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When you stand back from all the announcements made by Google today and increase the periphery, you start to notice that this is a company that is fighting a lot of battles on many fronts. In some places it is winning, but most places it is trench warfare. This is my codebase. There are many others like it, but this one is mine!
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Ben is surprised that the shareholders are ok with the Google mentality of giving so much away (I doubt he is. It’s just a literary device). I think it is a brilliant and terrible strategy. Let me put on my tinfoil hat for a bit. Here’s the Google business in a nutshell... Blah blah blah. You gotta believe me!
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The new Chrome for iOS is not a browser. It is a Chromelike skin over Apple's Safari, and it will be slower than Apple's Safari. As Buzzfeed says, it is "literally required to suck." What's more: by announcing this bogus "Chrome for iOS," Google shivs Android where it should be shilling it. You'd have yourself a real street-sweeper here if you put a little work into it.
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Many years ago, long before the birth of the web, there was a time when France was the happening-est place in the digital universe. What the TGV was to train travel, the Pompidou Centre to art, and the Ariane project to rocketry, in the early 1980s the Minitel was to the world of telecommunications. Thanks to this wondrous beige monitor attached to the telephone, while the rest of us were being put on hold by the bank manager or queueing for tickets at the station, the French were already shopping and travelling "online". Even the darkest night will end and the sun will rise.
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European Commissioner Karel De Gucht plans to ignore four ruling bodies voting to kill ACTA, and enforce it anyway. [ITworld]
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Far outside the RAI convention center and apart from Microsoft TechEd 2012 Europe, MS organized a Windows 8 workshop yesterday -- and while they didn't reveal anything new, they did put more serious effort into explaining how Windows 8 and the ARM-based Wndows RT will fit the enterprise -- with varying degrees of success. ITworld
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People expect that, as you grow older, you give up practical jobs such as programming for more noble tasks such as managing a team and acquiring funding. As a sign that I favor horizontal collaboration, I still program even though I am old. This is unusual. Do what you love. Please.
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In late 2009, I created an online persona named Pete London – a self-described JavaScript ninja – to help attract and hire the best JavaScript recruiters. While I never hired a recruiter from the experiment, I learned a ton about how to compete in today’s Silicon Valley talent war. Based upon two years of non-scientific research, here’s what you should know... The best way to hire? Find coders who can recognize talent.
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This article is mostly bullshit. The author comes of as incredibly naive; as though they just discovered that the business of hiring people is rather cut throat. Duh. If there's money to made in something, there are going to be a lot of scammers in that area; technology isn't magically immune. (And it goes both ways; most hiring managers have hired engineers who completely misrepresented their own skills and talents.)
Just like with any company, you can't just passively wait for jobs to drop in your lap. You need to do research and identify those companies who will benefit you. Many recruiters truly stink, however I've worked with several that are fantastic. I just dealt with one this week (they got me my last job and are working on getting me my next one--just this week, they got me an interview with a company that's almost impossible to get interviews at.) But that's also true of HR departments. I've dealt with (and worked for) companies that filter their resumes so heavily that it's almost impossible to get hired (or to hire someone.)
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ToneCraft lets you build music in 3D. The Y-axis represents the pitch of the tone, the X-axis represents the time and the different colors represent different instruments. The Z-axis makes it possible to layer sounds and to create whatever visual structures you like. (Note that it may only work in recent releases of Chrome.) Booshah booshah plink plink, booshah booshah plink plink...
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I ran into a really fun bug at work yesterday, where I discovered that my C program was branching down logically inconsistent code paths. After drinking another cup of coffee and firing up GDB I realized that somehow, a boolean variable in my code was simultaneously testing as both true and not true. I blame Kernighan and Ritchie.
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Yup Always blame the parents.
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Terrence Dorsey wrote: I blame Kernighan and Ritchie.
They were just following orders.
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Google is getting ready to roll out its very first Jelly Bean (Android 4.1) device, the Nexus 7 tablet, and while that’s exciting news, it’s also sobering for scores of Android users still waiting to unwrap Ice Cream Sandwich (Android 4.0.x). The numbers in Google’s own Dashboard for developers tell the story in disappointing detail, but they don’t pinpoint the problem. The software is easy. Testing and tweaking on all those devices is the hard part.
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In the wake of the Flashback botnet which targeted Mac computers, Apple has removed a statement from its messages on its website that Mac operating system X (OS X) isn't susceptible to viruses. The worm turns.
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As expected, Google unveiled its own 7-inch tablet today at the start of the company's I/O conference. Asus is helping Google build its tablet, co-branded once it's available in mid-July. Google's Nexus 7 is clearly going head-to-head with other low-cost Android tablets, including Amazon's Kindle Fire and Barnes & Noble's Nook Tablet — but how do they compare? Attack of the 7-inch tablets.
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University of Utah engineering student and part-time amusement-park arcade manager Nolan Bushnell thought that videogames could be a big deal. “The only question,” he remembers, “was how to bring them to everyone, not just those of us who could sneak into a computer lab late at night.” In 1971, Bushnell and partner Ted Dabney managed to turn Spacewar! into the first mass-produced video arcade game, Computer Space. The big video game Breakout was about to begin...
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Five years ago this week, Apple launched the iPhone. It seems safe to safe that never in history has a single product been so astoundingly successful so fast and had such a radical impact on the world. Here are a few highlights... Like it or not, the iPhone changed the game.
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The sci-fi genre has given us some of the most iconic and daring designs in Hollywood history. We discuss the very best designs in sci-fi movies throughout the ages, with a host of influential designers giving us their thoughts on our picks. What's your favorite sci-fi movie creation?
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Kelly Brock (Weird Science) or Six (Battlestar Galactica)
Steve
_________________
I C(++) therefore I am
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Well, this[^] is a good start.
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I am not sure what this device "really" offers. It is kind of odd device to me.
The Nexus 7 tablet, however, is a great deal.
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Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote: The Nexus 7 tablet, however, is a great deal.
Totally agree, Quad Core Cpu and 12 Core GPU it has to rock especially for 199usd
As for the Nexus Q, I think it could be summarised as a D-Link Boxee Box on Steroids!
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