gerard-sorme-old
Gerard Sorme
gerard-sorme-old

@pixelwax: It makes no sense for Windows to have a "Yes To All" but not a "No To All." Ridiculous. However, if you hold "Shift" and click "NO", it will default to "No To All." But it should be in the GUI pop-up. That's never made sense to me.

I've always thought Total Commander looks like it hasn't been updated in years. It brings back memories of all those old Windows 3.1 programs. Good program, it's just the UI that I have a hard time looking at.

Okay, hate to triple-dip, but MSNBC just put up a story that says Google will be offering a plan to split revenues on Google ads inside the Knols.

Sorry to double-dip, but I didn't really say what I wanted, I only mentioned the name...

Some here are saying that the "funny name" won't help it. Were any of you around in the late 90's when we first heard the name Yahoo! Or...God forbid..."Google"...???

I miss the point of shelling out almost $100 for a single-license of Directory Opus. Did I read someone above had to pay extra for a portable license? At the price they ask - it's not just expensive, it's.......I'll be kind.

Bottom Line: There are a lot of excellent backup solutions. Better? Worse? Best? Maybe, but mostly just different. To each his/her own.

I like voicemail that forwards to my email as transcribed text and an attached mp3 file of what the caller actually left.

I use Returnil and don't worry. With every start-up my system is back to it's "perfect state." If I want to trial a program I can use it during the session but then when I reboot - it's gone. To actually install the program (if I were to decide to keep it), I would use the "off" switch for Returnil and boot back into

Fascinating article from the NYT. I found a great blog that dealt with these very issues called, "Paper Notes In A Digital World." It has some truly excellent posts in the archives. But the final post from this blogger is a MUST READ.

I LOVE the 'NEW' Reader's Digest. This article is a good example of how they have become a magazine of the times - and not the magazine for your grandmother's bedstand. I even purchased a subscription recently and love all the 'tips' articles and the jokes are still there - more edgy for a new generation. Thanks for

VOTE: SmugMug

We no longer have common outlets for information. I grew up in a day when we all got our news from Walter Cronkite or Huntley/Brinkley, we read Time and Newsweek, and you waited to hear news on the radio at the top of the hour. Now, we all go to our respective echo chambers on the Internet. If you're conservative you

Wait!!! Everyone has missed the point of FlexCrypt. The link goes to "FlexCrypt Folders" which is single-file encryption and if you wanted to email the file you would send as an attachment. That is one small part of this line of products. Read about the *real* FlexCrypt from the other tabs. It is a program that uses

I've tried the online backup and just find it too slow and cumbersome. A lot of people don't realize how cheap Safe Deposit Boxes are at your local bank. I have a box in the bank storage vault that I pay $20 a year for. I have a 500GB External Hard Drive that I bought on sale for $89 from Newegg. My bank is about six

Vote: My own personal page

Vote: EasyDesktop 8.0

I have to agree with murph's comment at 11:30am above. Where is Bloglines? I love the new Bloglines Beta and everytime I try Google Reader - I always end up back at Bloglines. With the new Bloglines Beta version - which allows for much more functionality - I'm staying where I am.

This tiny little program with blow you away. Fully portable - no install. You may have to look through a long list - but the URL you visited is there. It's called [Index.dat] Viewer: [www.pointstone.com]

Everybody. Is. Different.