Customizing Miranda

This article was written on August 28, 2009 by CyberNet.

miranda customized.pngarrow Windows Windows only arrow
A little while ago one of my co-workers convinced me to give the Miranda instant messenger a try, and at first I was reluctant because I had heard how much customization was typically needed to get it just the way you wanted it. Over the years I had downloaded it to play around, but it has a rather overwhelming number of options that you can mess with. Then when you throw the addons into the mix the complexity continues to rise.

I took his recommendation (and dedication) to heart, and decided to give Miranda a real shot. I spent a few hours downloading addons, trying out themes, adjusting fonts, and tweaked the messenger until I got everything pixel perfect in my eyes. The end result is what you see to the right.

I have over a hundred contacts that I manage (most are cropped out of the screenshot), and so I wanted something that was compact to maximize the number of visible contacts. Miranda is perfect in this respect because of how customizable the interface is regardless of what theme you choose.

The best part? Even though memory is plentiful these days I’m always happy to find applications that can efficiently do their job. On average I’d say my Miranda instance runs around at around 9MB of memory (fluctuating between 6MB and 13MB depending on how many conversations I have open). It doesn’t get much more efficient than that.

If you decide that you want to give Miranda a try hopefully this article will serve as a good starting point for getting things customized the way you want them.

–Installing Addons or Themes–

For installing addons or themes what you’ll need to do is download them from the Miranda site, extract the files, and place them in the correct directories. These directories are located inside the folder where you installed Miranda, and in most cases that should be here:

  • Addons: C:\Program Files\Miranda IM\Plugins
  • Themes: C:\Program Files\Miranda IM\Skins

Place the files in those locations, and you may need to restart Miranda before you see the changes.

–The Contact List–

The contact list is one of the most important areas for me because I have so much data that I’m trying to cram into a small space. Before I dive into some of the more detailed customizations I made lets take a look at the addons that you’ll need:

  • tipper.pngModern Contact List: This is an addon that will make the contact list even more customizable. Many themes use this, and therefore won’t work properly if you don’t have it installed. If you’re running this addon on Vista or Windows 7 it also adds support for the Aero glass effect to Miranda.
    Note: After installing Modern Contact List you may find that it’s not enabled immediately after restarting Miranda. You’ll need to go into the Options -> Plugins, and disable clist_classic.dll so that you can enable clist_modern.dll. It’s not possible to have both enabled at the same time.
  • Tipper: This provides you with some information about the contact that you’re hovering over in the contact list. You can see things like the last message they sent, their status message, IP address, and much more. The screenshot above is of Tipper.
  • Szandor Vista: This is the theme I’m using for my contact list. It took me a little while to find one that looked good with the customizations I wanted, but this one seemed to suit me the best. If you don’t like dark themes you’ll probably want to check out some of the others, but I tried about two dozen different ones before coming across this gem.

Alright, now that you’ve got those installed here are some of the more detailed customizations I made:

  • Color-code names to match contact’s availability status. I don’t like relying solely on an icon to tell me the status of one of my contacts, and with Miranda I can customize the color of the name for contacts who are available, away, do not disturb (DND), offline, and more. This makes it more clear as to who’s actually available and who’s not. To do this go to Options -> Customize -> Fonts & Colors -> Contact List -> Contact names:
    contact colors.png
  • Compact the view. I don’t need things like avatars shown for my friends, and so I hide them. Go through the settings available at Options -> Contact List -> Row Items to pick and choose what information is shown for each contact in your list. Status messages are kind of important to me so I’ve enabled those, but you’ll find that you can customize everything down to borders and margins around each row.

    • If you click on the parent section (Options -> Contact List) there are also more settings that you can customize for the overall contact list. One setting in particular that I like is under the List tab that lets you hide the vertical scrollbar. How do you scroll through your contacts then? With your mouse wheel! I’ve never missed not having the scrollbar in my contact list.
  • Customize the tooltips. You installed Tipper so that you can see information about your contacts when you hover over them in your list, but now you need to make it look the way you want. There are a lot of options available for you in Options -> Customize -> Tooltips that give you full control over the layout.
    tipper settings.png

There are quite a few other changes that I’ve made, but the rest are really just minor details. The things I outlined will make your contact list look pretty close to mine.

–The Chat Window–

miranda chat.pngYou’ll probably get a kick out of this. For years now things have been moving to tabbed interfaces to conserve space, and messengers have been following a similar route. Miranda, however, doesn’t have tabs out-of-the-box. Instead you need an addon such as TabSRMM to add that kind of functionality. That’s not the funny part though. For the first few days with Miranda I decided to go without tabs though, and I don’t know if I could go back to a tabbed interface now. There’s something nice about having each contact isolated in their own windows. Here I thought tabs were great for everything, but I was wrong. Funny, huh? You do have options available if you decide to go the tabbed route.

