TOOLS: Reinstall WinXP without re-activation

[via vowe]

I haven’t tested this, but it seems to be interesting. If you have a *dynamic* WinXP installation – i.e if you are instaling/uninstalling/testing a lot of softwares and tools, you surely have already re-installed your machine, because of the performance.

It seems that there is a way to avoid the re-activation process after your re-installation, by backup-ing a small file called WPA.DBL (in \windows\system32\) and by replacing this file after the re-install.

Have a look at the full article.

TOOLS: Audio CD Ripper -CDex 1.51

CDex is an old-fashioned tool (release 1.51 from September 2003!!) but surely still one of the best Audio CD Ripper. Completely free (Open Source), very powerful but quite easy to use, very stable. A must-have.

I ripped about almost all my CDs (> 900) with this tool.

CDex is a tool to do all sorts of things audio related. Mainly focused on ripping and converting, things like turning your home Compact Disc collection into an mp3 collection on your hard drive become extremely easy. With built in support for many encoders you wont find any shortage of options for your media files. Below is a more in-depth explination of CDex features.

CDex Feature List:

* Easy to use interface
* Media File Player
* Create PLS and M3U playlist files
* Advanced jitter correction
* Support for many file formats/audio encoders (WAV, MP3, OGG, VQF, APE, etc)
* Support for ID3 V1 and V2 tags
* Support for normalization of audio files
* Support for transcoding of compressed audio files
* Support for CDDB
* Support for recording from the analog input line

CDex is one of the most downloaded application (all-time) at sourceforge (more than 24 million downloads!).

NEWS: Open Source

Open Source[via Rodrigo]

If you have some interest in the Open Source field, worth a bookmark, to my mind ;-)

InfoWorld released a very extensive and *great* report about, I think, all the current Open Source projects for the following fields:

InfoWorld also published a PDF report (free subscription required).

TOOLS: SauceReader – R.I.P.

Synop, the company which was developping SauceReader, my RSS/Atom reader for quite a while now, has closed for business.

The SauceReader source code and product are for sale.

I will have to move to another reader, although this one was ok for my own usage :-( I am actually not really convinced that you have a big chance to *sell* a product of a company which is out. Strange process, to my mind.

BUSINESS: GM & Ford rated as “Junk Bond”

I’ve missed this news from May ’05 but I haven’t read anything about this on-line. Standard&Poor;’s cut debt ratings for General Motors and Ford to “junk status” or “non-investment-grade” in May 5, 2005. In other words, G.M. and Ford are rated as junk bonds….

End of March 2005, G.M. had a consolidated debt of $292 billion and Ford a total debt of $161 billion!! That means, G.M. and Ford together have a cumulated debt of … $453 billion.

Just to give you a possible comparison: Spain, with 43 million inhabitants, had a public debt of $485 billion in 2004 (source: Wikipedia)…

Have a look at this NYTimes’ article (free registration required).

In explaining the downgrades, the agency used nearly identical language to describe a range of parallel concerns at each company, like falling sales of sport utility vehicles as gas prices have risen.

G.M.’s downgrade “reflects our conclusion that management’s strategies may be ineffective in addressing G.M.’s competitive disadvantages,” S.&P.; said in its report. For Ford, “the downgrade to non-investment grade reflects our skepticism about whether management’s strategies will be sufficient to counteract mounting competitive challenges,” S.&P.; wrote.

[S.&P.;] also blamed much of the companies’ problems on their huge financial commitments to its retirees, both in pensions and in medical benefits. Ford’s unfunded pension liability was $12.3 billion and its unfunded medical liability $32.4 billion at the start of the year, S.& P. said, while G.M.’s unfunded medical liability was $61 billion.

BUSINESS: Mozilla Foundation Reorganization

[via Joi]

Have a look at the official press release and at the Mozilla website.

On August 3rd, 2005, the Mozilla Foundation, a non-profit public benefit software development organization, launched a wholly owned subsidiary, the Mozilla Corporation. The Mozilla Corporation is a taxable subsidiary that serves the non-profit, public benefit goals of its parent, the Mozilla Foundation, and will be responsible for product development, marketing and distribution of Mozilla products.

