Slashdot Mirror


User: taupter

taupter's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
32
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 32

  1. Re:Expensive!! on Qt 5.5 Released · · Score: 1

    Do you develop mobile apps with in-app purchases using the LGPL version? AFAICT the in-app purchase module is not distributed with the LGPL version. I'd love to be proven wrong.

  2. Re:Good for mobile development? on Qt 5.5 Released · · Score: 1

    Actually it's pretty straightforward. Compile and run. It will deploy to an AVD, an Android device, to virtual and physical iOS devices, all directly from the Qt Creator IDE.

  3. Re:Expensive!! on Qt 5.5 Released · · Score: 1

    Well, if you can't addor 4,2k per year and a developer it may mean you're an Indie trying to break even and launch something nice. What is good and all, no prejudice. But some resources that would help an indie developer, as the Qt module that allows in-app purchases, aren't available to low-income developers, despite being the people who would mostly benefit from it. That's why if I was Qt I would add a new payment regimen, similar to what's already done by Unreal Engine and Unity 3D: pay after you earn something. "Do you have an idea? Use Qt Commercial and pay us when you break even!". If the indie project doesn't take off no harm was done (as no money to be earned existed anyway). This way Qt would gain traction and be more popular than how much it already is. A model like this:

    Indie: Pay 5% of your income after you earn $10,000.00
    Commercial: Pay $whatever/year.
    Open Source: Pay nothing but publish the source accorging to GPL/LGPL/whatever.

    Hope some old troll will listen and act accordingly.

  4. Re:Not just a GUI toolkit on Qt 5.5 Released · · Score: 1

    1. Native appearance is supported since a long ago in Qt, making a Qt program display in an appeasing way no matter what OS it is run on.
    2. No VM.
    3. No garbage collector.
    4. Compiled code. Native speeds. Performance dependent on compiler. Can use MinGW, GCC, MSVC2010-2013, LLVM/Clang. No JNI.
    5. Legacy code. Way easier to port already written code instead of translating it to another language and having to learn everything again and possibly adding new bugs and surely losing time redoing what is already done.
    6. Performance. I've seen benchmarks before defending one and another, but according to my experience, garbage collection has a perceivable negative impact in performance and memory usage. For client doftware it may be neligible, but for data crunching applications a compiled language makes more sense. The stack machine approach in Java is somewhat slow, and the Dalvik approach (register-based) is speedier but not as speed as native code. ART, despite its ahead-of-time approach has a median performance gain of about 15% only according to benchmarks I saw. Native code on Android doing the same workload is between 4x to 10x faster.
    7. Lower level access. I wrote hardware diagnosis software and used C++/Qt. It was portable to Windows, Linux and UEFI firmware. Frankly doing so in Java would be for all practical purposes impossible.
    8. Portability. It's easiers to port a dedicated C++ code to a new platform than porting a JRE to a new platform. Some platforms simply don't (and legally can't) have a JVM.
    9. Personal taste.

    I'm not saying anything against any language at all. Everything has a purpose, and some languages are best fitted to specific environments/purposes/domains. Doing a database-oriented Fortran code or 3D graphics in COBOL will not highlight these languages' strong points. But if you have the knowledge, experience and the language is a tool fit enough to the need in question, then why not?

  5. April 1st joke? Ponies!!! on Microsoft Phases Out XNA and DirectX? · · Score: 1

    Well, according to the article, the changes will be made effective on April 1st. So it's an announcement about an April 1st joke way before the date. Good try.

  6. Re:When in Rome... on Google Brazil Exec "Detained" For Refusing YouTube Takedown Order · · Score: 1

    About the Streisand effect, as long as the thing is played down, the problem dissolves in internet's white noise. That's why we got notice of this case, while the other thousands of court orders Google complies to in Brazil and around the world everyday take so little to no publicity.
    Being exposed in a Youtube video may be very damaging, but having it on Youtube for ad aeternam is worse than having a big pop of publicity at once and people forgetting it in a week or less as the next fad/meme/news enters their field of view. Who cares about Barbra Streisand's house anymore?

