Category: Geekdom

The best damn freeware graphics viewer around has been updated

Irfanview, the best freeware graphics viewer out there (in my opinion), has released version 3.8. If you have a file that’s sitting on your hard drive and you know it’s some sort of graphic (or even a video or audio file) just try opening it in this program. Based on the amount of file types this small download can open, you’ll be hard pressed to find something it can’t open. It’ll even give custom icons depending on the file types. Remember to download the plugins as well for the program to enable more features.

I’ve been using this program since version 1.x and absolutely love it, and it’s great for power users as well as simple tasks. Check it out! And don’t forget the Irfanview Explorer Extension for more power as well.

The Ultimate TV Remote

OK, this is one of those Really Cool Gizmos that I wish I had (or at least had a PDA to run it on). If you have a pile of remote controls controlling all your entertainment center goodies (I’ve got 5, at last count), and you also have a Strong ARM or Xscale processor-powered Pocket PC (an iPAQ, HP Jornada 56x, or Toshiba e740, for example), then you need this software. It will replace all those remotes and let you use your PDA to control it all. You can customize the interface, setup macros, and do a pile of stuff at once (ain’t multi-tasking fun?).

Scripts for Sun Admins

If you’re a admin for a Sun Microsystems machine, make sure you have this site bookmarked. It’s a great collection of scripts, utilities, and more from Sun and other contributors.

New Beast

I feel as though I must share my new machine with you all:

Gregg's new puter

Specs:

Antec case w/ 300 watt smart power supply (2 80mm case fans)

2 Western Digital SE harddrives (40gig=OS, 80gig=video scratch)

Asus 266N motherboard with 512Mb DDR

Athlon 1700XP (no overclocking)

Sony CD-RW (from my old Dell)

Pioneer 106s DVD (slot load)

6 USB ports, a firewire card, and NO Floppy.

Eventually I wanna put some cathode lights inside the front of the case…for the fun of it.

Wired’s Vaporware List for 2002

Wired‘s annual Vaporware lists have always been entertaining, focusing on products/services that were heavily hyped, but never saw the light of day. This year’s list is no different, providing a bunch of great entries like Silicon Film‘s Electronic Film System (a third-year list member), the new Amiga, Nvidia‘s GeForce FX, and Quark Xpress for OS X. Congrats to all the winners and let’s hope you can actually produce something useful this year.

Top 10 Web Design Mistakes for 2002

For once, I actually agree with Jakob Nielsen. His alert-box column last week focused on the Top Ten Web-Design Mistakes of 2002.

If you’re like most people and don’t like Nielsen, play his drinking game.

Stop using Ad-Aware for Spyware removal – UPDATED

According to this article, Ad-Aware is no longer being supported or updated for new spyware. From the article:

I truly hate that it has come to this. Lavasoft’s Ad-aware used to be a fine product. Not only was it the only free solution for finding and destroying advertising spyware, it was also a good program. However, Lavasoft has abandoned Ad-aware 5.83. Support is still offered at their support forums and via email, but the program is no longer being updated to handle new spyware targets. In fact, I feel that it is necessary to recommend to everyone that they simply remove Ad-aware version 5 entirely. Using it in its current, unupdated form can be, and has been proven to be dangerous.

Ad-aware has not had a reference file update since September 24. I’ve personally submitted over a dozen new spyware/hijacker targets and lord knows how many updates to old spyware/hijackers. Other developers on my private mailing list update when new targets are submitted to them. Lavasoft has not.

So if you’re using Ad-Aware, switch to something else like the free SpyBot S&D that’s updated more frequently, according to the article (I have them both installed).

UPDATED: Apparently the guys on spywareinfo.com were full of crap. Lavasoft has plans to release version 6.0 of their software next month, according to this Lavasoft forum post.

Free Listing Day!

Right on…I’ve been looking for an excuse to dump all my crap on eBay. Today is free listing day on eBay, so now’s your chance to dump all that unwanted Christmas crap. I’ve spent the last 2 hours copying all my data from my dead Dell to get it ready to put on eBay for parts. Oh what fun…and it’s been snowing profusely here in Sunriver, too, so my car is getting buried in the white stuff right now. Can’t wait to drive home.

