A recurring theme in the criticisms -- perhaps the most painfully misanthropic -- is that, since staff are trained to use MS Office, they simply can't figure out Open Office, and everyone who's switched back to MSO from OOO has seen support time and staff frustration drop like a rock. (Of course, going from MS Office 2k3's traditional interface to MS Office 2k8's "Ribbon" caused absolutely no confusion at all!)
But why is this? Why are people trained eat the bread and sip the MS Kool Aid so utterly helpless when faced with an alternative that doesn't look the same?
Well, it's because people with minimal computer skills teach other people with no computer skills that, in order to make this word look blue, you click this button in this place. Not "look for a color changer and select blue". No, it has to be under THIS menu, with THAT name, and looks like THIS button.
We don't teach people how to use computers or even software. We teach them very specific, contextless mundane steps.
What saddens me most is that I was able to document this twelve years ago and it's still the same today.
If only they had their own internal corporate Tea Party to chide them for wasting money!
So much for running government like a business.... If we did that, we'd have jury duty every day, health insurance wouldn't exist, and the President would just live at Camp David playing golf, while telling us we're all lazy.
When I was in college, kids in the university's then-tallest building would not bother getting cable service, which the dorm was pre-wired for. But despite not having cable service, they plugged their TV's into the cable jacks anyway -- and it increased their OTA reception fourfold. The cable wires running through the building served as a huge 100-foot antenna.
I don't know about all this so-called marketing. The first time I heard of APB was at PAX East back in February. They had 8 stations set up logged into the game. They had one emotionless, utterly uninterested guy talking about how awesome the game was, who occasionally threw a T-shirt into the huge crowd amassing around their booth. He would then taunt everyone else by saying "the best way to get a shirt is to play the game".
Except NO ONE GOT TO PLAY. Well, a couple of people did. They'd get about 5 minutes on the station, which was enough to walk around a little, and... find nobody else. Then, when they got off, the stations would be taken over by booth staffers, who would dick around with the stations for 15 minutes or so.
The best way to get people to play your game is to LET THEM PLAY IT. When a crowd of people are surrounding your booth, interested in playing a game that has no legacy to spur familiarity or loyalty, you should make sure they get to play it. Especially if it's as awesome as you say (hearing the music being played by people driving past, etc.). And you should provide a decent playzone or sandbox where they can actually do useful things instead of ooh and aah at your now-industry-standard graphics.
The authors of TFA say they are "surprised" that despite the payoff of infrastructure and the age of the technology that prices have not come down.
It's as if they think rich people don't like money.
The only reason a rich person gives up money is if he thinks he will lose more if he doesn't give up a little -- or if he thinks it will lead to getting even more money back. I.e. competition. And progressive taxes.
There's zero reason for telecommunications companies to reduce rates. This notion that "they make enough now, therefore they should lower/stop raising rates" is so silly, it's like trying to argue that greed = benevolence.
And yet this very principle is the underpinning of the libertarian free market religion. But like those of all other religions, it is utterly flawed, unfounded, and unrealistic.
INB4 "How much longer are PATRIOTIC AMERICANS going to allow BARACK OSAMA to DESTROY the CHRISTIAN instiution of marriage?" or some such. It can't be much longer now...
What on earth exactly is "proper rewards"? There is no such thing. Any estimation of such are based on presumptions by either the content creator or the distributor whom they license it to.
Let's say a photographer takes a picture. They offer it to media outlets for $100 a use. But only 10% of media outlets will pay it.
But if the photographer were to lower their price to $50 a use, perhaps 30% of media outlets would pay it. So despite lowering prices by half, their ROI becomes 50% greater.
The photog goes away griping that no one appreciates good photography anymore, etc. etc. But it is the photog themselves that is kicking themselves in the ass. Why? Because their notion of "proper rewards" is too rigid. While the photo might be $100 valuable to the originator, to everyone else it is likely worth, on average, less than that.
In the case of piracy, you have people who are unwilling to buy the work for the price stated. Instead, they take it for a lower price (free). But your loss is actually zero, because they wouldn't have bought it at your price anyway.
