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  1. Re:I put C on web pages at my last start-up on The Next Browser Scripting Language Is — C? · · Score: 1

    I had a similar experience, in one of the institutions I worked I was tasked with writing an internal application although I wasn't hired as a developer. What I did was to write a pre-processor that let me mingle C code and HTML data together. Then I separated them with the preprocessor and linked them with the tiny webserver and the Internet Explorer widget (the client was very picky about how the application looked).

    I left the "Hey that button should be pink" bastards with the source code and docs for it all but I don't think anyone with a little sense in them would get anywhere near it. The whole thing was one big binary which ran as two threads, one for the webserver and one for the Internet Explorer window.

    Still I wish there was some mature platform which lets me do that. An HTML window controlled by C source is very nice. You don't have to deal with any fancy-schmancy GUI toolkit and you have all the power you will ever need.

  2. Mod parent up too!! on Donald Knuth Rips On Unit Tests and More · · Score: 1

    Knuth doesn't go out of his way to promote his ideas or anything. The interviewer asks him about literate programming and he answers. I don't understand the reason for anti-knuth zealotry. Anyone care to comment?

  3. Partial solution on Laptops Can Be Searched At the Border · · Score: 1

    If they can't verify that your stuff is clear, they will simply detain it to examine it better. Just make sure your linux-based laptop isn't something expensive and desirable.

  4. Re:I predict a new business coming on UK's MI5 Wants Oyster Card Travel Data · · Score: 1

    You filthy bastards. We were just partying over the 15 grams we got over here!

  5. Re:Can they compile for Linux? on Microsoft to Give Away Developer Tools to Students · · Score: 1

    You could do that I guess, by replacing the compiler binary with gcc and make it understand the command line switches for the original compiler. I forgot what the compiler distributed with VS is called but I remember using it from the command line. So, it could be that VS is simply executing the compiler with appropriate command line args, with no Windows message stuff.

  6. Re:The REAL holy grail of nanotech. on 3D Crystal Grown On a DNA Lattice · · Score: 1

    Hey, after you wake up, could you wake me up when my computer can print me a Natalie Portman? Thanks.

  7. It's called marketing.. on Software Tool Strips Windows Vista To Bare Bones · · Score: 1

    When was the last time a salesman told you the truth?

  8. Re:Misinformed Author on You Used Perl to Write WHAT?! · · Score: 1

    It really doesn't make much sense to talk about whether a language is interpreted or not. There are C interpreters, for instance.

    The perception about Java being a compiled language is somewhat wrong. There are Java-based CPUs, but other systems have to interpret the code. However, there is no Perl machine or a Perl-JIT compiler. Perl is interpreted on all systems.

    For bytecode performance, what do you get past the AST? Maybe memory seek improvement, maybe disambiguation thru type inference. You're still throwing away all the good work that went into making the branch predictors, separate instruction/data caches, scoreboarding etc. Not to mention the running time requirement for translators vs compilers.

  9. Re:Misinformed Author on You Used Perl to Write WHAT?! · · Score: 1

    Also, Perl isn't interpreted. It's compiled to bytecode on the fly and run by its internal virtual machine, much like Java (except Java has an explicit compilation stage, while it's implicit in Perl).
    Please learn the meaning of 'interpreted' first.
  10. Re:Some questions remain unaswered. on Robot Planes to Track Weather and Climate · · Score: 1

    Any robotic line contains at least two robotic points in this plane.

    Hope this helps.

  11. Wake me up on Robots Learn To Lie · · Score: 1

    when they learn oppression and taxes.

  12. This is not what it seems on VBA Going Away, Macs Now, PCs Soon · · Score: 4, Interesting

    MS is not trying to improve their product by removing/upgrading VBA.. They just want to kill Mac. By providing different scripting languages for the two platforms, they are going to eliminate Macs from being used for business. Since most of your customers don't have Macs, you can't use a Mac to write a document with macros in it. So, you have to buy Windows.

  13. Re:Non-news on Young IT Workers Disillusioned, Hard to Retain · · Score: 1

    If you have 200 programmers in one team, either you're doing something huge (so you got the money for the building) or most of them are worthless (who won't do any good with or without an office).

    Also, development doesn't have to be where the business is established. You can put marketing in a central place to connect with clients and buy a building in a less populated and cheaper area for your developers, they don't see the customers anyway.

    Shared offices also work well in my experience. Putting 2-3 developers in a room doesn't cause too much discomfort. Stacking them up like in a chicken farm along with loud-mouth marketing in a cubicle farm is a good way to make sure that they don't do any useful work, though.

  14. Non-news on Young IT Workers Disillusioned, Hard to Retain · · Score: 5, Insightful

    WTF? If supply for something is less than the demand, of course prices will go up.

    If a younger person wants, say, $60K for an entry level job and has negotiation power (i.e. another company that pays it), then that is the entry-level payment and it means that you're paying less than what they deserve to your existing employees.

    This is one of the content-free articles.

    I don't think an office is unreasonable for anyone. The industry took away employee's rights one by one when there was ample supply. Now it's drying up and the workforce is asking for what belonged to them.

    If managers stopped "managing" people like they are a herd and became a part of their team, I don't see why they shouldn't be able to hold on to employees as long as the pay is competitive.

  15. Re:Does this mean... on GM Says Driverless Cars Will Be Ready By 2018 · · Score: 1

    Obviously, you didn't RTFA.. It specifically mentions augmented road signs..

  16. Not as slow as yesterday on Anti-Virus Bug Briefly Identified Windows Explorer as Malware · · Score: 2, Informative

    Yesterday, we read about a dork playing jingle bells by hitting his video card fan. This story is an improvement.

  17. Re:also does not bode well for... on Only 2 in 500 College Students Believe in IP · · Score: 1

    Not all software is tetris and mp3 players you know..

  18. Thank you very much AC. on Burying a Mainframe In Style · · Score: 1

    That was really informative.

  19. Great idea! on Boeing 12,000lb Chemical Laser Set to Fry Targets · · Score: 1

    Let's find a good name for your project. Bang, bong.. hmm not quite. Oh OK. I found it. Let's call it a BOMB!

  20. Re:Procrastination on Corporations Face Problems with Employee Emails · · Score: 1

    I agree with you to a degree but this works both ways. It gives free time to everyone, procrastinators and people who actually do work. Why, I do get annoyed when I'm in the middle of a coding frenzy and somebody calls me to ask a stupid question. Sending e-mail is being kind and respecting your peers' time management. The wrong kind of people will abuse your kindness. Abusing everyone is not a solution, instead you simply don't hire abusive people.

  21. Re:Aging gyros? on Final Repair Mission To Extend Hubble's Life · · Score: 1

    (Yes I know it is bad.)
    In fact, beef gyros are pretty good with mayonnaise..
  22. You let go of shift too early on DoJ Sides With RIAA On Damages · · Score: 1

    Case closed.

  23. I keep in the server room on Large Tech Companies Moving Beyond the Cubicle · · Score: 1

    It's quiet and as a bonus, I don't get phone calls. It rings back in my 'cube'. What do I care? If it's something important they walk up and talk to me in the server room.

    If the management were to tell me to do otherwise, I'd get the hell out of the company. It's my life and they have no right to reduce its quality.

  24. Re:moving to greener pasteurs on How Best Buy Tried To Whip The Geek Squad Into Shape · · Score: 1

    dictionary.com is your friend.

  25. Re:Imminent destruction! on Everyday Copyright Violations · · Score: 1

    Umm, you can not legally fillet his heart if you are not hungry. I know this for a fact, I saw it on the internet!