[/rant]

Frickin’ laptop

OK, I’m annoyed as heck, as I have a pile to do today, and my laptop is busted. At least Dell has nice hold music. Got it on speaker phone, cranking the ol’ big-band tunes until I can talk to a tech.

Meanwhile, I’m working on my slower Compaq, so don’t expect much out of me until I get my Dell up and working, as I don’t have w.bloggar installed, and I’m not about to sit at this web interface to type in all my entries.

Update: Got the thing fixed…the thing was having issues with my network card, or so I think. It, for some reason, works now, even though the network card is still in the system. Weird. This has been a VERY non-productive day.

Update 2 (3 hours from original post): Not fixed, back to not booting. Screw it…I’m going to eat lunch.

32 Computer Newbie Safety Instructions

From Lockergnome. Follow these, all you newbies out there, and make my life easier:

(1) Don’t open attachments that you didn’t ask for, even if you think you know who’s sending them

(2) make sure your software and OS are up-to-date. If you don’t have a broadband connection, take the machine somewhere that does

(3) If something asks to install itself on your computer, just say no. Call your local geek and ask how to proceed.

(4) You cannot initiate World War III by pressing the wrong key

(5) Sign up for a computer class. It’s a proven fact that family members suck at teaching the basics.

(6) Do not give out credit card information to anybody through e-mail or an instant messenger, no matter how official it sounds. Again, call your geek first.

(7) If you want to find something online, go to Google.com

(8) Do not eat or drink near your computer system unless your hardware is orange juice compatible

(9) CTRL+Z will usually undo the last thing you did, no matter where you are or what you’re doing

(10) Do not use the CAPS LOCK key; that is for expert users only.

(11) If something doesn’t want to go into a port, don’t force it; chances are, it’s not supposed to go in there. At least, not the way you think it should go.

(12) Those are floppy disks. Yes, I realize their case is hard, but the hard drive is actually inside that case

(13) Yes, that’s the case. The CPU is sitting inside of it on the motherboard – which is the stage upon which all of your computer components sit

(14) Memory is not the same thing as a hard drive; memory is also known as RAM, which is where programs and open documents are loaded. The hard drive is where your files sit silently, waiting for you to put them into memory.

(15) A screen saver is not the same thing as a desktop wallpaper; screen savers are animated, whereas a wallpaper is the picture that sits behind your icons

(16) There’s more than one way to do complete a task – this isn’t math class

(17) Don’t get mad at me when something doesn’t work; don’t get mad at the computer when something doesn’t work; don’t get mad at yourself when something doesn’t work

(18) Be inquisitive, but understand that certain answers may not exist – no matter how many ways you try to ask the same question

(19) You’re probably not going to get hacked; ask your geek how to best protect yourself if you’re worried

(20) Forwarding joke mails is not funny.

(21) The Internet doesn’t always move as fast as you’d like it to go; you’re not the only person online right now

(22) Don’t respond to special offers you didn’t ask for through e-mai

(23) Try right-clicking on your icons to see what you can do with each one

(24) Keep all of your saved files, word processing documents, spreadsheets, cards, etc. in the “My Documents” folder. Whenever a program asks you to save something somewhere, save it in there

(25) There’s more on your computer than “the Internet” and Solitaire

(26) You don’t need Photoshop to edit your digital photos

(27) Don’t send videos through e-mai

(28) The computer only does what you tell it to do; there are exceptions to this rule, but if you keep running into the same walls, you’re probably doing something wrong. That’s okay, even geeks make mistakes

(29) You usually can’t return opened software; learn how to download files to try them before you buy them

(30) You won’t need to upgrade everything tomorrow; this system will not be obsolete until it can’t do something you need it to do

(31) Have fun! If you take this activity too seriously, you won’t want to play with the computer too often; and

(32) subscribe to Lockergnome!