perhaps if i was writing an e-mail or letter that merited caps, i would use it. i hardly see why an undeserved article praising apple deserves the extra effort to reach over and hit the shift key
why does apple get all this praise with the slightest innovation. ive heard so much talk from people about how good g5's setup is. however, i built a p4 2.6ghz rdram machine with a ultra 160 scsi drive for half a grand and it outperforms my brothers g5 and he spent over two grand on it. i use windows 2000 pro and i have no crashes. linux is nice but if you know how to use it windows isnt nearly as unstable as everyone claims it to be. troll me if you like, but this is the truth!
"all major IMs use proprietary protocols for voice and video that have not been reverse engineered yet"
last i heard ben affleck was pretty good at that stuff, so i dont really think its a question of how, but when
I am in the computer engineering program in college and the focus of the program is still C, so until you get the universities to stop supplying new programmers who will want to use C (what they were primarily taught) C is not going to die for quite some time.
perhaps if i was writing an e-mail or letter that merited caps, i would use it. i hardly see why an undeserved article praising apple deserves the extra effort to reach over and hit the shift key
why does apple get all this praise with the slightest innovation. ive heard so much talk from people about how good g5's setup is. however, i built a p4 2.6ghz rdram machine with a ultra 160 scsi drive for half a grand and it outperforms my brothers g5 and he spent over two grand on it. i use windows 2000 pro and i have no crashes. linux is nice but if you know how to use it windows isnt nearly as unstable as everyone claims it to be. troll me if you like, but this is the truth!
"all major IMs use proprietary protocols for voice and video that have not been reverse engineered yet" last i heard ben affleck was pretty good at that stuff, so i dont really think its a question of how, but when
I am in the computer engineering program in college and the focus of the program is still C, so until you get the universities to stop supplying new programmers who will want to use C (what they were primarily taught) C is not going to die for quite some time.