This. Almost no software a parent can install is immune to kids. Plus, contrary to current browser vendor "wisdom", the most important security tools are (or should be) already on the screen: the location bar and the status bar. Teach your kids to pay attention to where they are and where they're going.
Although I find mapping hosts to 0.0.0.0 is faster, because it's not a valid IP address, so the DNS subsystem of your OS will ignore it without trying to connect.
There are several hostfile collections out there. I merged three of them several years ago just for my own freedom from ads and other junk. I currently have 131572 host names zero'd out.
Because they still think they can find people with 5 years experience in [core skill] to fill low paying, entry level positions. It also doesn't help that very few technology recruiters actually know what they're talking about.
The reality is, internet changed everything. They only want to buy, what they want to buy.
This is why television's channel package business model is doomed. The average cable customer only watches about a dozen channels; the rest of their cable bill goes to subsidize the other 138 channels. Cable TV is increasingly seen as not worth the cost.
If we could get a la carte programming, cable costs would plummet... those dozen channels would total about $20/month. But so would the number of channels, most of which couldn't survive without their current subsidies. Every cable and studio executive will proclaim to be a "free market guy", except in cases like this.
These short lifecycles are proof that WOTC (and their Hasbro overlords) still don't know how to manage an RPG. Almost everyone complained about moneygrubbing when 3.5 came out, and then some more when 4e came out. WOTC over-corrected for TSR's failure (too many crap/undersupported settings, and silly supplements) and took the wrong lessons from it. They've reduced the number of settings and put the core system on a version cycle that the model can't support, when they should have let system versions stand for 10 years and draw turnover from new setting materials.
Granted, 1e only lasted ~11 years until 1988 because of a legal spat between TSR and Gygax, otherwise who knows how long it could have run. 2e ended because WOTC thought it was too complex, and therefore difficult to market (it sort of was, after TSR spent its last six years bloating it). 3.5, 4e, and now this are just gratuitous.
And the sad thing is, most people who cut their teeth on 3e+ just don't know how to portray a character (or properly GM a game), because modern D&D is more about combat and powers; it's become somewhat more an FPS/MMO with dice than a classic tabletop RPG.
If this new version trades feats/powers/prestige classes (all the roll-playing junk that metastasized from kits in the brown books) for actual role playing, they'd be getting the game back on track.
We have now arrived well within step #2 of the plan I laid out before. Wait for some more networks to jump on this litigation bandwagon, then offer to shelve AutoHop in exchange for offering their channels a la carte, even at up to triple each channel's carrier rate. This way, people who actually want ESPN can pay ~$15 for it, instead of everyone paying ~$5.
Aero, and to a lesser extent Luna, had no coherent design philosophy. Random things were made shiny (from among a few different shiny styles), or animated, and the use of color was inconsistent. Plus, Aero sacrificed a lot of easy customization... why am I stuck with 8px thick window borders unless I download and install a binary that replaces Areo's images and skin geometry?
I suspect Metro is a correction for that, perhaps an overcorrection.
Continue taking steps to roll out AutoHop. Let the networks rage.
When the networks begin making serious litigation threats (which they will), offer them a deal: AutoHop or a la carte channels: Dish will cease to offer channel packages.
When the networks choose a la carte (which they will), stipulate that if a la carte is ever abolished, they consent to AutoHop.
Result: Dish customers get a better deal, and Dish gets more customers.
The discord you point out is why I have trouble believing these stories as they are presented. Sophisticated obfuscation techniques thwarted by boneheaded transport tactics, all done by Muslim fundamentalists embedding secrets in porn. It's just a bit too contrived and shiny.
Ignore everything he says to justify iPhone on Sprint, what Sprint really wants is to get in on the Apple party.
As a Sprint customer with an Android 4G phone (but no 4G service in my area, and I pay $10/month for it), I really would rather that they spend that pile of money on building out their network. Sure, they're going to roll out LTE over the next couple years, but my phone isn't LTE. Dammit. And my city will be among the last to get Sprint LTE.
Tablets are limited in what they can produce, both by the touch interface and by the landscape of available software. Sure, you can make a video on a tablet (if it has a camera) but doing anything more than remedial video editing is a no-go. Still graphics production is, even if there were equivalents to GIMP/Photoshop/Illustrator/etc, an exercise in masochism. Even working on a spreadsheet is infuriating. Playing any PC or console game? Forget about it, unless the game is ported to a tablet platform... and even then the UI will be hobbled/dumbed down.
Phones take the tablet limitations even further due to their reduced size, even though their processing power is for the most part equivalent.
So, if limited to one device: laptop, no question about it. Two devices: laptop and phone. After all, a tablet is either a weak PC without a keyboard attached, or an oversized phone that can't make cellular calls. There's nothing a tablet can do that the other two can't.
