After a few years of using the primitive XCOPY command, I was looking for a good, free, folder sync program to handle my backups for me.
I’ve found one, it is called Allway Sync, and can be found here: http://allwaysync.com/
Interfaces that use their own colour schemes other than the OS default always annoy me (because they always look hiedeous) but other than that this program is really great – look into it.
After looking through the entire firefox themes directory, I’ve concluded that they’re all hideous. If you want something that looks good in Vista, anyway.
The only decent one I found (and the one I’m using) is ChromiFox, which rather sadly is a rip of the Google Chrome skin.
Oh well, I guess they can’t get everything right…
This is my experience on using an SD Card for ReadyBoost. The main reason for using as SD card is that I can leave it permanently in my laptop, as opposed to a USB drive which would obviously stick out the side.
Initially I had a 2GB TwinMOS SD card, rated at 133x. At first Vista told it wasn’t suitable for ReadyBoost, but after a few formats of the card at with different filesystems and cluster sizes it started to work. I never noticed any real difference, and much to my annoyance Vista kept “forgetting” to use it for ReadyBoost and I’d have to keep switching it on again.
After a few months the SD card stopped working altogether so I got it replaced under warranty. This time I got a 4GB TwinMOS card listed as “SDHC Superfast” (whatever that means), and told Vista to use practically the entire 4GB (whatever the recommended value was, something aroun 3.8 GB). This time the performance increase was very noticable – mostly when it came to opening programs, and of course having lots of heavyish programs open simultaneously. Also, Vista never seems to “forget” anymore, it just works all the time silently. Even with my laptop’s 2GB of actual (which is pretty decent) the effects of ReadyBoost with this card were noticable.
And of course you’d never know it was there since it’s hidden neatly in the SD card slot.. nice.
If you’re running Windows Vista, Adobe Dreamweaver CS3 and want syntax highlighting/coloring for Smarty template engines, this will work:
http://smarty.incutio.com/?page=ConfiguringDreamweaver
My own notes:
-In Vista, the folder you want to look for is:
C:\Users\<user>\AppData\Roaming\Adobe\Dreamweaver 9\Configuration\CodeColoring
-The Smarty scheme should come before the scheme segment for HTML. I put it just after the ‘Text’ one.
-This solution is not perfect, the closing braces } often get coloured incorrectly.. Am working on perfecting it, will update when I have a better version.