they have gears, is probably the reason
― wongo hulkington's jade palace late night buffet (silby), Monday, 17 December 2012 05:21 (eleven years ago) link
Let's invent a printer w/ no moving parts. I just did my part, now you do yours and we'll make lots of money.
― (*・_・)ノ⌒ ☆ (Je55e), Monday, 17 December 2012 07:20 (eleven years ago) link
Printing is always a pain. This is what I use:
http://vandercookpress.info/images/219OS.jpg
― dan selzer, Monday, 17 December 2012 07:25 (eleven years ago) link
Trying to install Office 2007 (what we're supposed to use at work - lol out-of-date) while still keeping Excel 2003 (my preference* - lol prehistoric) installed, going mad in the process. Found some instructions online which said "on the 2007 installer option screen tick 'keep previous versions installed', but they won't necessarily play nice", except my 2007 installer doesn't even show me an option screen.
* I need to write Excel macros for my job and do not trust Excel 2007 not to shit up my ability to do that - mostly just my Luddite inability to learn how to work the ribbon, but I have had some genuine other issues w/macros in 2007 too
I don't know if I'm asking for advice or just venting. Mainly venting.
― a panda, Malmö (a passing spacecadet), Saturday, 5 January 2013 10:53 (eleven years ago) link
This'd be one where I would say "where are your IT department and why arent they doing this?"
― Una Stubbs' Tears (Trayce), Saturday, 5 January 2013 11:05 (eleven years ago) link
It is basically impossible right now for our IT dept to do anything even slightly complicated. They have some good staff - also some not good staff - but not enough of them, so everyone is frantically overworked, takes weeks to reply to tickets and won't read any instructions more than a line long before doing anything.
So they can install 2007 (in fact they will say "we put a script so you can install 2007 for yourself on the shared drive, you should just have run that already and not bothered us, ticket closed") but the chances of getting a working copy of Excel 2003 on at the same time without weeks of back-and-forth are about 0, I reckon. Especially since ideally I'd like Excel 2003 and Excel 2007 and that appears to be non-trivial. And since I still have admin rights...
Also I'm doing this on my home laptop right now, but yes, it's a test run to let me do work stuff and if I find a way I'll do it at work too.
― a panda, Malmö (a passing spacecadet), Saturday, 5 January 2013 13:29 (eleven years ago) link
Now that I no longer work for a company where file server backups are the IT department's problem and not mine, I need to find a reliable way to backup my laptop should it decide to shit the bed.
I guess I need some of external device (any recommendations?) and am also wondering if I can do some kind of automated cloud-based backup sort of thingie. Any recommendations for something like that?
So, basically, my boring computer question is how does a non-techie best shot backups. Cheap and easy is U&K.
― quincie, Tuesday, 15 January 2013 11:45 (eleven years ago) link
mac or pc?
― koogs, Tuesday, 15 January 2013 11:48 (eleven years ago) link
pc
― quincie, Tuesday, 15 January 2013 13:35 (eleven years ago) link
1. get a mac2. Time Machine
― (panda) (gun) (wrapped gift) (silby), Wednesday, 16 January 2013 01:37 (eleven years ago) link
sry I actually have no idea how to get a good backup regime going on Windows.
the general principle, though, is that you don't really have any file you don't have at least two backups of, one of which should be offsite. So the ideal situation is you have an incremental backup system backing up continuously or hourly or nightly to a local external disk, then you rotate that disk out with one you leave at work or safe-deposit box or some other hidey-hole once a week.
― (panda) (gun) (wrapped gift) (silby), Wednesday, 16 January 2013 01:39 (eleven years ago) link
cloud-based backup is supplemental to this. (NB I still don't actually do this, need to order a box of hard drives)
― (panda) (gun) (wrapped gift) (silby), Wednesday, 16 January 2013 01:40 (eleven years ago) link
quincie, how big are the files you want to backup? if it's just like important word docs and excel stuff etc just use dropbox
― 乒乓, Wednesday, 16 January 2013 01:40 (eleven years ago) link
silby I thought they gave you keys to S3 when you signed the contract
― 乒乓, Wednesday, 16 January 2013 01:41 (eleven years ago) link
I might be allowed to get a free personal account for "educational purposes", haven't looked into it
― (panda) (gun) (wrapped gift) (silby), Wednesday, 16 January 2013 01:44 (eleven years ago) link
For my (pretty simple) backup-to-external-drive regime on Windows, I find Microsoft's SyncToy does a decent job. We also use it small-scale at work with no trouble.
― anatol_merklich, Wednesday, 23 January 2013 13:45 (eleven years ago) link
Hmm OK what should I being looking for in purchasing an external drive? And as far as cloud-based stuff goes, what I'd really like is just to have some sort of icon thingie on my desktop that I can drag files into (dayo, this wouldn't be anything particularly special, just Word and excel docs and the like). But then I wonder about backing up program files: like, what if my Endnote fucks up and then I can't use it and it's six billion references that I've carefully curated?
