stormdog: (Tawas dog)
In my digital preservation class, a guest speaker (who gave a really interesting talk!) mentioned emulating Winamp on a website. I still use Winamp 2.71 as my default audio player. I got used to it a while back and have never found a need to change. Curious about how long ago 'a while back' was, I Googled and found that Winamp 2.71 is nearly 21 years old now. It was released in January of 2001. I tried Winamp 3 when it was released, but I didn't like something or other about it so I didn't update.

That's just a few months after Google's search engine left beta. I think I was primarily using a results aggregator called Dogpile for my searching at the time. I was probably running Windows 98 on my computers. Youtube wouldn't exist for several more years yet. My parents got DVDs through the mail via Netflix: it wouldn't turn into a streaming service for another six years.

Is it weird that this program still works? Is it just simple enough that all the backend OS changes from Windows 98 to Windows 10 don't affect it? Anyway, as long as it keeps working, it does everything I care about it doing (which is not much!) so I don't see a reason to change.

Winamp: still whipping the llama's ass 21 years later!

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Winamp Skin Museum - https://pcper.com/2020/10/remember-whipping-the-llamas-ass/
stormdog: (Geek)
I have a technical, Excel-related question for those who know the program.

I'm having issues with Excel displaying large numbers in scientific notation, even when I don't want it to, and *even when they're formatted as text*. I spent over an hour trying to fix this issue earlier this week in order to join a couple of tables within ArcGIS. The only way I could get them to display properly was:

First: format the column of numbers as text. They still showed in scientific notation, so

Second: click each individual cell, then click the field at the top that shows the actual value. This changed the displayed value in the cell. I had to do that for each of the 120-plus cells, which was a pain in the ass, and not practical on a much larger scale.

Do any of you know what I'm taking about? All I can find online is a bunch of people with the same problem, some of whom have a lot of profanity to direct at Excel and Microsoft. I can relate. Were it up to me, Excel would never, ever reformat anything into scientific notation ever. But alas, there seems to be no such option. But why on God's green Earth do they reformat *text* that way?

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stormdog: a woman with light skin and long brown hair that cascades over one shoulder. On her other side, she is holding a large plush shark against herself. She has pink fingernails and pink cat eye glasses (Default)
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