Writing this from my trust(worth)y little Mac. OK, so its a Big Al powerbook, but hey. Anyway:
Isnt it obvious that this is an astroturfin little fanboy - at best - probably sponsored by the Evil Empire itself? Even if it isnt, doesnt has praise for Longhorn just seem a teensy-weensy bit too similar to marketroid-concocted language devised deep inside the bowels of Mordorsoft itself? Im just sayings all.
Mac OSX may not be perfect. Longhorn may still be a pipe dream. I may be slobberting drunk. But this is probably a plug, plain and simple. OK?
So if I understand this correctly, you were able to avoid the JVM changes that seemed to implied by the previous prototype, by using annotations instead.
I think this is great news. Do you think youll get it through the business decision paper mill in time for Tiger?
How does this bug relate, technically, to RFE 4144488, which is pretty high on the vote count already? It seems they are requesting pretty similar stuff, so I'm curious if this is a tactical move to ensure the tiger is variant. Should we vote for both, or just this one?
For a long time, I thought maybe the reason that SMS isn't picking up in the US is that Americans rarely, if ever, can think of a reason not to raise their voices and boom out some heart-felt tidbit. They seem to find it natural to be making a lot of noise.
Still, it's strange, because this also means that there are situations, even for Americans, when your environment is just too loud to hear. Rock concerts, for instance. What could be wrong, in these situations, with a messaging medium that can reach everyone?
The real reason, which we've all figured out by now, is that they're embarassed they missed the tech train and just want to see it leave as soon as possible.
Some hints to get you started: First start to read "The Wire", which is not "Wired" (go to The Wire). It's a magazine that knows what happens from month to month. Subscribe, get the subscribers-only CDs they send you, find out what you like, and explore. Don't listen to people who tell you that Trance is the big one these days, or that their old heroes have defined your listening future.
Buy samplers with different artists on it. One that fits the topic is Electronic 01. Try also the Click'n'Cuts compilation series.
Check out special interest web shops and sites like Brainwashed, .
What you will find is probably that European, especially German, and Japanese artists are pretty much top of the line these days, but that this keeps changing. My most used line at Sonar this year was "We can see that, at least they're German".
Oh yeah, and the recent "Wired" article about electronic music was about five years out of date.
Noise, all.
Re:Some patterns to live by...
on
Bitter Java
·
· Score: 1
> Object creation performance has improved, but it
> is still much slower than recycling objects.
Sorry. With the VMs we have these days, this is a lie. You should try doing Java again, it must be years and years since your last time.
Writing this from my trust(worth)y little Mac. OK, so its a Big Al powerbook, but hey. Anyway:
Isnt it obvious that this is an astroturfin little fanboy - at best - probably sponsored by the Evil Empire itself? Even if it isnt, doesnt has praise for Longhorn just seem a teensy-weensy bit too similar to marketroid-concocted language devised deep inside the bowels of Mordorsoft itself? Im just sayings all.
Mac OSX may not be perfect. Longhorn may still be a pipe dream. I may be slobberting drunk. But this is probably a plug, plain and simple. OK?
Damn and blast. Kjetil
So if I understand this correctly, you were able to avoid the JVM changes that seemed to implied by the previous prototype, by using annotations instead.
I think this is great news. Do you think youll get it through the business decision paper mill in time for Tiger?
How does this bug relate, technically, to RFE 4144488, which is pretty high on the vote count already? It seems they are requesting pretty similar stuff, so I'm curious if this is a tactical move to ensure the tiger is variant. Should we vote for both, or just this one?
I want both of them, anyway. Good luck.
For a long time, I thought maybe the reason that SMS isn't picking up in the US is that Americans rarely, if ever, can think of a reason not to raise their voices and boom out some heart-felt tidbit. They seem to find it natural to be making a lot of noise.
Still, it's strange, because this also means that there are situations, even for Americans, when your environment is just too loud to hear. Rock concerts, for instance. What could be wrong, in these situations, with a messaging medium that can reach everyone?
The real reason, which we've all figured out by now, is that they're embarassed they missed the tech train and just want to see it leave as soon as possible.
Some hints to get you started: First start to read "The Wire", which is not "Wired" (go to The Wire). It's a magazine that knows what happens from month to month. Subscribe, get the subscribers-only CDs they send you, find out what you like, and explore. Don't listen to people who tell you that Trance is the big one these days, or that their old heroes have defined your listening future.
Buy samplers with different artists on it. One that fits the topic is Electronic 01. Try also the Click'n'Cuts compilation series.
Go to festivals like Sonar, Ars Electronica and Mutek, or at least find out what's hot there.
If you want to get into specifics, start with the labels. Places like Mego, Tigerbeat6, Kitty-Yo, Chicks on Speed, Mille Plateaux, Touch, Ninja Tune, Orthlong Musork, Staalplat, Domino, Emperor Norton, our heroes Rune Grammofon etc.Follow as many leads as you can, be open-minded.
Check out special interest web shops and sites like Brainwashed, .
What you will find is probably that European, especially German, and Japanese artists are pretty much top of the line these days, but that this keeps changing. My most used line at Sonar this year was "We can see that, at least they're German".
Oh yeah, and the recent "Wired" article about electronic music was about five years out of date.
Noise, all.
> Object creation performance has improved, but it > is still much slower than recycling objects.
Sorry. With the VMs we have these days, this is a lie. You should try doing Java again, it must be years and years since your last time.
Kjetil