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World: r3wp

[Tech News] Interesting technology

Graham
7-Jun-2006
[1010]
Henrik, how about carrying a usb drive with you?
Henrik
7-Jun-2006
[1011x2]
USB drives do not always work on the target hardware
in fact I've not experienced that great reliability with USB drives. 
more often than not I find myself using an FTP server as the USB 
drives have failed, files have been screwed up or not properly updated.
Graham
7-Jun-2006
[1013]
You could always run a synapse chat server :)
Henrik
7-Jun-2006
[1014x2]
the google way is cool if you have some work you do at home, which 
you want to continue on a netcafe or the library or just a place 
where you won't be for long
but it lacks speed and elegance
Graham
7-Jun-2006
[1016x3]
Or and IOS server if you have the $$$
but IOS requires local installation :(
As does Altme
Henrik
7-Jun-2006
[1019]
yeah, hopefully the plugin would solve that
Graham
7-Jun-2006
[1020]
also needs to be installed :)
Henrik
7-Jun-2006
[1021]
which hopefully will become as smooth as flash...
Ingo
7-Jun-2006
[1022]
... and preinstalled in all internet cafés ...
Pekr
8-Jun-2006
[1023]
Henrik - very strange, really. In our company, USB drives (flash 
drives) are really a boom. We can see problems VERY sporadically, 
if ever. I would definitely refuse to call them unreliable - much 
more reliable than anything else - floppies, cds/dvds
Edgar
8-Jun-2006
[1024]
I have seen a few laptops that has broken USB ports due to overused 
of USB drives. I still think it is great though.
Henrik
8-Jun-2006
[1025]
pekr, the drives themselves are OK, but the OS'es handle them badly. 
If I under MacOSX store some files on the drive and eject the drive 
as I properly should, the files are just not present on the drive 
according to WinXP, as if the ejection procedure didn't sync files 
to disk. Half the time, they don't work under Linux without hours 
of fiddling and most win98 machines won't handle them at all. Data 
transfer between machines is probably successful about 50% of the 
time.

An internet connection is, for me, a much more reliable way to get 
data onto a machine. It's probably the syncing aspect that makes 
them so unreliable.
Geomol
8-Jun-2006
[1026]
Could UNIX commands sync and touch help you? You have them under 
MacOS, and maybe under Windows too with cygwin. A little script could 
run through the dirs and sync or touch (or both) the files.
Henrik
8-Jun-2006
[1027]
I don't waste any more time on USB drives :-)
Geomol
8-Jun-2006
[1028x2]
oh :)
Cut the crap and move on
 is a good idea.
Pekr
8-Jun-2006
[1030x5]
Henrik - don't blame USB drives for your problems then :-)
as far as my experience goes, WXP was never problem - plug-and-play, 
never lost single file. The problem is valid for W2K, but it is how 
they did it .... one of my friends told me (not sure it is true), 
that W2K first caches files, and unless of some size, it is not being 
written to target USB device. So, if you unplug it and not by using 
OS disconnecting facility, such files are not there ....
maybe there is some setting for that, dunno .... Windows denerves 
me sometimes with so called - rought czech translation - delayed 
write was not successfull. Not sure how it happens, but somewhere 
deep in your profile there is a dir for such a feature, and if there 
is some file, you can see annoying messages each time Windows starts.
Henrik - did you do your homework this time, really? Win98 needs 
drivers, so what? 1) throw away PC using W98 :-) 2) Install your 
driver once, and it works like WXP next time, that is all. Had no 
problem with my old Fedora Core 1 and my 2 USBs, never hear of that 
"works half the time under Linux"
well, anyway, there is not easier way how to carry your files around 
then USB flash drives, so :-)
Henrik
8-Jun-2006
[1035x4]
pekr, I can't just ask a customer to throw away 10 win98 machines 
and go spend thousand of dollars on XP licenses because my little 
pen drive does not work on them. the fact is that I work in too many 
different OS'es that USB drives can work reliably across. had I been 
working in XP alone, there may not have been a problem, but this 
is not the case.
some machines don't even have USB ports...
but they have TCP/IP stacks :-)
and I've also seen XP machines that flat out refuse to mount USB 
drives. this is a stupid problem.
Pekr
8-Jun-2006
[1039x3]
well, this week, having PC shop, one customer buys two new PCs. I 
don't understand one thing - czech republic is far from being rich, 
yet ppl listen to suggestions. W98 is security thread and unnecessary 
complication in your network. Then carry floppy with your usb pen 
driver - always worked for me, the driver is tiny ...
well, or just small cd-rw should work for you as well :-)
thread=threat
Henrik
8-Jun-2006
[1042]
sorry, I just can't be bothered. fetching what I need off a website 
is way more reliable for me.
Pekr
8-Jun-2006
[1043]
so, here you go with your solution for usb driver :-) That sounds 
like real luxury, as for W98 archaic machines I would expect dial-up 
connection, not fast Internet line :-)
Henrik
8-Jun-2006
[1044x2]
the "strange" fact is that the machines are always accessible on 
a LAN, which is why I prefer using the internet to transfer data 
between machines at home and customers.
anyhow, back to work :-)
Ingo
8-Jun-2006
[1046]
Hi Henrik, 

I've had some really nice experiences with Qtask. Just upload a zip 
of all the files you might need, and download only those ones you 
actually need in a given situation. Real sweet.
Edgar
8-Jun-2006
[1047]
Qtask has Filesharing. My kids use them instead of USB drives.
Pekr
8-Jun-2006
[1048]
Another Windows Vista feature bites the dust - http://www.microsoft-watch.com/article2/0,2180,1973620,00.asp
Graham
10-Jun-2006
[1049x2]
The http://www.bluishcoder.co.nz/2006/06/unenterprisey-languages-meeting.html
meeting was mildly interesting.  Robert Strandh showed how he reimplemented 
metafont in common lisp with the main aim that he could provide print 
services for his G# music score editor.  This was implemented as 
a DSL, and printing done by converting the DSL to postscript.  Familiar??
The Erlang talk was also interesting .. to learn about a language 
designed for failure .. pity the demo was not well done.  Io - bit 
boring for me.  And Chris Double talked about javascript with continuations, 
and threads.
Pekr
10-Jun-2006
[1051]
have you held your Rebol presentation? :-)
Graham
10-Jun-2006
[1052]
their Mnesia product is pretty impressive http://www.erlang.se/doc/doc-5.0.1/lib/mnesia-3.9.2/doc/
Pekr
10-Jun-2006
[1053]
Interesting - something like that we wanted for IOS, right?
Graham
10-Jun-2006
[1054]
not just IOS
Terry
11-Jun-2006
[1055x2]
As of May 2006 The Encyclopedia of Computer Languages by Murdoch 
University, Australia lists 8512 computer languages.
somehow Rebol made it on this shootout.. http://dada.perl.it/shootout/craps.html
Pekr
12-Jun-2006
[1057]
FreeBasic - completly free variant of BASIC with surprising level 
of features - http://www.freebasic.net/index.php/about
Oldes
13-Jun-2006
[1058]
http://www.potix.com/zkdemo/userguide/
Pekr
13-Jun-2006
[1059]
nice, but really lagging, they should improve blitting a bit ...