This should not be private info for a business. Unless it's a large well-known company, I wouldn't do business with a small company that hides their identity. Not even sure if you are allowed to hide registration info in.org non-profit domains.
I was under the impression that if you are not Linus Torvalds and writing Kernels & modules, embedded code, or drivers then C++ does memory management. With C you have to write the code to handle memory and if done incorrectly you will have security issues, crashes, or buffer overflows. Therefore, if you don't care about the size of the program, C++ is the way to go.
Linus is also right for what he does. Like most good programmers, he avoids trends albeit he's obsessive about it, he sticks to what he knows and that made him very good at C programming.
Same here, I tested this Vivaldi browser on Linux recently. It's just another Chrome / Chromium clone made to look similar to Opera. Even in Linux it has ugly Windows 8 decorations. On some sites this browser caches the whole page before it shows you anything, seems very slow.
Chrome is a good browser, Firefox is a good browser, and I don't see any point in creating another Chromium based browser. The reason the original Opera was successful was because it was 1.4 MB and would fit on a floppy. They also had the option to move the location bar or tabs to bottom. In Vivaldi, you can only move the tabs to bottom. Nothing like the old Opera and looks more like the new IE with those window decorations. The only good features is a button to not load images, but I'm not sure if it's not loading images or using css to just hide them.
If you follow trends, you will never get anything done.
This should not be private info for a business. Unless it's a large well-known company, I wouldn't do business with a small company that hides their identity. Not even sure if you are allowed to hide registration info in .org non-profit domains.
I was under the impression that if you are not Linus Torvalds and writing Kernels & modules, embedded code, or drivers then C++ does memory management. With C you have to write the code to handle memory and if done incorrectly you will have security issues, crashes, or buffer overflows. Therefore, if you don't care about the size of the program, C++ is the way to go. Linus is also right for what he does. Like most good programmers, he avoids trends albeit he's obsessive about it, he sticks to what he knows and that made him very good at C programming.
Same here, I tested this Vivaldi browser on Linux recently. It's just another Chrome / Chromium clone made to look similar to Opera. Even in Linux it has ugly Windows 8 decorations. On some sites this browser caches the whole page before it shows you anything, seems very slow. Chrome is a good browser, Firefox is a good browser, and I don't see any point in creating another Chromium based browser. The reason the original Opera was successful was because it was 1.4 MB and would fit on a floppy. They also had the option to move the location bar or tabs to bottom. In Vivaldi, you can only move the tabs to bottom. Nothing like the old Opera and looks more like the new IE with those window decorations. The only good features is a button to not load images, but I'm not sure if it's not loading images or using css to just hide them. If you follow trends, you will never get anything done.