Sorry if this is uber dumb. My techie husband's assistance was identical to silby's 1) get a mac.
Hmm can I back up to his Mac instead of buying an external drive, or is that madness?
― quincie, Wednesday, 23 January 2013 14:14 (eleven years ago) link
Hmmm OK I just installed dropbox and dragged a file in there to test it out. But now that file isn't showing up in the original location? I thought that if I dragged it over it just made a copy in dropbox and I could, say, work on the file in the original location and some sort of magic would happen whereby any changes would synch up with the file in dropbox? What am I not getting here.
― quincie, Wednesday, 23 January 2013 14:30 (eleven years ago) link
No, you put the file in dropbox and it magically appears on dropbox.com and on any other computers using the same dropbox account. You can copy it in there if you like, but you have to work on the copy in the dropbox folder or the changes won't get saved.
― stet, Wednesday, 23 January 2013 15:10 (eleven years ago) link
I've just started using Dropbox properly, I love it!
It blows my mind that I can work on a piece of music at night, listen to mixes on my phone on the tube in the morning, do some edits over breakfast on my work computer then return home and carry on working without having to do any file admin whatsoever.
― Crackle Box, Wednesday, 23 January 2013 15:53 (eleven years ago) link
I highly rate SugarSycnc. I sync my documents folder using their 5gb free service and it works beautifully.
On the subject of external hard drives, does anyone have any brand recommendations or is it all much of a muchness? I have a couple of Buffalo drives that are still going strong. Looking for 1TB ideally.
― millmeister, Wednesday, 23 January 2013 16:59 (eleven years ago) link
I've stood by Western Digital.
― dan selzer, Wednesday, 23 January 2013 22:57 (eleven years ago) link
i was going to make a thread for this but maybe someone here can help me out
i'm looking for a good program like cold turkey/freedom/leechblock but nothing quite fits my criteria. my goal is to force a very small window of allotted internet time per day every day.
my dream program:1. works outside of a specific browser to limit all internet, including incognito and impossible to override without having special computer knowledge (cold turkey does)2. doesn't require adding every single specific site you want blocked (cold turkey doesn't)3. can be set up with a daily schedule (focus me can)4. doesn't rely on specific time settings, can simply provide a certain amount of time online at whatever times throughout the day (browsecontrol does)5. is not an expensive corporate tool used to control employees' computers and probably easy to manipulate (browsecontrol is)
focus me (nee distraction blocker) is the closest one i can find but it only allows access on a schedule and i'm not sure if it restricts in incognito or not. also it's easy to override... who thinks typing 100 characters is a hassle?
does anyone use anything like this? i tried leechblock in college and it worked on me for about an hour. i was seriously going to ditch my computer completely but i can't be without netflix and ableton and maybe occasionally email.
― #guy #guy fieri #poop #hallway (zachlyon), Friday, 1 February 2013 11:59 (eleven years ago) link
outside of the small window, do you want any internet at all?
― stet, Friday, 1 February 2013 12:06 (eleven years ago) link
everything except netflix i think
― #guy #guy fieri #poop #hallway (zachlyon), Friday, 1 February 2013 12:16 (eleven years ago) link
wait, you only want to *block* netflix outside the allowed hours, or you only want to *allow* netflix outside the allowed hours?
― stet, Friday, 1 February 2013 12:20 (eleven years ago) link
i only want to allow netflix outside the allowed hours
i'm playing around with the focus me trial and it's pretty close. you can force a total lockdown so the unlock point is moot and it works in incognito. but it's still on a scheduler and you can rearrange the controls whenever you're unlocked. cold turkey let's you lock shit down for 30 days at a time but i doubt i'll be able to do that with anything else.
― #guy #guy fieri #poop #hallway (zachlyon), Friday, 1 February 2013 12:20 (eleven years ago) link
My desktop computer only has one hard drive, and when I run Adobe Premiere the performance is awful. Lots of crashing, tons of lag... Obviously some of this is just because Adobe sucks, but I think my setup is also not ideal. I think maybe I should not have my media stored on my C drive, but I'm not sure what sort of secondary drive I should be using. Should it be a RAID drive or an SSD drive, or would simply using an external hard drive suffice? Should I upgrade my graphics card? I have the ATI Radeon 5450 HD that came with my computer. I have 8 GB of memory so I don't think that's the issue.
― pun lovin criminal (polyphonic), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 18:02 (eleven years ago) link
I am living in rural Mexico for several months. My computer support is limited to my spouse, who is a systems engineering type who has no aptitude for help desk type support (his support is limited to "just buy a Mac" and/or "just use Linux").
My PC (an HP probook that I like just fine) is my lifeline to 1) grad school coursework and 2) everything else outside of rural Mexico. It came with Windows 7 and Office 2010.
