Why do technology companies care?
The idea of building copy-protection technology into hardware is not a new one, nor has it proved highly successful in other initiatives. The Secure Digital Music Initiative (SDMI), sponsored by the music, technology and consumer electronics industries, has been trying to find a universally acceptable way to do just that with limited success for two years.
ill-mannered crackers who cracked dongles will crack their stuff again.. poor harware guys..
this is sure a good news.. i wonder how fast it is. will games run as 'smoothly' as ms-office? another question: will direct-sound, direct-blabla also be supported?
it seems big companies will prefer this of free licences im the future... yesterday windows ce sources, today kylix..
Why do technology companies care? The idea of building copy-protection technology into hardware is not a new one, nor has it proved highly successful in other initiatives. The Secure Digital Music Initiative (SDMI), sponsored by the music, technology and consumer electronics industries, has been trying to find a universally acceptable way to do just that with limited success for two years.
ill-mannered crackers who cracked dongles will crack their stuff again.. poor harware guys..
run-and-jump games just rule. *evil grin*
this is sure a good news.. i wonder how fast it is. will games run as 'smoothly' as ms-office?
another question: will direct-sound, direct-blabla also be supported?
long live d1rect-x. fuck opengl.. *NOT*
perl, python and javascript are already "cross platform".. i guess these do not need an IDE.