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PHOTD

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Back Room
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  • M Mike Gaskey

    Maximilien wrote: Shaving, and razors try this[^] best I've ever used, blades costly but last forever. Mike "liberals were driven crazy by Bush." Me To: Dixie Sluts, M. Moore, the Boss, Bon Jovi, Clooney, Penn, Babs, Soros, Redford, Gore, Daschle - "bye bye" Me "I voted for W." Me "There you go again." RR "Flushed the Johns" Me K(arl) wrote: Date:8:50 23 Feb '05 I love you.

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    Gary Kirkham
    wrote on last edited by
    #14

    ditto Gary Kirkham Forever Forgiven and Alive in the Spirit He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose. - Jim Elliot Me blog, You read

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    • C ColinDavies

      My Pet Hate Of The Day is PDF What's yours? - I hate PDF for so many reasons. Maybe there is a PDF haters community I can join somewhere. Also it makes me angry that Macromedia's products will soon head the way of PDF. Regardz Colin J Davies The most LinkedIn CPian (that I know of anyhow) :-)

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      Lost User
      wrote on last edited by
      #15

      My pet hate for today is the guy who sits about three desks away from me. I have only worked here for a month and approached him for the first time last week to ask a question. I was told that he is very difficult and I should be careful what I say to him but he is the only person who knows about what I am working on. I figure we both work here, why should I not ask him a question? If he is difficult and unapproachable they should get rid of him. So anyway I asked my question and I could tell he was not really listening to me. He assumed I was asking a silly question and told me to 'read the fuc&ing manual'. I have never been sworn at by a colleague before. When I repeated my question he realised that is was a sensible question. Today I let the toilet door slam in his face. I may wait till he goes home, get his desk phone, rub it on my sweaty smelly bits and call him in the morning to ask if he can smell something musty.

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      • C ColinDavies

        Generally I try to use RTF Although it doesn't have a lot of features. PDF seems to take so long to load. Also the number of crashes I have had with PDF in the last few days is ridiculous. I'm sure I can't have the OCX running in IE at the same time as the standalone reader. But other things seem to make it crash. Also I have never seen it scroll correctly, it always jumps around the place. I think I could whinge a lot more about PDF. Regardz Colin J Davies The most LinkedIn CPian (that I know of anyhow) :-)

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        Bert Otherside82 Derijckere
        wrote on last edited by
        #16

        The slow start-up time with Acrobat Reader is mainly because of all the plugins it loads at startup. Here is a simple trick to stop it from loading the plugins at start-up, but only when needed: Under the Acrobat Reader 6.0\Reader folder is a plugins folder that contains all the plugins that are loaded at startup. But there is also an Optional folder that is empty by default. If you move all files from the plugins folder to this Optional folder, Acrobat Reader will no longer load all the plugins at startup but only when needed. This makes the startup a lot faster and you don't loose any functionality of the plugins. I've seen the startup time on one of my machines go from 7-10 seconds to under 1 second (on a P4 1.8Ghz with 256Mb RAM)

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        • C ColinDavies

          My Pet Hate Of The Day is PDF What's yours? - I hate PDF for so many reasons. Maybe there is a PDF haters community I can join somewhere. Also it makes me angry that Macromedia's products will soon head the way of PDF. Regardz Colin J Davies The most LinkedIn CPian (that I know of anyhow) :-)

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          Chris Losinger
          wrote on last edited by
          #17

          ColinDavies wrote: What's yours? Intelligent Design Cleek | Image Toolkits | Thumbnail maker

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          • C ColinDavies

            My Pet Hate Of The Day is PDF What's yours? - I hate PDF for so many reasons. Maybe there is a PDF haters community I can join somewhere. Also it makes me angry that Macromedia's products will soon head the way of PDF. Regardz Colin J Davies The most LinkedIn CPian (that I know of anyhow) :-)

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            JWood
            wrote on last edited by
            #18

            On that topic is anyone that sends documents in any formatted in anything that requires a software that costs anything. I get hopping mad when they send documents and even demand them in return Word, WordPerfect AMiPro etc. format. PDF I can see would be a problem if they demanded them and they take alot longer to load than HTML.

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            • C Chris Losinger

              ColinDavies wrote: What's yours? Intelligent Design Cleek | Image Toolkits | Thumbnail maker

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              73Zeppelin
              wrote on last edited by
              #19

              Geez, who the hell voted you a 1? :rolleyes: Must have been a zealot. :->

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              • C ColinDavies

                Generally I try to use RTF Although it doesn't have a lot of features. PDF seems to take so long to load. Also the number of crashes I have had with PDF in the last few days is ridiculous. I'm sure I can't have the OCX running in IE at the same time as the standalone reader. But other things seem to make it crash. Also I have never seen it scroll correctly, it always jumps around the place. I think I could whinge a lot more about PDF. Regardz Colin J Davies The most LinkedIn CPian (that I know of anyhow) :-)

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                BlackDice
                wrote on last edited by
                #20

                I read an article in a magazine a few months ago (I think PC Magazine) that tells you how to speed up your Adobe app. there's a folder called plug_ins or something. you make a copy of that, then delete all except 3 of those files in there. the DLL loading on startup is what makes it take so long to open. If you just wanna read the pdf and delete all except those 3 necessary dll's, Adobe opens up 100 times faster (well maybe not '100', but MUCH faster) I don't remember what the 3 files are you need to keep, but you can probably google it My articles www.stillwaterexpress.com BlackDice