But most of this is irrelevant in the real world anyway, because the majority of artists (well, at least in music/movies/writing/etc) end up performing their work as "work for hire", and they are paid a flat price for their work that is unrelated to subsequent sales, usage, redistribution, even reimagining. In those cases, most artists don't get anything close to "proper rewards" either by their own standards or by that of a reasonable, uninvested third party.
This notion that piracy cuts into the artists proper rewards is the same argument that it cuts into the profits of record companies. You've just tried to make it folksy by taking out the corporate middleman. The applicable reasoning doesn't change.
All they need to do is release a phone with the capabilities of the Moto Droid, and the durability of their own Nokia 3390.
Those things last forever. I know people who still use them despite only being good for phone calls and texts. (gasp, i know, do they cook over open fires too?) Other people would use them too, if they could slice, dice, and run Google Maps.
The last Nokia phone worth a look was the NGage, though mostly just for the look.
It's not violence, indeed, but "violent oppression" includes intimidating (i.e. credible) threats of violence, in my book.
Well, I haven't read your book. It's best if we all work from the same book; ideally one that neither of us has written. In my case, I used Merriam Webster's book. If you insist on using your own book, don't expect the rest of the world to play by your rules -- or in your arbitrary namespaces.
Again, putting a sign on a lawn is neither violent oppression nor intimidation. Just exposure. And if it's put on the sidewalk, it's not even so much as trespassing. Exposure is not illegal. We have John Peter Zenger to thank for that.
As I said in my original comment (which you did read, right?), there's no more of such than there is a concerted effort at violence in the gay community in California.
Well, actually, someone said "the gay community is not going out of its way to violently oppress" people, and you disagreed (albeit noncommittally) by pointing out that a few gay-against-anti-gay incidents occured in California. Then you paid lip service (but noticeably provided no corresponding examples) to the notion that it has worked both ways. Despite ending with "it's bad on both sides and we should stop it", if you are presenting your post as not biased towards the notion that the gay community is inordinately practicing violent oppression, I beg to differ.
(Previously:) > The gay community isn't exactly going out of its way to violently oppress those who oppose > it, while the other side can't say the same. That depends on where you live and how you define "gay community". In California during the Proposition 8 debates and right after its passage there was quite a number of rather ugly incidents.
You refuted an assertion that the "gay community" was not, as a collective group, committing "violent oppression" by pointing out that, in California, a few gay-against-anti-gay isolated incidents occured, at least according to a pro-prop-8 website that didn't list any names or sources. Later you gave lip service to the notion that there's been some animus in the other direction.
before this particular petition, the state had found that these petitions did not fall under the Public records Act.
When was this? What was the petition number?
So, the people who signed this petition had reason to believe that their identities would not become general knowledge.
Sure, if you ignore the fact that they are signing them in public places, in broad daylight, in plain view of the general public, on a piece of paper left on a table for the next few hours, which will also be seen by as many as 30 or more subsequent signers (as well as people who read the petition but don't sign it), and which at the end of the day will be collected by a non-regulated or bonded private employee or volunteer who will hold onto them until eventually handing them into the private citizens running the group, and which will be in either private, non-government, non-regulated, non-bound peoples' hands until they are finally turned into the state -- IF the group ends up with enough signatures to bother doing so -- and even becoming remotely elegible for government-enforced secrecy, barring any laws that promote transparent government.
So yeah, other than all of that, it was done in complete guaranteed secrecy!
those who oppose your position are willing to use intimidation tactics (which is the case with this petition).
Telling people you are a homophobe is an intimidation tactic? Or do you have nighmares of imaginary mobs of men in dresses and misapplied lipstick painting your house pink in the middle of the night?
In point of fact, the process normally used by the state in this case is to take a sample of the signatures and verify those. According to the Sec of State this has been as small as 3%. Supposedly it depends on the proportion of signatures submitted over signatures required but the exact math is not disclosed. Normally they do not perform exhaustive verification.
And frankly, even when they do, they are extremely permissive about accepting signatures almost to the point of irrelevancy.