  7. Re:When in Rome... on Google Brazil Exec "Detained" For Refusing YouTube Takedown Order · · Score: 1

    I only talk about local judges because that's all I know (and I have a brother that is a state judge). I concede most judges have an inflated ego, and in fact it may even prove to be necessary for the profession (as displaying authority may be a better deterrent than only having authority).
    Judges, are people just like soylent green is. They make mistakes, some terrible. In 2005 a judge (Percy Barbosa), while drunken, killed a clerk in a supermarket just for the kicks. He got 15 years of jail time and had to support financially the family of the deceased, but sadly died in 2008 of a heart condition. Justice was served, anyways. Some judges are heroes, fighting the drug cartels and sleeping in their offices surrounded by cops because some death threats from the drug lords.
    Who really knows how the judges are monitored by other judges, by the Internal Affairs Comissions (Corregedorias de Justiça) and by the OAB (Ordem dos Advogados do Brasil - Order of Brazilian Lawyers) knows life of most judges is not exactly just flowers. That's it while meeting deadlines to judge cases, being flattered by false people, threatened by criminals and despised by the general population that sees them as pluripotent tyrants, while earning the equivalent to US$100,000.00/y, having to hide his family to avoid kidnappings and shootings and distrusting almost everybody outside a tight circle of family members.
    The only person that feels the weight of the crown is the one who wears it.

  8. Re:When in Rome... on Google Brazil Exec "Detained" For Refusing YouTube Takedown Order · · Score: 1

    Ok, but Google complies with such brazilian court orders by the thousands every year. The novelty is the SNAFU that made them forget to comply to this one.

  9. Re:I'm Brazilian and this is'nt censorship on Google Brazil Exec "Detained" For Refusing YouTube Takedown Order · · Score: 1

    Google is able to remove the video, and it can do it faster than waiting to discover who the guy/gal is and prosecuting him/her and demmanding the person to remove the video.
    Let's take some reductio ad absurdum and just imagine the criminal who posted the video died being hanged on a carrot. Should the defamed guy be defamed ad aeternam because the criminal met his/her maker? Isn't more sensible to order Google to remove the offending video, and for Google to comply? Let's just be reasonable, people. Should the guy endure more defamation because of Google's bureaucracy or another internal SNAFU? Should Google do nothing because Google people say "it wasn't me" one each time after another, and just be left the way is is while the guy suffers? How to force Google to do the sane thing, the same kind of sane thing it is used to do every single day in Brazil?
    It was a Google's SNAFU. Somebody needs to be armtwisted to obey the law, as expected.

    Nothing to see here. Move along.

  10. Re:I'm Brazilian and this is'nt censorship on Google Brazil Exec "Detained" For Refusing YouTube Takedown Order · · Score: 1

    IANAL but IAMTAL, so the problem is another. There's a concept in brazilian law that is Solidary Responsibility. It means in this case that if somebody posts a defamatoty video on youtube he/she is the accountable person for the defamation case, but both him/her and Google are responsible for the video presence. Google, as a common carrier, has no direct responsibility concerning the defamation crime, but google is just able to take the video down as the sender is, so both can be ordered to take it down and must either comply or present a formal response to the judge explaining why they can't. Simply refusing or ignoring is not a sane option.
    Ordering Google to disclose the perpetretor's identity is an obvious step, but waiting for it to prosecute him and forcing him to remove the thing would take too much time and cause more damage, so the judge can (and usually will opt by him/herself or by being asked to do so by the lawyer) order the carrier to remove the data. And Google does it by the thousands here in Brazil. The novelty here is Google forgeting to comply to something it usually complies to.

  11. Re:Streinsad Effect? on Google Brazil Exec "Detained" For Refusing YouTube Takedown Order · · Score: 2

    If Google disobeys brazilian laws, Brazil will want Google to take its marbles an get the fsck outta here, of course.
    Who must rule Brazil is the elected Brazilian representatives and not a foreign corporation. I believe USA has its own dose of transantional mega corporations messing with USA politics and it's not good for the USA.
    We'll not sell out Amazonia to avoid upsetting Bayer.
    Wanna play in our sandbox? You have to play by our rules, the same way we have to comply if we want to play in yours.

  12. Re:When in Rome... on Google Brazil Exec "Detained" For Refusing YouTube Takedown Order · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm the guy who posted comments before yours.

