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User: a-yz

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  1. Re:Incoming money-quote: on Windows 8 Won't Support Plug-Ins; the End of Flash? · · Score: 1

    Chances are very few people on Slashdot would be using the Metro side of Windows 8 on their desktop. Metro is designed for mobile devices and uncle Edie who can't figure out how to use e-mail and Facebook on 'standard' UIs.

  2. Re:I would have thought that ... on Satellite Captures Burning Man From Space · · Score: 1

    How relevant Burning Man has or has not become depends on your values. If one values the raw "tribal" anything goes aspect, that's mostly gone compared to what it was. If one values art structures and vehicles and post-apocalyptic style clubs and raves (with lots of alcohol everywhere) all in a very unique context, Burning Man is turning the knob to an 11.

  3. Re:It can be seen with the unaided eye on Satellite Captures Burning Man From Space · · Score: 1

    Comparing Bonnaroo to Burning Man like this is like saying "I've never had sex, but I watched soft porn on a movie channel so I win". If you had ever gone (you obviously haven't) you may honestly have hated it, but you wouldn't even consider making that kind of comparison.

  4. We Decide Where Your Constitution is in Effect on After Cell-Phone Switch-Off, Anonymous Promises BART Protest · · Score: 2

    "There are areas in the BART system that are designated free-speech areas. We support that," BART spokesman Jim Allison said.

    The zones in which the Constitution is "officially" in effect are shrinking more and more. I don't seem to recall anything being in there about selective application of Constitutional protections at all (It's "officially" in effect 100% of the time in 100% of the country - it's not like a smoking zone), but ever since the idea started at political events - forcing those who want to express their views (even if it is just a t-shirt a candidate/office holder doesn't like) into a confined and invisible 'free speech zone' - the idea that people can declare where and how the Constitution can be applied has really taken root.

    This may not be a case covered by Constitutional protections, but the fact that the spokesman framed it as 'we decide for your own good where your Constitution is in effect' shows how widespread and accepted this invalid idea has become.

  5. Re:No? on Was .NET All a Mistake? · · Score: 1

    I am personally very disappointed in screws. I've had screws grooves strip on me before. Screws are no damn good, phillips head or otherwise.

  6. Re: Language bigotry on Was .NET All a Mistake? · · Score: 1

    I wish it were so, but VB.NET is firmly entrenched in many sectors of the corporate world, probably because it hides complexity from the developers and that appeals to management and pseudo developers (though the complexity eventually tends to rip the lining of that 'safety blanket' anyway). Nevertheless, VB, like COBOL before it, isn't going to disappear any time soon, you just won't see it out in the open as much.

  7. Re:What has .NET brought to the programmer? on Was .NET All a Mistake? · · Score: 1

    I've developed both C++ applications (fairly hardcore ones too) and C# applications. Everyone is different, but most who would have those experiences under their belts would tend to prefer C# if the domain allowed it, even if most of those people aren't on slashdot.

  8. Hey! on Study Shows Programmers Get Better With Age · · Score: 1

    You kids GET OFF MY LAWN!

  9. Re:It's reverse psychology! on Nokia Windows Phone Revealed · · Score: 1

    The smartphone market is a tiny fraction of what it will be eventually. To say an entrant now is too late is like 10 years ago saying that an entrant to the regular cell phone market was too late.

  10. Re:MS hate on Microsoft's SkyDrive Drops Silverlight · · Score: 2

    It's Religion.

    Don't request reason here, there is no room when it comes to religion. Same as creationists. There is fundamentally no difference when it comes to fundamentalism of this sort.

  11. Re:Fear Mongering on Devs Worried Microsoft Will Dump .NET · · Score: 1

    I read the i-programmer article referenced at the top of this thread. It's implied claim that Microsoft is dumping .NET is baseless and dumb (though the idea that Silverlight is being de-emphasized is probably valid). I feel like I'm in an audience of jumping screeching monkeys, and only a few of us are just standing here watching the frenzy in wonder.

  12. Re:Ok... on Windows Phones Getting Buried At Carriers' Stores · · Score: 1

    "In terms of core features, maybe, and even then I'd probably disagree (where's my tethering? where's the ability for apps to communicate other than through the 'cloud'?)."

    The Mango update will support sockets. Currently Windows Phone 7 supports http, and does not need to go through any cloud services to communicate to the web or any generic web service. Tethering is another issue, probably won't be part of the Mango update, and is driven more by carriers than anything. Even android's tethering is under pressure from the carriers:

    http://www.pcworld.com/article/226905/android_tethering_free_ride_is_over.html

    "In terms of apps, it's still very lackluster. This is largely thanks to the inability to port existing C/C++ code from other platforms"

    Apps for smartphones are usually written from scratch in their own native environments. No porting occurs from non-smartphone c/c++ environments for almost all smartphone apps.

    "Then, of course, it's not like Android (and iOS) are static. While WP7 is catching up, they move ahead even further."