I was going to take on your trolling directly, but then i realized it was much more amusing, and telling, that you use a (bad) childhood analogy to illustrate the thought process of your supporters.
Violence is defined as "exertion of physical force so as to injure or abuse", so that's how I would not characterize a sign saying "bigots live here" as violence.
Isolated incidents do not a concerted effort make. We have these things called police which you pay for with your tax dollars which is what we as a society have provided to handle just these sorts of occasions. And we have well-defined laws that divide actions into actually damaging, and things that you may not like but aren't criminally or unfairly damaging which you are left to accept as natural consequence of life.
What you're doing here is stereotyping gay people (and pro-gay people) based on three isolated incidents out of hundreds of thousands of petition signers. Which, frankly, considering your established position on groups of people that are not like you, it's not at all surprising.
PS, this written criticism of your logic, misappropriation, and prejudice should not be construed as "violence".
Yes. It's programmer's fault that they write applications that make poor assumptions about names -- not the people who design software requirements who are neither programmers nor usually very worldly.
Perhaps we should have a list of "assumptions people make about developers"! * Developers get to design their own software. * Developers get to have some say in how their software is designed. * Developers at least can prevent really stupid things from being put in the software they write. * Developers aren't smart enough to know that outliers are inevitable. * Developers aren't smart enough to know that of course there are people with punctuation, extra words and spaces, even letters that no one has seen before. * Developers wouldn't rather code just one column to hold an identifier rather than two.
For some time now I've noticed that the My Location radius in Google Maps for Android gets much smaller when you are in signal range of an open wireless access point. (Assuming you don't have GPS on.) Android / Maps seems to use three different RF methods of location. 1, cell towers, 2, WiFi APs, 3, GPS. (Turn off WiFi and a medium radius will revert to the typical.5-2km cell tower radius.)
There is an interesting side effect to this. I moved last November and naturally took my WiFi access point with me. I kept the same router config, and same broadband service (and probably even same external gateway -- it was about 2 mi away). When I am at home, and I use My Location on my G1, it shows me at my old house. That was a dead giveaway that Google was storing location info of WiFi points -- and in this case, returning a stale location.
So it's okay for the federal government to swoop in and take over privately owned data lines and equipment nodes because it's a common public data infrastructure.... but its NOT okay for the federal government to swoop in and say that these data lines and equipment nodes have to provide the public with equal access to other lines and nodes?
Thanks so much... Where do I get off this runaway train?
Just think, the original SIM cards were as big as the piece of plastic you now punch them out of. The common SIM we use today is properly called Mini-SIM. SIMs use the same technology as smart cards (which every European credit card now is*), so they were originally the same size... no doubt this was back when mobile phones were the size of bricks or worse.
* We had a French foreign exchange student a few months ago, she tried to use her credit card at a gift shop, and couldn't figure out what she was supposed to do with it as there was no smart card reader. The swipe-and-sign method was completely foreign to her (literally!) just as the chip-and-pin method is foreign (and unavailable) to us. It was enlightening.
First off, the "proof of concept" does not prove that you can do AJAX without the J. It presents a very simple use of the "target" attribute to the <a> tag that has been around since, oh, 1995 or 6 (with real frames, to be fair, but thats academic. Iframes were only invented because paper-obsessed layout & design types didn't like the frame bars).
What it does prove, and it's a valid point, that there is plenty of page automation you can do without dependency on J or X. These days, because of the maddeningly and increasingly high-level focus of web development, a web programming shop will immediately reach for the AJAX hammer to hit even the simplest nails, instead of using the most efficient tool for the job.
Before AJAX we had DHTML, before DHTML there was cross-frame scripting, and before that there was client pull and server push. We do nearly all of these things now with AJAX and as a result, simple tasks are developed as unnecessarily complicated monstrosities.
It's time for the address space hogs to give back to the Internet! Go through your IP blocks and see if there are any you can spare. Free.com addys for one month for each Class B reclaimed!