There are a few customizations that I’ve made though:

  • Color-code incoming/outgoing messages. Frankly I don’t really need to see the messages I write most of the time… after all, I wrote them. Sometimes it’s nice to go back and reference what I’ve written, but I want to quickly identify messages that the person I’m chatting with has sent. That’s why, as you can see in the screenshot of the chat window above, I’ve grayed out my messages. I also made the font bold for the person I’m talking with. These things can be customized by going to Options -> Fonts & Colors -> Message Log, and look for the settings labeled incoming messages and outgoing messages.
  • Display last [XX] messages when opening a chat window. Sometimes you close a chat window before ending a conversation, and then you can’t remember what you were just talking about. In Miranda you can pick how many messages you want displayed when a chat window is opened. You can specify whether you want the last [XX] messages, or whether you want to show messages from the last [XX] minutes. That way you’ll always be able to pick up on your last conversation without any troubles. To adjust these settings go to Options -> Message Sessions, and click the Messaging Log tab.

My chat windows accomplish the goal that I set out to achieve, and that’s to focus on the messages being sent back and forth. I didn’t want toolbars upon toolbars of buttons, formatting options, and animations that I could send. I wanted a box I could type in, and a box I could see the messages I receive. In fact I removed all available toolbars from both the contact list and chat windows for this very reason. Messengers these days have too many distractions, and I had used the Google Talk client for such a long time because it brought simplicity back to the messenger world.

–Overview–

I know Miranda isn’t going to be for everyone, but I wanted to make sure people know what alternatives there are out there. This seemed especially important with the recent Digsby events, and the excellent Miranda community will surely try to help answer any questions you may have.

Interested in integration with other services like Twitter and Facebook? There are developers working on it, and you can jump in to test if you’d like. The Twitter project can be found here , and the Facebook project is here. See, Miranda has a very powerful community backing them, but it’s just that all this functionality doesn’t come bundled with the app. You have to go looking for some things, and in the end it can prove to be worthwhile.

If you use Miranda, or find some cool addons please let me know in the comments! I would still love to try out anything else you guys may find on your quest for a better messenger.

Miranda Homepage

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

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Samsung updates Galaxy S II, speeds up Swype and fixes auto-brightness issue

Samsung’s Galaxy S II superphone didn’t have many issues to begin with, and we’re hearing there’s one fewer annoying quirk today — Android Community reports that a new firmware update (available via Kies) addresses the overzealous auto-brightness setting that continually irked us during testing. The i9100XWKE2 revision also apparently increases the responsiveness of the Swype software keyboard — which is always a plus — so unless this update also fries handsets or something, it sounds like a desirable one.

[Thanks, Fayez]

Samsung updates Galaxy S II, speeds up Swype and fixes auto-brightness issue originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 15 May 2011 05:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft Releasing Windows Live Folders Soon?

This article was written on April 24, 2007 by CyberNet.

WLFoldersThere has been some news making its way out that Microsoft will soon be launching what everyone calls the “Live Drive.” The service will more than likely be called Windows Live Folders which is something Microsoft accidentally revealed on their online feedback site. A screenshot from the feedback site is pictured to the right, but the link has since been removed. For the time being you can still see it in this cached version which shows the Live Folders option pointing to this broken link).

When Microsoft first announced some information regarding the service last August they said that it would include around 2GB of free storage, but that is likely to increase since that is how much their email service offers now! By this point I think most email services provide more storage space than that, so I would guess that Microsoft will up it to 4GB or 5GB of free online storage. Much like their email service they will probably also have more advanced packages available for those who need more storage space.

Microsoft is also expected to make some announcements next week in Las Vegas as when their 3–day MIX event is going on. A lot of the speculation is that Microsoft will finally release the @Live.com email addresses, and maybe we’ll also see more information on the Windows Live Folders. Keep your eyes peeled next week as we see what Microsoft has in store for us!

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

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Google I/O 2011 T-shirt puzzle solved, reveals the droid you’ve been looking for

If unsolved Google puzzles keep you up at night, you now have one less reason to go sleepless: the Google I/O T-shirt enigma has been unraveled. The picture above contains a series of dots and dashes, which our friends at MobileCrunch recognized as Morse code. Using the line breaks as spaces (new characters), the code then reads:

…. – – .–. –. — — .-.-.- –. .-.. .- ….- -.-. -…. …– —-.

That translates to a URL, which we’ve linked to below. We won’t spoil where it leads, in case you’re feeling noble enough to try decoding it for yourself.

Google I/O 2011 T-shirt puzzle solved, reveals the droid you’ve been looking for originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 14 May 2011 23:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Android Community  |  sourceMobileCrunch, Google  | Email this | Comments

How would you change Apple’s Thunderbolt-equipped MacBook Pro?

Same ‘ole, same ‘ole? There’s no doubt that Apple’s newest MacBook Pro looks awfully similar to the models that have come before it, but the engineers in Cupertino still managed to shake a few things up on the early 2011 model. Aside from throwing an AMD GPU under the hood, pairing that with Intel’s integrated HD 3000 chipset and implementing Sandy Bridge, there’s also an entirely new I/O port: Thunderbolt. But was that really enough? For those of you who couldn’t escape the upgrade bug, we’re curious to know if you’ve been satisfied with the upgrade. If you had control of things, what would you change? Add a few more USB ports? Insist that native USB 3.0 support be added? Throw in a Blu-ray drive? Maybe add a couple of palm rest stickers? Toss your ideas out in comments below — but let’s keep it civil down there, cool?

