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Not quite, but that gives me some great marketing ideas.
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Sounds like a submission to this site[^].
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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Smirk
Way off base. The ones I've seen were pretty spiffy stuff.
Can't seem to find them today.
I'm guessing the bandwidth dragon killed the business model.
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There are plenty of other neat tricks like this as well.
"I've seen more information on a frickin' sticky note!" - Dave Kreskowiak
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Paul Conrad wrote: There are plenty of other neat tricks like this
Making it like XP is a neat trick? It should be better than XP on its own.
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Sorry, the link had an auto play noisy video so I closed before reading. Was there anything interesting?
veni bibi saltavi
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Nagy Vilmos wrote: auto play noisy video
My browser does not allow this, so I did not notice.
In a nutshell:
GodMode. The mere mention of the omnipotence-granting tweak should bring a smile to the face of veteran Windows tinkerers, and yes, the legendary hidden feature still works in the Windows 10 Preview.
GodMode essentially unlocks a centralized table of contents for all of Windows’ far-flung features and customization options, drawing all your options together into a single interface and sorting them by tweak types. Once you’ve basked in its glory, you’ll be hooked for life.
Activating it is easy: Just create a new folder and rename it to following:
GodMode.{ED7BA470-8E54-465E-825C-99712043E01C}
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Or they could just call it, "General Table of Contents"; since it does not grant you any special powers.
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Exactly.
The irony here is high : Having such a "general table of contents" is precisely what everybody with a bit of organisation feeling would do if they were assigned the task to guide the user. Instead of that, the operating system clusters all the settings in a zillion different places, and then creates a back door for accessing the overview and names it "God Mode", as if you'd need any kind of super power to be able to handle a table of content.
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Richard MacCutchan wrote: any special powers
And, if I may add, God mode is for me associated to IDDAD*, IDKFQ, and, if really needed, IDCLIP.
*For qwertyians, IDDQD and IDKFA.
modified 28-Aug-15 7:07am.
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Rage wrote: IDDQD and IDKFQ The same fate awaits us all.
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Rage wrote: *For qwertyians, IDDQD and IDKFQA. FTFY.
Invincible Doom Kicks Elephanting Backside was the expansion that went round the traps back in the day. It always made it an easy to recall combo.
"When I was 5 years old, my mother always told me that happiness was the key to life. When I went to school, they asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up. I wrote down 'happy'. They told me I didn't understand the assignment, and I told them they didn't understand life." - John Lennon
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It's not exactly new to Windows 10.
That feature was present at least since Vista.
I'm not sure if XP had it.
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They all had (XP and 7 included). I did not say it was new, only that it might help the fellow CPians who were having their first Win10 attempts
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I need to copy some code from one computer to another, but soft copies are forbidden for this particular computer. Standard OCR software does not do well with underscores, tildes, and the double parens that mark a procedure with no arguments. { As in: x(); } I did try using an OCR font in windows, but it did not help any.
Does anyone know of an OCR app that will produce editable text from an PDF? Being able to handle landscape would be a huge bonus. Maybe even 11 x 17 in landscape. That would be really cool.
Thank you for your time
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You should give Quick answers[^] a try.
The sh*t I complain about
It's like there ain't a cloud in the sky and it's raining out - Eminem
~! Firewall !~
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Did that. Thank you.
Thank you for your time
If you work with telemetry, please check this bulletin board: www.irigbb.com
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The latest ... Adobe reader version (x if I am correct) comes with an OCR. Just save your pdf file as text.
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bkelly13 wrote: hat will produce editable text from an PDF?
Foxit PDF reader[^] is awesome -- if you have a PDF, you should be able to c&p from it. Then again, I probably don't understand the details of the issue.
Marc
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Er .... you're converting a text file to pdf in order to have it read by OCR to convert it to a text file? I'm obviously missing something ... or you're crazy ... one of the two!
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Naw, you did not miss anything. I just left out the details.
I work for the government on classified computers. There is a bunch of code that the code itself it not classified, but is on a classified computer. We need to find a way to get it on an unclassified computer. Moving any type of media from a high level of classification to a lower one is strictly forbidden. The only option is to print it. Then we can retype the code in or scan it and extract the data via OCR.
Thank you for your time
If you work with telemetry, please check this bulletin board: www.irigbb.com
modified 4-Sep-15 20:12pm.
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PDF Xchange Viewer has OCR functionality built in
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