Seriously... IBM, DEC (?), BBN, GE, Boeing, DuPont, Prudential, Bell North (?), Ford, the US Post Office, Eli Lilly, Halliburton... do they really need their own Class A's all to themselves? Some having more than one? Uh, not likely.
incorrectly identifies svchost.exe, a critical Windows executable, as a virus
While it's fair to say that svchost.exe -- the FILE -- is a "critical executable", that is completely different from saying that svchost.exe -- the PROGRAM instance -- is always critical.
The very annoying thing is that svchost.exe doesn't do anything of its own, really, except run other programs. Sometimes that other program is really essential (like core Microsoft IPC services), sometimes that other program is necessary for one of your computer's devices to work, and yet other times that program is something like Yahoo Toolbar. Or worse: adware, spyware,or a trojan.
Shame that XP never thought you would need a way to know exactly what that svchost.exe instance was actually doing. I know I've forced a reboot unintentially by trying to kill unnecessary processes, and happened to kill that one joker's-card svchost.exe process that was running an essential core service. (Meanwhile you can kill explorer.exe, the core of the UI, and simply restart it to get it back. Go figure.)
Right now I have 7 svchost.exe processes on my XP system. I've no idea what any of them are actually doing. They have memory spaces anywhere from 200KB to 18MB, and open filehandles anywhere from 100 to 2,000. I would like to think I could determine which ones were legitimate and necessary and which ones were just idle crap taking up resources, or worse.
And are you also proud of how you save money by paying only the minimum balance on your credit cards each month?
Tivo monthly subscription is $13. Add in one multi-stream cablecard from Comcast for $1.50 and you come in at $14.50 a month. That's less than $16.95 in my math.
A recurring theme in the criticisms -- perhaps the most painfully misanthropic -- is that, since staff are trained to use MS Office, they simply can't figure out Open Office, and everyone who's switched back to MSO from OOO has seen support time and staff frustration drop like a rock. (Of course, going from MS Office 2k3's traditional interface to MS Office 2k8's "Ribbon" caused absolutely no confusion at all!)
But why is this? Why are people trained eat the bread and sip the MS Kool Aid so utterly helpless when faced with an alternative that doesn't look the same?
Well, it's because people with minimal computer skills teach other people with no computer skills that, in order to make this word look blue, you click this button in this place. Not "look for a color changer and select blue". No, it has to be under THIS menu, with THAT name, and looks like THIS button.
We don't teach people how to use computers or even software. We teach them very specific, contextless mundane steps.
What saddens me most is that I was able to document this twelve years ago and it's still the same today.
If only they had their own internal corporate Tea Party to chide them for wasting money!
So much for running government like a business.... If we did that, we'd have jury duty every day, health insurance wouldn't exist, and the President would just live at Camp David playing golf, while telling us we're all lazy.
When I was in college, kids in the university's then-tallest building would not bother getting cable service, which the dorm was pre-wired for. But despite not having cable service, they plugged their TV's into the cable jacks anyway -- and it increased their OTA reception fourfold. The cable wires running through the building served as a huge 100-foot antenna.
I don't know about all this so-called marketing. The first time I heard of APB was at PAX East back in February. They had 8 stations set up logged into the game. They had one emotionless, utterly uninterested guy talking about how awesome the game was, who occasionally threw a T-shirt into the huge crowd amassing around their booth. He would then taunt everyone else by saying "the best way to get a shirt is to play the game".
Except NO ONE GOT TO PLAY. Well, a couple of people did. They'd get about 5 minutes on the station, which was enough to walk around a little, and... find nobody else. Then, when they got off, the stations would be taken over by booth staffers, who would dick around with the stations for 15 minutes or so.
The best way to get people to play your game is to LET THEM PLAY IT. When a crowd of people are surrounding your booth, interested in playing a game that has no legacy to spur familiarity or loyalty, you should make sure they get to play it. Especially if it's as awesome as you say (hearing the music being played by people driving past, etc.). And you should provide a decent playzone or sandbox where they can actually do useful things instead of ooh and aah at your now-industry-standard graphics.
on how many of them will be returned with the screen hinges busted after the first three months.
