The Wiert Corner – irregular stream of stuff

Jeroen W. Pluimers on .NET, C#, Delphi, databases, and personal interests

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Archive for the ‘Power User’ Category

Some FindStr links

Posted by jpluimers on 2019/08/23

When searching text files on Windows, often FindStr is the only tool at hand. Given the MS-DOS ancestry, it carries quite a bit of history, so here are a few links on the quirks it has:

General references:

–jeroen

Posted in Console (command prompt window), Power User, Windows | Leave a Comment »

Signal messaging downloads

Posted by jpluimers on 2019/08/23

I forgot about the announcement that Signal had also become available on the Desktop, but it is via [WayBack] https://signal.org/download/:

  • Mac
  • Windows
  • Debian based x64 Linux:

$ curl -s https://updates.signal.org/desktop/apt/keys.asc | sudo apt-key add -
$ echo "deb [arch=amd64] https://updates.signal.org/desktop/apt xenial main" | sudo tee -a /etc/apt/sources.list.d/signal-xenial.list
$ sudo apt update && sudo apt install signal-desktop

I like the mix of echo and tee to update the [WayBack] /etc/apt/sources.list.d folder with the signal-xenial.list file.

These links will always give you the latest download filename:

The files you get there will be relative to the path https://updates.signal.org/desktop/ so will be similar to:

You can get the sources at https://github.com/WhisperSystems/Signal-Desktop/releases

Via:

–jeroen

Posted in *nix, Android Devices, Apple, Debian, iMac, iOS, iPhone, Linux, Mac, Mac OS X / OS X / MacOS, MacBook, MacBook Retina, MacBook-Air, MacBook-Pro, MacMini, macOS 10.12 Sierra, Power User, Windows | Leave a Comment »

Google Dataset Search

Posted by jpluimers on 2019/08/22

Reminder to self: check if [WayBack] Dataset Search still exists.

Via: [WayBack] Looking for a #dataset to use to train your system or test it? #Google has just released a search engine specifically for datasets. Very useful! #Machi… – Jason Mayes – Google+

–jeroen

Posted in Google, GoogleSearch, Power User | Leave a Comment »

Some Markdown links on phrasing more difficult markdown for correct rendering

Posted by jpluimers on 2019/08/20

After blogging on Markdown notes in 2014, Markdown support has come a long way. It also means that the documents written in Markdown has become more complex, and that more tools can render it.

Given the vague aspects of many Markdown dialects, rendering can be troublesome (see my post Babelmark 2 online Markdown checker), so below are some links on some aspects I had trouble with getting right.

Note that there are two markdown linters:

Sometimes, issues are present in one, but not in the other; see:

The command line interface to the Ruby version is easier to install than the JavaScript version as everything is in one gemmdl, unlike the npm, where the cli is in markdown-cli and the library in markdownlint.

–jeroen

Related:

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Posted in *nix, *nix-tools, Development, Lightweight markup language, MarkDown, pandoc document converter, Power User, Ruby, Software Development | Leave a Comment »

… compare two JSON structures and pin-point … the differences – – Nicholas Ring – Google+

Posted by jpluimers on 2019/08/20

I’ve added a few WayBack/Archive.is links to the interesting comments by Zoë Peterson from Scooter Software (of Beyond Compare fame) at [WayBack] … compare two JSON structures and pin-point … the differences – – Nicholas Ring – Google+:

Beyond Compare 4 has an optional “JSON sorted” file format that uses jq to pretty print and sort JSON data before comparing it. It’s not included out of the box yet, but you can get a copy here:

If you’re interested in an actual algorithm and not just an app, I don’t have a suggestion handy, but could dig one up. Tree alignment is more complicated than sequence alignment and we did do research into it, but it was quite a few years ago and didn’t get incorporated into BC. XML alignment algorithms were being actively researched back in the aughts and they should trivially transfer to JSON.

It looks like our research mostly ended around 2002, and I wasn’t personally involved in it, so I don’t know how helpful this will be, but here’s what I have:

The general idea in the thread is that JSON – though not as formalised as XML – does have structure, so if you can normalise it, then XML ways of differencing should work.

Normalisation also means that you need to normalise any floating point, date time, escaping, quoting, etc. Maybe not for the faint of heart.

–jeroen

Posted in *nix, *nix-tools, Beyond Compare, Development, diff, JavaScript/ECMAScript, jq, JSON, Power User, Scripting, Software Development, XML, XML/XSD | Leave a Comment »

Enable/Disable Windows 10 “tray” notification area icons

Posted by jpluimers on 2019/08/19

It looks like they reorganised the way you can enable/disable the Windows Notification Area icons (often called “Icon Tray”) in Windows 10.

