'But what I've always really wanted in my pocket was a little debian box'
Heck yes. That is a major selling point for me. Plus, I personally find Maemo to be a lot slicker than Android.
Opensource geeks need to be more savvy. google does make a decent search engine, but they are a lame, rusting, evil company that does not have your best interest in mind. Don't reward their convenient use of opensource software, and don't consider them to be better than Microsoft. In the end, google will always do what's best for google.
I chose to work with PHP due to its flexibility. Writing software by creating types is useful in certain places, but I have found that it tends to require more code to be written than is needed for most web applications. Many of the applications which I currently maintain have been written elegantly using basic GET and POST checking and a series simple of functions.
ASP.NET alone was enough to slow the adoption of the AJAX technique at the last firm I worked at. ASP.NET uses a component framework where every page is a form that uses POST DATA to maintain page state. Being bound to a framework that works like that makes AJAX development difficult if not awkward.
Once Microsoft created an AJAX library for.NET we were able to start slowly adopting the AJAX method but it mostly happened on new websites.
Wow, for once linux users will get flashed and take advantage of trim!
'But what I've always really wanted in my pocket was a little debian box'
Heck yes. That is a major selling point for me. Plus, I personally find Maemo to be a lot slicker than Android.
Opensource geeks need to be more savvy. google does make a decent search engine, but they are a lame, rusting, evil company that does not have your best interest in mind. Don't reward their convenient use of opensource software, and don't consider them to be better than Microsoft. In the end, google will always do what's best for google.
Shhhh!!! No more ideas! They are just crowd sourcing a possible strategy for releasing the pst format.
MMMMM Karmic Kola, *drools*.
Here let me help you with that.
Maybe it's really a compressed set of love birds.
Maktub.
I chose to work with PHP due to its flexibility. Writing software by creating types is useful in certain places, but I have found that it tends to require more code to be written than is needed for most web applications. Many of the applications which I currently maintain have been written elegantly using basic GET and POST checking and a series simple of functions.
A project called Open Rico has had an open-source javascript api that does that for a long time, and it works quite well. There is an online demo at: http://demos.openrico.org/demos/drag_and_drop_custom_dropzone No login required.
ASP.NET alone was enough to slow the adoption of the AJAX technique at the last firm I worked at. ASP.NET uses a component framework where every page is a form that uses POST DATA to maintain page state. Being bound to a framework that works like that makes AJAX development difficult if not awkward. Once Microsoft created an AJAX library for .NET we were able to start slowly adopting the AJAX method but it mostly happened on new websites.