The authors of TFA say they are "surprised" that despite the payoff of infrastructure and the age of the technology that prices have not come down.
It's as if they think rich people don't like money.
The only reason a rich person gives up money is if he thinks he will lose more if he doesn't give up a little -- or if he thinks it will lead to getting even more money back. I.e. competition. And progressive taxes.
There's zero reason for telecommunications companies to reduce rates. This notion that "they make enough now, therefore they should lower/stop raising rates" is so silly, it's like trying to argue that greed = benevolence.
And yet this very principle is the underpinning of the libertarian free market religion. But like those of all other religions, it is utterly flawed, unfounded, and unrealistic.
INB4 "How much longer are PATRIOTIC AMERICANS going to allow BARACK OSAMA to DESTROY the CHRISTIAN instiution of marriage?" or some such. It can't be much longer now...
Is it really "quick thinking" or is it just "utilizing the only way she knows how to communicate?"
> LOL OMG MOMS BF HIT ME WTF
> OMG RLY?
> YA HE HIT ME
> OMG DAT SUX
Next time I'm assaulted and don't know how to get help, I'll try forcing lots of air through my tightened vocal chords. Who would think of that?
Nothing about that question is correct.
What on earth exactly is "proper rewards"? There is no such thing. Any estimation of such are based on presumptions by either the content creator or the distributor whom they license it to.
Let's say a photographer takes a picture. They offer it to media outlets for $100 a use. But only 10% of media outlets will pay it.
But if the photographer were to lower their price to $50 a use, perhaps 30% of media outlets would pay it. So despite lowering prices by half, their ROI becomes 50% greater.
The photog goes away griping that no one appreciates good photography anymore, etc. etc. But it is the photog themselves that is kicking themselves in the ass. Why? Because their notion of "proper rewards" is too rigid. While the photo might be $100 valuable to the originator, to everyone else it is likely worth, on average, less than that.
In the case of piracy, you have people who are unwilling to buy the work for the price stated. Instead, they take it for a lower price (free). But your loss is actually zero, because they wouldn't have bought it at your price anyway.
But most of this is irrelevant in the real world anyway, because the majority of artists (well, at least in music/movies/writing/etc) end up performing their work as "work for hire", and they are paid a flat price for their work that is unrelated to subsequent sales, usage, redistribution, even reimagining. In those cases, most artists don't get anything close to "proper rewards" either by their own standards or by that of a reasonable, uninvested third party.
This notion that piracy cuts into the artists proper rewards is the same argument that it cuts into the profits of record companies. You've just tried to make it folksy by taking out the corporate middleman. The applicable reasoning doesn't change.
All they need to do is release a phone with the capabilities of the Moto Droid, and the durability of their own Nokia 3390.
Those things last forever. I know people who still use them despite only being good for phone calls and texts. (gasp, i know, do they cook over open fires too?) Other people would use them too, if they could slice, dice, and run Google Maps.
The last Nokia phone worth a look was the NGage, though mostly just for the look.
It's not violence, indeed, but "violent oppression" includes intimidating (i.e. credible) threats of violence, in my book.
Well, I haven't read your book. It's best if we all work from the same book; ideally one that neither of us has written. In my case, I used Merriam Webster's book. If you insist on using your own book, don't expect the rest of the world to play by your rules -- or in your arbitrary namespaces.
Again, putting a sign on a lawn is neither violent oppression nor intimidation. Just exposure. And if it's put on the sidewalk, it's not even so much as trespassing. Exposure is not illegal. We have John Peter Zenger to thank for that.
As I said in my original comment (which you did read, right?), there's no more of such than there is a concerted effort at violence in the gay community in California.
Well, actually, someone said "the gay community is not going out of its way to violently oppress" people, and you disagreed (albeit noncommittally) by pointing out that a few gay-against-anti-gay incidents occured in California. Then you paid lip service (but noticeably provided no corresponding examples) to the notion that it has worked both ways. Despite ending with "it's bad on both sides and we should stop it", if you are presenting your post as not biased towards the notion that the gay community is inordinately practicing violent oppression, I beg to differ.
