Raw dump...
By Eddieelcid73. Friday, September 16, 2005 1:53:22 PM
Kitchen sink Posted 31 Aug
Look- what percentage of the time we do spend rinsing dishes off or other activities with our hand in the water versus the amount of time we need boiling molten hot lava-like plastic melting heated water? I say the odds lean towards the former. That’s why I propose a safety catch of some sort to prevent you from getting scalded when doing the dishes but still allowing easy access to super hot water. I imagine something like a manual transmission safety measure preventing you from going into reverse-like turn all the way to hot then lift up and over? Or a button on the hot water knob; something that’s only visible after you’ve adjusted the temp all the way to the hot side.
I’ve seen several faucets advertised that have “heat limits”—but most I’ve seen are set/adjusted when you assemble the faucet.
I also know there are seperate hot water spouts available that already do this- but they are ugly, and often are too low/short to be of use. I also know you can probably adjust the water heater to a cooler setting… but then the scalding parties I have on the weekends would be boring waiting for the water to boil on the stove.
Night light toilet seat Posted 6 Sep
Wouldn’t it be nice if there was a light that was on the bottom of the toilet seat? Maybe it gets a capacitor charge or something from lifting the lid. I suppose it would only have to stay lit for a under a minute and be pretty faint.
update- I stand corrected. Nice job science:
http://www.the-gadgeteer.com/review/lavnav_motion_activated_toilet_night_light_review
Although- this looks suspect. I don’t know that I want to trust an adhesive- but I can’t think of a better idea yet. Also- I’m all for cleaning the toilets on a regular basis- but this changing batteries on my toilet does not seem like what I want to be doing. I’m curious how long they last.
DVD’s Posted 6 Sep
DVD’s are pretty darn sweet. They are small, clear, present a nice quality, I’m sure they’re cheaper to manufacture (or at least evolved to that point) than most mediums. I just don’t get CD’s and DVD’s. Why do we continue to present mediums that are exposed to the environment like that? I wish Sony MD’s would have caught on or something better came about. I’m tired of stopping my DVD’s that I rent to pull it out and clean it because the last guy decided to eat his dinner on the damn thing. Why should I have to clean it in order to use it? Can’t we protect these things somehow?
Windows Start Menu Posted 31 Aug
Possibly the most confusing thing ever. It makes me want to just go back to the command line. In most cases, I know what application I want to use, but I can’t remember the company that made it. I’ve seen in my office on more than one occasion people get frustrated with the start menu and just open explorer->program files->application directory. Why doesn’t the start menu reflect the same thing as the ‘Program Files’ directory?
MS Middle Click Posted 29 Aug
Why does it suck so much? It is pretty much useless when the slightest movement sends your document racing to the beginning or end. I’m sure you can configure it somewhere, but I’m not about to traipse through MS menu options to find it
Attachments on the intranet Posted 13 Sep
Every company that I’ve worked in has a mail storage limit and share drives for users to work off of. If there was more thought put into this with sending attachments, the world would be a better place.
It should be easier to create a shortcut to the file and tell the recipients where the file is located (for those few who actually care about the path on the share drive of where the file is). I know you can drag a shortcut to the file into email, but that’s often met with problems such as the users saving a shortcut to local disk and then having to open the file instead of just opening the file directly from the email.
Outlook Attachment options seem too complicated. Regular attachment is the “same ‘ol” process. Shared attachment seems like what I’m talking about- but where do I want to create a “document workspace” at? What happens after the meeting when I don’t really care about this file anymore. I don’t want to “become the adminstrator of the document workspace” nor do I know what “sharepoint URL” I want to store this at. I just want to email the slides out but not send 5MB to every single person in my organization. I’m just trying to be a good citizen, but this is too much for a simple email.
I think the mail client should be smart enough to simply mail a link to the (read only) file on the share drive (formated like a hyperlink instead of the often broken/confusing share drive path that doesn’t work-but still have the network path easy to see/find). If the email address is not on exchange- the actual file should be sent instead since it is likely that the recipients will not be able to access the share drives (network guys can figure out the best way to handle that).
Something like this (but the share path would not be the link- the word ‘presentation’ would be the link)
Here’s my presentation powerpoint slides for today’s 2:00 meeting
(located: \\someshare\presentation\project_status.ppt)
-Your boss
Outlook Calendar and Mail- tighter integration Posted 13 Sep
Highlight a date in an email: “bob- let’s meet at 200 today to discuss the changes.” and be able to add an appointment to the calendar from that. Nobody sends appointments for things like that, and when someone who is not an exchange users sends you an email- you still might want to add it to the calendar. The appointment creation already takes a broad range of input values for dates/times- why can’t we tightly integrate that into email?
UltraMon Posted (Dual monitor software) 13 Sep
UltraMon software for controlling my dual monitor displays has a “smart taskbar” that allows showing the window taskbar across both monitors.
These are two different options, but they look like the same thing. The second menu doesn’t make it clear that it will be part of the right click popup from the task bar.
“Click all menu items you want to use.” Considering I’m in a “menu” at the time this option is presented to me and it’s in the “customization” tab, I assumed this is how I enable/disable the smart taskbar. In fact, I still don’t think “click all menu items you want to use” is clear at all. How do I know that relates to right clicking on the system tray icon? How about: “Select which options are immediately available on right-clicking the icon in the system tray” -wordsmithed down (or up) to a reasonable level of clarity.
Attachment: smart_taskbar2.JPG
Attachment: smart_taskbar1.JPG
sorry- images coming soon.
slashdot posting on "Print Preview" Posted 13 Sep
From Anonymouse Coward regarding print preview:
“I still can’t print the exact same Word file on two different printers and get the same pagination.”
That’s because Microsoft doesn’t have WYSIWYG, and it looks like they either don’t understand what it is, or they’re not even trying to develop it. The best Microsoft has produced so far is WYGIWYS (What You Get Is What You’ll See). First you have to tell their software what printer you have. Now that they know that, they can determine what it will look like when printed (on that particular printer only!) and know what to show you on screen. Switch printers and they change the on-screen look to match. They have it exactly backwards.
Some of you Microsoft apologists will disagree with the above, but you can easily verify this. Try to do a print preview in Word before you set up a printer on the machine. It won’t let you! Why? Because they need to know the hardware to know what the hardcopy will look like. True WYSIWYG is device independent, i.e. they print it to match the on-screen look not the other way around as Microsoft does.
Why is this important? Amongst many other reasons, we need to know when we email someone a document that it will print out on the other guy’s printer (most probably a different model than ours) exactly as it was meant to. Anything less is pathetic at this point.
AC
Alarm Clock- Hunt for the best Posted 15 Sep
Here’s my requirements- I can’t find a good way to find one that meets them.
Battery backup
Date-time- I should be able to set my alarm to go off on Mon-Friday and not on weekends
Speed setting forwards and backwards
Snooze button should not be anywhere near the button to turn off for the day.
AM/PM should be written- not a dot for one or the other
No delicate switches to operate- you know, the switch that has four of five clicks it can fall into that are all so close together that the text describing it needs a line leading from the word to where the switch is supposed to be set. These are a pain to use and are never set right. Often you get blaring music as you move the switch across the range waking up your Sig. other.
I actually have a good clock that meets most of this requirements. I will look up the model number and post here soon. Contact me if you are interested.
update: I’m not the only one:
http://ask.metafilter.com/mefi/16968
http://changelog.complete.org/node/205


reiner UnsinnReinerUnsinn # Friday, October 8, 2010 11:32:03 PM
See DIN EN ISO 9241 Part 11.
This word (in English) is lost for qualified criteria of good products.
Sorry