LTE rollouts likely in the next year. I know it's no substitute for a proper wired connection, but it's a damn sight better than what's available in most places here at the moment.
It's an embedded devices OS, like WindowsCE. Still annoyed at Microsoft for dropping support for.NET Compact Framework from the new Visual Studio 2008. I hope this one will support CF or I'm going to have a whole lot of soon-to-be unsupported handhelds on my hands
During the early 00s nobody cared about anything else than IE because there was no decent alternative (Netscape was hell at the time), so, anything written/acquired back then only really supported IE. Rather than spend money on making it work with newer browsers, the companies decided that they'd just set IE6 as a requirement and force companies to either pay for costly migrations to more modern software, or keep IE6 installed.
Fair enough, maybe a better comparison would've been Mario vs Sonic. Sonic reused the premise of Mario's platforming, but by introducing the factor of speed made it play fundamentally different.
Why did someone write Linux when Unix was already out there? Why was Mario created when there were already other platform games out there? It's going to get harder and harder to come out with original ideas, e.g. look at any game released in the last 10 years, you can count truly innovative ones on both hands. But yet there's still games that come out, using a tried and tested formula, that are better than the rest. If there was no cloning, we'd have very few new games coming out ever.
That's an interesting question, but doesn't it apply to kevlar too? We've had kevlar vests for years, but no ammunition made of kevlar that I've heard of. Maybe the material isn't suitable to be shot out at high speeds/pressures?
As they're used to the engine they'll be more likely to use it commercial if they have the choice. It's the same thing Microsoft, Adobe and a multitude of other companies do when providing educational licenses
Not just crossover, it works great with Wine too. They also released a lib specifically for linux which means people can write their own client for it. One such client is Testify which runs natively
Now lets start holding politicians to the same standard, zero forgetfulness, zero lapses of memory, zero forgotten promises, 5 years jail for every offences, oh yeah, because it does affect national security.
You could get elected if you went into politics with that agenda, before not implementing it with no consequences!:p
They haven't so far, as their service is free, however, looking at something like XBox Live (which, admittedly, has a lot more games than EA's service would ever have), a small payment for quality mightn't be a bad thing either
I frequent a netcafe where a bunch of my pals go and we very often play games like Counterstrike, Left4Dead on the LAN. I also remember having lots of fun playing C&C:Generals with a single one of my friends over LAN. Nothing beats hurling insults across the room to people you've just shot/been shot by, and the level of fun is huge. Of course now you could setup an online passworded game to only allow your friends to join, but that'll start to eat bandwidth really quickly...
There should be a way to tag individual posts as NSFW, not because of unsuitable content, but more because I look like a moron when I burst out laughing at comments like these in the middle of the office.
Re:Let me be the first critic
on
Linux Needs Critics
·
· Score: 5, Insightful
I think what he was saying is that he uses Windows XP cos it works, and people are constantly telling him to switch to linux even though it's obviously not viable with his setup. Open-source users are going to have to learn to adopt a live and let live mentality, linux is not the holy grail, it works brilliant in some cases, and not at all in others, same with any other bit of software.
(eg. the millions of us who are forced to use Windows Mobile)...
Correct me if I'm wrong, but nobody is being forced to do anything. I use a Windows Mobile based phone out of choice. I'd gladly switch to an Android phone, but I understand nobody is going to make any money out of releasing an OS for a 5 year old phone, so I'll gladly buy a new one.
And now look at it from a developer's point of view, Windows has the vast majority of gamers, making it fairly unfeasable to make Linux-only games, or even port their DirectX-based games to Linux. But if they make it playable on Wine, and people start playing it on Wine, doesn't that increase the amount of people playing it on Linux? It might be a bit naive, but it's possibly a way of getting gamers over to Linux, encouraging developers to concentrate more time and effort on it.
LTE rollouts likely in the next year. I know it's no substitute for a proper wired connection, but it's a damn sight better than what's available in most places here at the moment.