If this does happen and anyone is surprised by it since Elop took over, they're idiots.
The Nokia/WP7 partnership has already done damage to Nokia. MS knows (or or expected) that WP7 wouldn't gain traction, and that they'd have to buy a handset maker to make it competitive. Now that Nokia has submitted to their doom, MS can become an OEM for almost peanuts. I'm surprised that Ballmer didn't let Nokia bleed out longer.
The people within Nokia that have carrier relationships would be kept on and assimilated to doing sales the Microsoft way. Redmond may have their flaws, but sales really isn't one of them... they need to get their foot further in the door with the carriers.
Plus, none of the other OEMS really screamed when Google bought Motorola Mobility.
Since you have previous pro game dev experience, you should know the entire crew is divided up into teams by task. Assuming some sort of 3d platform, not all the kids will have equal interest in art, modeling, testing, coding, rigging, etc. Break them up into teams.
Also, don't dismiss the allure of 3d... it pretty much is the main reason we don't all spend countless hours playing sidescrollers anymore, but aside from phones its the only scenario these kids likely know. Even if you just recreated an old 80's Atari game with minimal 3d, it would seem cooler and engage the kids more.
Blender can be a pain to learn, but once you do it's actually a very efficient workflow. The 2.5/2.6 releases are capable of some pretty amazing effects.
Even better, all scripting in Blender is Python. Much easier to learn than Java or Android SDK.
My second suggestion would be Scratch, but high school kids might turn their noses up at how child-friendly it is.
Look at how many software walled gardens have failed: IBM, DEC, SGI, and AOL, to name a few. If Microsoft ever had a walled garden (more likely poorly fenced), it is failing. Apple's garden walls, no matter how thick or high they are built, will eventually fail.
The/. crowd generally is more knowledgeable about computers and their interfaces. UI teams are dumbing down their interfaces to cater to the lowest common denominator of user. The simplification has reached a point where even median level functionality is not just hidden, but removed. The targeted users don't know any better (and likely never will), but we do.
This. Almost no software a parent can install is immune to kids. Plus, contrary to current browser vendor "wisdom", the most important security tools are (or should be) already on the screen: the location bar and the status bar. Teach your kids to pay attention to where they are and where they're going.
Although I find mapping hosts to 0.0.0.0 is faster, because it's not a valid IP address, so the DNS subsystem of your OS will ignore it without trying to connect.
There are several hostfile collections out there. I merged three of them several years ago just for my own freedom from ads and other junk. I currently have 131572 host names zero'd out.
Because they still think they can find people with 5 years experience in [core skill] to fill low paying, entry level positions. It also doesn't help that very few technology recruiters actually know what they're talking about.
.
This is why television's channel package business model is doomed. The average cable customer only watches about a dozen channels; the rest of their cable bill goes to subsidize the other 138 channels. Cable TV is increasingly seen as not worth the cost.
If we could get a la carte programming, cable costs would plummet... those dozen channels would total about $20/month. But so would the number of channels, most of which couldn't survive without their current subsidies. Every cable and studio executive will proclaim to be a "free market guy", except in cases like this.
I wouldn't say D&D was crappy, but it is primitive by today's standards. WOTC managed to oversimplify it... that made it crappy.
These short lifecycles are proof that WOTC (and their Hasbro overlords) still don't know how to manage an RPG. Almost everyone complained about moneygrubbing when 3.5 came out, and then some more when 4e came out. WOTC over-corrected for TSR's failure (too many crap/undersupported settings, and silly supplements) and took the wrong lessons from it. They've reduced the number of settings and put the core system on a version cycle that the model can't support, when they should have let system versions stand for 10 years and draw turnover from new setting materials.
Granted, 1e only lasted ~11 years until 1988 because of a legal spat between TSR and Gygax, otherwise who knows how long it could have run. 2e ended because WOTC thought it was too complex, and therefore difficult to market (it sort of was, after TSR spent its last six years bloating it). 3.5, 4e, and now this are just gratuitous.
And the sad thing is, most people who cut their teeth on 3e+ just don't know how to portray a character (or properly GM a game), because modern D&D is more about combat and powers; it's become somewhat more an FPS/MMO with dice than a classic tabletop RPG.
If this new version trades feats/powers/prestige classes (all the roll-playing junk that metastasized from kits in the brown books) for actual role playing, they'd be getting the game back on track.
We have now arrived well within step #2 of the plan I laid out before. Wait for some more networks to jump on this litigation bandwagon, then offer to shelve AutoHop in exchange for offering their channels a la carte, even at up to triple each channel's carrier rate. This way, people who actually want ESPN can pay ~$15 for it, instead of everyone paying ~$5.
