A two-button Mac mouse!? Frank McPherson asked what I would think of the multibutton/scroll wheel support in Mac OS X. Third-party multibutton mice have been supported via extensions for several years, but not officially from Ye Olde Apple. So what do I think? About stinkin' time!
I use 3-button mice on my Windows boxes. The middle button double-clicks. Cuts down on clicks. I like it. On Unix, where the middle button brings up menus, I'd prefer a fourth button for double-clicking. Scroll wheels I don't care about. The page up/down keys have performed that function just fine for 20 years. But some people like them; no harm done.
Data recovery. One of my users had a disk yesterday that wouldn't read. Scandisk wouldn't fix it. Norton Utilities 2000 wouldn't fix it. I called in Norton Utilities 8. Its disktool.exe includes an option to revive a disk, essentially by doing a low-level format in place (presumably it reads the data, formats the cylinder, then writes the data back). That did the trick wonderfully. Run Disktool, then run NDD, then copy the contents to a fresh disk immediately.
So, if you ever run across an old DOS version of the Norton Utilities (version 7 or 8 certainly; earlier versions may be useful too), keep them! It's something you'll maybe need once a year. But when you need them, you need them badly. (Or someone you support does, since those in the know never rely on floppies for long-term data storage.) Recent versions of Norton Utilities for Win32 don't include all of the old command-line utilities.
Hey, who was the genius who decided it was a good idea to cut, copy and paste files from the desktop? One of the nicest people in the world slipped up today copying a file. She hit cut instead of copy, then when she went to paste the file to the destination, she got an error message. Bye-bye file. Cut/copy-paste works fine for small files, but this was a 30-meg PowerPoint presentation. My colleague who supports her department couldn't get the file back. I ride in on my white horse, Norton Utilities 4.0 for Windows in hand, and run Unerase off the CD. I get the file back, or so it appears. The undeleted copy won't open. On a hunch, I hit paste. Another copy comes up. PowerPoint chokes on it too.
I tried everything. I ran PC Magazine's Unfrag on it, which sometimes fixes problematic Office documents. No dice. I downloaded a PowerPoint recovery program. The document crashed the program. Thanks guys. Robyn never did you any harm. Now she's out a presentation. Not that Microsoft cares, seeing as they already have the money.
I walked away wondering what would have happened if Amiga had won...
And there's more to life than computers. There's songwriting. After services tonight, the music director, John Scheusner, walks up and points at me. "Don't go anywhere." His girlfriend, Jennifer, in earshot, asks what we're plotting. "I'm gonna play Dave the song that he wrote. You're more than welcome to join us."
Actually, it's the song John and I wrote. I wrote some lyrics. John rearranged them a little (the way I wrote it, the song was too fast--imagine that, something too fast from someone used to writing punk rock) and wrote music.
I wrote the song hearing it sung like The Cars, (along the lines of "Magic," if you're familiar with their work) but what John wrote and played sounded more like Joe Jackson. Jazzy. I thought it was great. Jennfier thought it was really great.
Then John tells me they're playing it Sunday. They're what!? That will be WEIRD. And after the service will be weird too, seeing as everybody knows me and nobody's ever seen me take a lick of interest in worship music before.
I like it now, but the lyrics are nothing special, so I don't know if I'll like it in six months. We'll see. Some people will think it's the greatest thing there ever was, just because two people they know wrote it. Others will call it a crappy worship song, but hopefully they'll give us a little credit: At least we're producing our own crappy worship songs instead of playing someone else's.
Then John turns to me on the way out. "Hey, you're a writer. How do we go about copyrighting this thing?" Besides writing "Copyright 2000 by John Scheusner and Dave Farquhar" on every copy, there's this. That's what the Web is for, friends.
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Note: I post this letter without comment, since it's a response to a letter I wrote. My stuff is in italics. I'm not sure I totally agree with all of it, but it certainly made me think a lot and I can't fault the logic.
From: John Klos
Subject: Re: Your letter on Jerry Pournelle's site
Hello, Dave,
I found both your writeup and this letter interesting. Especially interesting is both your reaction and Jerry's reaction to my initial letter, which had little to do with my server.
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