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I can answer that. Only for short periods of time. As you're aware, you have to mix and match the input modalities to get something that isn't as exhausting - i.e., include gestures, gaze, voice and so on. Funnily enough, this is an area that you and I know an awful lot about
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I suspect the pr0n industry will be pioneering gesture based input.
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The company has reportedly considered is letting consumers pick either Windows Phone or Android after they select a given device in store. "Would you like what's in the box, or would you take what's behind door #1?"
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A Hong Kong computer scientist has created "programmable makeup."
Too weird? Too weird.
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I dunno, I think the cellphone-enabled panties are weirder (or at least potentially creepier). This is just us getting closer to our Gibsonian future.
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TTFN - Kent
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Ok, you win. I don't think I can top cellphone-enabled panties
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Kent Sharkey wrote: cellphone-enabled panties
WTF?
Getting information off the Internet is like taking a drink from a fire hydrant.
- Mitchell Kapor
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Didn't want to link to it, but here you go[^]. Slightly gratuitous (and possibly NSFW) images on that page, if you're looking at work.
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TTFN - Kent
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Even more WTF!
Just when I thought the world couldn't get any weirder... (The Japanese are excluded from this thought, as who knows what crazy thing they will come up with next)
Getting information off the Internet is like taking a drink from a fire hydrant.
- Mitchell Kapor
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Great, finally an acceptable reason for me to wear my fake eyelashes and fingernails.
Soren Madsen
"When you don't know what you're doing it's best to do it quickly" - Jase #DuckDynasty
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Google joins Audi, GM, Hyundai, Honda and NVIDIA in the Open Automotive Alliance (OAA.)
Yo dawg, we heard you like cars and phones, so we put a phone in yo car so you can car while you phone.
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We are actively looking at the potential standardization of a basic 2D drawing library for ISO C++, and would like to base it on (or outright adopt, possibly as a binding) solid prior art in the form of an existing library. "We built Moonlight in C++ for all the wrong reasons and was a decision we came to regret."
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Rumor has it that Microsoft is in full retreat on Windows 8 as the outlines of a new version emerge, but the company is already a step ahead as we move into a cloud-centric world. One step back, two steps forward?
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Programmers love to sneer at the world of fashion where trends blow through like breezes. Skirt lengths rise and fall, pigments come and go, ties get fatter, then thinner. But in the world of technology, rigor, science, math, and precision rule over fad. Just you wait, everything unfashionable will return one day
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Infoworld are good at factual inaccuracies.
There first point includes "languages that target the JVM" under preprocessors.
I pretty well stopped reading there.
"If you don't fail at least 90 percent of the time, you're not aiming high enough."
Alan Kay.
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Heady forecasts showing Linux would become a major player on the desktop, on the server, and in embedded systems were published back in 1994. While the prognostications proved correct for server and embedded operating systems, what happened on the desktop? Starts with an 'O', ends with 'ffice'
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Certainly a large part of it. There is also familiarity and to get people to move, things often need to be considerably better, where as the experience is while for general users not a whole lot worse, still worse. e.g. for a normal user playing video's etc was jerky because until recently the scheduler was not really designed to take those kind of use cases into account, unless to switched to the RR or FIFO schedulers and thats not something a normal user would even know to do. These days the problem has been solved on multiple fronts, but people don't care as everyone is using smart phones and tablets.
Laptops outsell desktop computers and tablets (not sure on this) are close or have probably overtaken laptops in sales. In a way, with Android, Linux is the desktop.
I switched to OSX and iOS about 4 years ago and have not looked back. I use Linux and Windows everyday, and on the whole don't care. Use the tool that seems right for the job.
I would consider myself fairly handy with office, but it does feel cumbersome these days. Excel is about the most usable. Outlook I am a slave too which I hate. Something has to change with e-mail. Its a shockingly outdated way of communicating in a work environment. It should probably be made illegal.
"Je pense, donc je mange." - Rene Descartes 1689 - Just before his mother put his tea on the table.
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Giles wrote: Use the tool that seems right for the job.
I wish more people would realize this, rather than investing their own self worth into their chosen OS/tools.
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TTFN - Kent
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Quote: Its a shockingly outdated way of communicating in a work environment. It's a perfectly fine way to communicate in a work environment. What's wrong with it? What sort of work do you need any more usually? I have instant messaging also on my PC but that is only used by my co-worker next door asking if I am ready for a lunch break. I volunteered to have my desk phone removed to save the cost of it as I never used it for work anyway. In my developer, systems designer and general IT guru role I don't need anything more than Outlook alongside my development and testing tools.
I don't see what is outdated about it. It works.
- I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.
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The phone is a vital office tool. How else are you supposed to get your computer unlocked a day after you changed the password to something you forgot overnight?
Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, waging all things in the balance of reason?
Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming soul, humanly warm and humanly beautiful?
--Zachris Topelius
Training a telescope on one’s own belly button will only reveal lint. You like that? You go right on staring at it. I prefer looking at galaxies.
-- Sarah Hoyt
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One, I don't forget my passwords - I have hundreds but I seem to be able to remember them all (so far but I'm getting older, I'm sure the brain will be going soon).
Two, format C: and re-install solves all lock-up problems.
Three, only wimps call tech support!
- I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.
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Fragmentation doesn't help either - which Desktop Manager to use, which distribution, and the general lack of consistency between apps.
I'm with Rob Pike on this one, who opined that if the state of the art was a clone of an O/S he helped write in the 1970's there is not much progress in software.(Rob Pike on Systems[^]).
"If you don't fail at least 90 percent of the time, you're not aiming high enough."
Alan Kay.
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Kent Sharkey wrote: Heady forecasts showing Linux would become a major player on the desktop, on the server, and in embedded systems were published back in 1994
Well it took them 20 years but 2014 is surely going to be the year of Linux on the desktop.
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You owe me a new keyboard. The monitor I can clean off.
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