Tech in a Galagzee, Not So Far Away.
Archive for June, 2008
Few Good Utilities
Jun 18th
It’s always exciting to come across some clever utility that resolves a long-standing (or sometimes a more recent) problem. Sometimes such utility simply makes life easier by simplifying or speeding up a process. Here are few such good utilities. Some of these programs have been around for years, and in some cases I used their inferior competition for long while before stumbling across the improvement. Others have been the staple of my toolbox already for some time.
ExtractNow (freeware) replaced a program called “Unziplify” I had used for years but that became eventually abandonware. Quite frequently an archive has been chopped into million segments and each segment zipped separately. ExtractNow makes it super easy to unzip those archives in a jiffy.
AutoHotkey (freeware) is an excellent keyboard hotkey mapping utility. It comes with a very versatile and easy to configure script language that allows mapping over Windows system hotkeys. This means that you can, for example, put your favorite file-search utility in place of Windows’ own search at Win+F. AutoHotkey also expands abbreviations so it might eventually replace another utility, ShortKeys, that I use frequently.
Roxip XStart ($30 shareware) is a very handy application launch utility. I like keyboard shortcuts, and XStart is an app launch utility that makes it easy to access frequently launched applications. Give it a try!
True Launch Bar ($19 shareware) takes the place of the Windows QuickLaunch, and adds pop-up menus, auto-sorting, differently-sized icons, and more. Finally it’s possible to organize the QuickLaunch in a meaninful way. With True Launch Bar and XStart I rarely access Start > Programs anymore.
Directory Opus is not exactly cheap Explorer replacement at AU$85.00 (about US$80), but it’s worth every cent! Directory Opus takes care of most every file operation you can think of. However, for find and replace operations I often use Advanced Find and Replace (for file content find+replace, also multi-line), and Effective File Search (better file name search which I’ve also mapped to Win+F using AutoHotkey). For more complex regex-based file searches Directory Opus’ file search or PowerGREP give more flexibility. To design and test the complex regular expressions for searches, nothing beats RegexBuddy. Finally, a handy shell extension HashTab adds configurable file hashes tab to file properties and also provides Hash Comparison making it easy to check whether file A is exactly the same as file B.
Slots Are Dead… Long Live the Slots!
Jun 6th
Some years ago slot-load CD and DVD drives were abound. Plextor, Pioneer, Sony, Toshiba all made some models that lacked the tray. Now if you try to find one you’re out of luck (except, perhaps, on eBay where you might still find a second hand slot-load drive).
So what happened? The slot-loaders clearly cannot be as fragile as the tray units – the trays are flimsy! Especially laptop DVD-drive trays almost self-destruct on slightest breeze! Perhaps there were issues with the alignment… but then a slot-load DVD-ROM drive that I have had in use from the early part of this decade is still working fine and I’ve never had any trouble with it. Perhaps it’s difficult to make writers that are slot-load? But there is still a place for read-only units. Two of the three computers our kids use (each has their own) has currently a destroyed DVD-ROM drive. You guessed it, the tray’s been bent or ripped out. If they were slot-load drives, perhaps some items would’ve been stuffed into them, but likely they would not have been destroyed. Slot-load drives would also be perfect for laptops: no super-flimsy trays, just a slot where a disk would sleekly slide in.
Clearly it is possible to continue manufacturing reliable slot-load drives as, for example, the popular game-console Wii that was released less than two years ago, comes with a slot-load DVD-drive. Wii drive reads both 4.7Gb and 9Gb DVD disks so clearly alignment can not be a major issue.
Manufacturers, please bring back the slot-load drives!