> I would not call all comments on this topic ignorant.
I don't. You are apparently using Unity and come up with some valid points. I was referring to the people who brought up issues that have already been addressed.
My point was and is: Unity is far from perfect, but it is usable and has some very nice window and workspace management features. I certainly doesn't deserve being bashed as unusable and overly simplistic.
Maybe I am living in another world. I consider myself a power user. I have usually around 15 apps open, many of them multiple instances and I used to have the Cairo Dock installed to manage my desktop and windows.
My first reaction to Unity (on 11.04) was rejection. I switched to Gnome2 less than 5 minutes after first trying.
But last week I was working on a remastered Ubuntu 11.10 to promote our new products, and I decided to leave Unity as the GUI for the time being. And guess what? I actually liked it. I decided to install it on my main system too. And it is still there.
All comments here about having to search apps in the dash prompt just indicate ignorance. You only have to do that once, then you can add the apps icon to the launcher. You can now launch multiple instances of already open apps like you do with, say, the Cairo Dock.
Alt-Tab works as expected, with the nice added feature of a nested view of windows belonging to the same app.
There are still some rough edges and the fact that the dock cannot be moved from the first monitors left screen edge is extremely annoying.
But it has a lot of potential and deserves a little more appreciation than the bashing by people here who obviously haven't tried Unity, but nevertheless have string opinions about it.
Absolutely true! I am maintaining a C++ project done by a guy who loved MI and operator overloading and his code is incredibly difficult to understand and debug. I program both in C++ and Java and use delegates in both.
The trick is that since the terrorist will say no, they can be deported for lying on an immigration form, which has much less of a legal burden than proving that they actually are terrorists.
He would only be lying if he either said he isn't a terrorist and you can prove that he is, or if he said he is a terrorist and you prove that he isn't.
So, assuming he said that he isn't a terrorist you would still have to prove that he is in order to prove that he is lying.
So you have no point here.
I have developed for Windows since Windows 3.0. Starting with MSVC 5.0 Visual C++ I have used all Developer Studio's.
One and a half year ago I researched our options for a X-platform basis for our software clients.
I looked at Mono for 2 hours before discarding it.
I finally chose Java SE, and it took me very little time to get used to the fabulous NetBeans IDE (looked at Eclipse too, but NetBeans takes much more care of things that aren't very obvious to Java newbies)
I am now porting our MSVC/MFC C++ codebase to GCC with the C++ standard lib and the impressive Boost library.
I had to refresh my C++ skills, regarding templates mainly, but it was well worth the effort.
After a lot of evaluations I decided to opt for CodeBlocks as my IDE. It's not comparable to Visual Studio, but certainly good enough!
So I'd recommend standard C++ for software that has to be fast (our software manipulates 1 bit TIFF G4 compressed files, quite CPU intensive), and Java for the rest.
You aren't working directly with Linux with any of these suggestions, but it will run very well on Linux, as on most other OSes,
I don't. You are apparently using Unity and come up with some valid points. I was referring to the people who brought up issues that have already been addressed.
My point was and is: Unity is far from perfect, but it is usable and has some very nice window and workspace management features. I certainly doesn't deserve being bashed as unusable and overly simplistic.
My first reaction to Unity (on 11.04) was rejection. I switched to Gnome2 less than 5 minutes after first trying.
But last week I was working on a remastered Ubuntu 11.10 to promote our new products, and I decided to leave Unity as the GUI for the time being. And guess what? I actually liked it. I decided to install it on my main system too. And it is still there.
All comments here about having to search apps in the dash prompt just indicate ignorance. You only have to do that once, then you can add the apps icon to the launcher.
You can now launch multiple instances of already open apps like you do with, say, the Cairo Dock.
Alt-Tab works as expected, with the nice added feature of a nested view of windows belonging to the same app.
There are still some rough edges and the fact that the dock cannot be moved from the first monitors left screen edge is extremely annoying. But it has a lot of potential and deserves a little more appreciation than the bashing by people here who obviously haven't tried Unity, but nevertheless have string opinions about it.
Absolutely true! I am maintaining a C++ project done by a guy who loved MI and operator overloading and his code is incredibly difficult to understand and debug. I program both in C++ and Java and use delegates in both.
A browser is only as secure as the most insecure plug-in it allows to be installed.
If I copy it into my sig, am I allowed to correct the grammar first?
The trick is that since the terrorist will say no, they can be deported for lying on an immigration form, which has much less of a legal burden than proving that they actually are terrorists.
He would only be lying if he either said he isn't a terrorist and you can prove that he is, or if he said he is a terrorist and you prove that he isn't. So, assuming he said that he isn't a terrorist you would still have to prove that he is in order to prove that he is lying. So you have no point here.
I have developed for Windows since Windows 3.0. Starting with MSVC 5.0 Visual C++ I have used all Developer Studio's. One and a half year ago I researched our options for a X-platform basis for our software clients. I looked at Mono for 2 hours before discarding it. I finally chose Java SE, and it took me very little time to get used to the fabulous NetBeans IDE (looked at Eclipse too, but NetBeans takes much more care of things that aren't very obvious to Java newbies) I am now porting our MSVC/MFC C++ codebase to GCC with the C++ standard lib and the impressive Boost library. I had to refresh my C++ skills, regarding templates mainly, but it was well worth the effort. After a lot of evaluations I decided to opt for CodeBlocks as my IDE. It's not comparable to Visual Studio, but certainly good enough! So I'd recommend standard C++ for software that has to be fast (our software manipulates 1 bit TIFF G4 compressed files, quite CPU intensive), and Java for the rest. You aren't working directly with Linux with any of these suggestions, but it will run very well on Linux, as on most other OSes,
You mean by using a PornStjar?