I have a server with 10+ virtual domains (most running Mediawiki). I'd like to be able to watch their traffic remotely with something nicer than tail -f . I could cobble something together, but was wondering if something super-deluxe already exists that involves a minimum of hacking and support. This is mostly to understand what's going on, not so much for security (though it could serve that role too). It must:

I' ve made some nice panoramas and I am just curious what is most practical to use.

ACDsee is nice, viewer included in Photovista is very slow, etc.

Just curious, as I mentioned.

One of my panoramas will be in

 , later tonight.

Keep in touch.


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Aloha well the MGI viewer is not that bad they are coming out with a scriptable one soon ????

but the one that is very nice and has a lot of scripting functions etc...

is Dersch's

 -furtwangen.de/~dersch/

A scanner is also a nice alternative, the late Epson flatbed has even built-in ICE. But in the end I guess you will go for a nice projector - Liesegang has a (manual) model that on e*ay can be found for about 100-150 EUR.

5x5 means the standard projectos where all slides have an outside measure of 5x5. I found some superslide frames for cheap on e*ay, they cost you about EUR 3-4/20 pcs and I cut some of my slides into this format. With your Rolleiflex 75mm lens you will have about a 90mm field of view that can be mounted in the superslide. A nice and inexpensive way to mount them, but you lose a bit of film of course.

I created a web map to review damage assessment inspections using the Attachment Viewer app. It would be nice if an engineer could review the photos and update the features directly in the Attachment Viewer. This way if they need to reclassify an inspection, add notes, or fill in missing information, they can do it all in one place while reviewing the attached photos.

For example if you open a pdf it always defaults to page width as the size. This makes the pdf document massive and so zoomed in its nuts. You can change the zoom to something else but since there are no preferences you can set for the program, if you go and open another pdf it defaults back to this ultra zoomed in experience. It genuinely makes me angry even thinking about it. I hate bad design. I feel like some basic configurable preferences would make the default document viewer about a million times better. I would love to be able to just open a pdf at a reasonable size by default instead of wanting to gnaw my own fist off in frustration at being visually assaulted by a pdf viewer.

When I ran Ubuntu MATE, I found Atril to be perfectly fine as a lightweight PDF viewer. The default "page width" zoom didn't bother me - but you could raise an issue on the project page to request for a more obvious default zoom preferences area:

For viewing PDFs, I always used my browser. While not the best solution, one could omit the PDF viewer entirely when using most modern web browsers and have something that doesn't suck. Nice to know for cheap on-the-go setups where space is as limited as size.

It hurts to say it... but Foxit Phantom for Windows is an example of a great PDF tool. Foxit Reader for Windows is an example of what is required at minimum for a PDF reader. Basic editing tools. The Linux version of Foxit Reader it is not quite as nice as the Windows version (both are free). It is like Master PDF Reader in that it is missing simple click buttons for basic edits like highlighting, strike out, etc. It's also missing the quick pop up options for copy and highlight upon dragging over text.

I'm partial to Chromas. it to is a free ware sequence viewer with all the bells and whistles. Can be downloaded from www.technelysium.com.au/chromas.html. Seems to be frequently updated and the full version of the program (ChromasPro) which allows contig assembly, sequence alignments etc. is very cheap and well worth it.



Cheers,


Scott

We are currently investigating similar transparency issues and will likely release a viewer version addressing them in the near future. I will let you know here once we have some progress about the issue.

got time to test it. It works awesome - even on my pi4. 

Loaded my largest gcode file for "stress testing" (this model) and it takes a few seconds to build it in the viewer but not that long and everything stays responsive.

Great work 

Looks like 30 fpsish but I can't say it for sure. Is there a way to see the fps in chromium?

I have found a little thing that might be a bug but idk: I printed this model on the virtual printer and while printing the raft and looking at viewer with progress sync activated sometimes the finished layed flickered on top of the unfinished one. I could try to screencapture it if you haven't seen it before.

In the meantime I put up a new version. Two big changes.

-The animation when printing is now nice and smooth (as your frame rate will allow).

-And I added environment maps to the print nozzle. If you have frame rate to burn you can turn on "reflections" in the options and it will update in real time and look all kinds of shiny.

