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A couple of rebuttal points.
1. I have not seen this story covered or anyplace else. I don't generally go to the soapbox so it may have escaped my attention there.
2. I am with the whining and complaining group regarding the VS11 interface. I think I've even posted by objections to it around here someplace. Microsoft has always talked down to the developers. I still remember those helpful diatribes from Mike Blaszczak in the golden age of MFC. Frankly, some developers need to be talked down to, that is to say, they need a little humility.
3. Finally, I wasn't concerned with the changes so much as the article itself: how it was written, its choice of words. Hence, the title of my message. I am just so impressed with how opacity of the language used by some "technical" writers, specifically, the use of "high energy" and "low energy" as opposed to "exciting" and "boring".
m.bergman
For Bruce Schneier, quanta only have one state : afraid.
To succeed in the world it is not enough to be stupid, you must also be well-mannered. -- Voltaire
In most cases the only difference between disappointment and depression is your level of commitment. -- Marc Maron
I am not a chatbot
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Michael Bergman wrote: 1. I have not seen this story covered or anyplace else. I don't generally go to
the soapbox so it may have escaped my attention there.
In this very forum. Link[^].
It was also posted out in the newsletter, so you should have received it there.
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not listening to me obviously. I wanted Metro to be optional on desktop, like Windows Media Center, now it's spreading to the apps that I frequently use
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This localtest.me trick is so obvious, so simple, and yet so powerful. I wouldn’t be surprised if there are other domain names like this out there, but I haven’t run across them yet so I just ordered the domain name localtest.me which I’ll keep available for the internet community to use. Here’s how it works. Master of your own (test) domain.
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Most of my readers are probably aware that Windows 8 is on the horizon. What I propose to do in this post is argue for a simple proposition...every developer who would like to put some additional money in their pocket owes it to themselves to learn the What, Why, and How of the Windows Store. You can write an app for that!
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In the ‘80s a few giant database companies cornered the market. They did this by promulgating fear, uncertainty, and doubt amongst managers and marketing people. The word “relational” became synonymous with “good”; and any other kind of data storage mechanism was prohibited. Should the database be the heart and soul of the design?
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Of the design? No. Of the implementation? Maybe.
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You really only do three things in programming:
1. Set a storage location to a value.
2. Test a value in a storage location.
3. Jump to a part of the program which will do either #1 or #2.
If not the database, then the data storage. Everything else is fluff.
m.bergman
For Bruce Schneier, quanta only have one state : afraid.
To succeed in the world it is not enough to be stupid, you must also be well-mannered. -- Voltaire
In most cases the only difference between disappointment and depression is your level of commitment. -- Marc Maron
I am not a chatbot
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Michael Bergman wrote: Everything else is fluff.
Great. Now I'm a fluffer.
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I make no judgments.
m.bergman
For Bruce Schneier, quanta only have one state : afraid.
To succeed in the world it is not enough to be stupid, you must also be well-mannered. -- Voltaire
In most cases the only difference between disappointment and depression is your level of commitment. -- Marc Maron
I am not a chatbot
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Well arguably you also perform arithmetic and logical operations to change the value on its way to #1. Otherwise you'd just be moving the same value around and not accomplishing much.
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There is a difference between setting a value and pushing a value.
m.bergman
For Bruce Schneier, quanta only have one state : afraid.
To succeed in the world it is not enough to be stupid, you must also be well-mannered. -- Voltaire
In most cases the only difference between disappointment and depression is your level of commitment. -- Marc Maron
I am not a chatbot
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Clearly, the sentiment goes, Metro is only for consumer apps. No real line of business work could be done using that interface. I mean, as we all know, LOB apps have to have busy, intimidating, and overly complex, fiddly UIs, right? LOB implies an unfortunate huddled mass of pitiable information workers who don't deserve usable interfaces. The Man can keep them down--because they're paid to use these apps, after all. It's just... we're using new tiles on all the TPS reports before they go out now.
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It’s like this: The browser’s doomed, because apps are the future. Wait! Apps are doomed because HTML5 is the future. I see something almost every day saying one or the other. Only it’s mostly wrong. Which wins? Depends on what you're trying to do.
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With more than 55 million iPads in use around the world and more than 400 million smartphones sold in 2011, companies are increasingly thinking “mobile first” when developing their web and mobile app strategies. Unfortunately, as companies rush to go mobile, they often overlook the importance of maintaining their global reach. That is, their mobile websites and apps don’t always support the breadth of languages and localized content supported by their PC-oriented websites. Users, users everywhere... but can they read your site?
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Today, users have many choices for synchronizing files and backing important memories and personal assets including music, pictures, notes, business documents, and other personal or business files. The offerings range from free to premium services, also known as the “freemium” model. In this post I will cover some of the pros and cons of each and some common scenarios for usage. I will also discuss what you get for free, and what some extra charges will get you an how much it will cost (measured in gigabytes per month). File storage with a silver lining.
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All things being equal, we'd all prefer to have more bandwidth rather than less. But of course, cost and availability both limit the bandwidth we can actually install, forcing organizations to consider not the amount of bandwidth that they want but rather the amount they need. They must also consider how those needs will change. So how can a smallish firm choose the right amount of bandwidth? Too much is never enough.
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Web startups are made out of two things: people and code. The people make the code, and the code makes the people rich. This is the story of a wonderful idea. Something that had never been done before, a moment of change that shaped the Internet we know today. This is the story of Flickr. And how Yahoo bought it and murdered it and screwed itself out of relevance along the way. Integration is the enemy of innovation.
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You can call Steve Ballmer many things, but you cannot call him the “the worst CEO of a large publicly traded American company today,” as Forbes' Adam Hartung did in a recent article. It's easy to see Microsoft as a bumbling fool of the tech world, but when you look closely at its business, the company's core competencies, and Ballmer's decisions, a coherent picture begins to form. It's a picture of a company being run from a very rational and respectable set of philosophies. Embrace. Extend. Repeat.
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Lorem ipsum, that place holder text that you often see in website and other graphic design, has been around since the sixteenth century by some accounts, but became popular in the 60s when Madison Avenue and the golden age of advertising took off. Its use today in web design, however, is corrupting to the point that it’s become evil. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, so I don't have to write this subhead.
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Utter nonsense.
"If you think it's expensive to hire a professional to do the job, wait until you hire an amateur." Red Adair.
nils illegitimus carborundum
me, me, me
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Quote: So here’s my advice to those planning to build a website. Start with your message. Then write a story in words and surround that with whatever the lorem ipsum equivalent of graphics and images is. Once you’ve nailed your branding, messaging and story to the point where you know exactly the experience you want, only then do you commission expert designers and programmers to manifest your vision.
Total crap. Anyone who's ever written copy knows that you don't design around what you write, you write to fit the space your design affords.
And anyone who's ever written a website knows that getting the final copy to go into the space can be the last thing you get before you go live.
And anyone who's ever maintained a site knows there's no such thing as the final copy.
Tripe.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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Quote: Before the age of Photoshop, designers would have to actually draw things so it made sense to put in filler text while the actual copy was being worked out. But today there is no need for that.
Of course not, because every page is made of static text that never changes so testing how it looks before content exists and making sure the layout is properly flexible is absurd!
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Once you’ve nailed your branding, messaging and story to the point where you know exactly the experience you want, only then do you commission expert designers and programmers to manifest your vision.
Highly not true, IMHO.
/ravi
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