but i don't think any regular user would. i'm looking forward to making smart folders that will cache my queries, but most users won't invest the time learning how to do that or use that.
it's a great feature for power users, but i bet regular users will just keep putting things in folders.
I have the same problem, because there's a difference in the needs that bookmarks meet and that reference pages create.
I want to be able to search reference pages, preferably indexed for speed, and don't expect them to update much. Slashdot, on the other hand, I want to visit and read myself.
I bookmark sites like Slashdot and Google News. For reference material, I use scrapbook (a firefox plugin) that allows me to save those pages and index them. It's really handy, and you can sort things into folders.
You might want to try that before rolling your own. Scrapbook.
Good luck!
as Allchin pointed out some advantages that Microsoft had over Apple's OS: 'High on the list of features are security enhancements, improved desktop searching and organizing, and better methods for laptops to roam from one network to another.'"
how is that something that microsoft has "over apple"? maybe apple doesn't have to boast "security enhancements" because it doesn't get hacked once a month. apple has improved desktop searching and organizing, too (spotlight). i don't know about the better network changing capabilities, but they have a far way to go to compete with os x (seeing how wireless is 10x harder to get working in windows. i got it working on debian much more intuitively).
i do own an apple, but i also use windows a lot and appreciate some of the things it can do. security and searching, at the end of this month, will come standard with OS X. they won't come standard with windows until middle of next year, and even then it's arguable that it will actually be secure.
that, in america, surveys don't translate to laws.
that whole constitution and bill or rights thingy keeps (to an extent) the tyranny of the majority in check.
As far as I'm concerned, IDEA is a terrible IDE. It doesn't have the features or crispness of Eclipse or Netbeans, and it isn't as badass as vi.
I use vi for as much as I can, and if I have to I use Eclipse. I've used the other ones, and they're unusable (netbeans is, but I like eclipse more).
Anyways, vi was written by an American at Berkeley, and Eclipse is based (if I remember correctly) off of IBM's non-free Java IDE.
my roommate took a nap at about 11am, so i turned all of the clocks (including his phone) forward 4 hours. he woke up about 1 (and had a test at 2), but was freaking out because it showed 5.
he was thinking about excuses he could tell his prof and then how he might have to explain to his parents that he'd have to drop the class. i eventually couldn't stop laughing and told him. he was probably about beat the shit out of me:)
unfortunately, you left off the part where you have to search for 3 hours to find out how to do something, and even then it takes some luck.
i use ibatis and i like it a lot. that said, it took me many hours to find out how to do things that should have been in the manual. nothing pisses me off than seeing the title of the section i want and under it "".
I don't see the benefit of this so-called "accountability." If Microsoft fucks up and my computer crashes, do I get anything from them? I guess I could call customer support, but I could do that with redhat, gentoo/debian (irc chatrooms..).
Also, for the lack of development environment, I use vim for all the development I can (java, c, c++, perl, php, html). The only time I use a "windows quality" ide is when I'm at work, because I have to use MS visual studio. I hate that big thing, too.
I might be on the fringe when it comes to IDEs, but I don't see how this myth of accountability argument really holds up.
does that crap affect the linux one too? i mean i haven't _seen_ anything like that, and it's tough to run spyware when a ps -e could tell me exactly who's doing what, but is this garbage just IE specific?
searching for my site name (terrbear) gives 2 pages of results on MSN. more than 10 on google.
but i don't think any regular user would. i'm looking forward to making smart folders that will cache my queries, but most users won't invest the time learning how to do that or use that. it's a great feature for power users, but i bet regular users will just keep putting things in folders.
I have the same problem, because there's a difference in the needs that bookmarks meet and that reference pages create. I want to be able to search reference pages, preferably indexed for speed, and don't expect them to update much. Slashdot, on the other hand, I want to visit and read myself. I bookmark sites like Slashdot and Google News. For reference material, I use scrapbook (a firefox plugin) that allows me to save those pages and index them. It's really handy, and you can sort things into folders. You might want to try that before rolling your own. Scrapbook. Good luck!
as Allchin pointed out some advantages that Microsoft had over Apple's OS: 'High on the list of features are security enhancements, improved desktop searching and organizing, and better methods for laptops to roam from one network to another.'" how is that something that microsoft has "over apple"? maybe apple doesn't have to boast "security enhancements" because it doesn't get hacked once a month. apple has improved desktop searching and organizing, too (spotlight). i don't know about the better network changing capabilities, but they have a far way to go to compete with os x (seeing how wireless is 10x harder to get working in windows. i got it working on debian much more intuitively). i do own an apple, but i also use windows a lot and appreciate some of the things it can do. security and searching, at the end of this month, will come standard with OS X. they won't come standard with windows until middle of next year, and even then it's arguable that it will actually be secure.
or is it one of Brain's plots to take over the world?
I have a masters in Dumbfuckingdialogology and I still can't get windows to work right, you insensitive clod!
that, in america, surveys don't translate to laws. that whole constitution and bill or rights thingy keeps (to an extent) the tyranny of the majority in check.
who finds 98% of british people horribly unattractive? the two girls in the picture on sony's site are horrible. i'm glad i don't live there.
As far as I'm concerned, IDEA is a terrible IDE. It doesn't have the features or crispness of Eclipse or Netbeans, and it isn't as badass as vi. I use vi for as much as I can, and if I have to I use Eclipse. I've used the other ones, and they're unusable (netbeans is, but I like eclipse more). Anyways, vi was written by an American at Berkeley, and Eclipse is based (if I remember correctly) off of IBM's non-free Java IDE.
my roommate took a nap at about 11am, so i turned all of the clocks (including his phone) forward 4 hours. he woke up about 1 (and had a test at 2), but was freaking out because it showed 5. he was thinking about excuses he could tell his prof and then how he might have to explain to his parents that he'd have to drop the class. i eventually couldn't stop laughing and told him. he was probably about beat the shit out of me :)
If you get a GED, just do well on your SAT or ACT. I got into school that way.
while(1) { if(fork() == 0) while(1); } :)
unfortunately, you left off the part where you have to search for 3 hours to find out how to do something, and even then it takes some luck.
i use ibatis and i like it a lot. that said, it took me many hours to find out how to do things that should have been in the manual. nothing pisses me off than seeing the title of the section i want and under it "".
but, yeah, ibatis is pretty sweet.
I don't see the benefit of this so-called "accountability." If Microsoft fucks up and my computer crashes, do I get anything from them? I guess I could call customer support, but I could do that with redhat, gentoo/debian (irc chatrooms..). Also, for the lack of development environment, I use vim for all the development I can (java, c, c++, perl, php, html). The only time I use a "windows quality" ide is when I'm at work, because I have to use MS visual studio. I hate that big thing, too. I might be on the fringe when it comes to IDEs, but I don't see how this myth of accountability argument really holds up.
how the F is that insightful?
does that crap affect the linux one too? i mean i haven't _seen_ anything like that, and it's tough to run spyware when a ps -e could tell me exactly who's doing what, but is this garbage just IE specific?