I took another look at the constructor error. I thought it was in the regular OctoPrint gcode viewer but it seems it is trying to construct (or check dependencies on) GCodePreviewViewModel which is something I cant find in the source. Is this maybe some other plugin?

Occasionally handy: samtools' tview (when over slow network or for quick check). One of the few viewers that display inserted sequences (what else besides gap5?). But most users would prefer IGV instead.

It doesn't let you edit them directly, but does format them for reading nicely in columns. To edit, it has a button to take you to that line in the text file, so it does still help with editing, in a way.

It hasn't. It doesn't work with Windows 7 so presumably won't with Windows 8 either. Does anyone know of an EXIF viewer that works in the same way as Opanda on Windows 7, and preferably with Chrome? If not, what is the best viewer to use with Chrome to view the EXIF data of photos posted here?Canon 7D2 16-35 f/4L IS 17-55 f/2.8 IS 18-135 f/3.5-5.6 IS STM 50 f/1.8 100 f/2.8 Macro 100-400L IS II

Picture editing is OK. CC always welcome.

Here is my question:

on some computers XML is presented in viewer very nicely, wrapped and in colors, while on other computer the same XML (same record) is shown in colors, but not wraped (in one line).

While investigating your issue, I noted some functionality in SQL Nav that is terribly confusing.

I draw your attention to the two attachments...

The only difference you will note between these two images, is that the XML is formatted in one of them, and not formatted in the other one.

-The first image is the clob viewer in edit mode.

-The second image is the clob viewer in view mode.

The problem is, that in the second image (view mode) there are several buttons in the dialogue that should be grayed out (i.e. inactive) or removed as the functionality is not available.

You could be forgiven for thinking that you were in edit mode!! as it looks like you are

Hey, wouldn't it be nice if you could directly login to a friend's pad or hangout spot? Guess what? We've got that in Viewer 2.5 Beta! There are a couple preferences boxes you need to check, and I've got you covered from start to finish, so download the 2.5 Beta and watch this video to see exactly how to make this work for you:

Seems to be a nice viewer. I can't wait to test it whe... O WAI... i can wait because i'm not able to log in SL since 3 weeks and you guys (whatever you're able to do, you, lindens) don't even read my dozen of tickets ?

3. The Herald-Coaster, Rosenberg - Gary Martin. "Bullish touch basketball" Great work up at the top of the photo. And 1? "Closed expressions soccer" Another nice shot, well timed and very raw.

2. Breckenridge American - Rob Durham. "Buckaroo relays" Both shots are simply good pictures played big. Action is simple and facial expressions show great determination. "Softball" Well cropped. Ball could use more space to side but otherwise a really nice pix.

3. The Highlander, Marble Falls - Virgil Belk. "Marble Falls basketball" Tighter crop from bottom and more from above ball (if there was any) would have made for a stronger action shot. "Dogs football" Good photo for action. Again tight crop from top and bottom would bring action closer to viewer.

3. Clay County Leader - Phil Major. "Bearcat relays" Tough shot isolating one hurdler and keeping the fluid elements of hurdling - outstretched arms, beautiful hurdle form, determined expression. "Aerobatics basketball" This is a nice action shot underplayed by photo editor. Should have been much bigger. Well-cropped.

4. Frio Nueces Current, Pearsall - "Going the other way" by Joe McMillian. Slow shutter plus flash freezes action but still allows for some motion. Could use tighter crop on right side to focus right on action. "Running basketball" by Manuel Azocar III. Slow sync flash gives viewer sensation of speed and motion. Nicely done.

1. The Free Press, Diboll - "That's keeping your head basketball" by Anthony Delco. By far best of the division in terms of overall peak of the moment sports action. These are rare, treasured moments. Great job. "Lufkin receiver" by Mike Zimmerman. Wide aperture or long tele-lens blurs background and tight crop brings arms/legs/bodies and "the ball" right to the viewer. And the black and white reproduction is spot-on.

2. Springtown Epigraph - Paula Campbell. "Lady Porcupines basketball" Strong first place contender, but lost out to uniqueness. Still a top winner. "Porcupine fielder" Great action. Nice size and crop. Very nice color.

2. The Pflugerville Pflag - "Second-grader basketball" by Robert Wood. Kids make great photos. Nice angle and tight crop bring viewer into action. "Connally football" by David Deardorff. Tight shot but caption could have been better. 006ab0faaa

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