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TechTV.com RIP

SlashdotOgre writes "It has finally happened, www.techtv.com is no more. This was somewhat expected after Comcast decided to give the ax. This is a bit of a shame; as many users know, the site was an excellent resource for both product reviews and software. Most noteably, the Call for Help section has disappeared and The Screen Savers only has recent episodes in the Episode History section. If Comcast does own the rights to older material, I do hope they decide to post some of it (but I doubt that will be enough to ge me to watch their "new" network)."

2 of 261 comments (clear)

  1. OT: A new idea for WYSIWYG rich text editors by bootedcat · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Last night was the first time my post to the USENET via Google Groups being deleted. The situation is strange. I post it here for records anyway: A new idea for WYSIWYG rich text editors Hello All, When I loaded a document to OpenOffice Writer and wanted to add annotation text immediately after some words, I found it difficult to easily insert annotation text with another formatting to multiple positions of the original text. Suppose the original text is formatted with Times New Roman, Unbold: aaa bbb ccc ddd eee fff ggg hhh iii jjj kkk. And I want to append annotations "123", "456", "789" formatted with Arial Bold to the words "bbb", "ddd", "fff" in the original text, to make it like this: aaa bbb [123] ccc ddd [456] eee fff [789] ggg hhh iii jjj kkk. Here [ ] means the enclosed text is formatted with Arial Bold, a different formatting from that of the original text. In practice I want to annotate for much more words than the above simplified example. What makes my task difficult is that all WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) rich text editors (Microsoft Word, OpenOffice Writer, Wordpad, etc.) apply the formatting of the current selection point as you type. To change the formatting of the current selection point, you have to do extra clicks or keyboard shortcuts. And when you move the selection point to another position, the current formatting automatically changes according to the new position. This behavior may be useful in general, but I suggest rich text editors to allow a new formatting mode - that is to say, once you choose a formatting, all subsequent inputs will use this formatting, regardless where you input. I call this new mode "Pen Mode", because it is like choosing a new pen of another color/size and writing anywhere in the document without having to reset to this formatting again and again. Best Regards, Yao Ziyuan http://babelcode.crazylife.org

  2. Unscrewed by rscrawford · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    My sister's boyfriend is an intern on Unscrewed. So I'll probably still check it out.

    --
    -- The reason it's called the right wing? Irony.