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Ouch!!!
"As beings of finite lifespan, our contributions to the sum of human knowledge is one of the greatest endeavors we can undertake and one of the defining characteristics of humanity itself"
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After months of anticipation, Twitter finally ripped off the Band-Aid Thursday and laid out the changes to how it shares data with developers. The message is as clear as ever: Twitter doesn’t want any client apps that aren’t made by Twitter itself. For those clients that are already out there, the changes will not destroy their business, but unfortunately, what the new guidelines will destroy is the possibility of Twitter streams being integrated into the rest of the Web. You can count the characters used to respond on one finger
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Looks like twitter is telling ever to eff off. Time for developers to tell twitter the same. It's such a simple idea to replicate, someone should.
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Want to learn how to become a better searcher? Take Google's free online course for power searching! I'll just put this here so that I can find it again
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Need to tell the sales department about this.
One person came to me the other day asking how to get different Excel documents of different screens.
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You may need to print the video off for that person.
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TTFN - Kent
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Nice one!
"Any sort of work in VB6 is bound to provide several WTF moments." - Christian Graus
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Beginning in September, the site is banning the sale of "advice, spells, curses, hexing, conjuring, magic, prayers, blessing services, magic potions, [and] healing sessions," according to a policy update. By the pricking of my thumbs, to Craigslist we go to find new victims
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If I knew this I could have used my spare time to go sell pieces of left over road kill to people.
Yesterday I saw a fresh road killed bird on my way to go drop off my laundry. My question: How fast must one be driving in the city to road kill a bird?
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Not sure, but I do know that hitting a pheasant at 70mph and a badger at 80mph is more than enough.
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Unfortunatley, unlike hexs, etc, you have to pay shipping. Sucks, doesn't it.
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Kent Sharkey wrote: the site is banning the sale of "advice, spells, curses, hexing, conjuring,
magic, prayers, blessing services, magic potions, [and] healing sessions,"
Heck - how am I going to make my code compile now ?
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Nemanja Trifunovic wrote: Heck - how am I going to make my code compile now ?
You'll just have to code in Octal. It's only digits 8, 9, A, B, C, D, E and F that are hexes. And as an added advantage, you can now have funkshuns as well as functions as spelling is not permitted.
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Seriously: how is this any different than the sale of virtual goods in World of Warcraft?
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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Think the memory card in your camera is high-capacity? It's got nothing on DNA. With data accumulating at a faster rate now than any other point in human history, scientists and engineers are looking to genetic code as a form of next-generation digital information storage. It might have to compete with that stuff in your keyboard
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I thought DNA was Microsoft's latest buzzword - Distributed Network Architecture...
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I think that was a few buzzwords back.
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TTFN - Kent
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IDC's report card says Oracle's stewardship has been good for the popular development platform "Baseball, been berry, berry good to me."
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If Oracle lets Java go, and it fails, then they are stuck with jumping onto the Microsoft bandwagon, and that is the last thing Oracle wants. Do not think C++ is a viable option for business applications.
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There are languages other than Java, C# and C++ out there and some of them are fine for business applications. Take Ruby or Python for instance.
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Of course that probably would mean that Oracle would have to invest in support since there is no single major company that is the focus for the software. C++ does have pretty significant support, but it is not really very good for business since the framework is not that good for business apps. That is why Java was created, because C++ had issues, and it still does. If C++ had been adequate, Java and C# would have never succeeded.
Oracle would just as well stick with unsupported Java. In fact there are a lot more languged than you stated: there if Fortran, Cobol, PL1, ... Probably the best option would be Ada since the US government is the main supporter.
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Judge Lucy Koh has been going increasingly terse with both Apple and Samsung as the trial continues, and she just let Apple have it after receiving a 75-page briefing. The document covered 22 potential rebuttal witnesses the company might want to call after Samsung finishes presenting its case. With the jury out of the courtroom, Koh laid into Apple, asking why it would present such a lengthy document "when unless you're smoking crack you know these witnesses aren't going to be called!" I'm sure with Apple prices, they can afford better stuff
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