(Previously:)
> The gay community isn't exactly going out of its way to violently oppress those who oppose
> it, while the other side can't say the same.
That depends on where you live and how you define "gay community". In California during the Proposition 8 debates and right after its passage there was quite a number of rather ugly incidents.
You refuted an assertion that the "gay community" was not, as a collective group, committing "violent oppression" by pointing out that, in California, a few gay-against-anti-gay isolated incidents occured, at least according to a pro-prop-8 website that didn't list any names or sources. Later you gave lip service to the notion that there's been some animus in the other direction.
before this particular petition, the state had found that these petitions did not fall under the Public records Act.
When was this? What was the petition number?
So, the people who signed this petition had reason to believe that their identities would not become general knowledge.
Sure, if you ignore the fact that they are signing them in public places, in broad daylight, in plain view of the general public, on a piece of paper left on a table for the next few hours, which will also be seen by as many as 30 or more subsequent signers (as well as people who read the petition but don't sign it), and which at the end of the day will be collected by a non-regulated or bonded private employee or volunteer who will hold onto them until eventually handing them into the private citizens running the group, and which will be in either private, non-government, non-regulated, non-bound peoples' hands until they are finally turned into the state -- IF the group ends up with enough signatures to bother doing so -- and even becoming remotely elegible for government-enforced secrecy, barring any laws that promote transparent government.
So yeah, other than all of that, it was done in complete guaranteed secrecy!
those who oppose your position are willing to use intimidation tactics (which is the case with this petition).
Telling people you are a homophobe is an intimidation tactic? Or do you have nighmares of imaginary mobs of men in dresses and misapplied lipstick painting your house pink in the middle of the night?
MPD.
In point of fact, the process normally used by the state in this case is to take a sample of the signatures and verify those. According to the Sec of State this has been as small as 3%. Supposedly it depends on the proportion of signatures submitted over signatures required but the exact math is not disclosed. Normally they do not perform exhaustive verification.
And frankly, even when they do, they are extremely permissive about accepting signatures almost to the point of irrelevancy.
I was going to take on your trolling directly, but then i realized it was much more amusing, and telling, that you use a (bad) childhood analogy to illustrate the thought process of your supporters.
Violence is defined as "exertion of physical force so as to injure or abuse", so that's how I would not characterize a sign saying "bigots live here" as violence.
Isolated incidents do not a concerted effort make. We have these things called police which you pay for with your tax dollars which is what we as a society have provided to handle just these sorts of occasions. And we have well-defined laws that divide actions into actually damaging, and things that you may not like but aren't criminally or unfairly damaging which you are left to accept as natural consequence of life.
What you're doing here is stereotyping gay people (and pro-gay people) based on three isolated incidents out of hundreds of thousands of petition signers. Which, frankly, considering your established position on groups of people that are not like you, it's not at all surprising.
PS, this written criticism of your logic, misappropriation, and prejudice should not be construed as "violence".
Yes. It's programmer's fault that they write applications that make poor assumptions about names -- not the people who design software requirements who are neither programmers nor usually very worldly.
Perhaps we should have a list of "assumptions people make about developers"!
* Developers get to design their own software.
* Developers get to have some say in how their software is designed.
* Developers at least can prevent really stupid things from being put in the software they write.
* Developers aren't smart enough to know that outliers are inevitable.
* Developers aren't smart enough to know that of course there are people with punctuation, extra words and spaces, even letters that no one has seen before.
* Developers wouldn't rather code just one column to hold an identifier rather than two.
For some time now I've noticed that the My Location radius in Google Maps for Android gets much smaller when you are in signal range of an open wireless access point. (Assuming you don't have GPS on.) Android / Maps seems to use three different RF methods of location. 1, cell towers, 2, WiFi APs, 3, GPS. (Turn off WiFi and a medium radius will revert to the typical .5-2km cell tower radius.)
