens
« Last post by Renegade on June 06, 2010, 11:21 PM »
What I don't get is why they aren't passing out tinfoil hats for us as protection~! :P
9740
I wonder how long it would be before people just started hanging up on people that are too cheap to spend the dime to make a phone call. I would. Ad? Ooops. We got disconnec...
9741
Living Room / Re: Honestly, who here actually owns an iPad? be honest!
« Last post by Renegade on June 06, 2010, 09:11 PM »
You may not be able to, though. Apple apparently has limited the number that you can own. They only accept credit cards to purchase one, and they keep track of WHO owns them. Privacy implications aside, it's really a dick move to pull.

this is getting too, quote Alice, "Curiouser and curiouser!".. ;D

Totally off topic, but that's absolutely one of my favorite books! Definitely in my top 10, and likely top 5. :)

Now that's glory for you~! :P
9742
Living Room / Re: Honestly, who here actually owns an iPad? be honest!
« Last post by Renegade on June 06, 2010, 08:54 PM »
Okay, you got me. I was just trying to be in the cool crowd with the Apple bashing going on here. I own three iPads.

They're just so smurfing awesome and useful! I can't stand the idea of not having one in the bathroom, so I'm looking at getting a fourth. :-* :-* :-* :-* :-* :-*

Hahahaha~! :)

You may not be able to, though. Apple apparently has limited the number that you can own. They only accept credit cards to purchase one, and they keep track of WHO owns them. Privacy implications aside, it's really a dick move to pull.


9743
Renegade and mouser have noted it well, but another element in Apple's continued success is that their entire fanbase consists of early adopters. In their string of gadget wonders, every one of them fell from the tree pre-sold to the salivating masses.

And never underestimate the allure of the user interface. You feel "cool" using it, being in the presence of their icons and dialogs. I don't get it because I've always seen the computer as a tool, not a toy, for utility, not play. But Apple focuses on the playful aspect of computer. I urge every one of you to go into one of the Apple stores the next time you're in a city that has one. It's an "experience" all right, a cult one. But it's entirely built -- in my opinion -- to separate upper middle class 40-somethings from their credit cards. If you buy into the "experience," you will want to spend $4,700 before you walk out.

If you're like me, however, you can think of a million better ways to spend $4,700, and pride yourself on using Linux and not wasting it on an underpowered, locked-down machine or device.

I think that you're pointing out something interesting here.

I find that Ubuntu and Suse are nicer to use than OS X, so in some ways, I think that coolness factor could rub off there. It seems to me that there's a lack of ability for Linux distros to communicate that coolness though. I suppose that is Apple's magic where they make themselves cool.

9744
Living Room / Re: The Ever-Evolving Question of Privacy
« Last post by Renegade on June 06, 2010, 07:30 PM »
^I'm not "crying conspiracy." I'm simply making an observation that this particular issue is a lot less serious and deliberate that some people are making it out to be. And the recent spate of actions on the part of many governments to violate their own laws (all in the name if security) constitutes a much larger and mire serious threat.

And far be it from me to defend Google. I was never a big fan of theirs.

But it should be pointed out that Google could be shut down tomorrow by any government that felt Google was exceeding it's legal sphere of activity. The same could not be said of governments should they exceed their constitutional authority.

Just my tuppence. :) 

+40 for 40Hz! :D

I would go so far as to say that there are no governments that do not exceed their mandate to govern.

I need only cite separation of church and state. Marriage is a holy institution. Civil union is the unholy, errr... I mean the secular version of marriage. Why does the state have any say in marriage? It is out of its domain. (This obviously goes to situations like gay marriage, etc. Gay "marriage" is a matter of religion, and not a concern for the state.) But I don't want to raise those issues here -- only point out a clear case where the state has overstepped its mandate to GOVERN.

In a similarly cynical vein, take the roles of organizations in general... Why is it that while other organizations generally are deemed to succeed when they increase operational efficiency, profits, throughput/output, and other key business indicators, governments on the other had only succeed when they become bloated, inefficient, money pits? e.g. Greece where 1 in 10 people work in civil service (about 5% of the population).

It's not corporations like Google that we really need to fear. It's government, and moreover, bad/poor government.

9745
Living Room / Re: Honestly, who here actually owns an iPad? be honest!
« Last post by Renegade on June 06, 2010, 07:14 PM »
I have one of these.
-cranioscopical (June 06, 2010, 11:49 AM)

Muahahahaah~! That's awesome~! :P :D

9746
If so, then why do so many non Apple people that I personally know 'get it' as far as the iPad is concerned?  It's not a cult thing- it's a usability thing.  I know a guy who already has a Kindle, a Zune, a non iPhone, a netbook... and was not going to get an iPad.  He had no intentions.

Then he used it.  Now he has one.

And I've seen that story over and over again.  Indeed, as I said, I plan to get one myself.

