Thanks Ernest for your explanation of MidStr>the_year,3,2,the_year and the GetDate>Function !
Armstrong,
Before I go and make you mad at me later on in this post,

I am going to ask you a few questions.
Have you come to any additional conclusions regarding automatic burning to CD-R/RW/DVD other than those below?
1. Defective CD/DVD
After days of researching the Internet, and since I am waiting for a virtual winner in the DVD Wars, I currently only use Taiyo Yuden CD-R's to back up my important data, no matter what else is on sale. I also only use TDK CD-RW's for the same reasons. I haven't had a bad disc since I started using these two brands. Do you have any insider knowledge of any better brands?
2. CD/DVD is (almost) full
Haven't decided what to do about this one, besides manually checking it daily. Maybe I will find some software in my travels that will help me keep an eye on the remaining space left on my CD-RW. This should be possible, since WriteCD-RW Pro makes a CD-RW look like a giant floppy drive to the system. I suppose I will have a verification failure, as in number 3, when I have a full CD.
Any more thoughts on automatic burning? Let me know what you think about the Software Architects implementation of Mount Rainier after you get done reading their website.
Since I make my living here in Saint Paul helping clients with their data protection and Internet Security needs, I was absolutely astonished when you mentioned that my new toy, Helix Producer Basic 9, was, in your opinion, "a well-known spyware". You went on to state that I should not "install it on my mission-critical PC connecting to the internet". You further stated that "Their ultimate goal is to sell consumer profiles they gather thru their so-call freeware. It's hardly free at all!" I assume you are talking about RealNetworks.com goal when you talk about "their goal."
Well, I am always ready for a lively sypware discussion, as long as we both agree to stick to the issue hand, have the welfare of each other our top priority, and not attack each other personally.
So, that being said, let me be the first to throw the gauntlet down.
Let me start by saying it's my business to keep my eyes and ears open regarding any new developments in the fast-moving computing field, and decide if any of these new developments could be of any value to my clients. Since it's my livelihood, I constantly place myself in "research mode" and I spend as much time as I can making myself aware of as much media information as I can get my hands on, including cable television, computer magazines, ezines, newsletters, and email listserves. Of course, I also browse the web constantly, which is how I came to learn about Macro Scheduler. Luckily, I enjoy what I do so much that it is not work for me, or else I would have burned myself out years ago.
Even though I hadn't heard anything about Helix Producer Basic 9 in my normal research, when you said you thought it was spyware, I decided to do some Internet research on it to see what I could find out about it.
I religiously use software from Lavasoft called Ad-Aware 5.83 Plus, so I wasn't immediately alarmed that I had inadvertantly installed some sort of spyware on my computer. I am sure you have heard of, and perhaps even use, the free version of Ad-Aware. A fifteen minute search on Google.com will reveal that Ad-Aware is one of the leading detectors of spyware that is currently available. Anyways, the Plus version of Ad-Aware, which is available for a paltry $15 US, has a feature that runs in the backround that will not allow you to install any known spyware, even if you try.
Besides the backround monitor, which I always have running, I decided to use Ad-Aware to perform a complete scan of all the files on my system. All it found was 8 spyware cookies and one Alexa.
Wouldn't you think that if Helix Producer Basic 9 was a "well-known spyware," it would show up in such a scan? Well, it didn't.
After I finished the Ad-Aware scan, I browsed over to
http://www.spychecker.com/
.
to see if "Helix Producer Basic 9" or even just "Helix" was a well-known spyware. With an index of almost a thousand software titles, you would think that any "well-known spyware" would come up, wouldn't you?
Helix Producer is the recording software, and RealOne is the player software for RealNetwork's proprietary .rm and the older RealAudio .ra media clips, so I typed in "RealOne Player Basic 2", "RealOne" and and even "RealNetworks". If any of those were "well-known" spyware, don't you think that they would also appear in a list of almost a thousand software titles?
Since Ad-Aware and Spychecker do not consider either Helix Producer Basic 9 or RealOne Player Basic 2 to be spyware, I have a few questions for you.
What information do you have that led you to believe that Helix Producer Basic 9 was/is a spyware application? I am always willing to learn something new.
At this point I will grant you that the configuration of the RealOne Player, is set by default to send out a lot of browsing information about you that you might want to have kept secret, but it looks like you can just turn off those "features" , by simply deselecting them, which is what I did. You can't do that with any other kind of spyware that I know about. I also hate the pop-up screens that you get when you browse around with RealOne Player. But, if you recall, all I want it for is to listen to Coast to Coast, so I am not going to be doing any browsing anyways.
And there don't seem to be any such "features" in Helix Producer Basic 9.
I have Zone Alarm Pro 3.5 and I could just take away RealOne Player's access to the Internet to just listen to the clips that I record with Helix Producer Basic 9. Would that make you feel any better?
For the moment, let's assume that one or the other of these two softwares are indeed spyware. I am going to start up Helix Producer to make a recording for about 5 hours per day 5 days per week, same URL, same time every day, then I am going to turn it off and not use it anymore for the rest of the week. It is not going to be running all the time like some of the other spyware is designed to do. I will probably install it on a different computer, separate from my main computer so that I can get the best recording, so I won't be browsing the Internet while it is running.
Do I really care if RealNetworks finds out that I listen to/record the same old boring 5 hour show, 5 days per week, same URL, same time every day? I do not see how they are going to get any kind of profile about me from that little bit of information. Can you see any drawbacks to my way of thinking?
I am anxiously awaiting your rebuttal. But please be kind.
Make it a great day!
Edward