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Viperstryker's Home of Imaginary Thoughts

Posts tagged with "windows"

ObjectDock awesome-ness

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I found out this awesome little shortcut that anyone that may read this that happens to use ObjectDock may love (like I now do). I managed to find this shortcut out on accident, while playing World of Warcraft, I ALT + Tab'd out to open my Shortcuts folder (Think of the "Applications" folder on a Mac) and was accidentally holding CTRL while clicking on the icon. Upon my surprise, it brought up a right-click style pop-up with all the contents of the folder (all the shortcuts in one nice little menu). So, if you want to try this yourself, put a folder on your dock, and CTRL + Left-Click it to see what I mean.

Here is a screenshot of what mine looks like when I do it:

The best anti virus is...

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This is all a matter of opinion. Sure, McAffe and Norton Desktop products have a bad rep. But some ones that have better status are Norton Corporate (if you try to say ALL Norton products are junk, well then ignorance is bliss.), NOD32, and Zone Alarm/Kaspersky.

None of the "better" ones mentioned above are better than one another, they will do the same job at finding things. If you try to say "Norton didn't find this!!!11!!" then you may want to also note that others won't find things that Norton will.

Honestly, you aren't going to find "the" best anti virus, it's which are good, and which aren't.

As for your computer running "smoother" and "faster", of course it will, you are uninstalling a program that is ALWAYS running. Think about that.

I will be one of the very few that will go unbiased on Anti Virus, most are resource hogs, and uneffective. But I will list several products that I know are good.

I don't mean to put anyone down for their opinion, but most people just go by word of mouth and not investigating what they hear.

Some good anti virus/anti spyware products are:
Windows Live OneCare
Zone Alarm Security Suite Professional
Kaspersky
ESET NOD32
Symantec (Norton) Corporate 10.1 (2k/xp/2003) / 10.2 (Vista/2008)



This is a post I made on a forum about anti virus. This is one of the first real posts I've made in a while and thought I did a good job, so I now share it with you.

zomgwtfbbq part 3

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On Friday I reinstalled Ubuntu, but with a different goal in mind then last time. This time, it was to get set up, fix any problems I ran into, and see if I could get everything working correctly. As of today, I can say that 99% of it is working perfectly.

I started off only using my secondary video card because it is an nVidia chip unlike my main card, an ATi Radeon 9250 (because we all know Linux works better with nVidia). My wireless card didn't have drivers for it, so I downloaded ndiswrapper on my Windows partition and got my wireless drivers for Windows. I got the Windows drivers because TRENDnet doesn't make Linux drivers, and the purpose of ndiswrapper is to be able to use Windows drivers for Linux network devices (eg: a wireless card). Once I setup my internet with my now functional wireless card, I downloaded EnvyNG and downloaded the newest drivers for my nVidia GeForce MX 4 graphics card. Upon rebooting my computer after the installation of my new video drivers, I noticed Compiz was running. This is a bad thing, seeing as I was going to enable it anyway.

The next thing I did was get my audio working correctly (yes, audio barely works correctly, if at all out-of-the-box). I started off by reading a tutorial on the Ubuntu Forums on how to change your output from eSound to ALSA. This forum thread explained what to do, and gave a script to use so you can have multiple applications use audio at the same time (which you'd think should be standard, right?). After doing so, everything seemed to be working good as can be. Now, pulseaudio does crash every now and again (*cough* during Skype phone calls *cough*), but it's running good besides that. The last thing I did was replace my default audio mixer with KMix (seeing as it doesn't have spasms like Gnome Volume Controller does).

Then the fun part came, application installing! The only thing I had to compile from source was my alarm clock applet, which came as a surprise. One of the first things installed of course was Opera, which isn't as stable as it is on Windows, but still runs good. Then I ran Pidgin (no need to install, it comes with Ubuntu) and set it up (I was a Pidgin user on Windows as well, so it was an easy transition). Then, came time to get and setup an IRC client. This isn't as easy as it sounds seeing as how I am a huge mIRC fan (enough of a fan to write his own modified version). I decided to go with XChat because mIRC isn't very stable when run under WINE, and everything else is either too much or too little. Another easy transition for me was from Winamp to amaroK. Now I did use a lot of the little known features of Winamp, but they weren't that hard to let go seeing as I used amaroK when I was using Winamp a year or so ago on my Gateway). Then came VLC Media Player, uTorrent (yes, I still refuse to use anything else, Linux or not), Photoshop CS2, and Skype.

I still hit the occasional hiccup in pulseaudio, and Opera crashes more, but it's bearable. I've changed my nVidia GeForce MX 4 card with a GeForce 6220, which runs so much smoother. And as of now I'm using Ubuntu as my primary install, I don't know how long it will last, but as of now, It's primary. As for anyone looking to jump into Linux, don't expect it to be a walk in the park, you'll realize that a lot of mainstream software, and your "favorite" software isn't ported to Linux. And be ready to learn how to use the terminal, it's not a nightmare, but it's out of the usual for a typical user.

zomgwtfbbq

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Today the experiment begins, I will be only using my Linux partition until next Saturday. This may seem like no big deal, but I am a huge Windows person. While I do like Linux, I always find myself going back to Windows. So this should be an interesting week.

noo ofice iz brek blakbox

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So I've finally found a fix for bbLeanSkin that forced a border on Office 2007.

Adding this to your exceptions.rc (%blackboxdir%\plugins\bbLeanSkin\exceptions.rc) will remove the bbLeanSkin border from it.

# Office 2007
WWLIB.DLL
OUTLOOK.EXE
EXCEL.EXE
POWERPNT.EXE

in soviet russia, cute ftps YOU

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I've recently been using GlobalSCAPE's CuteFTP Professional (trial) and would like to share my thoughts about it with you. If you don't happen to know what CuteFTP, or an FTP client is, it is simply an application used to access an FTP server. You may be thinking "Well, Internet Explorer/Konqueror/Safari does that, doesn't it?" The answer to that is yes, they do. However, an FTP client has far more functionality than a web browser does (at least, most do).

When I did the initial configuration of CuteFTP, one feature that really stood out was the "Site Manager" feature. This feature lets you have a "one click connect" per say to an FTP site. While other clients do have the dropdown quick connect box (as does CuteFTP), just clicking a button that is right there instead of choosing from the dropdown box is simply easier (and quicker) to do. A couple other features I noticed were tabbed sessions (so I could connect to multiple server simultaneously), quick connect (so I don't have to save an FTP site just to connect to it), and the click and drag interface (which several other FTP clients I've used did have multiple panes, but no drag and drop).

As for the stability of the application, all I can say is that it is excellent. I've had several problems with SmartFTP and IglooFTP not fully transferring a file and randomly disconnecting. I have not had CuteFTP crash a single time within the trial, which is more than I can say for most software. And if you happen to be a very picky preferences person, you will have a field day with CuteFTP's preferences. If you are a just a casual FTP user, or new to it, you'll be glad to know that you won't have to touch the preferences menu if you don't want to. One thing I found that put people on the fence about buying the software was the price tag. While $59 may seem like a lot, if you are going to get heavy into FTP, or looking for a permanent replacement for your current client, the price tag is worth it.

If you are looking for a quick pro/con list, here it is.

Positive:
  • Stable
  • Maintains a good connection
  • File transfers maintain their integrity
  • Support for both Windows and Mac OS X
  • Highly flexible settings
  • Site Manager for keeping tabs on your favorite FTP servers
  • Drag and Drop file transfers
  • Security (SSL, SSH, etc)
  • Folder Synchronization


Negative:
  • No official support for *nix
  • Intimidating preferences menu