Re: Known bug?

2011-02-11 Thread Jonathan Bayer

On 2/11/11 12:42 PM, Jeff Gaines wrote:

Hello Jernej

On Friday, February 11, 2011, 4:55:16 PM, you wrote:


No,  should always be escaped in HTML - URLs are no exception.

But Google search uses for example:

http://www.google.com/search?q=ampersandhl=ennum=10lr=lang_enft=icr=safe=imagestbs=lr%3Alang_1en


You aren't seeing the escapes behind the scene.  While you may see that 
in your browser, if you look at the source you will see amp  instead of 
the ampersand.



JBB


Current version is 4.2.42 | 'Using TBUDL' information:
http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html


Re: Search conditions in Message Finder

2011-02-03 Thread Jonathan Bayer
Hello Jernej,

You may work in a corporate environment, but half the world is not
corporate.  I include small businesses in that.

Configuration files are not written to that often, so your comment
about flushing misuscule changes is irrelevent.

I'd rather have a single conf file corrupted rather than the entire
registry corrupted.

However, I don't get your idea that conf or ini file corruption would
be an everyday occurrance.  If the registry doesn't get corrupted that
often, why would individual files get corrupted any more frequently?

One _major_ advantage to separate conf/ini files is that it can be
much easier to migrate a software package from one system to another.

And why is it difficult to control programs from a central location
with separate files?  If all the conf files are stored in a single
directory (such as /etc on Unix/Linux), I don't see any difference.
You can consider the individual files as a database, with each table
stored in a separate file, if you like.

Regarding breakage, I do agree that these days, the majority of
incidents are caused by spyware.  But because of the registry, the
spyware is more likely to cause other damage in the registry.

Don't get me wrong, I'm not a fanatic about Linux vs. Windows.  I use
Windows every day, even though my main job currently is a Linux
administrator.  Windows is, at present, the best OS for a desktop,
although several Linux distributions are catching up.  Linux, on the
other hand, is IMHO better at servers than Windows.  I do recommend
Windows when it is necessary and appropriate, and recommend Linux the
same way


JBB



I will agree that it is much better than the days of 9x, but it
Thursday, February 3, 2011, 6:39:12 AM, you wrote:

 On Wednesday, February 2, 2011, 21:59:04, Jonathan Bayer wrote:

 Hello Jernej,
 Wednesday, February 2, 2011, 3:46:51 PM, you wrote:
 Err, what's the point of Registry then?
 Something to hide parameters, configuration items, etc from the
 general user.  It is fragile, and the system won't boot if it is
 broken.

 Times of Windows 9x and it's fragile registry are long in the past. I
 haven't seen registry corruption (that wasn't a direct result of
 hardware failure) on Windows 2000 or newer. If everything that's
 currently reading and writing the registry would use separate files
 instead, your computer'd work either much slower (because everybody
 would be flushing those minuscule changes in small files all the
 time), or configuration file corruption would be an everyday
 occurrence.

 And while this isn't really important for home users, without Registry
 you also lose the ability to control programs from a central location
 (which is very important in corporate networks - you don't want the
 admin to visit every machine, or write a separate script for every
 program).

 IMHO, the registry is the worst thing about Windows.  I can live with
 everything else, but the registry is the one thing that breaks windows
 more often than I can count.

 Really? In my experience, by far the most often cause of Windows
 breakage is various spyware, followed by dying hard drives, bad
 drivers and bad RAM (but these three together don't account for even
 half of the spyware cases). I don't remember when I last saw registry
 corruption, and there's a lot of computers I deal with.




-- 
Best regards,
 Jonathanmailto:jba...@bayerfamily.net



Current version is 4.2.42 | 'Using TBUDL' information:
http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html


Re: Search conditions in Message Finder (modified per list rules)

2011-02-03 Thread Jonathan Bayer
Hello Jernej,

Thursday, February 3, 2011, 6:39:12 AM, you wrote:

 On Wednesday, February 2, 2011, 21:59:04, Jonathan Bayer wrote:

 Hello Jernej,
 Wednesday, February 2, 2011, 3:46:51 PM, you wrote:
 Err, what's the point of Registry then?
 Something to hide parameters, configuration items, etc from the
 general user.  It is fragile, and the system won't boot if it is
 broken.

 Times of Windows 9x and it's fragile registry are long in the past. I
 haven't seen registry corruption (that wasn't a direct result of
 hardware failure) on Windows 2000 or newer. If everything that's
 currently reading and writing the registry would use separate files
 instead, your computer'd work either much slower (because everybody
 would be flushing those minuscule changes in small files all the
 time), or configuration file corruption would be an everyday
 occurrence.

Configuration files are not written to that often, so your comment
about flushing misuscule changes is irrelevent.

I'd rather have a single conf file corrupted rather than the entire
registry corrupted.

However, I don't get your idea that conf or ini file corruption would
be an everyday occurrance.  If the registry doesn't get corrupted that
often, why would individual files get corrupted any more frequently?

 And while this isn't really important for home users, without Registry
 you also lose the ability to control programs from a central location
 (which is very important in corporate networks - you don't want the
 admin to visit every machine, or write a separate script for every
 program).

You may work in a corporate environment, but half the world is not
corporate.  I include small businesses in that.

One _major_ advantage to separate conf/ini files is that it can be
much easier to migrate a software package from one system to another.

And why is it difficult to control programs from a central location
with separate files?  If all the conf files are stored in a single
directory (such as /etc on Unix/Linux), I don't see any difference.
You can consider the individual files as a database, with each table
stored in a separate file, if you like.

 IMHO, the registry is the worst thing about Windows.  I can live with
 everything else, but the registry is the one thing that breaks windows
 more often than I can count.

 Really? In my experience, by far the most often cause of Windows
 breakage is various spyware, followed by dying hard drives, bad
 drivers and bad RAM (but these three together don't account for even
 half of the spyware cases). I don't remember when I last saw registry
 corruption, and there's a lot of computers I deal with.

Regarding breakage, I do agree that these days, the majority of
incidents are caused by spyware.  But because of the registry, the
spyware is more likely to cause other damage in the registry.

Don't get me wrong, I'm not a fanatic about Linux vs. Windows.  I use
Windows every day, even though my main job currently is a Linux
administrator.  Windows is, IMHO at present, the best OS for a desktop,
although several Linux distributions are catching up.  Linux, on the
other hand, is IMHO better at servers than Windows.  I do recommend
Windows when it is necessary and appropriate, and recommend Linux the
same way


JBB
-- 
Best regards,
 Jonathanmailto:jba...@bayerfamily.net



Current version is 4.2.42 | 'Using TBUDL' information:
http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html


Re: Search conditions in Message Finder

2011-02-02 Thread Jonathan Bayer
Hello Jernej,

Wednesday, February 2, 2011, 3:46:51 PM, you wrote:

 On Wednesday, February 2, 2011, 20:36:00, MFPA wrote:

 but also believe such 
 settings should be stored in the software's own settings files rather 
 than clogging up the registry.

 Err, what's the point of Registry then?

Something to hide parameters, configuration items, etc from the
general user.  It is fragile, and the system won't boot if it is
broken.

IMHO, the registry is the worst thing about Windows.  I can live with
everything else, but the registry is the one thing that breaks windows
more often than I can count.



JBB
-- 
Best regards,
 Jonathanmailto:jba...@bayerfamily.net



Current version is 4.2.42 | 'Using TBUDL' information:
http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html