    Google complies with brazilian court orders by the thousands every year, and it should be no news. Google complies with court orders from every country it has a headquarter.
    Mr. Fabio, a brazilian citizen, Google employee and top executive, may not be able to obey the order by himself, but he's capable to command another Google employee to do so. So ultimately he is the main responsible person.
    I don't know how Google Brazil is run, but every company around the world with 10+ employees needs an hierarquical structure where someone at the top delegates to his tenants and it goes down under to the cleaning guy. And people make mistakes, get dismissed and so on. Someone messed up and will have to take the heat. And Mr. Fabio wasn't imprisioned, he just had to go to a police department to answer some questions and to be made aware of the problem and act upon.
    If an USA judge issued a court order the police must comply, be the target BillG, the elusive Embraer secretary or whoever. If the secretary is an USA citizen, that's it, if not the diplomacy will take place, as every UN member would expect to act.
    Burning flags is not a brazilian national sport. We're pretty orderly (fanfare to the common man playing in the backgound) and working people.
    There are no double standards here. Brazil respects international laws pretty much as everyone else. Please remember Flight 1907, when USA pilots downed a Boeing full of brazilian citizens just because some USA senator didn't want to be tracked in brazilian airspace by brazilian airspace authorities. Nobody burned USA flags, the pilots were repatriated to USA and propably nothing wrong happened to them, despite reaping more than one hundred brazilian souls. Because we respect the law.
    Brazilian judges aren't pluripotent tyrants in constant tantrum spree. They're accountable and overviewed by the legal system, that can punish the judge and overrule him/her if appropriate, just as every really civilized western country with representatives elected by the people.

    Sorry, but nothing to see here. Move along.

  13. Re:give it a try first on Designer Jon McCann: "More Optimistic About GNOME Than In a Long Time" · · Score: 2

    Rephrasing myself: GNOME 3 and Unity are "oddities" we should ignore just as much as Windows 8 for those who think they're too otherwordly to be used.

    The fact is people get used to anything in life, even bad interfaces. Windows 8 will be a sales success by being force fed to computer buyers. GNOME 3 will not have such backing, so its adoption rate will be a lot slower. But the point is that people have choice, and people will eventually find what's best to them. GNOME 3 seems to be despised by a lot of people because of its defaults and lack of choice. So GNOME 3 has plugins. Nice. But people in general settle for the defaults and expect a given set of options. If the defaults are unuseable (to many) and to recover the expected functionality you'll have to thinker so people will run miles from it.
    UIs should be unobtrusive, because people use programs to do things. People don't need UIs to stare at them (Windows 8) or fiddle with its innards to get to the basics. The'yre not an end per se, but an enabler to let people get things done. If it stays in the middle of what people want to do people will use something else that lets them do what they want. Dead simple. One can shove years of methinksuishouldbelikethis and other theoretical, dadaistic designers' ideas because people like aesthetics, but don't live by it. Did you use Windows 8's message app? Good aesthetics, almost zero functionality, perfect for a Hollywhood movie but terrible for daily use.
    About typing an app's name to open it, KDE SC, Windows, GNOME, OS X, all have it. It's a staple now. KDE even extrapolates it with its idea of "semantic desktop", but WTF Nepomuk (also used by GNOME) is not agreed by all.
    In fact, sadly I have to say that functionality/usability-wise, according to my view, it's Windows 7, OS X, KDE on top, GNOME 2 and others at the middle and GNOME 3, UNITY and Windows 8 at the bottom.

  14. Re:That is too bad. on Designer Jon McCann: "More Optimistic About GNOME Than In a Long Time" · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There is still KDE SC (try it), LXDE, Enlightenment, WindowMaker, etc. It is still useable. GNOME 3 and Unity are "oddities" we should ignore just as much as Windows 8.

  15. The designer of an interface despised by the majority of its (ex) users (who are jumping the ship in droves) says he's right and the world should bend over and get some more of his wisdom. Ok, he's gentle and says he wants the UI experience he devised used by the people who is still unaware of it. It it seems like a turd, smells like one and is warm like one, it's difficult to believe it is something else. And asking people to manipulate it will not make a lot of happy fa(e)ces.
    But I don't believe he'll listen.
    Changing for the sake of change doesn't aggregate anything to the user experience. People will not 2girls1cup with it.

  16. OILIX on Rainforest Fungus Synthesizes Diesel · · Score: 1

    To all those MSX and Metal Gear fans, do you remember OILIX, the Zanzibar-native-fuel-producing microorganism from Metal Gear || - Solid Snake?

