They have a much stronger hold on the advertising market, where the product is not search but AdWords. Customers are businesses, not people looking for information.
If > 50% of your business comes from AdWords, switching away from it might be the end of your company...
To be fair, this incident was a LOCAL station and not Fox News Channel. However, the station is owned by Fox and not an affiliate.
They were a CBS station before some purchases had affiliations jumping around all over the dial IIRC, and part of the news cast remains. They do have a decidely biased slant on their reporting and some really asinine op ed pieces, but then again they also have a pretty damn good weather department and "Skytower HD Viper" which is nice here in Florida I suppose. The Corporation also had a bit about this incident and along with the decidely smug segment that aired during the news broadcast about the "victory" in court. Of course, there was no mention of any sort of lying or attempt at altering the original piece, but that's pretty much to be expected.
Ya, that's basically the concept.
That's "faith" for you... believing in something you can't prove.
The way out of the recursive trap of a creator requiring a creator is existance without creation. It's stupid but that's the "logical" explanation for it.
VB6 allows you to accomplish "business goals" in a very mediocre manner.
Take a look at all the "Teach your self VB6 in 21 days" books out there. There are a considerable number of developers that learned to code using these types of materials.
Usually these are people that had no intention of ever programming, but kind of "fell" into it.
It is much harder for these people to grasp such a fundamental paradigm shift (such as object oriented programming) than your average went to school for it type of coder. You know what they say about anecdotal evidence, but i've had several jr. programmers who were going to school for CS and couldn't handle the switch to object oriented development.
Look, anyone can learn anything they set their mind to, but sometimes, it is incredibly hard, or even impossible to break out of the mind set you were previously in...
Google has anything but a monopoly.
They have a much stronger hold on the advertising market, where the product is not search but AdWords. Customers are businesses, not people looking for information.
If > 50% of your business comes from AdWords, switching away from it might be the end of your company...
To be fair, this incident was a LOCAL station and not Fox News Channel. However, the station is owned by Fox and not an affiliate.
They were a CBS station before some purchases had affiliations jumping around all over the dial IIRC, and part of the news cast remains. They do have a decidely biased slant on their reporting and some really asinine op ed pieces, but then again they also have a pretty damn good weather department and "Skytower HD Viper" which is nice here in Florida I suppose.
The Corporation also had a bit about this incident and along with the decidely smug segment that aired during the news broadcast about the "victory" in court. Of course, there was no mention of any sort of lying or attempt at altering the original piece, but that's pretty much to be expected.
Ya, that's basically the concept.
That's "faith" for you... believing in something you can't prove.
The way out of the recursive trap of a creator requiring a creator is existance without creation. It's stupid but that's the "logical" explanation for it.
So, who designed the creator?
One of the most important tenets of faith is the concept of existance without creation. Existance without creation is what makes "god" god.
It's quite simple:
VB6 allows you to accomplish "business goals" in a very mediocre manner.
Take a look at all the "Teach your self VB6 in 21 days" books out there. There are a considerable number of developers that learned to code using these types of materials.
Usually these are people that had no intention of ever programming, but kind of "fell" into it.
It is much harder for these people to grasp such a fundamental paradigm shift (such as object oriented programming) than your average went to school for it type of coder. You know what they say about anecdotal evidence, but i've had several jr. programmers who were going to school for CS and couldn't handle the switch to object oriented development.
Look, anyone can learn anything they set their mind to, but sometimes, it is incredibly hard, or even impossible to break out of the mind set you were previously in...