Up until Windows 8.1, you could run this:

%SystemRoot%\System32\rundll32.exe shell32.dll,Options_RunDLL 5

There you would end up editing the application specific icons.

As of Windows 10, you need to:

  1. Run %SystemRoot%\System32\rundll32.exe shell32.dll,Options_RunDLL 6
  2. Click on “Select which icons appear on the task bar” (or Dutch “Selecteren welke pictogrammen op de taakbalk worden weergegeven”)

So both the index changed, and you need an extra click to get at the application specific icons.

Further more, you can now only turn them on or off, where up until Windows 8.1, you could also choose only show notifications. I think on means only show notifications as for instance the Java Updater with a setting on on Windows 10 disappears after a Java Update has been installed, whereas on Windows 8.1 it would stay unless you switched from on to only show notifications.

The above commands are based on [WayBack] Create Direct Shortcut for “Notification Area Icons” in Windows Vista and Later – AskVG and

–jeroen

Posted in Power User, Windows, Windows 10 | Leave a Comment »

THE PRINT VERSION

Posted by jpluimers on 2019/08/19

Conference Call Bingo, the viral meme created by E Gilliam. Designed to bring hilarity to your daily drudgery.

Cool: [WayBackTHE PRINT VERSION – PDF

Other versions:

–jeroen

Via: [WayBack] This is one game I hate playing. – Steven Vaughan-Nichols – Google+

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Fun, LifeHacker, Power User, Quotes, T-Shirt quotes | Leave a Comment »

Windows: running “mklink” as Administrator “You do not have sufficient privilege to perform this operation.”

Posted by jpluimers on 2019/08/19

Via “mklink” “You do not have sufficient privilege to perform this operation.”:

The [WayBackmklink tool can create NTFS links so multiple directory entries point to the same object.

It requires the [WayBackSeCreateSymbolicLinkPrivilege (in English Windows versions [WayBack] “Create symbolic links”) which is by default not granted to users as it can expose security vulnerabilities.

Even if a user in the Windows Administrators group has the privilege, it still cannot be executed from a regular command-prompt:

C:\Users\Develope>mklink "%temp%\Recycler" c:\$RECYCLE.BIN
You do not have sufficient privilege to perform this operation.

If you grant a regular user the privilege you can execute if from a regular command prompt.

However, as member of the Administrators group, you have to run this from an elevated command-prompt:

C:\Windows\system32>mklink "%temp%\Recycler" c:\$RECYCLE.BIN
symbolic link created for C:\Users\Developer\AppData\Local\Temp\Recycler <<===>> c:\$RECYCLE.BIN

The reason is that members of the Administrators group get two security tokens when they logon: an elevated full-access token and a regular filtered access token.

They key here are the words full-access and filtered: the elevated token gets more access permissions than the account is configured for, but the regular token gets less access permissions than the account is configured for.

This means that a standard command prompt will not get all the access you might exec, as the regular token is the access permissions minus the filtered permissions.

By now you probably guessed that – despite the documentation [WayBack] Windows Vista Application Development Requirements for User Account Control Compatibility leaving out SeCreateSymbolicLinkPrivilege – that is actually part of the filter. So the regular command-prompt lacks the SeCreateSymbolicLinkPrivilege permission and gives you an error message when executing mklink.

This is opposite to a regular user: if you grant it the “Create Symbolic Links” any command-prompt will get the SeCreateSymbolicLinkPrivilege permission.

–jeroen

via:

Posted in Power User, Windows | Leave a Comment »

When archiving in the WayBack machine returns error 400: clear your cookies

Posted by jpluimers on 2019/08/16

When archiving pages in the WayBack machine, despite Privacy Badger having set to “save no cookies”, it still managed to set truckloads of cookies.

So I used the Chrome settings in chrome://settings/content/cookies to disable cookies and now everything is fine.

–jeroen

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Posted in Chrome, Google, Internet, InternetArchive, Power User, Privacy, WayBack machine | Leave a Comment »

Excel on Mac OS X: Insert, move, or delete page breaks in a sheet

Posted by jpluimers on 2019/08/16

Since I always get confused by the differences in Excel versions (not just between Mac OS X  and Windows):

In Excel for Mac, you can adjust where automatic page breaks occur, add your own page breaks manually, and remove manual page breaks.

Source: [WayBackInsert, move, or delete page breaks in a sheet.

–jeroen

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Posted in Excel, Office, Office 2011 for Mac, Power User | Leave a Comment »