
Mini-reviews on the forum
This page collects various reviews that have been posted by users on our forum. They represent the views of the poster and not necessarily the views of the site administrators. To browse a more complete and up-to-date collection of mini-reviews, check out the mini-review section of our forum here.
Editorial Integrity
DonationCoder does not accept paid promotions. We have a strict policy of not accepting gifts of any kind in exchange for placing content in our blogs or newsletters, or on our forum. The content and recommendations you see on our site reflect our genuine personal interests and nothing more.
Occasionally a friend of DC without a web site will release a program and ask us to host it. We've create the Miscelaneous Member Software Archive for this purpose.
There you will find some programs by DC member seedling, including: Random MixTape Maker, which takes a large collection of your mp3 files and creates playlists with a specified target duration; WTF Music Info, which will scan your music directories and give you a nice, graphical view of your music library.
- Number of programs available: 3
- Last updated: 2008
- Visit the miscelaneous DC member archive page to browse apps and download them here: http://www.dcmembers.com/archive.
Mini-reviews on the forum
This page collects various reviews that have been posted by users on our forum. To browse a more complete and up-to-date collection of mini-reviews, check out the mini-review section of our forum here.
RIPT (Ript) shareable scrapbook-clipping programme - Mini-Review
Basic Info
Intro and Overview: RIPT is a shareable (with other RIPT users) scrapbook-clipping program. I thought I'd publish a review of this forgotten, elegant program for those who (like me) might find an occasional - if not frequent - use for it. I don't really need it now, as I tend to use:
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Micro-review: Scapplehttp://www.literatur...atte.com/scapple.php
I LOVE this program. For me, it is the perfect brainstorming tool I've always been looking for. It's easy to change the look of each element. It's easy to put background shapes around a selection of elements. It can export easily as images, pdf, whatever. You don't need a "center" like most mindmaps. It's easy to link things together with lines or arrows. It's easy to do simple alignments of elements. I've been looking for something like this for years. I tried a whole bunch. Things like Personal Brain are too fancy and complicated. Mindmaps never worked for me at all. Visio is too much and too hard to do simple things. I settled on Edge Diagrammer (thanks mouser!) for a while because it was the easiest of those flowchart tools to use. Regular notetakers and outliners are not freeform enough for brainstorming. ![]() ![]() |
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Review of Zeus EditZeus Edit Review
Basic Info:
Introduction Zeus is billed as a programmer's editor, but that is selling it short. It is a text based IDE in the vein of SlickEdit and UltraEdit Studio. It is fully scriptable, keyboard centric, fully customizable, and includes throwbacks to hardcore programming like Brief, WordStar, Epsilon, and Emacs keyboard emulation. It supports visual studio solutions (in addition to it's own workspace format), has built in source control integration for Subversion and TFS, and a variety of other features. In fact, there are so many features, that I'm going to have to break this review up into separate parts. Review Notes Many people swear by Visual Studio as an IDE, and I do like what Microsoft has done with it. But it takes a while to start up, uses a lot of memory, and is prone to crashes. I love SlickEdit, but over time, I've had to pare down, and I just haven't been able to justify the extravagant expense to use such an editor. So, I've stuck with Visual Studio, and just used text editors to support it. I discovered Zeus, and the price is right, and the feature set is right- I'm just hoping that it lives up to the hype on the site. |
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Qiqqa - Reference Management System - Mini-ReviewBasic Info
Intro: On 2012-11-04, I made this comment in a discussion thread Re: organize data for research ...[Reference Management software: There is good software in this category that could be seriously useful in research work. For example:- so this is the belated review of Qiqqa. Summary description of Qiqqa: Qiqqa contains everything you essentially need for the five stages of commercial or academic research work/projects:
Most of these projects require collecting and reading a large number of papers or "knowledge items" - sometimes thousands of documents. The sheer volume of these documents can sometimes make it difficult to work with them, sift through them, and keep things under control. Qiqqa was designed with this task in mind, and it has these main features to help you keep those documents under control and to keep your knowledge expanding coherently:
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Google Reader - Mini-Review
Basic Info
Intro and Overview: I thought it might be helpful/useful to post this review, as it could potentially save people a lot of time (if they were not already using a feed-reader). There are some discussions in the DC Forum that refer to Google Reader, and these two seem most relevant: If you don't want to have to spend time wading through the often confusing mass or clutter on a website in order to read something of interest, then you can subscribe to posts on the website, or comments in a forum (e.g., including the DC Forum) without having to post something and requesting email notification of responses - as you normally would have to do. To do this, you have to subscribe for yourself rather than expect the website to do it for you. For example, I have been doing this for several forums and blog sites for years, including the DC Forum. |
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SysExporter - (Screen-scraping) Export data from Windows controls - Mini-Review
Basic Info
Intro and Overview: There is a general problem in Windows OSes - one that has been a continuing source of frustration to me and probably many others - that many System and application displays often contain really useful data that is effectively "protected" from being copied/used. I had been looking for a way to capture the data from the Windows update history display (this is on a laptop with Win7-64), to put into a database, so that I could analyse the history for failed updates. Looking through the display manually was becoming a tedious experience due to its functional limitations, and I wanted to automate/filter the analysis as much as possible. |
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