The board of the Mozilla Foundation includes Mitch Kapor, Brian Behlendorf, Mitchell Baker, Brendan Eich, and Joichi Ito.

The board of directors of the Mozilla Corporation includes Mitchell Baker, Christopher Blizzard, and Reid Hoffman, CEO of LinkedIn. Mitchell Baker is president of the Mozilla Corporation.

PICTURES: Splendid Saturn

[via CICLOPS]

Cassini offers this lovely, crisp view of Saturn, which shows detail in the planet’s banded atmosphere, as well as the delicate ring system.

The image has been rotated so that north on Saturn is up; the Sun illuminates Saturn from below. Saturn’s tilt throws ghostly shadows of the rings onto the northern hemisphere during the current season.

The image was taken with the wide angle camera on January 23, 2005, from a distance of approximately 2.8 million kilometers (1.7 million miles) from Saturn through a filter sensitive to wavelengths of infrared light centered at 728 nanometers. The image scale is 166 kilometers (103 miles) per pixel.

Saturn

NEWS: Three CNET Top10

[via Heiko]

Top 10 Downloads of the past 10 years

When CNET Download.com opened its doors in 1996, it was home to 3,000 small shareware and freeware applications. Online software distribution was still in its infancy. What a difference a near-decade makes! Since 1996, we’ve watched the rise of instant messaging, digital audio and the MP3 format, file sharing, spyware and antispyware, and the open-source movement, just to name a few. And we’ve watched as online software distribution has gone from pipe dream to reality. These 10 applications best represent the top trends in downloading over the past decade.

  1. ICQ
  2. Winamp
  3. Napster
  4. Firefox
  5. Winzip
  6. iTunes
  7. Ad-aware
  8. Skype
  9. RealPlayer
  10. Adobe Acrobat Reader

Top 10 dot-com flops

The most astounding thing about the dot-com boom was the obscene amount of money that was spent. Zealous venture capitalists fell over themselves to invest millions in Internet start-ups; dot-coms blew millions on spectacular marketing campaigns; new college graduates became instant millionaires (albeit on paper) and rushed out to spend it; and companies with unproven business models executed massive IPOs with sky-high stock prices. Of course, we all know what eventually happened to this world. Few of these companies actually made enough money to recoup that cash, and when their investors fled to the hills, these start-ups died dramatic deaths. These are the celebrity victims of the new-economy bust.

  1. Webvan (1999-2001)
  2. Pets.com (2000)
  3. Kozmo.com (1998-2001)
  4. Flooz.com (1998-2001)
  5. eToys.com (1997-2001)
  6. Boo.com (1998-2000)
  7. MVP.com (1999-2000)
  8. Go.com (1998-2001)
  9. Kibu.com (1999-2000)
  10. GovWorks.com (1999-2000)

Top 10 tech of 1995

Let’s stroll down memory lane to 1995. William Jefferson Clinton was president of the United States, and you were probably getting acquainted with six new friends (Rachel, Ross, Monica, Chandler, Phoebe, and Joey)–unless you were hanging out in the coffee shop, brooding in your grunge gear. We were stunned and saddened by the Oklahoma City bombings, and the “trial of the century” ended with O. J. Simpson’s acquittal. Heck, the San Francisco 49ers were Super Bowl champs (see, they were good at one point). All in all, 1995 was jam-packed. To kick off our anniversary, we have rounded up the 10 technologies from 1995 that helped shape the present and moved us into the future. Drumroll, please.

  1. Sony PlayStation
  2. IBM ThinkPad 701c
  3. Digital cameras
  4. Sony DCR-VX1000
  5. The Web
  6. Java
  7. USB Standard
  8. Flat-screen plasma display TVs
  9. CDMA (Qualcomm)
  10. eBay

BLOG: blog design completely changed

So, after some months, I wanted to change the design of my blog. You see the first version…if you are not using a RSS/atom reader ;-)

If this is the case, may I suggest you to haver a look at www.didierbeck.com with your “usual” browser? Please, let me know if you have some issues with the new design (specially for my Safari’s readers, I have no chance to test the CSS with this browser).

Feedback generally speaking welcome ;-)