There is an interesting side effect to this. I moved last November and naturally took my WiFi access point with me. I kept the same router config, and same broadband service (and probably even same external gateway -- it was about 2 mi away). When I am at home, and I use My Location on my G1, it shows me at my old house. That was a dead giveaway that Google was storing location info of WiFi points -- and in this case, returning a stale location.
So it's okay for the federal government to swoop in and take over privately owned data lines and equipment nodes because it's a common public data infrastructure.... but its NOT okay for the federal government to swoop in and say that these data lines and equipment nodes have to provide the public with equal access to other lines and nodes?
Thanks so much... Where do I get off this runaway train?
It beats the hell out of XP and that's good enough for me. Thank you, Ubuntu, you've made two aging/underpowered machines suddenly useful again.
Just think, the original SIM cards were as big as the piece of plastic you now punch them out of.
The common SIM we use today is properly called Mini-SIM.
SIMs use the same technology as smart cards (which every European credit card now is*), so they were originally the same size... no doubt this was back when mobile phones were the size of bricks or worse.
* We had a French foreign exchange student a few months ago, she tried to use her credit card at a gift shop, and couldn't figure out what she was supposed to do with it as there was no smart card reader. The swipe-and-sign method was completely foreign to her (literally!) just as the chip-and-pin method is foreign (and unavailable) to us. It was enlightening.
First off, the "proof of concept" does not prove that you can do AJAX without the J. It presents a very simple use of the "target" attribute to the <a> tag that has been around since, oh, 1995 or 6 (with real frames, to be fair, but thats academic. Iframes were only invented because paper-obsessed layout & design types didn't like the frame bars).
What it does prove, and it's a valid point, that there is plenty of page automation you can do without dependency on J or X. These days, because of the maddeningly and increasingly high-level focus of web development, a web programming shop will immediately reach for the AJAX hammer to hit even the simplest nails, instead of using the most efficient tool for the job.
Before AJAX we had DHTML, before DHTML there was cross-frame scripting, and before that there was client pull and server push. We do nearly all of these things now with AJAX and as a result, simple tasks are developed as unnecessarily complicated monstrosities.
It's time for the address space hogs to give back to the Internet! Go through your IP blocks and see if there are any you can spare. Free .com addys for one month for each Class B reclaimed!
Seriously... IBM, DEC (?), BBN, GE, Boeing, DuPont, Prudential, Bell North (?), Ford, the US Post Office, Eli Lilly, Halliburton... do they really need their own Class A's all to themselves? Some having more than one? Uh, not likely.
http://xkcd.com/195/ (anyone know of a more up to date version?)
incorrectly identifies svchost.exe, a critical Windows executable, as a virus
While it's fair to say that svchost.exe -- the FILE -- is a "critical executable", that is completely different from saying that svchost.exe -- the PROGRAM instance -- is always critical.
The very annoying thing is that svchost.exe doesn't do anything of its own, really, except run other programs. Sometimes that other program is really essential (like core Microsoft IPC services), sometimes that other program is necessary for one of your computer's devices to work, and yet other times that program is something like Yahoo Toolbar. Or worse: adware, spyware,or a trojan.
Shame that XP never thought you would need a way to know exactly what that svchost.exe instance was actually doing. I know I've forced a reboot unintentially by trying to kill unnecessary processes, and happened to kill that one joker's-card svchost.exe process that was running an essential core service. (Meanwhile you can kill explorer.exe, the core of the UI, and simply restart it to get it back. Go figure.)
Right now I have 7 svchost.exe processes on my XP system. I've no idea what any of them are actually doing. They have memory spaces anywhere from 200KB to 18MB, and open filehandles anywhere from 100 to 2,000. I would like to think I could determine which ones were legitimate and necessary and which ones were just idle crap taking up resources, or worse.
And are you also proud of how you save money by paying only the minimum balance on your credit cards each month?
Tivo monthly subscription is $13. Add in one multi-stream cablecard from Comcast for $1.50 and you come in at $14.50 a month. That's less than $16.95 in my math.
that was already how they determined processor speed: http://www.pcguide.com/ref/cpu/char/mfg_Rating.htm