It's an embedded devices OS, like WindowsCE. Still annoyed at Microsoft for dropping support for .NET Compact Framework from the new Visual Studio 2008. I hope this one will support CF or I'm going to have a whole lot of soon-to-be unsupported handhelds on my hands
During the early 00s nobody cared about anything else than IE because there was no decent alternative (Netscape was hell at the time), so, anything written/acquired back then only really supported IE. Rather than spend money on making it work with newer browsers, the companies decided that they'd just set IE6 as a requirement and force companies to either pay for costly migrations to more modern software, or keep IE6 installed.
Fair enough, maybe a better comparison would've been Mario vs Sonic. Sonic reused the premise of Mario's platforming, but by introducing the factor of speed made it play fundamentally different.
Why did someone write Linux when Unix was already out there? Why was Mario created when there were already other platform games out there? It's going to get harder and harder to come out with original ideas, e.g. look at any game released in the last 10 years, you can count truly innovative ones on both hands. But yet there's still games that come out, using a tried and tested formula, that are better than the rest. If there was no cloning, we'd have very few new games coming out ever.
That's an interesting question, but doesn't it apply to kevlar too? We've had kevlar vests for years, but no ammunition made of kevlar that I've heard of. Maybe the material isn't suitable to be shot out at high speeds/pressures?
As they're used to the engine they'll be more likely to use it commercial if they have the choice. It's the same thing Microsoft, Adobe and a multitude of other companies do when providing educational licenses
Twisted is a networking library, this seems to be a webserver (which Twisted can do) as well as a framework
Not just crossover, it works great with Wine too. They also released a lib specifically for linux which means people can write their own client for it. One such client is Testify which runs natively
There's already an Android client for it, check the "mobile" section on the Spotify site
Now lets start holding politicians to the same standard, zero forgetfulness, zero lapses of memory, zero forgotten promises, 5 years jail for every offences, oh yeah, because it does affect national security.
You could get elected if you went into politics with that agenda, before not implementing it with no consequences! :p
They haven't so far, as their service is free, however, looking at something like XBox Live (which, admittedly, has a lot more games than EA's service would ever have), a small payment for quality mightn't be a bad thing either
I frequent a netcafe where a bunch of my pals go and we very often play games like Counterstrike, Left4Dead on the LAN. I also remember having lots of fun playing C&C:Generals with a single one of my friends over LAN. Nothing beats hurling insults across the room to people you've just shot/been shot by, and the level of fun is huge. Of course now you could setup an online passworded game to only allow your friends to join, but that'll start to eat bandwidth really quickly...
There should be a way to tag individual posts as NSFW, not because of unsuitable content, but more because I look like a moron when I burst out laughing at comments like these in the middle of the office.
I think what he was saying is that he uses Windows XP cos it works, and people are constantly telling him to switch to linux even though it's obviously not viable with his setup. Open-source users are going to have to learn to adopt a live and let live mentality, linux is not the holy grail, it works brilliant in some cases, and not at all in others, same with any other bit of software.
Of course, moving to a form of media which encourages short posts is a really good way to get rid of lazy journalists...
Less reading time to get bored in though ;)
Because you live outside the euro zone?
(eg. the millions of us who are forced to use Windows Mobile)...
Correct me if I'm wrong, but nobody is being forced to do anything. I use a Windows Mobile based phone out of choice. I'd gladly switch to an Android phone, but I understand nobody is going to make any money out of releasing an OS for a 5 year old phone, so I'll gladly buy a new one.
The USA defeated the communist Soviet Union by outspending them in the specific industry of aerospace technology.
Wait, what? Did I miss a piece of history somewhere along the way where the Soviet Union was "beaten", rather than fizzled out?
Do you have one? ;)
And now look at it from a developer's point of view, Windows has the vast majority of gamers, making it fairly unfeasable to make Linux-only games, or even port their DirectX-based games to Linux. But if they make it playable on Wine, and people start playing it on Wine, doesn't that increase the amount of people playing it on Linux? It might be a bit naive, but it's possibly a way of getting gamers over to Linux, encouraging developers to concentrate more time and effort on it.
If they release a linux client that uses Wine, they're bound to support it too, which can only be good for Wine, and linux gamers.
The small fraction of proprietary software jobs are not hard to avoid
I'd like to see where he gets that from, I've never talked to anyone personally that works in a company that develops free (as in beer) software.
Java?