Posts tagged Windows
Make: A photoshop quick access keypad
Nov 9th
As you can imagine with the amount of photography posts on this blog, I spend a fair amount of time in Photoshop. Like most people using Photoshop, there are a number of tools and actions that I use far more regularly than others, so I thought it would be nice to have quick access to these on a keypad, so I don’t always have to go to the toolbar to activate them. Yes, I know I could use the standard keyboard and shortcut keys, but I just prefer having them on a dedicated and more visual pad than the standard qwerty. Having an old numeric keypad laying about, and having played with AutoHotKey a fair bit recently, I decided to set about reconfiguring the pad to activate my most common used tools when in photoshop. Here is the result:
The icons you don’t recognise at the bottom are just mapped to a few custom photoshop actions. The – and + keys increase and decrease the brush size.
The key tops are just printed on card, ‘lacquered’ with clear nail varnish to protect the ink a bit, and then glued to the numpad keys. At the moment it’s dedicated to Photoshop, but I’m considering re-printing the tops and having them dual use for Photoshop and Bridge. It’s not the most beautiful thing in the world, granted, but it does the job well and it will suffice for now till I feel justified in buying an Optimus OLED keyboard :P
The AHK script and icon for anyone who is interested, can be downloaded here: PS-Pad
~Shepy
Windows Re-installs made easy.
Jul 15th
I have recently built a new PC, so I’ve been planning to format and rebuild the old one to make it into a media server for the lounge to replace the ageing and slow machine already performing that function. One thing I was not looking forward to though was having to find all the drivers for the various parts, its so long since I built that machine that I don’t recall what motherboard, graphics card etc, etc I used when building it.
Now normally when I build a new machine, I’m pretty good with keeping all the driver discs etc together and handy for re-installs, but over time they seem to drift and after 2 years I’d have more chance of finding the Holy Grail that finding those discs.
Luckily a few weeks back I happened across a program that claimed to be able to rip out and backup all of the drivers from a system, ready for import onto a fresh install, so what better opportunity to give it a try.
One swift download and unzip of DriverBackup (which incidentally is free and open source) later, and I’m looking at the main driver backup window. When the program first opens, it doesnt show any hardware, but clicking the ‘Refresh’ button made it go scurrying off and collecting data about all the drivers in my system. A few seconds later there was a complete list of drivers and hardware, including some stuff I had forgotten I had even owned, but obviously still had driver files lingering in the system long after I had stopped using the device! From here you just click the “Start Backup” button, the software asks you where you want it to save the output, so i pointed it to a 4GB usb key and away it went copying driver files merrily. After about 2 minutes it had finished copying all files, and I was left with a nice directory structure of 1 folder per device, with the folder named after the device.
Sceptical about how reliable this was going to be, I formatted the machine and re-installed XP, and then once at the desktop for the first time went to investigate the state of the device manager. As I’d expected, maybe half a dozen items with no drivers, most importantly of which the network card. Not expecting much, I right clicked the offending network card and selected to update driver, then selected the option for “look in this location” for the driver, and sure enough after pointing it at the correct folder on the usb key, it had installed the driver fine and the network card functioned as expected, I was pleasantly surprised! I continued down through every one of the non-functioning items, updated driver and pointed them at the relevant folder on the usb key and they each worked perfectly every time.
I must say I am quite impressed with how effortless this made the whole thing, I half expected to have to spend an hour or so checking what hardware was in the machine and hunting down drivers, but no such pain, all sorted in mere minutes. Installing the sound card driver didn’t only give me basic sound but still installed the correct surround sound management application as well, I can see no difference between having installed this way and doing so from the original CD or downloaded setup file.
If you have a machine you need to format and re-install, you should seriously consider having a look at DriverBackup before you take the final plunge and format it, it could just save you some wasted time when it comes to getting it all back up and running again!
As usual, comments and suggestions welcome.
~Shepy
Modlock V0.5 Released
Aug 19th
I have just released ModLock Version 0.5, which brings:
- Added option for up to 4 extra customisable buttons
- Added ability to check for updates manually or automatically
- Filename name back to modlock.exe to prevent problems updating
- Added double click support to tray icon
As usual, it can be downloaded from the ModLock page by clicking ‘modlock’ at the top right of this site.
As it now has update checking in, I wont be making any more blog posts about new releases, so you’ll either need to use the built in updating or check the page every now and then.
~Shepy
ModLock v0.3 Released
Aug 14th
The latest version of ModLock has been released, with the following features:
- Added transparency support
- Added auto run on startup option
- Added minimize to tray functionality
ModLock now has its own page on the site, where you can dowload it from. That page can be found by clicking the ModLock link in the top left, or by clicking here
~Shepy
ModLock V0.2 Released
Aug 13th
Modifier (Alt, Ctrl, Shift) Lock for Tablet PC
Aug 12th
Recently i bought myself a Tablet PC / notebook, which I have been using quite a bit with photoshop to modify photographs when away from my main desktop PC.
One problem i stumbled into however with this is the need to use modifier keys, such as Alt or Shift to change the way in which a tool behaves. When the computer is in tablet mode rather than notebook mode i have zero access to the keyboard, which made this a bit awkward to use the clone tool, for example, as i would have to half unfold the tablet to get to the actual keyboard, or use the huge standard on screen keyboard.
I had a bit of a search about and was unable to find software that suited my requirements, namely a small app that sat on screen and provided just the three modifier keys and more importantly, was free.
As i couldn’t find anything, and i was getting bored, i decided instead to just knuckle down and code it, and thus Modifier Lock for Tablet PC (ModLock) was born. A quick screenshot:
Avira results
Jun 27th
End of the scan: 27 June 2008 15:14
Used time: 5:41:36 min
The scan has been done completely.
48752 Scanning directories
2290751 Files were scanned
31033 Archives were scanned
I can live with that, under 6 hours suits me just nicely, less than half of what AVG was taking.
If you’re looking for some Windows Anti-Virus, especially if you have an unusual storage setup like mine, I would recommend Avira, its fast and no nonsense with a simple interface.
~Shepy
AVG Sucks
Jun 27th
Since the move over to the new 8 series AVG, it has ran like an absolute dog. Now i realise that I probably have more files than the average user, with over 1.5Tb of data on this machine, but considering that the old 7.5 version used to take approx 4.5 hours to scan, why does this new version take over 14 hours?
I have tried tinkering with the options, making sure it was set to fast scan and Googled to see if there was anything else i could do, but it would seem that its giving a lot of people similar problems with no known cure.
I’m rarely away from the computer for over 14 hours, so I don’t want to have to contend with the machine running sluggishly and being unresponsive for the anti-virus to run a scan which is why it was scheduled to do its thing during the night while I’m asleep. Its a shame, I’ve been a loyal user of AVG for a number of years now but the time has come to ditch it.
I have done a bit of reading of reviews about the various free anti-virus providers and Avira looks really quite promising. I had considered going back to Avast, but that bloody irritating “Your virus database has been updated” it feels compelled to shout periodically just annoys the life out of me. I leave my computer on 24/7 and the last thing I need is that shouting at me in the middle of the night if I have forgotten to turn down the volume. To be fair, there is probably an option somewhere to disable that, but most reviews give it a low detection percentage anyway so I’m going to give it a wide berth for now.
I’ve installed Avira, and I’m letting it do a full scan of my drives now, so lets see what it comes up with.
~Shepy