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Eddy Vluggen wrote: It does; a quick extension in C# does that for me. Okay, if customizing kicks in, then I am with you, File Explorer can do anything
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Just running batch files as if they a command. Cheap, easy, effective. And better yet, I can trust what I write.
I dislike the new menu's, but that's it.
Never understood why people need two directory lists in a single window. Never learned to ALT TAB or what?
Bastard Programmer from Hell
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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Eddy Vluggen wrote: Never learned to ALT TAB or what? To me, it is far more easier to use F5 or F6 to copy or move, plus you have tabs that you can switch to in the two panes, etc... In fact, once you are used to the key combinations, it is really efficient, and it makes a better use of screen space - though less important now that everybody uses at least 2 monitors. But then, tooling is a subjective matter - Alt-tabing is perfectly good as well if it fits you
I still use easy features from the command line - Today, when you need to send a list of files in a directory, everybody attaches a screenshot. I still do a Dir > Filelist.txt
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I do that too. Using File Explorer.
Why pay for something inferior?
Bastard Programmer from Hell
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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Eddy Vluggen wrote: I used DOpus on the Amiga. Total Comander? No, I'd prefer DOS over it. Easier, more powerful, simply better.
DOpus is available on Windows and it's awesome.
Directory Opus[^]
Regards
Nelviticus
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Rage wrote: I still fail to see how a file explorer can have a one pane-view only
Apparently, a tabbed view is in preview for W11. Whether it will make the light of day remains to be seen.
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They waited long enough for dual monitors to make it not interesting anymore, but nah...
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On the lighter side, I have used midnight commander via WSL.
>64
Some days the dragon wins. Suck it up.
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This smells like Linux, doesn't it ?
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sniff, sniff. Yup, guilty as charged.
But it is running on Winders and accessing my C and E drives.
WSL/Ubuntu/mc
(I didn't say it was smart)
>64
Some days the dragon wins. Suck it up.
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Q-Dir
History Q-Dir - The Quad Explorer for MS OS[^]
I used PowerDesk for ~15 years, but the last owner (company was acquired 3 or 4 times, I lost count) stopped paying attention to it, so I hunted around. Q-Dir isn't perfect, but the developer (one-man shop, AFAIK) maintains it well, and produces dozens of other small applications.
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Nah, I'd use Midnight Commander in a command prompt. ( Window-Key with R, type cmd, enter to get the dos(command) prompt then mc and enter to get an nice text based way to use your machine. Of couese you have to find it, download it, and install it in a directory that's on the path
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raddevus wrote: UI elements that disappear are so stupid.
Agreed 100%. I still can't get used to the stupid Office "ribbon," which varies according to the size of the window and what function you've activated.
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UX On phone making commenting difficult. Kudos to whom said "who uses File Explorer" and that "Files Preview" with tabs on is just too damn slow.
Total Commander is the answer, worth it for over 10 years nag screen included.
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Takes me back to Norton Commander, which my fingers knew at the cellular level
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Don't feel bad. I had a disappearing wifi card in my Windows 11 HP laptop. Finally came back on its own without any interaction from me.
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I have a psychological answer for you...
It's a phenomena I noticed decades ago...
All People uses core senses (Visual (think geeks), Kinesthetic (think jocks), Auditory (think rockers))
Now, everyone possesses ALL 3 of these, but USUALLY 1 is primary.
In Synesthesia, these are actually mixed (specific numbers associate with specific colors, etc).
In MUSICIANS, these are STRONGLY Blended.
So, the challenge is this. Visual (and Hyper Visual) people can process and IGNORE visual input quickly/easily.
But Kinesthetic and Auditory people are not as good as this (Although, Auditory people can hear a piece of music, and ISOLATE
just the FLUTE, incredibly easily... I have a friend, he can focus on, and literally only hear that instrument. Crazy. It's a BLUR to my ears. LOL)
Therefore, complex screens with too many items OVERWHELM about 2/3rds of the people looking at them!
Even Visual People, the first time, have to learn to "CHUNK" the screens of information, and apply "selective attention".
which they readily and easily do.
So, envisioning a world, where the number of items you can interact with is MINIMIZED Helps to NOT Overwhelm the majority of users.
At the expense of those of us (usually programmers, LOL), that prefer to see it all...
Again, I ended up learning about this, because I found a GROUP of people who HATED some "Great" software I had written. Now, all the users who were like me (visual), LOVED the software. The strong love/hate confused the heck out of me. But that's when I noticed the Haters were a mashup of people who spoke a bit slower, some where really physical (gym rats, or skate boarders)...
My research led me to understand these groups better. I made some MODEST changes to the software to reduce the Visual Intensity/Complexity of the screen... And the HATERS slowly converted...
And I became better at writing software for ALL types of users...
That said. At no POINT in my WILDEST Imagination, did I think "use Time/Space in such a way that the mouse position, or the angle to their eyeballs should be used in what I display on screen"...
I TRULY HATE these things going away. The HIDING SCROLLBAR... yeah, I get it, it just takes up space, but I simply cannot see it unless my mouse hits it, and it's really hard to tell a user to click on something they cannot see!
[In many new programs, I will hit the ALT key, just to see if the Menu Activates, so I can more easily direct users]
I think that was the first example of "Hiding Things until needing them". But I could be wrong.
So, I believe THIS is why they are doing it. Based on some research papers and non-computer user feedback, etc. etc.
And I still have issues with this approach. They should at least have a KEY you hit that brings them all back, so we can all TALK about the same screen.
This is why it is easier for me to jump into a RemoteControl session and just deal with it. Yep, even to my Wifes Computer 2 rooms away... LOL
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Fantastic explanation of the situation. Thanks for sharing.
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Ran into local store & bought the _same_ box of printer ink I bought a couple of months ago (same $$ too).
Got it home and noticed that it isn't quite the same. Here's a snapshot (the one on the right is the new one[^]).
Oh, for fox sake! 🦊🦊🦊
Yep, Epson punk'd me. They're so funny. Aren't they?
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It appears will NOT be able to exceed your vision...
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They did not punk you, you just did not order/purchase/pickup it correctly.
Epson 220: comes in BLACK only, multi-color, and Black/Multicolor.
You need to make sure you grab the correct box of 220. Look it up, you will see what I am talking about.
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Ok, might be true, but did you see the photo of the two boxes.
They look (almost) exactly the same and they are the same size boxes too.
I know that all tricks committed on a person are always the victim's fault -- everyone cons theirself -- but this one was really tricky.
Also, I love marketing!!!! But, I love marketing-speak even better. And, Bureaucracy is an order of magnitude better than all marketing-speak.
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Well, to be honest, I am not sure why they don't have these boxes/products labeled: 220-1 Black, 220-2 Black/Multi-Color, and 220-3 Multi color, no black.
I am sure many, many people make the same mistake.
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Yeah, but that's just bad product packaging. You shouldn't have to read the fine print to buy an ink cartridge.
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