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                • B Bert Otherside82 Derijckere

                  The slow start-up time with Acrobat Reader is mainly because of all the plugins it loads at startup. Here is a simple trick to stop it from loading the plugins at start-up, but only when needed: Under the Acrobat Reader 6.0\Reader folder is a plugins folder that contains all the plugins that are loaded at startup. But there is also an Optional folder that is empty by default. If you move all files from the plugins folder to this Optional folder, Acrobat Reader will no longer load all the plugins at startup but only when needed. This makes the startup a lot faster and you don't loose any functionality of the plugins. I've seen the startup time on one of my machines go from 7-10 seconds to under 1 second (on a P4 1.8Ghz with 256Mb RAM)

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                  Lost User
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #21

                  Thanks, have a :beer: The tigress is here :-D

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                  • C ColinDavies

                    My Pet Hate Of The Day is PDF What's yours? - I hate PDF for so many reasons. Maybe there is a PDF haters community I can join somewhere. Also it makes me angry that Macromedia's products will soon head the way of PDF. Regardz Colin J Davies The most LinkedIn CPian (that I know of anyhow) :-)

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                    El Corazon
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #22

                    My home computer.... blue screening once a day... debating on upgrade or take it somewhere to start swapping parts to track down the problem.... decisions... decisions... _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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                    • L lmuth

                      If your beef with PDF is Adobe Acrobat's load time, then your beef is with Adobe Acrobat, not the PDF format. In general, I think PDF is great. It's totally multi-platform, you don't depend on people having MS Office installed, and with a good PDF reader, it takes a mere second to read. Have I mentioned I love my Macs with native PDF support? Oh, and my peeve is people sending me attachments for personal stuff (i.e. at home) in an MS Office format. I happen to love LaTeX for writing documents and have no need for Office. :)

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                      Daniel Ferguson
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #23

                      lmuth wrote: Have I mentioned I love my Macs with native PDF support? Me too! I used to really dislike PDF because of the clumsy Windows viewer program, but they're much easier to read on a Mac.

                      I contend that we are both atheists. I just believe in one fewer god than you do. When you understand why you dismiss all the other possible gods, you will understand why I dismiss yours. ~Stephen Roberts

                      « eikonoklastes »

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                      • C ColinDavies

                        Generally I try to use RTF Although it doesn't have a lot of features. PDF seems to take so long to load. Also the number of crashes I have had with PDF in the last few days is ridiculous. I'm sure I can't have the OCX running in IE at the same time as the standalone reader. But other things seem to make it crash. Also I have never seen it scroll correctly, it always jumps around the place. I think I could whinge a lot more about PDF. Regardz Colin J Davies The most LinkedIn CPian (that I know of anyhow) :-)

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                        gregs
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #24

                        There is a program that removes the plugins here[^]

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                        • R Ryan Roberts

                          Rejoice, for soonish we will have Metro[^] - looks like it might be a sort of XAML EMF type thing. Ryan

                          O fools, awake! The rites you sacred hold Are but a cheat contrived by men of old, Who lusted after wealth and gained their lust And died in baseness—and their law is dust. al-Ma'arri (973-1057)

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                          ColinDavies
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #25

                          That is good I hope it is adopted. :-) Regardz Colin J Davies The most LinkedIn CPian (that I know of anyhow) :-)

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                          • B Bert Otherside82 Derijckere

                            The slow start-up time with Acrobat Reader is mainly because of all the plugins it loads at startup. Here is a simple trick to stop it from loading the plugins at start-up, but only when needed: Under the Acrobat Reader 6.0\Reader folder is a plugins folder that contains all the plugins that are loaded at startup. But there is also an Optional folder that is empty by default. If you move all files from the plugins folder to this Optional folder, Acrobat Reader will no longer load all the plugins at startup but only when needed. This makes the startup a lot faster and you don't loose any functionality of the plugins. I've seen the startup time on one of my machines go from 7-10 seconds to under 1 second (on a P4 1.8Ghz with 256Mb RAM)

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                            Paul Watson
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #26

                            Holy crap, that worked like the Bomb! Thanks Otherside82. regards, Paul Watson South Africa PMW Photography Gary Wheeler wrote: It's people like you that keep me heading for my big debut on CNN...

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                            • B Bert Otherside82 Derijckere

                              The slow start-up time with Acrobat Reader is mainly because of all the plugins it loads at startup. Here is a simple trick to stop it from loading the plugins at start-up, but only when needed: Under the Acrobat Reader 6.0\Reader folder is a plugins folder that contains all the plugins that are loaded at startup. But there is also an Optional folder that is empty by default. If you move all files from the plugins folder to this Optional folder, Acrobat Reader will no longer load all the plugins at startup but only when needed. This makes the startup a lot faster and you don't loose any functionality of the plugins. I've seen the startup time on one of my machines go from 7-10 seconds to under 1 second (on a P4 1.8Ghz with 256Mb RAM)

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                              KaRl
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #27

                              Very effective, thanks!


                              Fold with us! The only thing that stops God from sending another flood is that the first one was useless.

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