Recommended Posts

I don't really care.  I can't see myself using this unless they make something amazing that I have never seen bofore.

586313770[/snapback]

Took the words out of my mouth.

I really can't see why some specific information should be super accessible like that. Accessibility sounds good in theory, but why would you keep watching, say, a calendar frequently each day, or your photo collection, or stock quotes, or... These things you really don't monitor from hour to hour, from minute to minute, even if you're into stocks. All these things are stuff you'd likely just need to check out once or twice a DAY if you'd do it often. I can't see where you'd ever fill up an entire sidebar with stuff you'd need to keep track of often. A clock is good if you need to remember to do something happening very soon, but that's already in the task bar! IM's may be useful here, but basically all IM's already have this functionality.

If I'd use it, it would probably end up as something I'd have open but rarely looked at, just making it eat screen real estate.

Edited by Jugalator

Does the sidebar stay like active content on the desktop, so that if I maximize a window, it is behind the window? That might be better than it always occupying the space, since people complained it was taking too much screen real estate

windows vista Sidebar is back (Y)

(N) I want something that I've never seen before, not a look a like from the competitor.

586314115[/snapback]

Come off it, folks.

Dashboard itself is a knockoff of Konfabulator, which steals features from DesktopX (which is a Win32 application from Stardock). While I don't have any *current* use for it, I certainly don't mind it (especially since it's an option that is NOT active by default).

As for the *boycott IE* mantra, THAT dog shouldn't hunt in any way, shape, or form. That sort of thinking means that there is only one *proper* way to browse the Web, and is NOT what the Web (or the Internet in general) is about. If you are going to take IE to task, it should be because of security issues. Not because it fails to follow *standards* (which Mozilla, Opera, etc. don't always do, either) and not because of features it offers that the competition doesn't.

If they allow custom content like can be done with dashboard and it can be assigned a shortcut key so it appears and disappears completely when desired, I see now problem with it. Would be nice to have when I need quick weather info and such.

This is cool, another option is always a plus. althoguh i don't think i could find a use for it.

more is always good :D

and who cars if ms are copying other companies, so you think they should have left tabs out of ie7 so it wouldn't look like they had copied firefox?? If something is useful to just one person they shoudl have the option there.

I'm glad it's back in as a choice.

I used to use third party sidebars for watching movies and stuff whilst doing my work, but after a while they came a little pointless.

Maybe MS will include some nice little aps that you can plug in, or allow samurize etc to plug into it.

For people complaing about it taking up screen space; I'm sure you can have it autohide just like your taskbar.

As for the *boycott IE* mantra, THAT dog shouldn't hunt in any way, shape, or form.  That sort of thinking means that there is only one *proper* way to browse the Web, and is NOT what the Web (or the Internet in general) is about.  If you are going to take IE to task, it should be because of security issues.  Not because it fails to follow *standards* (which Mozilla, Opera, etc. don't always do, either) and not because of features it offers that the competition doesn't.

586314223[/snapback]

Ummm... No. Web developers have every right to boycott IE for the simple fact that they're not going to follow standards. End-users even have that right. Microsoft is severely limiting the amount of development that can be done on the web simply because they won't (and because of their stupid decisions before, they can't) follow standards. It may not seem like a big deal to you, but it certainly is to anybody who cares about the web moving forward.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Fastfetch 2.64 released bringing new logos and other improvements by David Uzondu Fastfetch, the popular command-line system information tool that developers created as a fast alternative to the classic Neofetch utility, has updated its codebase to version 2.64, bringing experimental scripting power, streamlined compilation options, a smarter logo renderer, and Codec module support. As noted earlier, Fastfetch can now detect hardware-accelerated video codecs across Windows, macOS, Linux, and Android through this new Codec module. On Linux and BSD, the utility uses VA-API by default, with a fallback to VDPAU on Nvidia hardware if compiled with libva and libvdpau. Windows users get D3D12VA on Windows 11 or D3D11VA with Media Foundation Transforms on older systems, while macOS relies on VideoToolbox and Android utilizes AMediaCodec. You can manually toggle Vulkan Video via the config file, and the program will report both encoders and decoders unless configured otherwise. Logo support for Quasar, Origami, Origami_small, NixOS2, and BerserkArch also landed in this release. BerserkArch, if you have never heard of it, is a specialized Arch Linux derivative that targets security researchers and power users. This distro comes with an offensive security tool manager, simply called berserk, which allows users to install complex hacking toolkits with single terminal commands. Moving on, Fastfetch now has experimental scripting options for custom formats using Lua or QuickJS. The Lua integration supports versions 5.3 through 5.5, sharing a single interpreter instance across all modules so you can store variables globally. T Alternatively, if you prefer JavaScript, you can use QuickJS-ng version 0.15.0 or newer to evaluate your custom formats with the qjs: prefix. Other changes that version 2.64 brings include native CMake compilation flags to disable specific modules to shrink the final binary size. Users can delete unwanted ASCII logo files directly from the source directory before building to save additional space. The format engine now boasts ANSI-escape awareness, meaning you can center text with the new vertical bar specifier without breaking colored outputs. Haiku users receive preliminary support for boot manager, window manager theme, screen brightness, and other basic properties. Finally, the Linux edition now extracts desktop wallpaper and theme details from the modern COSMIC desktop environment.
    • That's a good number until the game you want to play is not in that list. 
    • So, the logo means No ducking AI?
    • For sure, humanity us highly unlikely to survive the helium flash. Even if we have colonized moons in the outer planets by then, that is such a monumental change in heat output, coupled with the destruction of Earth, it's unlikely we could be fully prepared for changes of that scale.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Apprentice
      fernan99 went up a rank
      Apprentice
    • One Month Later
      nothanks earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      B2Proxy earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Year In
      MadMung0 earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      jefred earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      476
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      242
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      79
    4. 4
      FloatingFatMan
      73
    5. 5
      Michael Scrip
      59
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!