How would you change Apple’s Thunderbolt-equipped MacBook Pro? originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 14 May 2011 22:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Yahoo Maps Beta Adds Satellite Images

This article was written on April 12, 2006 by CyberNet.

Yahoo Maps Beta Adds Satellite Images

Yahoo, in hopes to rival their competition, has finally added satellite images to their mapping system. After using it for a little while (I had to install Flash first) I started to like how smooth it ran. They did a really nice job putting it together, however, I don’t believe that they did enough to pull people away from the already popular Google Maps.

You shouldn’t be surprised if they soon offer a “Yahoo Earth” which would be a software version of their satellite mapping. Google and MSN currently have this software available to their customers at no cost. Right now it appears that Yahoo is just struggling to keep up.

Yahoo Maps Beta
News Source: Unofficial Yahoo Weblog

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

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RIM recalls 900 faulty BlackBerry PlayBooks, here are the serial numbers (update)

We found the BlackBerry PlayBook to be a pretty solid piece of hardware, but it seems there was a problem batch — an inside source tells us that nearly 1,000 faulty tablets were shipped to Staples, and now they’re being recalled. We’re hoping that Staples (and any other affected retailers) will reach out to customers and inform them of the problem right away, but just in case that doesn’t happen, we’ve compiled a searchable spreadsheet of all 935 alleged serial numbers for you to check against your own. Find it right after the break.

Update: RIM tells Crackberry that the faulty batch of the 16GB tablets was indeed limited to the approximately 1,000 units described here, and that they had a faulty build of the OS “that may result in the devices being unable to properly load software upon initial set-up.” Furthermore, the company says that only a few went out to customers and that most are still in distribution, so with any luck you’ll never have to deal with this problem to begin with.

Continue reading RIM recalls 900 faulty BlackBerry PlayBooks, here are the serial numbers (update)

RIM recalls 900 faulty BlackBerry PlayBooks, here are the serial numbers (update) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 14 May 2011 21:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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RIM recalls at least 900 faulty BlackBerry PlayBooks, here are the serial numbers

We found the BlackBerry PlayBook to be a pretty solid piece of hardware, but it seems there was a problem batch — an inside source tells us that nearly 1,000 faulty tablets were shipped to Staples, and now they’re being recalled. We’re hoping that Staples (and any other affected retailers) will reach out to customers and inform them of the problem right away, but just in case that doesn’t happen, we’ve compiled a searchable spreadsheet of all 935 alleged serial numbers for you to check against your own. Find it right after the break.

Continue reading RIM recalls at least 900 faulty BlackBerry PlayBooks, here are the serial numbers

RIM recalls at least 900 faulty BlackBerry PlayBooks, here are the serial numbers originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 14 May 2011 21:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony begins relaunching PlayStation Network

Company says network will return in stages, after a weeks-long outage that began when Sony’s computer servers suffered a devastating and illegal intrusion.

Originally posted at Media Maverick

PlayStation 3 system update 3.61 available now, ‘phased restoration’ of PSN begins today (update)

Ladies and gentlemen, your PS3 may technically be able to connect to PlayStation Network now, but we’re not through the woods yet — today, Sony is issuing a mandatory System Update (v3.61) which will prepare your game machine for that magical day when the company actually throws the switch. In the meanwhile, Sony says the update will prompt you to change your PlayStation Network password, which will likely rank among the easiest decisions that you’ve ever made.

Update: Sony’s just announced that a “phased restoration” of PlayStation Network and Qriocity is beginning today, and that online gaming, Music Unlimited, Netflix, Hulu, Vudu and MLB.TV should rolling out right now in Europe and North America. Watch cool cat Kaz Hirai deliver the good news in a video after the break.

Update 2: Sony’s got a map of the US up, and will be lighting up individual states — check out our more coverage link to get a rough idea of when you’ll be able to play. The company also says it plans to have PlayStation Network fully functional by the end of May. PR after the break.

Update 3: The restoration is beginning now: we’re seeing Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Maryland, Vermont, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, and California. And would you look at that, the southeast just got its due: Florida, Georgia, North and South Carolina have PSN too… and as of 10:18PM PST, you can add Delaware, Pennsylvania, both Virginias, Ohio, Indiana and Michigan to that list.

Update 4: Annnnnd we should all be back. Sleep well, PSN users. By the way, Sony Online Entertainment (the MMO division) has a list of the free goodies you’ll get for your inconvenience — read it at the link below.

Update 5: Sony just flipped the international switch — PSN’s rolling out across the world.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Continue reading PlayStation 3 system update 3.61 available now, ‘phased restoration’ of PSN begins today (update)

PlayStation 3 system update 3.61 available now, ‘phased restoration’ of PSN begins today (update) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 14 May 2011 19:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Joystiq  |  sourcePlayStation.Blog  | Email this | Comments