I mean, just imagine how secure Adobe Flash would be if it were sandboxed such that all it can do is get the web browser to perform HTTP requests on its behalf, and output audio and video?
So would it open up a TTY link to the video hardware to 'output' this video? Or does it communicate to an optimized, accelerated video driver/interface that protects the computer from it? What would even be the purpose of a Flash Player existing if it wasn't allowed to do any of the heavy lifting?
I'm not writing this to justify Flash. I often use browsers for which a Flash Plug-in has not bee installed, for a number of reasons.
Unread email never touched my browsers. I also only use a fairly robust third-part open-source email client (Sylpheed) to read my mail. pop.google.com is your friend.
The Sylpheed viewer gimps 'HTML' email significantly, but I see that as a good thing, not a bad thing. If it's really important to read a formatted email message, there is almost always a way to see it in a browser, AFTER I know what it is and where it comes from.
As long as it kills the existence of Javascript engines in browsers, it sounds like a good deal to me.
(being sarcastic, but WTF? when I want to read something it doesn't mean I want to RUN something, nor does it means it will impress me that trying to read something takes 40% of my processor's resources.)
The thing I don't get, and haven't for a long while, is why the 'Anti-virus' addon is so much a user process. As in, I have the BIOS in the computer on my desk configured so that the machine boots up at about 7:30AM and it's waiting at the login prompt when I arrive. Why isn't the Anti-virus stuff loaded as a system-level daemon and already running before I log on? Why is it installed to run at the Application level?
Also, you shine the brass and keep the wastebasket empty.
But what sort of perturbs me is that 'Engineers' aren't just IT types. Where I work, engineers work on and design product. Except for companies that produce IT Products, the IT staff aren't engineers, except in the 'sanitation engineer' sense. So why does the article immediately and only segue into: " Exactly how long should this database field be? " Engineers concern themselves with what type of plastic to produce which components of the product out of, tooling tolerances, production costs, etc. The guy that maintains the CAD files database is a glorified file clerk.
There was a period after the Watergate Scandal when it became popular to hold journalists up to high esteem for reasons that have never really been explained. While essentially, Journalism School majors are people who flunked out of Calculus, and THEN were also rejected by the English department.
The danger isn't really in the Law Enforcement agencies getting the equipment. It's the very militarization that is dangerous. The police should always see themselves as part of the community. Giving them the appearance of being a military, or allowing them to feel like a military force, separates them from 'the civilians.' No police force should refer to the ordinary citizens around them as 'the civilians' yet this is common language for police forces. Giving the police big lumbering military vehicles and promoting paramilitary SWAT teams to pose around in military-like uniforms is hazardous to our freedoms.
This sort of separation from the community they work in is a big part of the problem right now in Ferguson, MO.
Most people focus on Eisenhower's reference to the 'Military-Industrial Complex' and for some reason omit, or are not aware of this additional warning that was part of the same farewell speech:
Yet in holding scientific discovery in respect, as we should, we must also be alert to the equal and opposite danger that public policy could itself become the captive of a scientific-technological elite.
I use a Virgin Mobile Android smartphone. So I pay $35 a month for quasi-unlimited data and a few hundred minutes of voice. But I can switch from one Virgin Mobile phone to another by just going to the drugstore, buying it, and switching to the new phone on my account. How is my SMS tied to a SIM?
It's disturbing that you put Musk and Einstein in the same paragraph. Einstein was one of the most successful breakthrough scientists in history. Musk is a wheeler-dealer.
Certainly not the Europeans in general, though. They descended into the dark ages some time after the end of Greek civilization. If the Arabs hadn't preserved the knowledge and culture of the Greeks, we'd likely not know of it.
Death due to medical rationing is always a possibility, though. I suppose you can fly to the US or one of those clinics in the Bahamas if you have enough money.
Already requires that you can see, which is part of the driving licensing test.
My wife watched an elderly gentleman at the License Branch bump into a chair as he went up to the counter to renew his license. He said 'excuse me' to the chair. The person at the counter gave him his license renewal.
Maybe your Apple iDevice blocked the anchor tag. It seems suspiciously like writing an executable, which we know is forbidden on iOS. (don't look for a forth interpreter without jailbreaking)
Okay. He didn't do his Apple Branding right. Big boo boo.
30% off the top is pretty substantial. Why you insist on comparing it to 'every retail industry' is kinda weird. Why not compare it directly to other software operations? Like, how the percentage compares to the percentage a publisher that sells on their own web page gives up for infrastructure/billing costs?
You seem like, or at least are a self-appointed, expert on the matter of selling software. So why are you making flawed comparisons?
So would it open up a TTY link to the video hardware to 'output' this video? Or does it communicate to an optimized, accelerated video driver/interface that protects the computer from it? What would even be the purpose of a Flash Player existing if it wasn't allowed to do any of the heavy lifting?
I'm not writing this to justify Flash. I often use browsers for which a Flash Plug-in has not bee installed, for a number of reasons.
Unread email never touched my browsers. I also only use a fairly robust third-part open-source email client (Sylpheed) to read my mail. pop.google.com is your friend.
