Applications I like...
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Shog9 wrote:
With emoticons and HTML preserved? ;)
Okay...so now it's really preserved... :-D
Picture a huge catholic cathedral. In it there's many people, including a gregorian monk choir. You know, those who sing beautifully. Then they start singing, in latin, as they always do: "Ad hominem..." -Jörgen Sigvardsson
David Stone wrote:
Shog9 wrote:
With emoticons and HTML preserved? ;)
Okay...so now it's really preserved... :-D
HAHAHAHA! YES! w00t! :-D :-D :-D :jig:
Picture a huge catholic cathedral. In it there's many people, including a gregorian monk choir. You know, those who sing beautifully. Then they start singing, in latin, as they always do: "Ad hominem..." -Jörgen Sigvardsson
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Okay, I'm sold. That's a pretty cool product. I think I'll be picking up a license. You might have to add a FogBugz Tips & Tricks section because I imagine both you and I will want to customize that a bit. :)
Some assembly required. Code-frog System Architects, Inc.
Another cool feature is that you can set it up to check a particular e-mail address. Any e-mails coming in to that address will be sent through a bayesian filter (primarily, to weed out spam, but also to sort the e-mails into the different project areas) and then have cases created around them. It's very cool stuff. :cool:
Might I recommend that you pick up Mike Gunderloy's excellent Painless Project Management with FogBugz[^]. Very good read...and it'll help you get up to speed on FogBugz in no time. :)
Picture a huge catholic cathedral. In it there's many people, including a gregorian monk choir. You know, those who sing beautifully. Then they start singing, in latin, as they always do: "Ad hominem..." -Jörgen Sigvardsson
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I haven't provided a direct link yet. This is hot off the press. In fact, you're the second to know. Here's the URL[^]. There's a public "Test Project". :) Marc VS2005 Tips & Tricks -- contributions welcome!
Picture a huge catholic cathedral. In it there's many people, including a gregorian monk choir. You know, those who sing beautifully. Then they start singing, in latin, as they always do: "Ad hominem..." -Jörgen Sigvardsson
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David Stone wrote:
Shog9 wrote:
With emoticons and HTML preserved? ;)
Okay...so now it's really preserved... :-D
HAHAHAHA! YES! w00t! :-D :-D :-D :jig:
Picture a huge catholic cathedral. In it there's many people, including a gregorian monk choir. You know, those who sing beautifully. Then they start singing, in latin, as they always do: "Ad hominem..." -Jörgen Sigvardsson
David Stone wrote:
David Stone wrote:
Shog9 wrote:
With emoticons and HTML preserved? ;)
Okay...so now it's really preserved... :-D
HAHAHAHA! YES! w00t! :-D :-D :-D :jig:
Classy... now, any chance you can ditch the <p> tags for <br>?
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Another cool feature is that you can set it up to check a particular e-mail address. Any e-mails coming in to that address will be sent through a bayesian filter (primarily, to weed out spam, but also to sort the e-mails into the different project areas) and then have cases created around them. It's very cool stuff. :cool:
Might I recommend that you pick up Mike Gunderloy's excellent Painless Project Management with FogBugz[^]. Very good read...and it'll help you get up to speed on FogBugz in no time. :)
Picture a huge catholic cathedral. In it there's many people, including a gregorian monk choir. You know, those who sing beautifully. Then they start singing, in latin, as they always do: "Ad hominem..." -Jörgen Sigvardsson
David Stone wrote:
Might I recommend that you pick up Mike Gunderloy's
Thanks! :-D Marc VS2005 Tips & Tricks -- contributions welcome!
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David Stone wrote:
David Stone wrote:
Shog9 wrote:
With emoticons and HTML preserved? ;)
Okay...so now it's really preserved... :-D
HAHAHAHA! YES! w00t! :-D :-D :-D :jig:
Classy... now, any chance you can ditch the <p> tags for <br>?
Shog9 wrote:
now, any chance you can ditch the <p> tags for <br>?
Any particular reason why?
Picture a huge catholic cathedral. In it there's many people, including a gregorian monk choir. You know, those who sing beautifully. Then they start singing, in latin, as they always do: "Ad hominem..." -Jörgen Sigvardsson
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David Stone wrote:
Might I recommend that you pick up Mike Gunderloy's
Thanks! :-D Marc VS2005 Tips & Tricks -- contributions welcome!
