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Things were so much better when it was just IE4 and NutScrape, and all you had to worry about was how they calculated table borders.
Remarkably (VERY remarkably!) we used to be able to view all web pages perfectly well, back then, and security was a doddle, when the average page didn't have 13,465 lines of code tucked away behind its fourteen lines of text and a checkbox.
Two things went wrong with the Interwebs:
0. It was supposed to be "for the people", but devs took over, and turned it into a nightmare.
1. "The people" decided that twatter and farcebooj were all they wanted, and turned it into a nightmare.
If the net had been done exactly as I want it, I'd have no room for complaint.
(Not that that would stop me complaining, but jes' sayin')
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Mark_Wallace wrote: we used to be able to view all web pages perfectly well
I have a very, very different view of "back then".
"Back then" we used to have to bend ourselves backwards and tie ourselves into knots to ensure that our sites worked on IE and Mozilla and Safari and then Opera and then Chrome. And then IE evolved and we had standards and quirks mode. And different rendering modes. The box model was the least of our problems, and what you ended up with was hacks on hacks on hacks. And lots of tables.
It was horrible and a massive time suck.
To the general web users, however, "things worked". Because we worked so frickin' hard to make it work.
cheers
Chris Maunder
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A token gesture acknowledging their redundancy. Good.
Standards should have been set before they were implemented. Or, at the very least, before they'd been implemented so long ago that every modern browser manufacturer had implemented them and every web developer used new features as par for the course and everyone was already onto v.Next.
The W3C didn't have to come up with the plans. They didn't have to exhaustively test them (500M websites were well on the way to already doing that). They just had to act as a central repository for the standards, and if they rev'd those standards monthly then it still would have been better than being years behind.
And yet even with all of this they were entirely ornamental because there were no consequences to not following the published standards. Quite the opposite: there were consequences to sticking to the standards and that consequence was losing market share to other browsers that made life nicer.
cheers
Chris Maunder
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Microsoft and its PC partners may be ready to take the wraps off a new Windows 10 Home edition that potentially would work on more powerful PCs than those which ship with reguar Windows 10 Home. "In a super jet he comes from a billion miles away, from a distant planet land"
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One Windows!
Roolz, ya?
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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That means that when a new website is registered it will be crawled by Google’s smartphone Googlebot, and its mobile-friendly content will be used to index its pages, as well as to understand the site’s structured data and to show snippets from the site in Google’s search results, when relevant. It's a small world, after all...
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I don't see this as a problem.
winio pretends extremely well that it's a mobile OS, so it should fool them into indexing it a lot quicker than other OSes that are far more suitable than winio for desktops and laptops -- like iOS, androud, and Symbian.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Compliance has been slow, enforcement has been lax, and organizations are finding that learning about data origin, residence and use can be hugely daunting and difficult. Governments slow to act on their own legislation? Whaaaaa?
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56 million return on an investment of about 10, in 12 months?
I'd call that a win.
And they've got their feet wet, now, so are better equipped to go in for the kill.
I can't wait until they get their teeth into airbnb (who have still not deleted my personal data, and who still occasionally demand a copy of my passport).
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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A satellite tracker in the Netherlands has captured stunning video of dozens of SpaceX Starlink satellites passing overhead. "Don't let it go down the drain. Ya better hop on the cosmic wagon train!"
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“Burnout” is big this year. The term has been applied to everything from being tired at the weekend to the malaise of an entire generation. And you thought it was just me not having a sense of humour
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Burnout?
I've never played it, so this doesn't apply to me, yet -- I wait until such games are in the bargain bin.
Maybe I should read the article in eighteen months.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Ah, first world problems...
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There’s been a death in the YouTube family and its name is YouTube Gaming. It's getting pretty bad when Google cancels services before I even know they exist
It's like they're accelerating or something
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It's probably because their marketing morons kept getting confused because of the use of the word "gaming".
Gaming suckers is their raison d'etre, after all, so using it for something that to them is comparatively minor was bound to cause problems.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Kent Sharkey wrote: It's like they're accelerating or something They are approaching the Event Horizon! This is their AI guard.
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They could save even more money by just cancelling services immediately upon getting a name for them. The best part is they could make outlandish claims about it.
For example:
Google Apex was unbelievably sophisticated. So much so, users couldn't understand it's brilliance and so we've regretfully cancelled it.
(What did it do? We can't describe it since you wouldn't understand, now give us more money for advertisements.)
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It's called "the quickening".
".45 ACP - because shooting twice is just silly" - JSOP, 2010 ----- You can never have too much ammo - unless you're swimming, or on fire. - JSOP, 2010 ----- When you pry the gun from my cold dead hands, be careful - the barrel will be very hot. - JSOP, 2013
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Its Brilliant course shows how to write quantum code. A is for Atom, holding your state. B is for Boson, not a lightweight...
C is for Classical, old style of logic gate. D is for Down, a measure of spin state.
I'm not going up to the end, that much wore me out.
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I wonder how many programming languages would let you replace " and" with a comma.
I wouldn't use one that did, and I don't read articles that mutilate the English language in the same way.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Meh. They are obviously behind the times. The next big thing will be machine learning taken to the next level: the seed set will be all the FB emojis.
Of course this will start SkyNet, and be the reason the Terminators want to take us out. Our own stupidity.
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And what does quantum computer programming allow you to do?
(Crickets chirping.)
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I'm to busy training as a matter-transporter operator right now. Otherwise I'd happily give them my money.
Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it is time to pause and reflect. - Mark Twain
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These days, when an unexpected email turns up offering lots of cash, most people just assume it is a scam and delete it. Wanted: Patched or Alive
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I've always found it curious how people and organisations that have have words like "ethical" in their "public names" are those that you can trust the least.
I'm sure that anyone who has bought a car from "Honest Al" would share that curiosity.
It's like organisations with "Democratic" in their title are almost always totalitarian, and those with "Christian" are exclusively dominated by criminal organisations that make their money through drugs and prostitution.
I think I'd be making the right choice by voting for the party that calls itself "The Useless Sh1thead @rsehole Party"
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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