There are cult-ish Apple afficionados just as there are cult-ish windows people, etc.  But if you can market to the non-cult members, doesn't that say that there might be something more than you're seeing from the surface?

I think that you are indirectly pointing out that pathetic portion of the population (of which I am part) that we call 'technophiles'. We buy just about anything, for any reason, at any time. I have software licenses that I have never used. I have gadgets that I have never used. Yes. I even own Apple products too!

It's a compulsion. We need help~!
9747
I think Apple has the touchscreen done better so far.

I'm wondering why you think so. Apple's version of "multi-touch" means 2 points. Microsoft has had more than 2 points for quite some time. They've had multi-user multi-touch. Granted, Apple is the posterboy for popular consumer electronics.
9748
p.s. i hate Apple. so much.

Hahahaha~! :D

I suppose that it's really no surprise that so many people loathe Apple around here. The Apple marketing machine basically spits venom in your face if you don't use a Mac. It's insulting.

On the Apple site, they try to sell you on a mac by mentioning PC and Windows no less than 12x.

Mac-PC-apple-ads.jpg

Ahem... Who's got a small
NSFW
penis

?
9749
I think that there is a fundamental difference between companies like Apple and Sony.

Sony is a consumer electronics company.

Apple is a religion cult.

Seriously.

Apple is very far from being the innovator that the fanboys tout it to be. Apple is good at 1 thing, and 1 thing only. It takes good ideas that failed, repackages them in a super-sexy outfit, then pimps them out to its followers.

The tablet isn't new. The iPad is just a tablet with better marketing to the Cult of Apple followers, and those that are wannabe cult members.

The iPod was very far from revolutionary. Apple merely packaged a half-assed piece of hardware (the iPod cannot even play WAV files properly without crashing -- I have test files THAT WERE PRODUCED ON A MAC if anyone wants to try...) with a sexy interface, hooked it up to a store that rapes its customers with some of the most obscene EULA terms in the industry, breaks all those sales with crippling DRM, and touts is all as something God would be proud of. The same obscene EULA terms have been around for a long time in spyware, adware, and other unseemly products. The store itself is one of the worst implementations of an ecommerce system that I've ever seen. The single click purchasing has been around for a long time. The poor format support has been seen in other players. Rich format support like you get in COWON players will never be seen in the iPod, because COWON is all about providing a superior product to consumers, while Apple is about seeing just how much money they can squeeze from their customers.

The big consumer electronics companies are too conservative to try major marketing offensives that could alter their brand image. They have reputations that they need to consider. Apple doesn't have that worry because their design skills are simply outstanding and their fanboys take up the slack in evangelizing how Apple can do no wrong.

Microsoft is unlikely to ever pull off anything remotely like Apple because they are a platform company. They are not a religion/cult.

Apple's modus operandi is to find an existing market that is highly profitable and create 1 product with 3 configurations that is simply a stunning piece of work to look at, and then market the hell out of it as the cure for cancer, or in Apple-speak, "revolutionary".

OS X is nothing more than a BSD with some sexy tweaks that fails to bring the user-friendliness of Windows to the UNIX world. It is not "revolutionary". It is easy to do SIMPLE things on, but that's it. If you're not capable of doing anything beyond surfing the net and emailing, then OS X is a great choice. If you want to do much more, then you need to learn UNIX. How is that "revolutionary"?

BACK TO THE OP:

Other companies are always in the market before Apple. Apple doesn't lead in any market. None. Not a single one.

COWON had MP3 players/PMPs that far outdo the iPod in every way long before the iPod came out.

The iTouch is far below the iPaq. No comparison. The iTouch is way outclassed in every way.

The iPhone has no advantage over any high-end smartphone. It has only disadvantages compared to Android phones.

The iPhone display technology is far from new. Microsoft has had better technology for years.

The iPad is an oversized mobile phone without the phone. For feature sets or possibilities, it is really very far behind other tablets. It's just "sexy" because that is what Apple does -- the make things sexy.

*IF* (and that is a BIG IF) Apple is innovating something truly new or pioneering a new market, it is in aesthetics, and not in functionality or feature-sets.

Sony can't pull off what Apple does because it's not a technology issue. It's a brand issue. Apple has the cult following for its brand that no other consumer electronics company has. It's unique. The closest thing to it is Google and how Google gets people oogling over it. No other company that I can think of has anything like that kind of loyalty. I suppose there are "Coke" and "Pepsi" loyalists (and the like), but to me that seems a bit different.

Sigh... I simply cannot resist ranting about Apple... :( Stop tempting me~! :P :)

9750
Living Room / Re: Honestly, who here actually owns an iPad? be honest!
« Last post by Renegade on June 06, 2010, 02:55 AM »
Nope. Not going to either. Unless I am forced to write iPad software...

But for Apple... I just bought another TV show episode through iTunes... and I feel seriously very dirty when I do. I honestly feel like I just paid a prostitute or something. I don't know just how dirty I would feel if I bought an iPad.
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