Sorry Marc. Don't pay attention to that...I was just using your post for testing something... :)
Picture a huge catholic cathedral. In it there's many people, including a gregorian monk choir. You know, those who sing beautifully. Then they start singing, in latin, as they always do: "Ad hominem..." -Jörgen Sigvardsson
-- modified at 19:57 Wednesday 30th November, 2005
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I have really enjoyed the use of two applications recently that fill a very small niche for me. One is Taskbar Manager by Askarya (he's got some other cool stuff to): http://www.askarya.com/index.asp[^] This application allows you to drag/arrange programs down in your taskbar. For really anal-types like myself (yes I'll admit it) the taskbar applications must be ordered and placed. {Explorer}-{Outlook}-{Browsers}-{VS IDE}-{Iron Speed}-{OMEA Pro}-{Yeah You Get The Idea} Invariably though, something might go wrong. I could click a close button on accident, an application could lock-up etc... So then when I re-open it it's now in the wrong place. TBM by Askarya lets me drag it where it belongs on the taskbar and is rock-solid and stable. (Never tried it with Window Blinds but that's a product I won't use in the same sentance as rock-solid or stable.) The other product is Genie Outlook Backup: http://www.genie-soft.com/products/olb/default.html[^] I'm *SO* lazy when it comes to administrative tasks. I don't want to have to copy my .pst files, my email account settings and all that jazz manually. I just hate it and I forget something. The above program backed up my 1.6 GB .pst file and all my pop mail settings in less than 10 minutes. It even builds a self-installing .exe file for me and within 10 minutes all my mail, folders and settings were on my new machine and ready to go. I make zero money from this. I don't have a clue who these companies really are and if they test using animals, lead-paint or depleted uranium. I don't have a clue. I know I enjoy their products and thought I'd share them here for anyone needing that niche product. Anyway two programs I enjoy and both reasonably price. If you know of free equivalents I'd be very happy to investigate them for comparability. - Rex
Some assembly required. Code-frog System Architects, Inc.
thanks for sharing. The taskbar app doesn't seem to support any apps that have multiple instances grouped into one entry (e.g. if you have 12 internet explorer windows open it won't move the group). EDIT: obviously there's nothing you can do about this - but i'm just adding some feedback if anyone's interested :) -- modified at 20:07 Wednesday 30th November, 2005
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Shog9 wrote:
now, any chance you can ditch the <p> tags for <br>?
Any particular reason why?
Picture a huge catholic cathedral. In it there's many people, including a gregorian monk choir. You know, those who sing beautifully. Then they start singing, in latin, as they always do: "Ad hominem..." -Jörgen Sigvardsson
Plays better with CP's stylesheet:
Any particular reason why?
vs.
Any particular reason why?
Not a big deal by any means.
My god, you're a genius! - Jörgen Sigvardsson, The Lounge
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Plays better with CP's stylesheet:
Any particular reason why?
vs.
Any particular reason why?
Not a big deal by any means.
My god, you're a genius! - Jörgen Sigvardsson, The Lounge
What exactly are the two of you doing? Are both of you making changes to CP code? This is an interesting thread as it appears each of you is changing code the other is using.
Some assembly required. Code-frog System Architects, Inc.
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What exactly are the two of you doing? Are both of you making changes to CP code? This is an interesting thread as it appears each of you is changing code the other is using.
Some assembly required. Code-frog System Architects, Inc.
I've taken it upon myself to change Shog's CPhog to utilize the "Midas" rich text editor in all Mozilla applications. I'm getting the quote function working again. Things are quite different when utilizing Midas vs a standard textarea control. :)
Picture a huge catholic cathedral. In it there's many people, including a gregorian monk choir. You know, those who sing beautifully. Then they start singing, in latin, as they always do: "Ad hominem..." -Jörgen Sigvardsson
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Plays better with CP's stylesheet:
Any particular reason why?
vs.
Any particular reason why?
Not a big deal by any means.
My god, you're a genius! - Jörgen Sigvardsson, The Lounge
Good point...I'll fix that. :)
Picture a huge catholic cathedral. In it there's many people, including a gregorian monk choir. You know, those who sing beautifully. Then they start singing, in latin, as they always do: "Ad hominem..." -Jörgen Sigvardsson
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Plays better with CP's stylesheet:
Any particular reason why?
vs.
Any particular reason why?
Not a big deal by any means.
My god, you're a genius! - Jörgen Sigvardsson, The Lounge
Shog9 wrote:
Plays better with CP's stylesheet:
Any particular reason why?
How's that?