  17. Re:Yeah but... on Hands On With Nvidia's New GTX 280 Card · · Score: 1

    YMMV. I personally still feel Nvidia drivers aren't even on par with the Intel driver.
    Unaccelerated console framebuffer if you use the proprietary drivers, memory leaks, lockups, crashes and overall instability compared to the free nv driver, problems with notebook screens, shader bugs and bad performance on newer GPUs all of these made me unwilling to spend more money on Nvidia hardware. Maybe it's time for Intel (even if so much slower) or AMD/ATi (with good closed-source drivers, and flourishing new open source drivers coming along with the specs).
    Nvidia is doing something to support Linux, and we need to praise them for it, but right now it's injustifiable to buy Nvidia to put in a Linux machine. Sadly. We need better drivers, framebuffer acceleration, kernel-based resolution mode change, less memleaks, and, I hope someday, free-as-in-speech 3D drivers, or at least the GUPs' specs so we can implement it ourselves.
    What bothers me is the fact Nvidia didn't set things straight, it wasn't the leader in Linux support, and it's not even being the follower, as some things we take for granted from other manufacturers don't come from Nvidia.

  18. Re:The opposite is true in Japan on SMS 4x More Expensive Than Data From Hubble · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ... and typing those Kanji in a mobile phone keyboard must be a royal PITA btw. :)

  19. Re:The GPL: Intellectual Theft on SWSoft Out of Compliance With the GPL · · Score: 3, Informative

    The GNU C Library actually is distributed under LGPL (http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node /Copying.html), So your closed-source proprietary code is allowed to link with it without any problem and you don't have to redistribute the Glibc's code as long as it's unmodified. According to http://forum.parallels.com/showthread.php?t=12648& highlight=wine , a guy named Andrew, who is a Parallels' forum administrator, openly admitted they're using modified LGPL code, as quoted: "In current implementation Parallels uses modified Wine code under LGPL license.". What they're missing is the fact that according to the LGPL (http://www.gnu.org/licenses/lgpl.html), in it's Section 2, if they distribute modified binaries based on the LGPL code they need to redistribute the source code of the modified LGPL library under LGPL or GPL. Quoting:

    "2. Conveying Modified Versions.
    If you modify a copy of the Library, and, in your modifications, a facility refers to a function or data to be supplied by an Application that uses the facility (other than as an argument passed when the facility is invoked), then you may convey a copy of the modified version:
    a) under this License, provided that you make a good faith effort to ensure that, in the event an Application does not supply the function or data, the facility still operates, and performs whatever part of its purpose remains meaningful, or
    b) under the GNU GPL, with none of the additional permissions of this License applicable to that copy."

  20. C# on OSS Music Composer Gaining Attention · · Score: 1

    FOSS project for Windows written in C#.
    Sometimes I think there's a ploy from MS to "taint" the FOSS community by writing "free" code tied to a de-facto closed platform.
    I have a feeling this thing doesn't run with Mono. Even if it runs, it's aways on a platofrm _tolerated_ by MS before it gains widespread use, and then sue or menace to (as we've seen soooo many times).

  21. Re:Blackmail tactics on What Happened to Blue Security · · Score: 2, Funny

    And we'll fight them at the Gmail's spam filter. ;) You forgot this one!
    Yep, we should take action. Somebody has to. As people who profit from spam don't want to take effective action against them, we're in our right of defending ourselves. Maybe the guilt is not only theirs, but those 0.005% people who buy penis enlagement pills, viagra, cialis and such.
    The amount of short-dicked, impotent men waiting for a nigerian fortune is simply unbelievable.

  22. Blackmail tactics on What Happened to Blue Security · · Score: 3, Informative

    Those spammers will threat e-mails if you unsubscribe or not, so don't unsubscribe. They're doing this because it's hurting it in their pocket. Big deal. I don't give a damn if a spammer can't buy a new humvee limo, and I don't have to support those scumbags. So if they want to fill my mailbox with with their trash, so be it. I will not bend over to them. I will not unsubscribe. I will not let those fscking bastards tell me what I should do.

  23. Re:Mod Company -1: Troll on Linspire Announces Freespire Distribution · · Score: 1

    Kopete is benefited too. Linspire hires Matt Rogers to work on it.

  24. Re:Why? 3D acceleration under VMware is on the way on Windows XP on Intel Mac Confirmed · · Score: 2, Informative

    Well, 3D acceleration under VMware is on the way, according to
    http://www.vmware.com/support/ws5/doc/ws_vidsound_ d3d.html

    It's in experimental stage, but looks promising.
    The following link tells how to enable it for a given guest O.S.:
    http://www.vmware.com/support/ws5/doc/ws_vidsound_ d3d_enabling_vm.html

  25. Re:I looked it up. on Homer Becomes Omar · · Score: 0

    Hum... According to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continent there are six main forms of interpretation, varying from 4 to 7 continents. Yours is your local convention (mostly used in Western Europe and United States of America). Don't assume the rest of the world thinks the same way.