I started in 4th grade on an Apple ][e in 1985. I was the first kid in the class to figure out how to do animation, as a result of a bug in my code.
After your first sentence, you're absolutely right. UI designers have unlearned the difference between can and should.
If I hadn't already commented, I'd mod you up for your use of "Fisher Price".
Aero, and to a lesser extent Luna, had no coherent design philosophy. Random things were made shiny (from among a few different shiny styles), or animated, and the use of color was inconsistent. Plus, Aero sacrificed a lot of easy customization... why am I stuck with 8px thick window borders unless I download and install a binary that replaces Areo's images and skin geometry?
I suspect Metro is a correction for that, perhaps an overcorrection.
Result: Dish customers get a better deal, and Dish gets more customers.
Or Miguel de Icaza starting with the .NET framework documentation and creating Mono?
The discord you point out is why I have trouble believing these stories as they are presented. Sophisticated obfuscation techniques thwarted by boneheaded transport tactics, all done by Muslim fundamentalists embedding secrets in porn. It's just a bit too contrived and shiny.
Ignore everything he says to justify iPhone on Sprint, what Sprint really wants is to get in on the Apple party.
As a Sprint customer with an Android 4G phone (but no 4G service in my area, and I pay $10/month for it), I really would rather that they spend that pile of money on building out their network. Sure, they're going to roll out LTE over the next couple years, but my phone isn't LTE. Dammit. And my city will be among the last to get Sprint LTE.
Make election day a holiday for whatever jurisdiction (federal, state, county, etc) is on the ballot.
I wonder if they dangle.
PCs are both consumption and production devices.
Tablets are limited in what they can produce, both by the touch interface and by the landscape of available software. Sure, you can make a video on a tablet (if it has a camera) but doing anything more than remedial video editing is a no-go. Still graphics production is, even if there were equivalents to GIMP/Photoshop/Illustrator/etc, an exercise in masochism. Even working on a spreadsheet is infuriating. Playing any PC or console game? Forget about it, unless the game is ported to a tablet platform... and even then the UI will be hobbled/dumbed down.
Phones take the tablet limitations even further due to their reduced size, even though their processing power is for the most part equivalent.
So, if limited to one device: laptop, no question about it. Two devices: laptop and phone. After all, a tablet is either a weak PC without a keyboard attached, or an oversized phone that can't make cellular calls. There's nothing a tablet can do that the other two can't.
If this does happen and anyone is surprised by it since Elop took over, they're idiots.
The Nokia/WP7 partnership has already done damage to Nokia. MS knows (or or expected) that WP7 wouldn't gain traction, and that they'd have to buy a handset maker to make it competitive. Now that Nokia has submitted to their doom, MS can become an OEM for almost peanuts. I'm surprised that Ballmer didn't let Nokia bleed out longer.
The people within Nokia that have carrier relationships would be kept on and assimilated to doing sales the Microsoft way. Redmond may have their flaws, but sales really isn't one of them... they need to get their foot further in the door with the carriers.
Plus, none of the other OEMS really screamed when Google bought Motorola Mobility.
Finally, we know for sure which "major versions" are worthwhile: 10, 17, 24...
Since you have previous pro game dev experience, you should know the entire crew is divided up into teams by task. Assuming some sort of 3d platform, not all the kids will have equal interest in art, modeling, testing, coding, rigging, etc. Break them up into teams.
Also, don't dismiss the allure of 3d... it pretty much is the main reason we don't all spend countless hours playing sidescrollers anymore, but aside from phones its the only scenario these kids likely know. Even if you just recreated an old 80's Atari game with minimal 3d, it would seem cooler and engage the kids more.
Blender can be a pain to learn, but once you do it's actually a very efficient workflow. The 2.5/2.6 releases are capable of some pretty amazing effects.
Even better, all scripting in Blender is Python. Much easier to learn than Java or Android SDK.
My second suggestion would be Scratch, but high school kids might turn their noses up at how child-friendly it is.
Ding ding ding ding ding!
Unfortunately for them the name Xe is already taken.
So how do Tesla Roadster buyers fit into that?
Look at how many software walled gardens have failed: IBM, DEC, SGI, and AOL, to name a few. If Microsoft ever had a walled garden (more likely poorly fenced), it is failing. Apple's garden walls, no matter how thick or high they are built, will eventually fail.
TFA is baseless paranoia and speculation.
They would also advertise a new iPhone with a 4 inch screen as if it was the first phone ever to have a screen bigger than that of the current iPhone.
The /. crowd generally is more knowledgeable about computers and their interfaces. UI teams are dumbing down their interfaces to cater to the lowest common denominator of user. The simplification has reached a point where even median level functionality is not just hidden, but removed. The targeted users don't know any better (and likely never will), but we do.
These new interfaces are just too simple for us.