Picture a huge catholic cathedral. In it there's many people, including a gregorian monk choir. You know, those who sing beautifully. Then they start singing, in latin, as they always do: "Ad hominem..." -Jörgen Sigvardsson
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I am that way too :) Its odd because I HATE the XP feature that groups like apps together.
George Carlin wrote: "Don't sweat the petty things, and don't pet the sweaty things." Jörgen Sigvardsson wrote: If the physicists find a universal theory describing the laws of universe, I'm sure the asshole constant will be an integral part of that theory.
My Blog[^]
I am that way three. :-D I also use the classic Start Menu, Classic Control Panel, Classic Windows Theme, show file extensions, and of course, INSTALL TWEAK UI.
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Shog9 wrote:
Plays better with CP's stylesheet:
Any particular reason why?
How's that?
Picture a huge catholic cathedral. In it there's many people, including a gregorian monk choir. You know, those who sing beautifully. Then they start singing, in latin, as they always do: "Ad hominem..." -Jörgen Sigvardsson
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David Stone wrote:
Shog9 wrote:
Plays better with CP's stylesheet:
Any particular reason why?
How's that?
Fixed for you, but not for me...
I just want you to be happy, That's my only little wish...
Oh...I'm stupid...I need those newlines. Ugh.
Picture a huge catholic cathedral. In it there's many people, including a gregorian monk choir. You know, those who sing beautifully. Then they start singing, in latin, as they always do: "Ad hominem..." -Jörgen Sigvardsson
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I have really enjoyed the use of two applications recently that fill a very small niche for me. One is Taskbar Manager by Askarya (he's got some other cool stuff to): http://www.askarya.com/index.asp[^] This application allows you to drag/arrange programs down in your taskbar. For really anal-types like myself (yes I'll admit it) the taskbar applications must be ordered and placed. {Explorer}-{Outlook}-{Browsers}-{VS IDE}-{Iron Speed}-{OMEA Pro}-{Yeah You Get The Idea} Invariably though, something might go wrong. I could click a close button on accident, an application could lock-up etc... So then when I re-open it it's now in the wrong place. TBM by Askarya lets me drag it where it belongs on the taskbar and is rock-solid and stable. (Never tried it with Window Blinds but that's a product I won't use in the same sentance as rock-solid or stable.) The other product is Genie Outlook Backup: http://www.genie-soft.com/products/olb/default.html[^] I'm *SO* lazy when it comes to administrative tasks. I don't want to have to copy my .pst files, my email account settings and all that jazz manually. I just hate it and I forget something. The above program backed up my 1.6 GB .pst file and all my pop mail settings in less than 10 minutes. It even builds a self-installing .exe file for me and within 10 minutes all my mail, folders and settings were on my new machine and ready to go. I make zero money from this. I don't have a clue who these companies really are and if they test using animals, lead-paint or depleted uranium. I don't have a clue. I know I enjoy their products and thought I'd share them here for anyone needing that niche product. Anyway two programs I enjoy and both reasonably price. If you know of free equivalents I'd be very happy to investigate them for comparability. - Rex
Some assembly required. Code-frog System Architects, Inc.
You might be able to get Start Button Boogie. I don't believe it works for XP nested icons. If you want to see what it takes for XP nested icons, right here on CP is your answer: Nicholas Butler's work. I don't believe it allows drag-n-drop - I think you have to rearrange the icons in the program's window.
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SciTE and Trillian are two apps i'd be very unhappy without.
My god, you're a genius! - Jörgen Sigvardsson, The Lounge
Ruby comes with the SciTE Editor. Is that what you use? If so; Why on god's green Earth do you like it? regards, Paul Watson Ireland Colib and ilikecameras. K(arl) wrote: oh, and BTW, CHRISTIAN ISN'T A PARADOX, HE IS A TASMANIAN!
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Ruby comes with the SciTE Editor. Is that what you use? If so; Why on god's green Earth do you like it? regards, Paul Watson Ireland Colib and ilikecameras. K(arl) wrote: oh, and BTW, CHRISTIAN ISN'T A PARADOX, HE IS A TASMANIAN!
It starts quickly, acts how i'd expect it to, supports all the various languages i use, and doesn't get in my way... It also prints nicely and allows copying text into emails with syntax formatting intact. It comes closest to filling the gap in my workflow that was last filled by the EPM editor on OS/2.
You must be careful in the forest Broken glass and rusty nails If you're to bring back something for us I have bullets for sale...