    There is a certain subset of features which provide most of what most people want from a smartphone. Mango will provide most of that, and it's unlikely that anything revolutionary will be thrown into the ring on other smartphone environments any time soon. Some would say that the development environment for Windows Phone 7 is a feature which gives it an edge in the long run. It's surprisingly elegant compared to it's competitors.

  13. Re:Ok... on Windows Phones Getting Buried At Carriers' Stores · · Score: 2

    "What's in it for them?"

    Profit.

    Smart phones eat bandwidth, phone carriers sell bandwidth.

  14. Re:Ok... on Windows Phones Getting Buried At Carriers' Stores · · Score: 1

    I suspect Microsoft is putting more resources into the post Mango period than anything happening right now. It would be a smart move, given limited resources. After all, the benefits of the Nokia deal combined with the exposure of the Metro (like?) interface in Windows 8 and the much improved user experience from the Mango update for the phone will all happen in conjunction with each other probably next year. There will be a significant synergy then that doesn't exist now, and Microsoft can afford to wait it out to take advantage of that leverage so they probably are.

  15. Re:A real shame on Paul Allen's Lawsuit Patents To Be Reexamined · · Score: 1

    Or maybe he needs a new oar for his little boat: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Octopus_(yacht)

  16. Re:Consumer Electronics, really? on Bashing MS 'Like Kicking a Puppy,' Says Jim Zemlin · · Score: 1

    So if they ditch the XBOX OS, they will be in touch? With what again?

  17. Re:Jurassic Park on Ask Slashdot: Worst Computer Scene In TV or Movies? · · Score: 1

    In 1993 MacOS X was NeXTSTEP running on top of Mach + BSD Unix (I remember people then saying you can never create a mainstream consumer OS on top of anything Unix like). By that time, it was already running on x86 hardware as well.

  18. Re:It's a good disconnect on IT Graduates Not "Well-Trained, Ready-To-Go" · · Score: 1

    The ivory tower model of colleges should be taken down with extreme prejudice. It is harmful both for the student (when they try to place themselves in the job market) and to the companies. The "get people ready for the job market and what the companies need" model of technical schools is what is need. Several countries are starting to see that, and investing heavily on it (Brazil, Germany etc).

    Germany has had both "ivory tower" universities and technical/trade schools side by side for decades - they aren't just starting to get it, and they aren't throwing away the 'ivory tower' either. They have parallel education channels, and which one a student follows depends on their aptitudes and demonstrated abilities.

  19. Re:Why was this story even news to begin with? on Nokia Plan B Was Just a Hoax · · Score: 1

    The plan was juvenile. It called for recruiting top talent at universities from around the world and bringing them to a single technology center in a country most people wouldn't want to live in because of weather and sunlight extremes. Then these inexperienced apprentice engineers were going to do what to give Nokia an immediate shift in their circumstances?

  20. Re:Agree, mostly. on Why the Arduino Won and Why It's Here To Stay · · Score: 1

    Umm, Team Foundation? Workflow? That's for teams of programmers working on large projects. .NET Micro Framework is a Micro controller solution. There's almost nothing workflow or Team about it. You can dislike it for whatever reason you want, but I think you may have missed more than just a workflow associated with an enterprise team based software engineering solution.

  21. Re:Evil reaches the iPad on News Corp. and Apple Unveil The Daily · · Score: 2

    The end of that last post, stating you are either making a joke or you are a moron, is much like Fox News itself. Their stories basically lead you into one of several choices ("we report..") and then you are encouraged to choose one ("...you decide"). Many of their routine viewers don't even realize that they are false choices and they will just blindly choose to go with one. Of course, either choice, if accepted by the viewer, directly serves the interests of those who run News Corp.

    I was in a waiting room several days ago, and Fox News was on the TV and sure enough they did the same thing the poster above does - they gave two false choices. "Michelle Bachman - abused by the press or a victim of sexism?". Of course, free people are free to not choose bogus choices, they can use critical thinking skills and make up their own mind without TV 'helping' them to decide.

  22. Re:What grounds? on Assange Could Face Execution Or Guantanamo Bay · · Score: 1

    I was pretty much reading on autopilot until I saw this:

    All you have to do to have healthcare in the US is to show up to a hospital. The fact is, "health care access" is not an issue: "health insurance", which helps one pay for it, is what is being roundly discussed.

    When you say 'US', which country are you talking about? Living in the USA as long as I have I know you can't be talking about this country. While US hospitals will admit you if you are facing a serious or life threatening condition, you most certainly will not be admitted for the vast spectrum of health issues.

    If you go in a say you are a diabetic, you will be asked to leave. If you then drop on the floor in a diabetic comma, they will treat you. And even if you do have a condition which will get you admitted, it doesn't mean you will be treated anytime soon. You could literally be sitting in the waiting room for days. I've seen that before.