The Sylpheed viewer gimps 'HTML' email significantly, but I see that as a good thing, not a bad thing. If it's really important to read a formatted email message, there is almost always a way to see it in a browser, AFTER I know what it is and where it comes from.
As long as it kills the existence of Javascript engines in browsers, it sounds like a good deal to me.
(being sarcastic, but WTF? when I want to read something it doesn't mean I want to RUN something, nor does it means it will impress me that trying to read something takes 40% of my processor's resources.)
The default for Windows 8 is kind of in the middle, there, too.
But if you want to compare OS X to Windows 98, maybe we should be talking about MacOS 9 instead.
The thing I don't get, and haven't for a long while, is why the 'Anti-virus' addon is so much a user process. As in, I have the BIOS in the computer on my desk configured so that the machine boots up at about 7:30AM and it's waiting at the login prompt when I arrive. Why isn't the Anti-virus stuff loaded as a system-level daemon and already running before I log on? Why is it installed to run at the Application level?
Also, you shine the brass and keep the wastebasket empty.
But what sort of perturbs me is that 'Engineers' aren't just IT types. Where I work, engineers work on and design product. Except for companies that produce IT Products, the IT staff aren't engineers, except in the 'sanitation engineer' sense. So why does the article immediately and only segue into: " Exactly how long should this database field be? " Engineers concern themselves with what type of plastic to produce which components of the product out of, tooling tolerances, production costs, etc. The guy that maintains the CAD files database is a glorified file clerk.
Same as it ever was.
There was a period after the Watergate Scandal when it became popular to hold journalists up to high esteem for reasons that have never really been explained. While essentially, Journalism School majors are people who flunked out of Calculus, and THEN were also rejected by the English department.
Only because professional sports is even more repulsive, and there isn't much else on at that time.
The danger isn't really in the Law Enforcement agencies getting the equipment. It's the very militarization that is dangerous. The police should always see themselves as part of the community. Giving them the appearance of being a military, or allowing them to feel like a military force, separates them from 'the civilians.' No police force should refer to the ordinary citizens around them as 'the civilians' yet this is common language for police forces. Giving the police big lumbering military vehicles and promoting paramilitary SWAT teams to pose around in military-like uniforms is hazardous to our freedoms.
This sort of separation from the community they work in is a big part of the problem right now in Ferguson, MO.
Most people focus on Eisenhower's reference to the 'Military-Industrial Complex' and for some reason omit, or are not aware of this additional warning that was part of the same farewell speech:
I use a Virgin Mobile Android smartphone. So I pay $35 a month for quasi-unlimited data and a few hundred minutes of voice. But I can switch from one Virgin Mobile phone to another by just going to the drugstore, buying it, and switching to the new phone on my account. How is my SMS tied to a SIM?
It's disturbing that you put Musk and Einstein in the same paragraph. Einstein was one of the most successful breakthrough scientists in history. Musk is a wheeler-dealer.
Now, if Jobs had just collected a $10,000 per unit subsidy from the government (or scaled equivalent per Apple unit sold) he'd be even MORE like Musk.
Walled gardens, and Stockholm Syndrome comes to mind.
It's okay to cherry-pick a few lemon models of conventional cars, to compare to the Tesla. That makes the Tesla look more reliable.
Why would one need any other reason to hate now that it's owned by Facebook?
You like democracy? You should thank the Greeks.
Certainly not the Europeans in general, though. They descended into the dark ages some time after the end of Greek civilization. If the Arabs hadn't preserved the knowledge and culture of the Greeks, we'd likely not know of it.
You're very cosmopolitan.
How do we subscribe to your newsletter?
Death due to medical rationing is always a possibility, though. I suppose you can fly to the US or one of those clinics in the Bahamas if you have enough money.
Europe is not the USA
It certainly isn't. There are pretty close to zero Trabants on the road in the USA.
Already requires that you can see, which is part of the driving licensing test.
My wife watched an elderly gentleman at the License Branch bump into a chair as he went up to the counter to renew his license. He said 'excuse me' to the chair. The person at the counter gave him his license renewal.
The weird thing is, you're so nestled into your worldview that you thought you didn't need a visible sarcasm tag.
Tort law can easily resolve this, without need for protectionist measures backed by unions and various other cartels.
Maybe your Apple iDevice blocked the anchor tag. It seems suspiciously like writing an executable, which we know is forbidden on iOS. (don't look for a forth interpreter without jailbreaking)
Okay. He didn't do his Apple Branding right. Big boo boo.
30% off the top is pretty substantial. Why you insist on comparing it to 'every retail industry' is kinda weird. Why not compare it directly to other software operations? Like, how the percentage compares to the percentage a publisher that sells on their own web page gives up for infrastructure/billing costs?
You seem like, or at least are a self-appointed, expert on the matter of selling software. So why are you making flawed comparisons?
The reason the App store and perhaps even the iPhone itself was such a success is because there is only one place you need to go to find Apps.
That's debatable. Where is your evidence that it's the reason for the success of the platform? Just saying it isn''t enough.