The thing has some sort of "HP Support Assistant" that periodically seems to run some sort of updates, although I can't ever tell if everything is really up to date or not.
My boring computer question: do I need to get a copy of McAfee or some other anti-virus software thingie? Anything else I need to do to keep this machine trouble-free? I am backing up docs with Dropbox, but is there other stuff I should be doing to avoid problemos?
― quincie, Wednesday, 17 April 2013 23:30 (eleven years ago) link
1) skip ahead to "Let's talk about your anti-virus solution" on http://www.metafilter.com/user/77879. follow the instructions there, i.e. uninstall any norton/mcafee-type antivirus stuff you've got, and install MSE.
2) bookmark that page, you will need it one day, unless you...
3) buy a mac
― caek, Wednesday, 17 April 2013 23:32 (eleven years ago) link
i don't know if windows has something like time machine, but you could (should imo!) also make a full backup of your hard drive once a week. by an external drive the same size as your hd. use something like "driveimage xml" (maybe there are better options, i last used windows before 9/11, but http://lifehacker.com/5839753/the-best-disk-cloning-app-for-windows says it's the best).
― caek, Wednesday, 17 April 2013 23:34 (eleven years ago) link
also never used it, but max iirc recommends http://www.crashplan.com/.
― caek, Wednesday, 17 April 2013 23:52 (eleven years ago) link
but if your internet isn't the best down there then your #1 priority should be an external drive
(or two)
Oh hey looks like MSE is already on here! I still need to implement a hard-core back-up plan, though. It would help if I had a clue about (or patience for) computer shite. But thanks much for links, that will help me get started!
― quincie, Thursday, 18 April 2013 00:02 (eleven years ago) link
Anyone else having youtube issues lately? I've had them all week, on multiple devices connected to different internets
Basically the videos just stop at random points, clicking on the timeline bar a bit further ahead resumes. Happens very often though.
Can't find anything on the web other than 'clear your cache' which I've done multiple times and hasn't changed anything
― These are my every day balloons (Ste), Friday, 24 May 2013 10:29 (eleven years ago) link
i've tried both Chrome and IE btw
― These are my every day balloons (Ste), Friday, 24 May 2013 10:30 (eleven years ago) link
guess its just me.
yt now defaulting to 144p lol i didn't even know that existed!
― These are my every day balloons (Ste), Friday, 24 May 2013 17:45 (eleven years ago) link
I've had that happen in the last few days as well. Start playing a 20 min or longer video, and it suddenly stops halfway through as though it's only 10 mins long. Refresh the page, click on the timeline to get back to where it stopped, and Youtube will only play another 5 mins or so. Rinse/repeat. Also for a couple of days it defaulted to 144p, but so far today it's been fine. (Win 8, Chrome - haven't tried any other browsers on this PC)
― go cray cray on my lobster soufflé (snoball), Friday, 24 May 2013 17:58 (eleven years ago) link
got so bad that I'm now referring to using a proxy site to view any youtube vids. It's not bad, apart from losing a lot of YT functionality like playlists and signing in, but meh as long as I can watch a damn video without it stopping.
― Ste, Sunday, 26 May 2013 11:16 (eleven years ago) link
No problems here, apart from this odd thing that's been happening in the last couple of days where a video will play for about a minute, skip over a couple of seconds, and then continue playing like nothing happened.
― go cray cray on my lobster soufflé (snoball), Sunday, 26 May 2013 11:39 (eleven years ago) link
I checked some forums and I'm definitely not alone, I wonder if its anything to do with location or isp.
― Ste, Sunday, 26 May 2013 11:42 (eleven years ago) link
I don't know where else to ask this, so it goes here: In what format should I be saving images (photos, stuff from the web)? I guess not JPEG, right? BMP?
― Je55e, Friday, 7 June 2013 18:06 (eleven years ago) link
Especially wondering about things I want to print in photo quality.
Could you clarify your use-cases?
― Operation Gypsy Dildo (silby), Friday, 7 June 2013 18:28 (eleven years ago) link
They're mostly iPhone pics since my digital camera broke and I haven't replaced it. I'd be doing some light photoshop and printing them either at a lab or on my quite decent photo printer. (Is that what you meant?)
― Je55e, Friday, 7 June 2013 18:52 (eleven years ago) link
jpg, as high quality as you can stand.
― dan selzer, Friday, 7 June 2013 19:12 (eleven years ago) link
if you're really concerned about quality tiff w/ lzw compression, but if you're dealing with the web, jpg over bmp, png etc
― dan selzer, Friday, 7 June 2013 19:13 (eleven years ago) link
OK, thank you. Somewhere along my life's journey, I got the idea that jpg was bad? I don't know why, though. May I ask why jpg or tiff are preferable?
― Je55e, Friday, 7 June 2013 19:26 (eleven years ago) link